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- [***][2/14/84][***]
- IBM TIGHTENS THE NOOSE:
- A new portable computer, priced at $2,795, sporting 256K, a single
- floppy drive, a built-in nine-inch monitor, weighing 30-pounds, and
- able to run all IBM programs has been announced by IBM. The company
- says the portable will be available March 1. Analysts say the new
- portable IBM, dubbed not coincidentally the IBM Portable Personal
- Computer, looks a lot like the Compaq computer, made in Houston, which
- has dominated the portable IBM-compatible market through 1983.
- IBM expects to ship 2.5 million units by year's end, but warns initially
- supplies will be limited. An added benefit of the new Portable PC is
- that it can run on a "cluster" program, which will link it to up to
- 64 other IBM computers in a network.
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- CONTACT: IBM
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK
- 212-407-6942
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- [***][2/14/84][***]
- THREE GIANTS TO ENTER YOUR HOME:
- CBS, IBM and Sears Roebuck & Company say they're planning a joint videotex
- service that will be available to home computer owners "in the next few
- years." While the details of this new project are unclear, the videotex
- service will offer home banking, shopping, and electronic newspaper
- services to subscribers with computers throughout the country. At this
- reading, the videotex will not be available through cable television
- subscription, therefore you won't be able to see the services on your
- television set. The companies admit hardware and software problems
- have to be worked out. Among the services we can expect to be offered:
- Sears catalog shopping, purchasing of Allstate Insurance, or securing
- investments through Dean Witter Reynolds, as well as interactive shopping,
- messaging and video game playing.
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- CONTACT: SEARS-IBM-CBS
- SEARS & ROEBUCK
- CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
- 312-875-2500
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- [***][2/14/84][***]
- COPY CATS:
- IBM settled out-of-court last week with two computer distributors that
- it had charged with copyright infringement. The defendents were
- Corona Data Systems and Handwell Corporation. IBM had charged the companies
- had copied its Input-Output system code which transmits language between
- the keyboard, display and terminal. Handwell has been importing IBM-
- compatible machines from Taiwan; Corona manufactures its own Corona PC.
- A Corona spokesman implies IBM got the idea of chasing down copyright
- infringements after Apple's success in doing so. No money changed
- hands, but the agreements do affect future activities of the affected
- companies. IBM doesn't rule out future lawsuits.
- ----
- CONTACT: LARRY LETITO, VP MARKETING
- CORONA DATA SYSTEMS
- SAN JOSE, CA.
- 408-295-6988
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- [***][2/14/84][***]
- VICTORIOUS RESCUE:
- Victor may soon be out of hot water thanks to its British distributor,
- Applied Computer Techniques. ACT has offered to bail out the bankrupt
- computer-maker; no price has been disclosed. ACT distributes the
- Apricot computer, among others, and promises to buy off most of Victor's
- debt by acquiring rights to make Victor products in the U.K. as well as
- obtain worldwide manufacturing and distribution rights. Victor hasn't
- said it it will accept the offer, but says spokesman Gary Cohan, "We're
- not going to reject anything that's a serious offer." Victor has
- amassed over $100 million in back debts. The company was sued by six
- major debtors two weeks ago and consented to involuntary bankruptcy.
- Operations at the plant are now at a virtual halt.
- ----
- CONTACT: GARY COHAN, VICTOR VP AND GEN. COUNSEL
- VICTOR TECHNOLOGIES INC.
- SCOTTS VALLEY, CA.
- 408-438-7000
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-
- [***][2/14/84][***]
- ANOTHER BRIT TO THE RESCUE?
- A hot rumor--friend of mine, a reliable source, says Thorne-EMI, the giant
- U.K. manufacturer of electronics is offering a sizeable amount to purchase
- Perfect Software, the debt-ridden manufacturer of Perfect Speller, Perfect
- Writer, among others. He says the offer is "under 10-million" and is
- an offer for less than controlling interest of the company. No official
- of Perfect would confirm or deny, but an internal memo tells employees,
- "A number of offers are under consideration." There are rumors, says my
- source, that Thorne-EMI may in fact, be given the go-ahead to bail out
- the troubled company.
