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- [***][7/17/83][***]
- VIDEOTEX FORECAST:
- The Videotex Industry Association chairman says
- the videotex market will grow to an up to $15
- billion business by 1990. Videotex allows cable-
- TV subscribers to do banking and shopping in the home,
- without the aid of a personal computer. Larry Pfister
- claims videotex will even change traditional transport
- practices for the delivery of goods. A problem in need
- of work, however, will be how to protect the privacy
- of the videotex user.
- ----
- CONTACT: LARRY PFISTER
- VIDEOTEX INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK
- 212-408-8600
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- YOUR OWN PAY PHONE:
- Several businesses, encouraged by AT&T's deregulation
- are manufacturing personal pay telephones. The F.C.C.
- hasn't ruled on the legality of this yet, but Tonka
- Tools, for instance, is selling pay phones at $600 each
- which cost a caller 25-cents to use for an amount of
- time set by the owner. Already 7-Eleven stores are
- planning to install their own 7-Eleven pay phones if
- the legal hurdles are knocked down.
- ----
- CONTACT: TONKA TOOLS
- MOUND, MINNESOTA
- 612-471-0126
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- ATARI'S FUTURE PRODUCTS:
- Include four new computers, a light-pen for graphics
- and a letter-quality printer...all under $200 each.
- In January Atari introduces a $1-2,000, 16-bit, IBM-compatible
- portable computer and unspecified "other products"
- that are IBM and Atari-compatible. Admitting the
- Atari name is closely associated with "toys", Atari
- hopes to win consumers through its low prices.
- ----
- CONTACT: JOHN CAVALIER
- ATARI
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
- 408-745-4142
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- ARCADE PROFITS DROP:
- The discouraging news is that video arcade profits
- are expected to drop from $7 billion last year to
- $5.3 billion by this December, with many arcade-houses
- seeing income off 25 to 50 percent. Many are banking
- on new types of games to win back the kids, such as
- the laser-disk animated cartoon "Dragon's Lair" from a
- former Walt Disney cartoonist Don Bluth.
- ----
- CONTACT: CHRISTOPHER KIRBY
- SANFORD BERNSTEIN AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK CITY
- 212-486-5800
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- APPLE CREDIT CARD:
- Because many are reluctant to dish out several thousand
- for a personal computer, Apple is introducing its Apple Card,
- a credit card useable for all Apple product purchases.
- Finance charges will be the going market rate. Cards are
- available at all Apple dealers.
- ----
- CONTACT: APPLE COMPUTER
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA
- 408-973-2042
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- $7-MILLION SUPERCOMPUTER:
- It's a series of six black monoliths, reminiscient of
- the movie "2001"....the Denelcor executes 160 million
- instructions per second, and within three years is
- expected to process 12 billion per second...that's 500
- times more powerful than any supercomputer made today.
- Denelcor hopes its "computer architecture" will give
- other supercomputer-makers (Cray Research and Control
- Data Corp.) a run for their money.
- ----
- CONTACT: JAMES HILL, PRESIDENT
- DENELCOR INCORPORATED
- AURORA, COLORADO
- 303-337-7900
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- SUPERCOMPUTER RECRUITING:
- Bobby Inman, former spy with the CIA and now head of
- the 12-company consortium in Austin planning to build
- the world's ultimate thinking machine was at Lawrence
- Livermore Laboratory in California, giving scientists
- a pep talk on the project, hoping to win their participation.
- Inman has been attempting to recruit the world's top
- scientists to the $150 million a year consortium.
- ----
- CONTACT: BOBBY INMAN
- MICROELECTRONICS AND COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY CORP.
- AUSTIN, TEXAS
- 512-480-8765
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- SILICON SHORTAGE PREDICTED:
- Monsanto predicts the boom in IC manufacturing and sales
- will cause a shortage of silicon wafers by the end of the
- year. Monsanto is the largest manufacturer of the raw
- materials used for silicon chips.
