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Technology Stocks : Ampex Corporation (AEXCA) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: WTSherman who wrote (6364)3/20/1999 11:58:00 AM
From: Terry W Weaver  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17679
 
Mr. Sherman, I will have to disagree with you as to "this thread becoming useless". This thread has some of the best and most knowledgeable posters, bar none. I think at this point everyone has just about exhausted their sources on analyzing, critiquing, sleuthing, and otherwise intensely pursuing DD and we are sitting around the campfire waiting for cousin Ed to come riding in on his white horse and bring the news. You will just have to excuse the temporary diversions that help keep sanity. If you have any other insights regarding AXC, I am sure the thread would appreciate you sharing them with us...

Thanks and Best Regards...TW



To: WTSherman who wrote (6364)3/20/1999 1:20:00 PM
From: B. A. Marlow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17679
 
How's this for "cheese banter," WT? Bidding war for BCST?!

A little AXC MO-MO on MOnday?!

Melt-up Kraft cheese sandwiches and ice-cold High Life for everybody! I'm buying lunch.

BAM

***

What Yahoo! Sees in Broadcast.com: Eyeballs
It's not profitable, but Broadcast.com has the attention of millions of multimedia-loving Web surfers

If you're puzzled that anyone would want to strike a deal with Broadcast.com, a money-losing streaming media site run out of a converted warehouse in Dallas, think underwear. Sure, video sent over the Internet appears jerky and low-resolution compared with broadcast TV. And the sound falls a bit short of FM-stereo quality. But more than 2.0 million users logged on to see the Broadcast.com Webcast of Victoria's Secret fashion show on Feb. 3,

The event underscored the Web's evolution from a text-based medium to one that offers live or archived feeds of audio and visual content. And as major portals compete for eyeballs, Broadcast.com offers the Web's largest collection of multimedia. It Webcasts feeds from more than 400 radio and TV stations, hours of CDs and audio books, and reams of specialized content, from press conferences to live air-traffic-control-tower babble.

"Audio/visual has the potential of turning into a massive consumer market on the Internet," says analyst Mark Mooradian of Jupiter Communications. That could be just the ticket to make Yahoo!, which is in talks with Broadcast, the portal of choice for millions of Web surfers (see BW Online Daily Briefing, 3/19/98, "Is Yahoo! Ready to Rack Up Broadcast.com?").

The interest in Broadcast comes as Microsoft, Viacom, and major media are muscling in. Viacom, which runs the popular MTV Networks, has acquired Imagine Radio, an online provider of customizable streaming audio, and set up a new Internet division. Viacom has also expressed interest in acquiring the Ultimate Band List, a popular music site, sources say. As for Microsoft, on Mar. 18, it launched Web Events 3.0, a major upgrade to its streaming media site.

WHERE THE MONEY IS. Although Broadcast.com is known for its extensive hookups with radio and TV stations, the bulk of its revenues are derived from broadcasting business events, such as earnings announcements or analysts conferences. More than 1,100 companies, including Intel and Texaco, pay up to $350,000 for broadcast services. Revenue from this business jumped 183% during the quarter ending Dec. 31, to $7.6 million, or 63% of the company's total. For the period, Broadcast.com had a net loss of $3.7 million. "These business-to-business services deliver cash flow that will really allow them to be a leader in the enterprise space," says Mooradian.

More important, though, is the promise of streaming video, highlighted recently not only by the turnout for Victoria's Secret fashion show but President Clinton's videotaped deposition during the impeachment hearings. Although these events are difficult to earn money from, they have tremendous potential in luring in new users and registering them. "And in the online media business," says Mooradian, "knowing who your users are is what it's all about."

Speculation that streaming sites could be the focus of another frenzy of Net-related mergers has supported stocks in that sector. Shares of Broadcast.com (BCST) fell $2, to $85, on Mar. 19. But they've soared in the last four months, giving the three-year-old company a current market valuation of nearly $3 billion.

Among other Web multimedia companies, the share price of San Diego-based InterVU Inc., which provides Internet distribution services for streaming content, rose 1 5/8 on Mar. 19, closing at 33 3/8. That's up from it's 52-week low of 5 1/8. Shares in RealNetworks, which sells the most popular software for streaming content on the Internet and runs its own directory of online multimedia content, jumped 14 3/4, to 141 3/4, on Mar. 19. All of that stock action was before the news on Yahoo! and Broadcast.com broke. Monday should be interesting.

Brull covers streaming media, and more, from Business Week's Los Angeles bureau.

businessweek.com



To: WTSherman who wrote (6364)3/20/1999 2:25:00 PM
From: Alan Cassaro  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17679
 
Is this your first post? What is its relationship to AMPEX? Considering that the only recent Ampex news item is still about Hillary Clinton, and that a lot of the posts here are about other video streaming sites or storage tech companies, and considering that the recently hired PR guy to give a ÒbrandingÓ image to Ampex also handled the KRAFT cheese account, I would suggest that there may be some relevance here concerning the CHEESE, the PACKAGING, and anything else that happens to cross our minds. Remember that every jazz artist mentioned here in other posts recorded on Ampex tape, and it probably makes that relevant too.
If you actually have something more substantial to contribute, please go ahead. DonÕt waste valuable band width complaining. ItÕs less relevant than us discussing Kraft cheese. al



To: WTSherman who wrote (6364)3/20/1999 2:59:00 PM
From: Alan Cassaro  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 17679
 
No apologies needed. Back to STORAGE systems. I have a zip disc, and it holds a lot. However, thereÕs no comparison between that and a DST unit.

But my favorite storage system is my >>refrigerator<<<. IÕve used one all of my life. I canÕt begin to tell you folks how much KRAFT cheese IÕve had in there over the years, both of the natural variety as well as of the cheese food variety. IÕve still got those individual slices in the back of the drawer, because I do get the occasional urge for a toasted cheese sandwich. And that stuff keeps for decades! Now, how many of you folks here have had a Kraft cheese product in your cold storage Unit within the last 3 years? How many POUNDS of that product have you eaten? I would venture to guess that 98% of this board has ingested a Kraft cheese product within the last 4 weeks.
And of course the man responsible for making us WANT......no, letÕs suggest......REQUIRE.....the Kraft Cheese experience belongs to US. He is our man. We pay his salary. We donÕt even THINK about the Kraft Cheese experience anymore. We do it as a matter of course. ItÕs become a reflex of the body, not the brain. ItÕs Pavlovian.
Consider that the day will come when people reach for their Ampex products with out thinking about it, whether it be a technology working in the background to deliver us our music, our storage, or our video streaming products. Ampex will be necessary in order for us to conduct our daily routine. And right now, our new PR former Kraft Cheese guy ( I donÕt even know HIS name) is a KEY player and integral factor to that bright future weÕre investing in. Our share price will increase when his marketing ideas begin to kick in. Are you getting my drift yet, or is this some more irrelevant useless information?