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Technology Stocks : Rambus (RMBS) - Eagle or Penguin -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rosemary who wrote (18697)4/14/1999 10:54:00 PM
From: jopawa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
Dave,

OK, where did you play and how many Mulligans?!<gg> Internet appliance, was that an ELON project? What's your thought on RMBS? Going to bed now (house sh!t making me sick), but since you post about the time I usually wake up I can read it in the morning.

John/long 800 and hoping that my buy on the dip trades works again!



To: Rosemary who wrote (18697)4/15/1999 12:57:00 AM
From: Estephen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
If the internet requires faster processors, it needs faster memory
too !!

Wednesday April 14 11:24 PM ET

Intel's vision: 3-D, talking Internet

By Matthew Broersma, ZDNet

LOS ANGELES -- Here's what the future of the Internet looks like for a computer chip maker: everything's
3-D, requires immensely fast servers and accepts voice commands.

Well, this is Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news), after all. And a presentation by senior vice president Sean
Maloney Wednesday morning at Spring Internet World here rather predictably focused on the way
next-generation processors can solve many of the problems that are cropping up as the Internet becomes more
widespread in business and personal life.

That said, some of the solutions are pretty cool.

For example, how to cut down on the information overload that comes with the vast amounts of content flying
around on e-mail and the World Wide Web? Simple: just represent all the information in flashy, rotating 3-D
carousels, as Excite Corp. (Nasdaq:XCIT - news) does with a new service called Excite Extreme.

"This is needless to say very computationally intensive," Maloney said. "So we've all got, as you have at home,
a 500 MHz Pentium III. There will be a lot of these around by the end of the year, I hope."

3-D can also be used to enhance the e-commerce experience, giving customers realistic constructions of
consumer products that they can examine before buying. The Sharper Image is already using such a system on
its site.

Internet with ears
Maloney also demonstrated an application for accessing SQL databases using plain-English terms. The
complex relational databases usually require a complex programming language.

The system can even accept voice commands, a feature Intel clearly sees as an integral part of future Internet
use. For example, the spoken words "get me a pie chart showing sales by category" instantly generated a
graphical table.

Other key problems Maloney identified were a faster, more reliable Internet infrastructure and ubiquitous
online access.

Web servers need to be able to handle immense traffic spikes, just as the telephone system does.

"One of the great fears in the banking industry is that at five minutes after midnight on Jan. 1, 2000, everybody
is going to wonder whether the Y2K bug wiped out their bank balance," Maloney said. "Compare that traffic to
five minutes before midnight, when everyone is having a toast of champagne." One answer to this problem is to
build more powerful servers, with faster processors, he suggested.

The Web speaks
In the home, fast processors could make Web access practical where it wasn't before. In the kitchen, people
could use voice-recognition and voice-synthesis software to access recipe information on the Web, without
having to deal with a mouse or keyboard, Maloney said.

"If it's easy to use, you could make an argument for having an Internet connection in every room in your home,"
he said.