home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- A PIONEER BITES THE DUST:
- Osborne Computer Corp., down to 85 employees from 1-thousand just
- a month ago, has been allowed to borrow up to $600-thousand dollars
- from three banks to keep payroll and operations afloat. Osborne
- filed for bankruptcy (9/13/83) after sales of its Executive and
- Osborne-1 computer slumped. Nobody at Osborne is making any
- predictions as to whether the company will survive; word is it's
- looking for a buyer. As for the so-called "cherry bomb" which was
- to be announced (an IBM-compatible Executive) said one laid-off
- engineer, "That's on hold, obviously." Adam Osborne has taken
- himself off the payroll. The company owes some $4.5-million in
- back debts.
- ----
- CONTACT: JAMES LOPES, ATTORNEY
- OSBORNE COMPUTER CORP.
- HAYWARD, CALIFORNIA
- 415-887-8080
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- FALLOUT FROM THE OSBORNE CLOUD:
- Meanwhile, analysts say there are plenty of lessons to be learned
- from Osborne's demise. Computer manufacturers have to be quick
- on their feet, ready to bring out new products within a year rather
- than wait two or three. With so much R&D at stake, costs will
- rise for all computer manufacturers, meaning investment capital
- will have to come thick and fast. There are some 250 personal
- computer manufacturers in the marketplace; there will be more
- shakeouts; analysts say those companies that make easy-to-use
- Lisa-like machines at low prices will have the best chance of
- survival.
- ----
- CONTACT: ALEX STEIN
- DATAQUEST, INC.
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
- 408-971-9000
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- SPEAKING OF LISA:
- Word is Hewlett-Packard is about to introduce a Lisa-like
- IBM-compatible PC. Industry executives are invited to a secret
- unveiling of the new baby on Tuesday (9/20/83) at HP's
- Palo Alto headquarters. Insiders say look for a break with
- their "verticle integration tradition" which means this time
- HP will use CPU's identical to IBM's and industry-standard,
- third-party software.
- ----
- CONTACT: HEWLETT-PACKARD
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA
- 415-857-1501
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- LISA AHEAD OF THE PACK:
- Apple says 165 software companies worldwide are developing
- application software for the Lisa computer. The first on the
- market is an accounting system from Open Systems, Inc. By
- year's end other business programs will be available. Apple is
- even offering workshops to software developers concerning how
- to write programs for the Lisa. All this, of course, means
- Apple is no fool when it comes to knowing software, not hardware
- sells the product.
- ----
- CONTACT: RENEE OLSEN
- APPLE COMPUTER
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA
- 408-973-2042
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- PEANUT STILL A WELL KEPT SECRET:
- Software developers just dying to jump on the peanut bandwagon
- are hoping IBM releases some information soon. The Peanut's
- introduction, probably late this year, will probably bring on
- a new era in the computer market--the first mass-appeal, low-
- priced 64K computer that plays games, and performs sophisticated
- chores. Among the potential peanut-eaters is a company called
- Spinnaker Software, which plans to buy the first Peanut on the
- market, and institute a crash program to develop as much software
- as possible in record time.
- ----
- CONTACT: WILLIAM BOWMAN, CHAIRMAN
- SPINNAKER SOFTWARE
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
- 617-868-4700
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- IBM CRACKS THE RECORD:
- It's a 512K-bit dynamic random access memory chip, and IBM
- unveiled the little wonder at a Symposium in Hawaii (9/13/83).
- The experimental computer memory chip has its brains from
- a technique called "plate pushing." The chip creates a double-
- strength electronic signal, pushing additional charges out of
- the chip's storage cells. Measuring 3/8-of an inch, the chip
- is 1/50th the width of a human hair.
- ----
- CONTACT: IBM
- ESSEX JUNCTION, VERMONT
- 802-769-0111
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- MEANWHILE IN THE ROM MARKET:
- Things are not so rosy. Read-Only-Memory chips are glutting
- factories and not selling well. Industry experts say this is due
- to the slumping video game industry. ROM chips sales did well just
- one year ago, but now this $700-million dedicated ROM business
- may find itself dedicated to obsolescence.
- ----
- CONTACT: ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL
- NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA
- 714-833-4378
- ----
- MOSTEK
- CARROLLTON, TEXAS
- 214-323-6000
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- CALLING ALL VIDEO GAMES:
- The nation's first phone-linked system of delivering video games
- to consumers with Atari video game consoles has been introduced
- by Control Video Corporation. The company says some 3-thousand
- homes nationwide now have access, through a special $60-dollar
- modem, to at least 65 games online. The games download to an
- 8K memory unit in the "Master Module" within a minute, the phone
- disconnects, and customers get about 10 plays for $1-dollar.
- Company execs say the advantage of the service is that customers
- can try out games before they buy them. Software companies can
- also keep track of which games are getting the most play.
