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Gold/Mining/Energy : Certicom Corporation (TSE:CIC, NASD:CERT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ron Nairn who wrote (1593)3/19/1999 1:07:00 PM
From: Frank Ferrari  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4913
 
I found an interesting article on the Dell thread. Discusses the future of hand held computing devices. Someone mentioned a rumour of big blue and certicom announcing something in April. I cut and paste the article, I am still trying to find the actually link.

Cheers
Frank

Tech Sector To Battle over Internet Devices, IBM Exec Says

Handheld and other devices are going to out number PCs as THE interent access
device. The above is what I see, and now I feel it will happen much faster then I thought
before.

See below.

By Neil Winton
Reuters

HANOVER (March 19) - International Business Machines Corp., the world's largest
computer maker, said on Friday that competitors in the market for Internet devices will
fight a decisive battle within the next 18 months.

Mark Bregman, General Manager at IBM's Pervasive Computing division, told Reuters
in an interview that the winners will be the companies which can provide consumers with
uncomplicated and focused devices.

The losers will be companies like software giant Microsoft Corp. which produce
powerful but complicated devices, according to Bregman.

Microsoft told Reuters on Wednesday that, on the contrary, it felt well placed to
succeed in the devices segment.

We will soon know the answer to these counterclaims, said IBM's Bregman.

''In five years this will get settled, in fact I think it will get settled in the next 12 to 18
months. In World War Two, in retrospect we knew when the decisive battle was, but it
took a long time afterwards to get the thing finished,'' Bregman said at the annual CeBIT
technology fair.

Bregman said the Microsoft approach worked well in the business world, but would be
less attractive in mass markets.

''The business model that Microsoft has is very suitable when you are in the platform
business because then the customer wants to know it can run all these applications. But
in the appliance market you don't care anymore. What's the operating system in your
cellphone? You don't know because you don't care,'' Bregman said.

News from CeBIT this year has been dominated by companies competing to outdo
each other with new little computerized communications devices. Companies have been
setting up alliances to make sure that whoever wins, they don't lose.

CeBIT has seen new palm-top computers that can surf the Internet, play audio, act as
word-processors in color, and connect with personal computers by infrared or radio.
Laptops are now being offered incorporating a telephone.

Microsoft unveiled its Hermes Internet telephone powered by its Windows CE
(compact edition) software on Wednesday. The world's biggest personal computer
maker Compaq Computer Corp. showcased a little hand-held device -- the Arrow
2100 - which boasts a color screen and radio connectivity.

3Com Corp. of the U.S., which leads the hand-held market with its best-selling Palm
Pilot, announced improved products in the form of the Palm V and Palm IIIx. IBM
joined in the act announcing a deal on Thursday with Finnish mobile telephone power
house Nokia Oyj and travel services company SABRE for travel booking for executives
on the move.

Earlier this week Japanese telecommunications giant NTT announced a deal with
Symbian, the consortium including Motorola of the U.S., Ericsson of Sweden, Nokia
and Psion Plc which plans to market the next generation of Internet devices. NTT later
announced it also planned a deal with Microsoft.

At the CeBIT show Sun Microsystems announced a tie-up with Symbian. Analysts said
this was an outflanking move against Microsoft.

All these products aim to be the next generation of devices that can surf the Internet,
and appeal to mass markets for the first time. The theory is that the first round in this
battle was won by the personal computer. The next phase is up for grabs.

''The first 200 million computer owners used Wintel machines -- (PCs using Intel Corp.
chips and Microsoft's Windows software) -- the next 800 million will not,'' 3Com chief
executive officer Eric Benhamou was recently quoted as saying.

IBM believes that in the next five to 10 years there will be over one million businesses
and one billion people using one trillion mobile and network devices to communicate
world wide.

''What's happening right now is a sign of the fact that we are in a state of transition,''
IBM's Bregman said