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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gerald Walls who wrote (17452)3/8/1999 8:14:00 PM
From: t2  Respond to of 74651
 
Gerald, I have a feeling that MSFT and INTEL are going to outperform the Nasdq tomorrow. Intel on the AMD news and Microsoft on the settlement with DOJ possibility.
Let's see if this turns out to be the case.
I would rather accept a gain in the Nasdq rather than a loss with MSFT outperforming on the downside.

However, lately i have noticed that on down days MSFT has been outperforming the Nas while on up days, it just tracks it.
That is not bad.

BTW--I wish I could buy the Nasdq futures right about now!!!!!



To: Gerald Walls who wrote (17452)3/8/1999 8:15:00 PM
From: taxman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
this linux stuff looked too complicated for me to mess with. the instruction book was about the size of a small novel, but a lot more complex. at least that was my impression. anyway lower prices mean two and three computer families.

regards

Round Rock, Texas, March 8 (Bloomberg) -- The following are comments made by Michael S. Dell, chairman and chief executive of Dell Computer Corp., the No. 1 direct seller of personal computers. Dell talks about Red Hat Software Inc.'s Linux operating system, low-cost personal computers and computer maker Apple Computer Inc. ''We're going to start selling Linux to single-party users very soon,'' Dell said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. ''There is a growing demand there.'' ''If the cost of the components goes down, you'll see lower- priced machines from Dell,'' he said. ''The price of components has been artificially high because of all the investments in Asia'' by companies trying to increase their market share in the region.

Apple Computer's ''iMac is a good wake-up call for us and the rest of the industry, in ease of use and also in ergonomics,'' Dell said. ''We have some things that we can learn, and we're in the process of learning them.'' ''The information applications of the future could very well be a kind of next-generation PC that has a broad-band connection on it, and that's the kind of device that I think you'll see Dell compete in,'' he told the newspaper. ''When and what it does look like, we're not ready to say.''
NYSE/AMEX delayed 20 min. NASDAQ delayed 15 min.