- ----
- CONTACT: WILLIAM VON MEISTER, PRESIDENT
- CONTROL VIDEO CORPORATION
- VIENNA, VIRGINIA
- 703-448-8700
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- ENGINEERING VIDEOTEX:
- All the electronics buffs in the Northeast can rejoice over this
- one: a company called VideoLog is offering the first videotex
- service for the technically-inclined. The new cable-linked
- venture will include diagrams, logos, response curves, and all
- the graphs of electronic components to make an engineer's heart
- tingle. Inquiries about particular items can be made via an
- electronic "bingo card". The cost of the service: $10-dollars
- an hour.
- ----
- CONTACT: ALAN BRIGISH
- VIDEOTEX INFORMATION CORPORATION
- WILTON, CONNECTICUT
- 203-762-2274
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- TEXAS INSTRUMENTS AIMS FOR THE TOP:
- If you can't win on one extreme, try the other. That seems to
- be the logic behind T.I.'s latest venture. It's acquired 25%
- of LISP Machine, Inc., a company which makes computers for
- artificial intelligence research. As we will recall, T.I. took
- a pounding on the low end of the scale when its home computer
- sales dropped through the floor.
- ----
- CONTACT: LISP MACHINES, INC.
- CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA
- 213-390-3642
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- BEWARE OF WAFER:
- Get ready for another scandal in this so-called "clean" industry.
- A research firm has found chip-workers are being exposed to
- phospine, a toxic gas used to produce the layers in a chip.
- It happens when the wafers are dunked into hydrofluoric acid
- during the etching process. Normally ventilation hoods remove
- the gas, but if they don't workers can experience tooth and
- jaw problems. So far there are no reports of tooth-ache sick-outs
- at any semiconductor plants.
- ---
- CONTACT: BALAZS ANALYTICAL LABORATORY
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA
- 415-965-0423
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- WORLD'S FIRST ELECTRONIC UNIVERSITY:
- Picture this: You push a button on your home computer, a digital
- picture of your instructor appears, "teacher" asks you what you
- want out of this course in "How to Discuss Sex with Your Child."
- Class begins, on your screen. A test is live, next week. Two
- Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are actually launching this on-line
- university this year. Connecting through Tymnet, TeleLearning
- Systems is offering 170 different courses to home users. The
- software package costs less than $230-dollars, courses cost
- $35 to $100-dollars. Company execs expect to have 1-million
- students online by the end of '84.
- ----
- CONTACT: RON GORDON AND THOMAS WHITE
- TELELEARNING SYSTEMS, INC.
- SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
- 415-928-2800
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- AM STEREO SETBACK:
- We'll wait a little longer to get stereo AM-radio in most cities.
- The FCC has ordered Harris Corp. to take its stereo exciter off
- the market, despite the fact that 60 stations nationwide are already
- using it. The FCC claims there's not enough technical data on the
- AM stereo exciter to warrant wide-spread use. AM stereo is expected
- to challenge the dominance of FM stereo because of the low cost of
- the broadcasting and receiving equipment.
- ----
- CONTACT: JOHN REED
- FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-655-4000
- ----
- HARRIS CORPORATION
- QUINCY, ILLINOIS
- 217-222-8200
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- HARDER TO CRACK THAN FORT KNOX:
- Here's some advice to would-be burglars of Los Alamos: don't
- bother. Access to classified computers is controlled by 4 Cray-1's,
- one CDC 7600 and 1 CDC Cyber 825. Access to secret files is possible
- only through special terminals in restricted areas. Those terminals
- are electronically shielded per Tempest specs, or kept in screened
- rooms. Lines to the computers pass through welded steel conduits.
- Then there's encryption equipment. And, you need a so-called "Q"
- clearance to get to the terminals.
- ----
- CONTACT: LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY
- LOS ALAMOS, NEW MEXICO
- 505-667-5061
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- KEEPING THE LID ON SOFTWARE:
- Yet another software protection scheme comes from the Vault
- Corporation. This one consists of a hybrid hardware/software
- technique for putting a "fingerprint" onto the master diskette.
- Copies can be made, but can't be run unless the master disk with
- the fingerprint is in the system. The Association of Data Processing
- Service Organizations is ready to endorse the idea. Vault is
- gearing up to make 200-thousand of these uncrackable diskettes
- per month, with designs on making 2-million a month in the
- future.
- ----
- CONTACT: VAULT CORPORATION
- ARCADIA, CALIFORNIA
- 213-574-8594
- ----
- [***][9/19/83][***]
- BANKING ON AN EARTHQUAKE:
- Billions of dollars are wired daily to and from California
- banks. If an earthquake knocks out power, money-managers
- would find themselves with reams of blank balance sheets.
- That's why a California task force is issuing guidelines
- for protecting bank computers from the expected 8.3 quake
- in California. Recommendations include keeping plenty of
- cash on hand, and hardening computer centers from potential
- shock.
- ----
- CONTACT: DALE HATFIELD, TASK FORCE CHAIR
- BANK OF CALIFORNIA
- SAN FRANCISCO, CALILFORNIA
- 415-765-0400
- ----
-
-