F-5 Freedom Fighter, a 1960s US jet fighter produced for export
F-5 Lightning, photo-reconnaissance version of the P-38 Lightning
Shenyang F-5, export version of the Chinese Shenyang J-5 jet fighter
professional wrestling throw used by Brock Lesnar as a finisher
Megadeth is an American heavy metal band led by founder, frontman, and songwriter Dave Mustaine. ... David Ellefson (born November 12, 1964 in Jackson, Minnesota) is a bass guitar player who is currently a member of Temple of Brutality, F5 and Killing Machine, but is best known as a former member of the thrash metal/speed metal band Megadeth. ... F5 Networks, Inc (NASDAQ: [FFIV]), originally manufactured and sold some of the first load balancing products. ... A tornado in central Oklahoma. ... The Fujita scale (F-Scale), or Fujita-Pearson scale, rates a tornados intensity by the damage it inflicts on human-built structures and sometimes on vegetation. ... The Nikon F5 was a 35 mm film-based single-lens reflex camera body manufactured by Nikon from 1996 through 2004. ... Coagulation is the thickening or congealing of any liquid into solid clots. ... Cosmic Air is an airline based in Kathmandu, Nepal. ... The F-5 Freedom Fighter (or Tiger II) is a low cost entry level supersonic fighter aircraft, designed and built by Northrop in the United States, beginning in 1962. ... P-38 may also refer to the P-38, an army-issue can opener, or to the Walther P38 handgun The Lockheed P-38 Lightning was one of the most important American fighters of the Second World War. ... J-5 of the PLAAF The J-5 or F-5 (Not to be confused with the American made F-5 Freedom Fighter) is a Chinese-built Single-seat jet interceptor and fighter aircraft derived from the Russian MiG-17. ... Konnan performs his Facejam (sitout facebuster) during an episode of TNA iMPACT! A.J. Styles performs his Styles Clash (belly-to-back inverted mat slam) on Christopher Daniels. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article may require cleanup. ...
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In June 2000, F5 celebrated its 11th consecutive quarter of revenue growth, but its stock was trading for $36 per share, down sharply from the $160 per share at the beginning of the year.
F5 was reliant on the types of companies who were suffering the most, deriving 80 percent of its revenue from dot.com start-ups.
F5 went from being 80 percent reliant on dot.com customers to 90 percent reliant on large enterprises." Revamped and financially on the mend, F5 was ready to take on Cisco and Nortel, forgetting its size as it sought to improve its ranking in the traffic management market.