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Technology Stocks : Citrix Systems (CTXS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gdichaz who wrote (6157)2/8/1999 8:27:00 AM
From: gdichaz  Respond to of 9068
 
For those who might be interested. A related story from the Qualcomm thread on SI:

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To: Maurice Winn (22628 )
From: DaveMG Sunday, Feb 7 1999 11:13PM ET
Reply # of 22638

They'd only have themselves to play with..

Thatsabeauty..

Heres a 2nd grade level piece from FinancialT:

Microsoft, BT in UK internet venture
By Alan Cane in London and Louise Kehoe in California
British Telecommunications and Microsoft, the world's largest software group, are expected to announce today that they are collaborating in a venture to provide their customers with wireless access to the internet. Neither company was prepared to comment yesterday, but it is understood they were in talks last night that were expected to lead to a detailed agreement.

Paul Maritz, Microsoft group president for platforms and applications, is expected to announce the venture to a wireless industry conference in New Orleans today.

The scheme would be Microsoft's first move into telecommunications in the UK and a challenge to Symbian, a joint initiative between Motorola of the US, Ericsson of Sweden, Nokia of Finland and Psion of the UK.

At stake is the leadership of the nascent market for the delivery of information to subscribers on the move. Analysts expect the market to mushroom as receiving devices - essentially elaborate cellular phones - decline in price and increase in capabilities.

Symbian was formed with the purpose of capturing this market through the development of an operating system based on Psion's hand-held "organiser" products, thus denying Microsoft the opportunity to dominate the market with its Windows CE (compact edition) operating system for hand-held computers.

The establishment of Symbian was a setback for Microsoft, which had established a joint venture with a US technology company, Qualcomm, to offer a wireless internet service to cellular phone companies that would in turn offer the service to customers.

A deal between Microsoft and BT would be a test of Microsoft's leadership ambitions in wireless data communications. Steve Ballmer, Microsoft president, said two months ago that wireless data represented a "logical extension" of Microsoft's strategy of enabling users always to be connected to their corporate and personal information. BT, which already has a number of business relationships with Microsoft, is investing to take advantage of the "datawave" - the huge growth in demand for data transmission.

It is the major shareholder in Cellnet, the UK's second largest mobile operator, which could provide the nationwide infrastructure for the Microsoft venture. Analysts speculated that the two companies might be contemplating a joint application for a UK licence for third generation mobile services, which involve cellular access to the internet.

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To: gdichaz who wrote (6157)2/8/1999 8:32:00 AM
From: gdichaz  Respond to of 9068
 
Another related story from the Q thread:

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To: DaveMG (22630 )
From: michael piturro Monday, Feb 8 1999 12:19AM ET
Reply # of 22639

Mot's New Toy>

Monday February 8, 12:00 am Eastern Time

Motorola merges organizer with cellphone

(Release at 0001 EST February 8)

By Therese Poletti

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 8 (Reuters) - Cellular phone giant Motorola Inc. (NYSE:MOT - news) on Monday will unveil a
handheld organizer that meshes with its cellular phone technology -- making it possible to dial a phone number stored in an organizer with one touch.

The organizer, called the StarTac Mobile Organizer, is the first product to result from Motorola's acquisition of Starfish Software of Scotts, Valley, Calif., last July for
a few hundred million dollars.

The suggested retail price of the organizer, which clips onto the back of a Motorola StarTac cellphone, is $250. It will be available in the second quarter through
cellular phone carriers and electronics retail outlets. The organizer is an accessory to Motorola StarTac cell phones. Motorola has not yet priced the combination
StarTac phone/organizer package.

''The carriers may choose to subsidize the product because it will be easier to make extra calls,'' said Ravi Srivastava, a director of strategy and marketing in
Motorola's cellular subscriber business. ''It gives you the ability to have a turbo dialing approach.''

The StarTac Mobile Organizer is a bit larger than a pager, weighs 2.3 ounces and runs for about nine months on two lithium batteries. It clips easily onto most
versions of the popular StarTac cellular phone, which is one of the smallest and lightest cell phones, with millions in use.

