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- [***][3/13/84][***]
- OSBORNE'S NEW VENTURE:
- By the end of this month, Adam Osborne's new company, "Paperback Software"
- will be rolling. Osborne, who's switched from hardware to software, predicts
- his new firm will revolutionize the software industry because his prices
- and distribution will leave everyone else in the dust. Osborne claims
- to have lined up a stable of highly-talented software designers with whom
- he'll share the profits if his venture is successful. The plan is to
- have book stores sell Osborne's software and the entrepreneur already claims
- to have several bookstores lined up and waiting in the wings to sell his
- products. As outspoken as ever, Osborne says his new company could
- easily make up to half a billion dollars within five years.
- ----
- CONTACT: ADAM OSBORNE
- SOFTWARE SEED CAPITAL CORP.
- BERKELEY, CA.
- 415-644-2116
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- ADAM'S 'EX' ON HER OWN:
- A federal bankruptcy judge in Oakland has approved a reorganization plan
- for Osborne Computer, a move which essentially puts current Osborne
- executives well on their way toward raising $3.3 million in venture capital.
- The company must get final approval from some 3,000 creditors to whom
- it owes some $40 million. If Osborne gets that okay, the reorganized
- company hopes to become a distributor for Osborne products overseas,
- including distribution of the IBM-compatible computer that was put
- on hold when the company went bankrupt September 13, 1983. Osborne
- President Ronald Brown was quoted as saying, "It's a good day, a very
- good day." Brown previously told NEWSBYTES he's certain the new plan
- will work and Osborne will again become a respected name.
- ----
- CONTACT: RONALD BROWN
- OSBORNE COMPUTER
- HAYWARD, CALIFORNIA
- 415-887-8080
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- COMPUTER CRIME BILL:
- The House Judiciary Committee has given the stamp of approval on a new
- computer crime bill, which now goes to Congress for a full vote. The
- bill requires fines of up to $1,000 and up to a year in jail for people
- caught in the act of breaking into a computer illegally. Also, if
- someone's personal data is obtained without permission, and then
- disclosed, that person can seek damages against the perpetrator in
- court. Passage of this bill isn't going to be a cut-and-dried affair.
- Already, "sysops" of bulletin boards and others who use them are
- complaining the provisions of the bill are too broad--that simply
- accessing a bulletin board database could be seen as a crime. The bill
- is expected to undergo some changes during debate in the House.
- ----
- CONTACT: CONGRESSMAN RICHARD TULISANO, CO-CHAIR JUDICIARY COMMITTEE
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-224-3121
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- CRIME COMPUTING:
- It's the nation's first fingerprint-matching computer in a city police
- department, and the NEC computer in San Francisco is quickly earning
- its keep. The system has identified more than 60 suspects from
- previously unsolved crimes and has brought about the arrests of 2 murder
- suspects in the last two weeks. By the end of February, police
- personnel had loaded 3-million fingerprints into the database and
- continues to file away the prints of everyone arrested on felony
- charges. Capable of searching 650 prints per second, the $2.6-million
- computer has become an indispensible crime-fighting tool.
- ----
- CONTACT: SAN FRANCISCO POLICE DEPARTMENT, RECORDS DIV.
- SAN FRANCISCO, CA.
- 415-553-1415
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- FBI TALKS TOUGH:
- The Development of Counter-intelligence Awareness program, run by the
- FBI, is increasing its effort to warn some 11,000 hi tech workers to
- be on the lookout for high tech agents from China and the Soviet Union.
- Citing evidence espionage is on the increase, the FBI warns the Soviets,
- in particular, are trying to steal our secrets and that to date, two-
- thirds of the Soviets' technology is based on American designs.
- So far there have been no indictments in the program's 5-year history,
- but department spokesmen say it's at least keeping tabs on foreign
- operatives in the U.S.
- ----
- CONTACT: JOSEPH TIERNEY, INTELLIGENCE DIV.
- FBI
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-324-3000
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- PROBING THE CHIPS:
- The Defense Department is also stepping up its investigations into
- American semiconductor firms which may have falsified data on federal
- contracts. At least 14 firms are being watched closely since federal
- operatives initiated a suit against National Semiconductor for alledgedly
- telling lies about the microchips it sold to the government. National
- is paying over $1.7-million in damages as a result of its guilty plea.
- The Defense Department won't say who's being investigated, but says
- the companies involved spread across six states.
