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To: arno who wrote (19078)5/26/1999 2:02:00 PM
From: May Tran  Respond to of 40688
 
Good Find.
I'll listen to it when I get home.
Thank you.

Johnny



To: arno who wrote (19078)5/26/1999 2:06:00 PM
From: rbotik  Respond to of 40688
 
Arno,

Thanks for that lead.

Great interview. I didn't realize Glen was so young.
Young enough to take us into a new world.

The president of Oracle told the steelmakers they better
be ready for a "new economy."

Full story here:
news.com

The old guard, including that writer at WSJ who bashed the Internets
just don't get and probably never will.



To: arno who wrote (19078)5/26/1999 3:17:00 PM
From: Pete Summers  Respond to of 40688
 
arno,

Thanks for the link. GZ articulates the PNL concept with ease. I urge all newbies and longs to listen to this interview.
.http://www.howtoconquertheworld.com/zagoren.htm



To: arno who wrote (19078)5/26/1999 6:49:00 PM
From: Martin Matthews  Respond to of 40688
 
Great post Arno!!!!!!

Thanks
MNM



To: arno who wrote (19078)5/26/1999 7:07:00 PM
From: jwk  Respond to of 40688
 
good read...here's the intro. Remember GZ made a specific mention of the need to "earn a profit".

cnnfn.com

Is the Net bubble bursting?
Several factors are driving the sector down, but analysts expect a recovery

May 26, 1999: 4:35 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Sooner or later, all bubbles deflate, either suddenly bursting or slowly leaking. With Internet stocks down sharply since last month, Wall Street watchers are wondering if the air finally has been let out of that bubble.
Despite Wednesday's rebound, largely due to investor bargain hunting, Internet stocks are significantly weaker than they were during their April highs.
Analysts said fears of rising interest rates play a part in the latest downturn, as well as a new-found investor desire for Internet firms to start showing actual profits.



To: arno who wrote (19078)5/26/1999 7:19:00 PM
From: jwk  Respond to of 40688
 
The TREND is our friend....

cnnfn.com

(intro only...)
U.K. drops e-commerce rules
Government withdraws new rules on Net business, aims to boost U.K. presence

May 26, 1999: 10:14 a.m. ET
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain said Wednesday it is axing plans for tough electronic commerce regulation, as it set new targets for "U.K. PLC" to cash in on booming global revenue expected to reach 500 billion pounds ($800 billion) by 2002.
The move confirmed a marked shift in government policy away from burdensome red tape toward a more minimalist approach to help British firms profit online.
"It means we have a strategy which strikes a balance between protecting society from criminals and creating the best environment in the world to do e-business," Prime Minister Tony Blair said.

(more at url...)




To: arno who wrote (19078)5/26/1999 7:24:00 PM
From: jwk  Respond to of 40688
 
now here's a real problem from a bit deeper in the story...

>>>...Byers (UK Trade Sec.) warned against complacency: "While the U.K. is still ahead of France and Italy, very rapid growth in Germany over the last year has put it on a par with the U.K. on most measures of information and communication technology uptake."...<<<

What ever will we do if the Euro's start competing amongst themselves to have the best e-commerce, b2b environment? damn.