A user can click through the organizer calendar and address book functions using pager-like keys while on the go, without having to look up an entire phone number,
and then dial it.

''It's probably going to be one of my top ten products of the year,'' said Andrew Seybold, editor of Andrew Seybold's Outlook, a newsletter on mobile computing,
in Boulder Creek, Calif. ''It's also going to change the definition of a smart phone dramatically...I think they will sell a huge number of these things.''

Seybold estimates that Motorola could sell about 500,000 organizers to the installed base of 10 million StarTac users and that up to 500,000 new subscribers could
buy StarTac phones because of the organizer in its first year.

Starfish is mostly known for creating the calendaring and scheduling software that is part of the REX, a tiny handheld computer the size of a credit card. Starfish was
founded in 1994 by the software industry maverick Philippe Kahn, who also founded Borland International Inc.

The company, now a wholly-owned subsidiary of Motorola, also develops software called TrueSynch, which lets a user enter information once on one device and
download it or transfer it to other devices such as a personal computer or a PalmPilot, synchronizing all updates at once.

The Motorola StarTac Organizer has TrueSynch technology to synchronize with PC organizer software such as Microsoft Corp.'s Outlook, IBM's Lotus Organizer,
Lotus Notes, Starfish's Sidekick, Web-based calendars such as Yahoo! (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) Calendar & Address Book, and personal digital assistants such as
3Com's Palm Pilot and the REX Pro.

(NYSE:MOT - news), (NYSE:IBM - news), (Nasdaq:COMS - news), (Nasdaq:YHOO - news)

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To: gdichaz who wrote (6157)2/8/1999 8:42:00 AM
From: gdichaz  Respond to of 9068
 
One more - and last for now - from Q thread related to wireless appliances possibilites Note: Long so skip if boring. :-)

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To: michael piturro (22632 )
From: Jon Koplik Monday, Feb 8 1999 7:46AM ET
Reply # of 22642

I am no longer "on strike." (someone accused me of being a "blabbermouth").

I hereby declare Qualcomm an Internet play !! (See following article).

February 8, 1999

Cisco and Motorola to Develop Wireless Internet
System

By DAVID BARBOZA

CHICAGO -- In what is being billed as the next giant step in the Internet
revolution, the Motorola Corp., the maker of wireless communications
products, and Cisco Systems Inc., which provides Internet equipment,
plan to form an alliance that would build the world's largest wireless Internet
system.

The project is the most ambitious effort yet to build a global network that
would enable businesses and consumers to have high-speed Internet access to
e-mail and faxes without the burden of wires, cables or even walls.

The plan, which is expected to be announced Monday at a cellular telephone
conference in New Orleans, makes Motorola and Cisco Systems the latest
communications and networking giants to join forces in an attempt to
capitalize on the increasing popularity of the Internet and the rapid growth of
wireless communications products.

Over the last year, several telecommunications companies have announced
plans to offer new services or upgrade their wireless communications
operations so that businesses and consumers may have some access to the
Internet. The AT&T Corp., for instance, already is offering wireless service
that taps into electronic mail and Internet information.

The race to transform communications through the Internet also has led to
several giant mergers that could result in greater wireless access. In June,
Northern Telecom Ltd. of Canada, one of the largest makers of
telecommunications gear, said it would acquire Bay Networks Inc., a large
data networking company. Just last month, Lucent Technologies, the former
research arm of AT&T, announced its acquisition of Ascend
Communications, a leading provider of Internet equipment.

Executives at the Microsoft Corp., Apple Computer Inc. and Qualcomm Inc.,
the wireless communications outfitter, also have expressed an interest in
developing products related to wireless Internet access.

"This is part of a trend," said Roberta Wiggins, a wireless communications
analyst at the Yankee Group in Boston. "People have been saying: 'There are
all these people with cell phones and all these people accessing the Internet,
and at some point people are going to put these two things together."'

While Ms. Wiggins and other analysts say that developing a wireless system
could be costly and cumbersome -- with competing and incompatible systems
trying to transmit bulky data and video into wireless units -- officials at
Motorola and Cisco say their vision of a world where automobiles could get
tuneups by wireless signals and sales executives could obtain company
information from a remote place is just beyond the horizon.