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- CONTACT: PERFECT SOFTWARE
- BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA
- 415-527-2626
- ----
- [***][2/14/84][***]
- MIXED NEWS FROM COLECO:
- Two items worth note--this week Coleco laid off 50 employees at
- its administrative offices in Hartford, Conn. Why? Well, Coleco says
- it's "consolidating". It is known that Coleco has back debts totalling
- $150 million, trouble making trouble-free computers, and a fairly low
- profit margin, according to most analysts. But you have to congratulate
- the company for its ambition. Coleco is planning to market a device
- that will make its Adam computer IBM-compatible. The plug-in
- attachment will be available, says the company, later this year. Also
- Coleco has just signed an agreement with Digital Research, in which
- Coleco will manufacture the software firm's personal CP/M operating
- system. That's expected to make a large base of CP/M software available
- for the Adam.
- ----
- CONTACT: COLECO INDUSTRIES
- HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
- 203-278-0280
- ----
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- [***][2/14/84][***]
- DRIVE STANDARD:
- Disk/Trend Inc., a market analyst, is predicting that by 1986,
- shipments of floppy drives worldwide will reach 23 million--and most of
- those drives will be the two sided 5 1/4" minifloppies. This size has
- become the industry standard already, so much that many companies
- manufacturing larger or smaller floppies are having trouble making ends
- meet. Further, the company predicts half-height 5 1/4-inch floppy
- drives will account for 90% of the 2-sided drives and 60% of the
- one-sided drives by 1986.
- ----
- CONTACT: DISK/TREND INC.
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA.
- 415-961-6209
- ----
- [***][2/14/84][***]
- APPLE FOUNDER IN SPACE:
- Steve Wozniak has launched into another frontier. He's hoping the
- company he helped finance, Starstruck, succeeds in its venture to
- provide rocketry that will help space-bound satellites. In less
- than a week, Starstruck's first rocket, dubbed "Dolphin", a 55-
- foot missle, will be launched into orbit from a location 200 miles
- off the California coast. If the test-launch is successful, the
- company will proceed toward a program of boosting communication
- satellites into Cape-Kennedy-free orbits in a way that only
- private enterprise can achieve.
- ----
- CONTACT: ROY MCDONALD
- STARSTRUCK
- REDWOOD CITY, CA.
- 415-367-6800
- ----
- [***][2/14/84][***]
- PORTABLES IN AIR-SPACE:
- Eastern Airlines has cleared the air over use of portable computer on
- flights. The company says passengers can use them only during takeoff
- and landing. Eastern banned portables less than a year ago for fear
- the electronic emissions would interfere with navigational guidance
- systems. Now, following an investigation, the company says that doesn't
- happen. The FAA still hasn't provided a clear-cut policy on the use
- of portable computers aboard airlines. TWA, United and Delta allow the
- use of portables during any period of a flight; American Airlines
- doesn't. Other airlines simply have no policy.
- ----
- [***][2/14/84][***]
- COMPUTERIZED SUSHI:
- Look out you sushi lovers, especially in Los Angeles, San Francisco
- and Hawaii, because YOU will be the first recipients of computer sushi
- shops. A Tokyo restauranteur plans open sushi shops in which
- customers use special pens to mark charts that are built into
- countertops, which tell the sushi chef what to make and for whom.
- The process elimates the verbal instruction process, an age-old
- tradition which is cherished by frequent sushi-bar-goers. The developer
- claims the computerized shops can produce 3X the amount of fish-covered
- rice balls as a conventional sushi restaurant. He also says the
- efficiency of the system cuts prices in half.
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- CONTACT: TSUTOMU TAKEUCHI
- SUN ATOM COMPANY
- TOKYO, JAPAN
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