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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Red Scouser who wrote (52198)3/8/1999 9:01:00 PM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
EP speaks.

****Compaq Targets Internet In Bid To Hit $50Bil - Pfeiffer 03/08/99

Newsbytes, Monday, March 08, 1999 at 13:09

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1999 MAR 8 (NB) -- By John Stackhouse, Computer
Daily News. The Internet is helping spur Compaq [NYSE:CPQ] towards annual
revenues of $50 million, President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
Eckhard Pfeiffer told the Australian press in a Sydney media briefing.

"We are at an annual run rate of $37 billion and that makes the '99 target
($43.5 billion), which is the analysts' estimate, a lot more achievable.
Once we do that I think we would have the momentum to make the move to
the $50 billion," Pfeiffer said.

With a dark suit, showy shirt and a red-patterned tie with swirling,
abstract motifs, his now-snowy hair immaculate, Pfeiffer -- visiting
the Australian subsidiary for a regular checkover -- ran his own
presentation from a notebook. It went off smoothly, with none of the
glitches that seem to dog Bill Gates at public presentations.

The venue was strangely at tables set for a meal and a late breakfast was
served (croissants, rolls, meats and fruit). A domestic Australian bubbly
was poured for those who needed a heart-starter at 10 am (15 minutes
late). One glass was poured at the top table at the elbow of Ian Penman,
Compaq Australia's managing director. But it went untouched.

Pfeiffer dwelt on the strengths inherited from acquisitions such as
Tandem, including "7 by 24" processing in banks, stock exchanges
and other critical businesses. He also spent some time on Digital's
absorption which took Compaq into information technology (IT)
services with 27,000 people.

He also mapped out a star role for potential spin-off AltaVista, which
in the Pfeiffer vision is set to become the leading destination for
information and e-commerce on the Internet. Compaq already claims
to be top brand on the Net. "Forty-five percent of the information
technology infrastructure of the leading Internet companies are
Compaq systems," Pfeiffer said.

Business cycles formerly ran in years, Pfeiffer said. They shortened
to nine months or so in the 1980s. But after 2001, in the Internet
era, he predicted, they would be measured in seconds, or rather in
transactions because the transaction would be the basis of all
business.

AltaVista's target, as set by Pfeiffer, is to become the leader in the
fast-growing market of Internet content information. "That market
will reach $170 billion by 2002. This is approximately the size
of the entire PC market today," he said.

Reported by Newsbytes News Network, newsbytes.com

(19990308/WIRES ONLINE, ASIA, BUSINESS/).