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- [***][8/7/83][***]
- OSBORNE RETRENCHES FOR 'CHERRY BOMB':
- In two weeks Osborne Computer Corp. is expected to release
- an IBM-compatible portable computer, an upgrade of its
- "Executive-1", and officials are timing the release two
- weeks ahead of IBM's "Peanut." This word comes at a time
- when the company has closed its Monmouth Junction, N.J.
- plant and cut a third of its workforce at its Hayward,
- California facility, laying-off almost 300 workers--the
- layoffs due to dwindling sales of its original "Osborne"
- and a sluggish market for its "Executive-1".
- ----
- CONTACT: JEFF BOYNTON
- OSBORNE COMPUTER CORP.
- HAYWARD, CALIFORNIA
- 415-887-8080
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- MATTEL TOYS WITH 'GETTING OUT':
- Another 400 employees will be jobless, following a layoff
- of 260 last month at Mattel Inc. The company's electronics
- division, which markets Intellivision home video games
- expects to report a loss for more than $100-million so far
- this year. Mattel spokesmen deny reports the company
- wants "out" of the electronics business altogether, but
- word is the company doesn't expect to make back the
- $50 million in R&D spent on its only computer--the
- "Aquarius" which retails for $70-$90-dollars.
- ----
- CONTACT: MATTEL INC.
- HAWTHORNE, CALIFORNIA
- 213-978-5150
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- BAN ON PROFIT-BOOSTING:
- The Securities and Exchange Commission is slamming the
- lid on a technique that allows software companies to
- give investors a 'false' picture of their profits.
- The technique allows a software company to count as
- earnings part of the research and development cost
- of software that's sold or leased. Only companies
- that filed with the Commission before April 14 will be
- allowed to continue this practice. Others are now
- required to tell shareholders how much this technique
- boosted "profits".
- ----
- CONTACT: SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-655-4000
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- PIRATES PLUNDERING THE PROFITS:
- More testimony before the House Judiciary Committee--
- this time from Tom Dunlap of Intel. He's calling for
- the establishment of "mask works" for semiconductors
- as a new provision in the copyright law. It's called
- the Semiconductor Chip Protection Act. American IC
- producers claim the reason that Japan holds 70% of
- the worldwide chip market is because they've
- systematically copied U.S. chip designs, reproduced
- the chips, and sold them for less. This has cost the
- U.S. billions of dollars. The bill would be the first
- step in establishing an international copyright law.
- ----
- CONTACT: TOM DUNLAP
- INTEL
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA
- 408-987-8080
-
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- MORE FRUIT-COCKTAIL FROM TAIWAN:
- Meanwhile in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce,
- Apple Computer's Al Eisenstadt said 20,000 Apple II "fakes"
- are pouring into this country, all programmed verbatim
- in Applesoft Basic. He called for the Committee to
- strengthen U.S. Customs inspections, and act to change
- Taiwan's murky copyright laws to respect U.S. patents.
- He expects the next wave of counterfeit computers to
- resemble Apple's "Lisa" which cost $55-million to develop.
- If all this gets worse, he says, American software
- manufacturing will all but die.
- ----
- CONTACT: AL EISENSTADT
- APPLE COMPUTER
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA
- 408-973-2042
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- COMPUTER RAGS ON THE RISE:
- There are at least 200 computer magazines available with
- more to come. Word from Wayne Green, Inc. is that it will
- launch 8 more computer magazines within the year. (W. G.
- already publishes 5 computer magazines including
- "Microcomputing".) The publisher of "PC" and 2 other rags
- plans to launch an Apple-oriented monthly. Look for more
- mags for kids and for families. Right now the biggest
- seller is "Personal Computing" which claims a circulation
- of 470-thousand.
- ----
- CONTACT: WAYNE GREEN, INC.
- PETERBOROUGH, NEW HAMPSHIRE
- 603-924-9471
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- HEALING OLD WOUNDS:
- A storm of protest still greets the receptionists at
- Mead Data Central, who hear from customers, angry that
- the company now requires special terminals to access
- NEXIS and LEXIS, the most comprehensive on-line data
- base in the world. Mead claims the new terminals were
- necessary because the system was developed before
- industry standards existed. Mead promises to soon make
- its data available for access by IBM Personal Computers and
- other ASCII-based computers. So far service for these
- computers is just available in Washington D.C. but service
- is expected to other parts of the country before year's
- end.
- ----
- CONTACT: ANNE BAINES
- MEAD DATA CENTRAL
- DAYTON, OHIO
- 513-433-5676
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- DESIGNS ON THE FUTURE:
- Almost 50% of all mechanical engineering is today done by
- CAD/CAM. Here's a breakdown on the money-makers: IBM
- holds 35% of the market, Computervision 25% and McAuto
- (McDonald Douglas) holds 6%. Electronic engineering
- accounts for 27% of the CAD/CAM market; the leaders are
- Computervision (34%) and Calma (30%). The CAD/CAM
- business earned $1.3-billion last year.
