Tuck a packet of Kleenex into your suit pocket -- it's investor conference time.
You can count on hearing a few sob stories this week as the
Robertson Stephens Tech 2001 Conference takes shape in San Francisco. In the natural progression of loss, last year's winter conference hit during the dizzy inebriation of the market before the Internet music died. This week's conference will provide tear-jerking renditions of a December and January gone sour, a baffling economy and a handful of stiff upper lips who say they're above the fray.
TSC's Dan Colarusso,
Adam Lashinsky,
Scott Moritz and
Tish Williams are reporting from the conference on how the companies are dealing with today's environment and whether they're offering any of the
visibility everyone wants.
Thursday, Feb. 15
Nvidia Takes a Victory Lap, Aims for New Markets
Loose Lips Float Corning's Hidden Dragon
CNet Bets on Its Brands
Network Associates' New CEO Tries to Rally His Team Wednesday, Feb. 14
TiVo, Liberate Look for More Revenue
With Cisco Stalking, Juniper Shows No Fear
Chipmakers Finding Little Love
Inktomi Targets Enterprise Market
Brocade Sees Big Opportunities, but Offers Little of What Investors Want
Despite Its Promise, Investors Want to See New Corvis Customers Tuesday, Feb. 13
Who's the Best? Palm. Just Ask Its CEO
MarchFirst Gets Cool Welcome
CMGI, divine interVentures Promise They've Found Focus
In Tougher Environment, Networkers Pitch Services as Revenue Generators
CMGI, divine Interventures Promise They've Found Focus Monday, Feb. 12
Terra Lycos Sees Possible Internet Ad Market Rebound
WorldCom Talks Trains, eBay's Traffic and, Oh Yeah, Its Spending
Micron Says Some PC Makers Working Through Memory Glut
Level 3 Mired in Price War It Asked For
Its Stock Struggling, Vignette Stresses Ties to Major Companies
Battered Emulex Tries to Soft-Pedal Order-Delay Issue
Intel Sticks With Guidance