- ----
- CONTACT: BRIAN BRUH, INVESTIGATIONS DEPT
- DEFENSE DEPT.
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-545-6700
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- COMPUTER FAIRE PREVIEW:
- The 9th annual West Coast Computer Faire opens in San Francisco on
- March 22 and is guaranteed to keep your feet aching and your wallet
- empty. 300 exhibitors plan to be there, including the 'biggies' such
- as Apple, IBM and DEC. The cost will be $20 for four days or $12 for
- one. Frequent Faire-goers say the parties at days-end are the best
- part of the show. There is where the inner sanctum of the computer
- world gather to exchange inside information and gossip. Among the
- 'stars' of the show will be Steve Wozniak, who'll show off the MacIntosh,
- and Microsoft's Bill Gates, who plans to embrace the subject of the
- future of personal computers. Attendance is projected to be 50,000.
- ----
- CONTACT: WEST COAST COMPUTER FAIRE (W.Coast Office)
- REDWOOD CITY, CA.
- 415-364-4294
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- 'HOT' COMMODORE:
- On Wall Street these days, Commodore has been touted as the 'stock to
- watch'. The company has received permission to make Intel's 8088 chip,
- the 'brains' of the IBM PC. Everyone is pretty sure that it means
- Commodore is going to come out with an IBM-like sophisticated machine
- that could pose a threat to IBM itself. Meanwhile, IBM has also won
- rights to make the Intel 8088 and the mysterious "other components"
- which it won't name. Word is there just aren't enough chips being
- made at Intel and contracting out was one way to increase supply.
- Some analysts are saying the "other components" include an "80186"
- microprocessor, which is smaller, more efficient, and eliminates
- the need for peripheral chips.
- ----
- CONTACT: LEONARD SHREIBER, SPOKESMAN
- COMMODORE INTERNATIONAL
- WEST CHESTER, PA.
- 215-431-9100
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- 'THINKJET' PRINTER FROM H.P.:
- A genuine breakthrough came from Hewlett Packard this week: the first
- ink-jet printer selling for less than $500. At the heart of the machine
- is a print head that costs the less than $8. The print head
- is disposable and is easily ejected from the unit. The ink-jet
- technology makes the printer quiet--less than 50 decibles of noise--
- and each cartridge has a 500-page lifetime. In addition, it's fast,
- printing out 125-characters per second, and is versatile, able to
- print out 11 different languages. Hewlett-Packard expects to
- have the "Think-jet" printers at 750 personal computer dealers
- by April 1. The only other company working with this new technology
- is Canon Ltd. of Japan, with whom Hewlett-Packard is cooperating.
- ----
- CONTACT: WILLIAM MURPHY, MARKETING MGR. PERSONAL COMPUTING GROUP
- HEWLETT PACKARD
- PALO ALTO, CA.
- 415-857-1501
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- IN BRIEF--
- MITSUBISHI begins production of its personal computers in the U.S.
- soon, claiming it will be easier to get supplies of semiconductors here
- where manufacturers often given priority to domestic clients.--VAISALA,
- INC. of Woburn, MA., is offering up a home weather station package for
- Commodore, Apple IIe or IBM PCs. The $200-$240 software and equipment
- package forecasts and gives you current conditions.--MORE GIVE-AWAYS
- this week. STORAGE TECHNOLOGY of Louisville, Colo., donates $663-
- thousand worth of equipment to U. of South Carolina. DATA GENERAL of
- Westboro, MA., gives away $300-thousand in equipment to Harvard's
- Robotics Laboratory in Cambridge, MA. IBM donates $9.2-million worth
- of hardware and cash to seven New York community colleges. All the
- colleges are near IBM facilities.--KAYPRO is still in Japan, negotiating
- with Mitsui to market Mitsui computers in the U.S. A Kaypro spokeswoman
- tells me, "Yes the deal is still on."
- ----
- [***][3/13/84][***]
- WATCHING YOUR WATCH:
- Seiko, the people who brought you the world's first television watch,
- are offering up a wrist-watch databank. Data20000 will be available
- in the next few weeks and can be programmed to display phone numbers,
- appointments, etc. The watch will cost $195 and will feature a tiny
- little keyboard and a tiny little LCD. It'll scroll up to 2000
- characters. Oh yes, it will also tell you the time of day.
- ----
-