"This extends the Internet to a world without wires," said Don Listwin,
executive vice president at Cisco, based in San Jose, Calif.

Over the next four or five years, Motorola and Cisco say they plan to invest
more than $1 billion to create a system capable of transmitting voice, data and
video over existing cellular telephone stations directly to wireless telephones,
laptop computers and other devices.

The system would create a new line of products for Motorola, a new
generation of wireless networking gear for Cisco and perhaps even signal the
convergence of several existing communications products, like pagers,
cellular telephones, televisions, radios and computers. "The goal is that instead
of having four or five communication devices in your briefcase, you'll have
one or two," said Doug Wills, a spokesman for Cisco.

The two companies also plan to open four jount research and development
centers, two in the United States and two abroad.

A critical piece of the puzzle, Motorola and Cisco say, is that the wireless
transmissions would be delivered using an Internet Protocol platform that is
compatible with all wireless formats. Unlike analog or digital platforms, the
companies say that the Internet Protocol, or IP platform, will be able to
effectively deliver and bundle voice, data and video feeds through cellular
stations.

What is novel about the effort, the companies say, is that they plan to adopt
an "open" standard. In other words, they plan to create a wireless industry
standard that could be adopted by any company that wants to develop
different or competing products. Such an open standard, officials say, would
be different from other wireless Internet efforts now under development. The
new IP framework will be published this spring in a "white paper," the
companies said.

For Motorola, which has stumbled of late in the world of wireless
communications, the deal with Cisco is an attempt to help resurrect its
reputation as an innovative company. After two years of earnings shortfalls
and market share losses tied to its line of wireless telephones, Motorola has
been on an aggressive path to new wireless ventures.

The company, which is based in Schaumburg, Ill., and had sales of $29 billion
in 1998, has a huge stake in Iridium, a satellite venture that offers voice and
paging systems. In May, when sharp cuts were being made in its work force,
Motorola abandoned a plan to spend $13 billion to build what it called its
Internet in the Sky project, a satellite network capable of delivering high-speed
data communications anywhere in the world.

Instead, Motorola said it would invest about $750 million in Teledesic, a
low-orbit satellite venture that also intends to deliver high-speed access to the
Internet, beginning in 2003. The new wireless venture with Cisco, officials at
Motorola say, is different but would be compatible with Iridium and
Teledesic, which was founded by William H. Gates, the chairman of
Microsoft, and Craig McCaw, the cellular telephone pioneer.

Now, company officials say, they have hit upon a revolutionary scheme.
"With this system you can get Internet information any time, anywhere," said
Bo Hedfors, senior vice president at Motorola.

As for Cisco, executives say the new venture will strengthen its move into the
telecommunications equipment market, where it is battling companies like
Lucent and Nortel. By forming an alliance with Motorola, Cisco -- which
among other things sells networking gear to telephone providers -- is staking
out firmer ground in its efforts to persuade global companies to use its
equipment and the Internet to transfer information.

Though some analysts insist that Motorola and Cisco face many hurdles in
creating a wireless Internet system, including the prospect of transmitting
bulky video feeds over a wireless network, the two companies say the
framework they have outlined already has won strong support from big
telephone service providers like Sprint, Nextel and Airtouch Communications.

Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company

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To: gdichaz who wrote (6157)2/8/1999 10:29:00 AM
From: mauser96  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9068
 
Well, I'm certainly not a tech wiz either but I try to do my homework. The best place to learn about Citrix is their www page citrix.com
Java is an interpreted (as opposed to compiled) language. The old Basic is a similar type of language. It isn't a path, and neither is ICA which is an architecture.
I believe you may find a www computer encyclopedia site useful
computerlanguage.com (this is also available as a CD)
You can find terms like "network architecture" defined there.
If you have a special interest in telecommunications I can recommend the easy to read book "The Essential Guide to Telecommunications" by Anabel Z. Dodd, as a starting point. It's available at Amazon.
good luck