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To: Randy Ellingson who wrote (43563)3/2/1999 9:57:00 PM
From: GST  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Randy -- that does not sound like vintage MSFT strategy -- do you think they have a new frame of mind these days? If not, is it a serious threat to their more lucrative business applications? MSFT has held up well despite many reasons to come down. Is it invincible?



To: Randy Ellingson who wrote (43563)3/2/1999 11:35:00 PM
From: Impristine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Linux,
my eye,
what the frig is a shell,
what the frig is a borne,
shell,
has the shell been hatched,
that is a bunch of crap,
popcorn,
average J6P does not give,
a hey, about a Borne shell



To: Randy Ellingson who wrote (43563)3/3/1999 9:02:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Microsoft to unveil Internet commerce strategy
By Martin Wolk
SEATTLE, March 2 (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp. <MSFT.O> plans
to shed its image as a "no-show" competitor in the explosively
growing electronic commerce market this week, unveiling a
strategy to help companies do business over the Internet.
At a media briefing in San Francisco Thursday, Microsoft
Corp. Chairman Bill Gates and President Steve Ballmer will roll
out a new set of software and services based on its msn.com
Internet portal site and the forthcoming Windows 2000 system,
industry analysts say.
The company is expected to announce the details of an
upgraded and renamed version of its server software for
electronic commerce to be released with Windows 2000, the
long-delayed upgrade to the high-end Windows NT operating
system due out this year.
And Microsoft will take special aim at small businesses
with its MSN Marketplace, a set of tools and services that
allow companies to set up Internet "storefronts" with
transaction capability using simple browser-based tools,
according to analysts who have been briefed on the plan.
"It's kind of the Holy Grail right now of electronic
commerce," said Jack Staff, chief economist of Zona Research.
"The major driving force in the economy is small business and
thus far nobody has really cornered that market with
e-commerce."
The appearance of Microsoft's top two executives at the
briefing appears intended to change the perception that the
computer software group has lagged in efforts to grab a piece
of the enormous electronic commerce opportunity. By some
estimates more than $400 billion in business will be conducted
over the Internet by 2002, including consumer sales and
business-to-business transactions.
Microsoft quietly has built a strong business supplying
back-end software for Internet commerce based on Windows NT,
but has been overshadowed by rival International Business
Machines Corp.
While Microsoft has been bogged down by a headline-grabbing
antitrust trial, IBM has used savvy marketing and its strong
relationships with big business to establish a reputation as
the leader in "e-business."
"Microsoft has for all intents and purposes been a no-show,
at least in the war of words," said Dwight Davis, an analyst
with Summit Strategies.
At the briefing, Microsoft is expected to disclose the
names of large businesses handling electronic commerce over
Windows NT systems rather than the mainframe and minicomputer
options promoted by IBM.
"Microsoft is a tough competitor no matter what segment
they're playing in and they bring a lot of resources to any
situation," said Karl Salnoske, general manager of electronic
commerce for IBM. "We don't underestimate Microsoft."
For its MSN Marketplace, Microsoft will get a running start
from its $265 million acquisition last year of Link Exchange,
which offers ad placement, transaction capability and other
features to a network of some one million businesses.
But Microsoft faces intense competition from major portal
site operators, including Yahoo Inc. <YHOO.O>, Excite Inc.
<XCIT.O>, Lycos Inc. <LCOS.O> and Netscape Communications Corp.
<NSCP.O>.
"The small business area is going to get very competitive
because people do understand that the opportunity is there,"
said John Keister, president of Go2net Inc., which is adding
20,000 businesses a month to its HyperMart community. "There is
a ton of growth still left in this category."
As a result Microsoft will offer services that undermine
its core Windows franchise by supporting businesses without
requiring them to invest in the platform, said Vernon Keenan of
Keenan Vision, who estimated the number of online merchants
would rise to 400,000 by 2003 from about 17,000 currently.
"This is the typical eat-your-own-young approach," he said.
"What they're hoping to do is get people hooked into the
services business with MSN Marketplace in the hopes that they
will graduate to Windo...