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Microcap & Penny Stocks : TSIG.com TIGI (formerly TSIG) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: REW who wrote (22767)3/31/1999 3:42:00 PM
From: Hardy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 44908
 
While you are killing time check out:

www.telepath.com/isd/discountcds

Hardy.com



To: REW who wrote (22767)3/31/1999 4:44:00 PM
From: Tompj  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 44908
 
Bought 50K More today at firesale prices. Thank you sellers!!! I never thought we would see 30's
great to have cash. great to be able to buy a company like TSIG.

SEE ya all Longs in the 5's in 3-4 months



To: REW who wrote (22767)3/31/1999 4:57:00 PM
From: Jazzbo  Respond to of 44908
 
Bob,

I'm not calm...I'm doing our taxes.

On a kinder, gentler, thought provoking topic, Microsoft announced a few days ago that it would be reorganizing into 5 units. Bill says it has nothing to do with settling the antitrust suit. Sure.

The five groups are:

- A Consumer Windows Division that will focus on developing Windows for the consumer;

- The Developer Group, which will focus on software developers;

- The Consumer and Commerce Group, which includes the Microsoft Network, which will focus on bringing consumers and businesses together online;

- The Business and Enterprise Division, which will focus on software for information technology customers; and

- The Business Productivity Group, which will focus on products for so-called knowledge workers, which includes telecommuters and home-office workers.

I just toss this out there for general knowledge, NOT to form the basis of, or supplement, rumors.

On another subject dear to my heart, I read an article in the Sunday Times Business section on the investment philosophy of Prince Walid bin Talal of Saudia Arabia, who in 1979 mortgaged a house his father gave him for $400,000, and has amassed a fortune exceeding $14 billion. You've probably read of him, he owns large chunks of Citigroup, Saks Fifth Aveneue, Saatchi & Saatchi, TWA, and Hyundai to name a few companies.

His philosophy, after much due diligence, is to invest in under-valued companies, and quoting here, "Buy and Hold".

Best, Tim