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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ToySoldier who wrote (22533)5/11/1999 8:16:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 74651
 
Microsoft covers wireless bet with Nextel investment

By Martin Wolk
SEATTLE, May 10 (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp. took out its
ample checkbook again Monday, underscoring the message that the
world's leading software company wants to be everywhere that
matters in the emerging world of high-speed communications.
Microsoft's $600 million investment in Nextel
Communications Inc. marks its biggest move to date in the
wireless arena, following a two-year binge of spending on cable
companies that culminated last week in $5 billion alliance with
AT&T Corp.
"Microsoft has got so much money and so much at stake they
can't afford to miss anything," said Bruce Kasrel, a senior
analyst at Forrester Research. "Anything that has to do with
technology, they want to be there."
He and other analysts said Microsoft's financial returns
may be modest in the short term compared with its lucrative
business in computer operating systems and applications.
But with a $22 billion cash hoard, Microsoft can afford to
place a lot of bets, and in any case the company has shown
itself to be an astute investor, making hundreds of millions of
dollars of paper profits on its cable stocks, for example.
"One way to make sure you're in the winner's circle at the
end of the race is to bet on every horse," said analyst Rob
Enderle of Giga Information Group. "For them it's much more
important to be in the winner's circle than just to pick the
winning horse."
Microsoft made an initial foray into the digital wireless
space last year, starting a joint venture with cellular
telephone maker Qualcomm Inc. aimed at expanding availability
of information over computer modems, cellular telephones and
other hand-held appliances.
Such services, which are unproven and pose significant
technical hurdles, are expected to appeal to a niche audience
of business people who travel extensively and need access to
the Internet or corporate data from a variety of locations.
Brad Chase, vice president of Microsoft's consumer and
commerce group, said he expected more alliances to be announced
in the future in both wired and wireless communications.
"At the broadest level what we're trying to achieve is to
help contribute to building the next generation of information
and application services," he said. "We are investing in a
broad range of communication areas to help bootstrap that."
In addition to driving new demand for Microsoft back-end
server software, the Redmond, Wash.-based company aims to get
more viewers for its MSN.com Internet portal, which is being
customized for the smaller screens of wireless devices.
Internet rivals America Online Inc. and Yahoo! Inc. have
announce similar efforts.
"Basically everyone is trying to cover all their bases,"
said analyst Zia Daniell Widger of Jupiter Communications.
The research firm estimates that by 2003 about 9 percent of
households with access to the Internet will reach online
destinations solely through telephones, game consoles or other
non-computer devices.
"We still feel PCs are going to be the dominant device,"
she said.
But Kasrel pointed out that Microsoft was caught unaware by
the sudden explosive growth of the Internet and had to spend
heavily to maintain its dominant market position.
"They're determined not to let that happen again," he said.
"They can afford to throw money at a lot of things and say,
let's see what works."
((-- Seattle bureau 206-386-4848, marty.wolk@reuters.com))



To: ToySoldier who wrote (22533)5/12/1999 12:26:00 AM
From: jim shiau  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
>Jim, you are like so many that get a NOS and a Directory Service completely mixed up.

No. I don't mix up with these two. What I want to tell you that NDS is just a minor product, and You keep talking like it is something big.