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To: H James Morris who wrote (45706)3/14/1999 9:40:00 PM
From: Bill Harmond  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
This speculated deal isn't going to happen because it doesn't need to happen. Plus Bezos & Family own more than half the company.



To: H James Morris who wrote (45706)3/15/1999 8:35:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Spotlight at CeBIT fair to shine on e-commerce, Y2K
By Neal Boudette
FRANKFURT, March 15 (Reuters) - Germany's gigantic CeBIT
trade fair in Hanover this week will throw a spotlight on two of
the hottest issues facing the computer and telecommunications
industries -- electronic commerce and the millennium bug or Y2K.
With Europe poised for an explosion in Internet commerce,
CeBIT plans to give some 700,000 visitors a look at the
technologies that will drive the e-commerce boom and some of the
companies leading the way.
"The future of business is online," said Hans-Juergen
Werner, technical programmes manager at the European
headquarters of Intel Corp <INTC.O>.
Companies like Deutsche Telekom AG <DTEG.F>, SAP AG
<SAPG.F>, IBM Corp <IBM.N> and Intel will use CeBIT to highlight
their latest technologies for shopping, selling, buying, paying
and winning over the Internet.
Deutsche Telekom will launch an online mall --
www.shopping.t-online.de -- as well as a secure system for
credit card payments over the Internet.
SAP will unveil a web site, using its software, where
businesses can order office products. Intel plans to highlight
successfull online merchants at its CeBIT display, and tout the
new security features in its Pentium III processor.
Europe has so far trailed the United States in cyber sales,
but researchers expect that to change soon.
"E-commerce activity is exploding across Europe," the
European Information Technology Observatory said in a recent
report. In the next few years, it will become "normal practice
for every organisation that wishes to remain competitive."
Western European Internet commerce sales are expected to hit
28 billion euros in 2001, from only 970 million euros in 1997,
according to forecaster International Data Corp.
But e-commerce won't have the CeBIT spotlight all to itself.
With only nine more months to go until 2000, plenty of CeBIT
visitors will be on the hunt for new products to help them
protect their computer systems from the millennium bug.
The bug stems from the way older computers use two digits to
keep track of years -- such as 99 for 1999. Computers may crash
at the end of this year if they are not fixed to read 00 as
2000, and not 1900.
With the large number of foreign exhibitors at CeBIT -- 63
countries will be represented -- the show should raise the
importance of the millennium bug in those countries that are
lagging behind.
Last week the U.S. State Department said even Germany and
Japan are not moving fast enough to prepare for Y2K, while
Russia, China and others could face widespread outages unless
they move quickly.
This year's CeBIT will also serve up plenty of the standard
Hanover fare -- cool technologies, hot computers, ever-shrinking
phones and a bit of controversey.
Sweden's C-Technologies, for example, will show off its
C-Pen, a pen-sized device that can scan text from a newspaper,
book or report, and then transfer the data to a PC word
processor, all without wires.
Siemens AG <SIEG.F> will have a security device on display
that recognizes the finger prints of authorized computer users.
Compaq Computer Corp <CPQ.N> and other PC makers are
expected to display PCs with new 500MHz Pentium III chips from
Intel.
New lightweight mobile phones with Internet capabilities
will come from Motorola Inc <MOT.N> and Nokia Oy <NOKAV.HE>.
As for controversy, sparks should fly right from the start.
Sun Microsystems Inc Chief Executive Scott McNealy is due to
deliver the keynote address at the opening on March 17.
He will have a lot to say about electronic commerce -- Sun's
Java language and server computers are favourites for Web site
developers.
But he is also a strong critic of Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O>
and rarely misses an opportunity to bash chairman and fellow
billionaire Bill Gates and his business practices.


REUTERS
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