Technology Stocks | Apple Inc.


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To: Dan Fleuris who wrote (28296)6/15/2000 2:05:00 PM
From: Jim Patterson   of 154308
 
It is just one of many trades.

Reggie makes his trades based on price movement, and does not consider fundamental issues. When the stock was trading below 90 on June 13 the stock was in a very precarious position. It managed to rebound, but it is not completely out of the woods yet.

The trade works or it does not. We have no personal agenda concerning the stock or the company. I know that if you stick to our system you will come out ahead in the long run.

Jim

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To: Dan Fleuris who wrote (28295)6/15/2000 2:44:00 PM
From: WebDrone   of 154308
 
Dan, I think I found some pizzaz-

I've got some anecdotal evedence that Apple is making a decent move to retake a good part of the education market.

This summer, I'm taking a course for teachers about how they can develop portfolios of their work in electronic format, and post them on the internet.

There are multiple reasons teachers want to do this; not the least of them are national trends across state standards that require such demonstrations as part of the teacher certification and recertification process.

We are talking about web pages with text, photos, audio tapes, video clips, and multimedia hoo-ha up the kazoo. The course is being taught in a UW-Madison lab stuffed full of G3s. It is simply taken for granted that you can digitize audio and video and make quicktime clips without major fuss.

I asked "What about schools that are based on Windows?"
The answer was "Well, I guess it can't be that hard- they should be able to do that, too- right?" Well--- Not out of the box! Not without extra boards and software! A lil' black iMac can do this stuff with ease.

There is also a national trend for student constructed portfolios. And kids are smart- they see video, they want to make and show video. And nothing else will do!

Now, you can get a lil' black iMac, or you can order a Dell and some hardware (?) and somebody (?) can hook it up and somebody (?) can train you on the quirks of that setup and then the original (?) can troubleshoot...

ANECDOTE:

It's summer time, and I'm seeing a lot of Apple STYROFOAM PACKING MATERIALS out in the halls of the University as folks install their new rigs for Fall. Education market looks STRONG around here! I expect it's a trend.

Web

I agree- 2 500 MHz processors equal 1,000 MHz to the average consumer. Three would be... you do the math!

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To: Jim Patterson who wrote (28294)6/15/2000 10:51:00 PM
From: Beachbumm   of 154308
 
"...a 6% loss is better than an 8% loss..."

Excuse me, I have no idea who Reggie is, but I hope people don't actually pay him for this sort of nonsense. Stick with Will Rogers: buy stocks that go up; if they don't go up, don't buy them.

Beachbumm

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To: Beachbumm who wrote (28299)6/16/2000 12:19:00 AM
From: High Grader   of 154308
 
"...a 6% loss is better than an 8% loss..."

I would call that a wedgie!

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To: WebDrone who wrote (28298)6/16/2000 9:28:00 AM
From: BillHoo   of 154308
 
<<The course is being taught in a UW-Madison lab stuffed full of G3s.>>

Sounds, good, but I have a friend who is the IT Manager for a relatively large private elementary school. About 4 years ago, he was bragging about how Microsoft sent him down to North Carolina (expenses paid) for the Microsoft Education Technology Summit.

He was raving about it! His school is all NT and students have Win95 laptops. Of course, this is a school that can afford a fulltime NT administrator. That's the weakness of NT, requires too much time.

Anyway, MSFT does a good job seeling the technology to schools. Apple needs to counter that without playing MSFT's game. Then it would be a war of who could BUY the most educational minds.

-Bill_H

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To: BillHoo who wrote (28301)6/16/2000 9:03:00 PM
From: THE WATSONYOUTH   of 154308
 
Moto is all ready about 9 months late with their bulk .18um G4s and now they are going to deliver G4 at .18um on SOI and then "quickly" move to .13um??? Will Apple's suffering ever end???? Meanwhile, on the IBM front, they are still pushing the dead ended G3 design which Apple doesn't want. Madness. Sheer madness.

eet.com 

"At the VLSI Technology Symposium here this past week, managers from Motorola's Semiconductor Products Sector told
EE Times that the company will use an SOI process ( initially at 0.18-micron design rules but moving quickly to 0.13 micron ) to build
an Altivec G4 PowerPC processor.The chip is to sample late this year and go into volume production in mid-2001. Performance will be "well over a gigahertz," said Suresh Venkatesan, who is in charge of developing Motorola's 130-nanometer (0.13-micron) technology."


THE WATSONYOUTH

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To: Trey McAtee who wrote ()6/17/2000 10:48:00 PM
From: N4ZQ   of 154308
 
Slightly off thread but...is there an equivalent to 'napster' in the MAC universe? Apparently their website only works for PCs. Thanks

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To: N4ZQ who wrote (28303)6/18/2000 12:33:00 AM
From: Kevin Monroe   of 154308
 
Affirmative:

blackholemedia.com 

Listen to the music.

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To: Kevin Monroe who wrote (28304)6/18/2000 7:22:00 PM
From: Carolyn   of 154308
 
(From BullMarket Investor)


5. REALNETWORKS' NEW WEAPON: APPLE
by Kevin Prigel

Related Stories: streetadvisor.com 

Apple Computer (AAPL, $91) and RealNetworks (RNWK, $46) entered into an
agreement allowing Real to license Apple's Quicktime streaming media
technology for incorporation into its server software. The winner here?
Everyone except Microsoft (MSFT, $73).

A good portion of the world's video production is done on Apple's
Macintosh systems. And with the rising popularity of home video
publishing, this production is moving beyond the studio and into the home.
With Quicktime as the native Apple streaming format, this should be the de
facto choice for streaming.

However, most of the world continues to serve the Internet with Unix and
Windows NT. This has led to the dominance of RealNetworks and Microsoft's
Media Player streaming formats, while Apple runs a distant third.

The gap between the streaming technologies of Microsoft and Real continues
to close, but Real needs some advantage in this war. Linking up with the
company that controls the production was the weapon it needed.

Video producers will now be able to produce their work in Quicktime format
and stream it from a RealNetworks server. This combo will be the choice
for the broadband future.

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To: N4ZQ who wrote (28303)6/19/2000 11:24:00 AM
From: BillHoo   of 154308
 
Yes there is. If you go to the Napster website, they have a link to a site that produces Macster.

Here, I'll save you the trouble.

blackholemedia.com 

The Napster site also indicates that they are developing a Mac product, but offer Macster until then.

-Bill_H

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