- ----
- CONTACT: HASKELL WADDLE, VP OF MARKETING
- MONSANTO COMPANY
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA
- 415-493-3300
- ----
- SEMICONDUCTOR EQUIPMENT & MATERIALS INSTITUTE
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA
- 4150964-5111
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- HUGHES UP IN THE AIR:
- Due to an estate battle being fought in a Delaware
- court, Hughes Aircraft faces an uncertain future. Hughes,
- the largest industrial employer in California has been
- a leader in high technology, making the first working
- laser. The electronic/aerospace firm, owned by the Howard
- Hughes Medical Institute, could be separated from its
- trustees as a result of the estate dispute.
- ----
- CONTACT: HUGHES AIRCRAFT
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
- 213-670-1515
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- VIDEO TERMINAL REGULATION?
- The organization "9 to 5" (National Association of Working
- Women) is proposing legislation (House Bill #2658) to
- mandate ergonomically-correct video work stations
- and to require employers to pay for annual eye exams for
- VDT operators.
- ----
- CONTACT: REP. ELIZABETH METAYER
- HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-224-3121
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- NEW ROBOTICS ORGANIZATION:
- The Robotics Society of America, an organization formed
- to promote the potential of robots in America, and to
- hash out their philosophical implications on our lives, held
- its first meeting in Palo Alto. The meeting included
- demonstrations of Androbot's TOPO, Microbot's TEACH-MOVER
- and Heathkit's HERO, although founder Dr. Walter Tunik says
- most robots are still being made by amateurs and hobbyists
- working in their garages.
- ----
- CONTACT: DR. WALTER TUNIK
- ROBOTICS SOCIETY OF AMERICA
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA
- 415-326-6095
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- COUNTERFEIT RAMS:
- The problem surfaced at Hitachi recently when 1,000
- 64K dynamic RAMs were returned as defective. Hitachi
- discovered they were counterfeit. Hitachi expects to
- make 5 million legitimate RAMs per month, and if the
- counterfeiting operation isn't stopped, it could cost
- the company plenty of money...especially the RAMs used
- in military or aerospace applications, which cost up to
- 20 times that of the commercial equivalent.
- ----
- CONTACT: HITACHI LTD.
- TOKYO, JAPAN
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- LAWSUITS FOR FOUL-UPS:
- In two unrelated cases, electronics manufacturers are
- suing equipment-makers for faulty parts. Seeq Technology
- claims defective wafer-steppers made by Canon caused a
- 6-month delay in their second-generation EEPROM's. Also
- Sprague Electric Company and General Instrument have
- filed complaints against Computervision and Applied
- Materials for projection aligners that failed.
- ----
- CONTACT: SPRAGUE ELECTRIC COMPANY
- NORTH ADAMS, MASSACHUSETTS
- 413-664-4411
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- JUGGLING CP/M:
- Digital Research is expected to recover some of its lead
- in the operating-system market with its introduction of a
- multi-tasking concurrent CP/M for the IBM PC. In a
- recent demo, four programs ran simultaneously: word
- processing, data base management, communications, and
- project management.
- ----
- CONTACT: DIGITAL RESEARCH
- PACIFIC GROVE, CALIFORNIA
- 408-649-3896
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- TRADE WAR ON HOLD:
- The Semiconductor Industry Association says that progress
- is being made in talks between the U.S. and Japan over
- trade, and has postponed its call for trade sanctions
- against Japan. The S.I.A. has contended that the Japanese
- routinely practice unfair trade policies by restricting
- the sale of U.S.-made semiconductors in Japan.
- ----
- CONTACT: WARREN DAVIS, V.P. FOR GOV'T AFFAIRS
- SEMICONDUCTOR INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
- 408-255-3522
- ----
- [***][7/17/83][***]
- WORLD'S SMALLEST COMPUTER:
- It's sold by CompuGift, Inc. The pint-sized portable
- measures 4 and a half by 6 inches...it sports a full
- typewriter keyboard and calculator keypad. Available
- in beige, gray, yellow or magenta, it costs just
- $9.99. Of course, buyers don't get a guarantee....
- and if it doesn't work you can use it as a paper
- weight!
- ----
- CONTACT: COMPUGIFT INC.
- MISSION VIEJO, CALIFORNIA
- 714-768-8223
- ----
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