- ----
- CONTACT: DARATECH
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
- 617-354-2339
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- CHEAPER THAN A CAD-ILLAC:
- How about designing your next home, your new boat, even
- your new car on a computer? A Maryland Company plans to
- make CADs available to home users with the introduction
- of its Vector Sketch system. Compatible with IBM PC's,
- it retails for $7500 and features a sensitized drawing
- surface and a 'zoom' function. It even produces digitized
- representations of photos as a base of work. Its maker,
- GTCO Corp. also produces complete CAD systems for
- industry.
- ----
- CONTACT: DONALD CARRUTH
- GTCO CORPORATION
- ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND
- 301-424-7077
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- THE THIRTY SECOND CIRCUIT:
- A Southern California firm has introduced a system for
- making a printed circuit board, direct from CAD data
- in half a minute. Conventionally the process takes
- up to 15 hours of painstaking photoplotting. But
- Excellon's DIS2000 laser pattern generator can directly
- expose an 18-by-24-inch photoresist-covered board in
- 30 seconds using a scanning laser, bypassing the need
- for an artwork master.
- ----
- CONTACT: EXCELLON AUTOMATION
- TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA
- 213-325-8000
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- COMMODORE IN COURT:
- In 2 separate lawsuits, Commodore is suing a keyboard
- manufacturer and Atari. Commodore contends 35-thousand keyboards
- it bought from AMP, Inc. (Harrisburg, Pa.) were defective. The
- keyboards are in Commodore's MAX home computers sold in Japan.
- In the other suit, the company charges that Warner, owner of
- Atari, "enticed (three engineers) to leave Commodore." The
- three then developed a keyboard and other peripherals that
- the company planned to sell to Atari, according to the suit.
- ----
- CONTACT: LEONARD SCHREIBER, GENERAL COUNSEL
- COMMODORE INTERNATIONAL, LTD.
- WEST CHESTER, PENNSYLVANIA
- 215-431-9100
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- TALKING THE SAME LANGUAGE:
- Microcom Inc. plans to make its Microcom Networking Protocol
- the hoped-for standard for communication between all personal
- computers. Significant is the fact that the company has
- received the endorsements of several giants in the field,
- namely Apple, VisiCorp, GTE and Telenet.
- ----
- CONTACT: MICROCOM, INC.
- NORWOOD, MASSACHUSETTS
- 617-762-9310
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- PRETTY PICTURE AT A PRETTY HIGH PRICE:
- IBM has developed a very high resolution display which
- incorporates 32 semiconductor lasers and a liquid crystal
- cell. It has 64-million elements (about 8000 X 8000) or
- 256 times more than a conventional t.v. set. Its
- expected to cost more than $50,000 initially, but
- advances in integrated optics may bring the cost down
- significantly.
- ----
- CONTACT: BOB FOLEY, MARKING MANAGER
- IBM
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
- 408-256-3265
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- A TERMINAL FOR EVERY STUDENT:
- By 1990 every school kid should have access to a computer.
- More than a third of U.S. public schools now own 250-thousand
- computers (29-thousand public schools) compared with 53-thousand
- three years ago. Testifying before the Senate Subcommittee
- on Taxation and Debt Management, school officials are calling for
- more tax credits for industries supplying computers to
- schools.
- ----
- CONTACT: PATRICIA VARDEN
- TEACHERS COLLEGE, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
- NEW YORK CITY
- 212-678-3710
- ----
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- EXPLOSION IN EDUCATIONAL SOFTWARE:
- One market researcher expects the educational software market
- to explode from $70-million this year to more than $1-billion
- by 1987. Once purchased only by schools, educational
- software is now being purchased for home use. Firms that
- make the software fun, as well as educational are doing the
- biggest business, including SKU Inc, of Berkeley, Ca., and
- the Learning Company of Menlo Park, California.
- ----
- CONTACT: FUTURE COMPUTING
- RICHARDSON, TEXAS
- 214-783-9375
- ----
- ****16****
- [***][8/7/83][***]
- A start-up firm is going to produce electronic games that
- demand physical exertion as well. Healthtronics will
- market an exercise bike which possesses attributes of
- the real thing, but controlled as part of a video game.
- It will also calculate calories burned and heart rate.
- If you don't mind a bit more money, how about Perceptronics'
- videodisc-based exercise bike. As you pedal, you will
- electronically tour scenic suburbs. The price on this
- is a healthy $20-thousand dollars.
- ----
- CONTACT: HEALTHTRONICS
- CAMPBELL, CALIFORNIA
- 408-370-1411
- ----
- PERCEPTRONICS
- WOODLAND HILLS, CALIFORNIA
- 213-884-7470
- ----
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