He also predicts that ad networks will fret over working with a company that has direct ties to publishers and advertisers.
Which leaves central bankers and politicians with plenty to fret about as they wonder whether they may be forced to postpone the project.
Companies that have seldom sold AMD systems now fret about the possibility of competing with the K7, which may substantially outperform anything in Intel's arsenal for the next several months.
Flexibility with financial caps, they fret, is simply code for palming off the financial burdens of Medicaid on to the states.
Even Alan Greenspan, the cautious chairman of the Federal Reserve, had started to fret about what the government would do with all the surplus revenues filling its coffers.
Europe-focused exporters were under pressure in Asia as investors continued to fret over euro-zone debt problems, with sentiment cautious before the Spanish debt sale.
Investors will, with luck, no longer have to fret about how the country will cover its financing needs next year.
Where the Pilgrims drank unpasteurized milk filled with potentially life threatening bacteria, we fret about drinking anything out of plastic containing BPA, even though Health Canada pointed out that we would need to drink more than 1, 000 liters a day to exceed the safety level (which has an additional safety factor to make the safe level even safer).
The more that markets fretted about Italy, the more they would also fret about France, given its strong trading and financial links with Italy.
Developers also fret about just how open--and profitable--apps developed with Apple's SDK will be.
Germans still fret about moral hazard: a bail-out would mean that Greece gets away with years of irresponsible fiscal policy and could set a bad precedent for other euro delinquents.
Its enemies fret about the fact that Windows 98 fully integrates Microsoft's Internet Explorer Web browser with the operating system for the first time.
And though many insiders fret about exaggerating the Fund's ability to head off crises, the focus goes down well with Paul O'Neill, America's treasury secretary, who has made a big deal about preventing, rather than merely responding to, crises.
ECONOMIST: The International Monetary Fund: Köhler’s new crew | The
Some fret that the more central bankers pronounce on fiscal policy, the more Congress may be tempted to meddle with monetary policy.
Some fund managers also worry that banks they sue will restrict their allocation of bonds in future offerings, while hedge funds fret that their prime brokers will close off finance to them, says David Grais, a lawyer who works with aggrieved investors.
ECONOMIST: Banks are under assault from buyers of mortgage securities
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