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- [***][7/21/84][***]
- IBM BIRTHDAY II:
- (File #5, "IBM.POPCORN" will be up 'til Wednesday--has details of new PC/AT.)
- IBM, in conjunction with Sytek, of Mountain View, Ca. is promising to
- offer networking hardware which would enable the PC/AT to be linked to 71
- other IBM computers by October. The name of the hardware will be "LocalNet/PC"
- as packaged by IBM. The new "windowed" software for the PC/AT will not
- be available until early next year. Meanwhile, while some are saying the
- new product (introduced at a classical Southern barbeque in Dallas) is not
- as significant as had been hoped, some are predicting big sales. Namely,
- InfoCorp of Santa Clara, Ca. which believes by the end of 1984, 30-thousand
- PC/ATs will be shipped followed by another 200,000 in 1985.
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- COMMODORE BEATS THEM ALL:
- In a move that signals a new "arms race" between Commodore and the rest of the
- computer world (Apple in particular) the company has purchased Amiga
- Corporation of Santa Clara, Ca., maker of the new Amiga computer which
- reportedly has excellent graphics capabilities and runs on the same chip as
- the Apple MacIntosh. The move may have surprised Atari's Jack Tramiel. As
- one Commodore insider reportedly told a Wall Street Journal
- reporter, "This is the high-end machine Jack wanted. He knows it, we know
- it, and he's going to have a fit." Commodore's newly acquired 32-bit
- machine is in direct competition with Tramiel's plans to offer a MacIntosh-
- like computer for "under $1,000." Nobody is saying how much Commodore paid
- to acquire the small Silicon Valley firm.
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- VICTOR SOLD TOO:
- For $28 million, Victor Technologies was sold to Datatronic AB of Stockholm,
- Sweden this week pending approval of a creditors committee. Datatronic,
- which distributes Commodore computers in Europe, has not indicated whether
- it wants to change the company's name, but has said that the Scotts Valley,
- Ca. headquarters of Victor will stay in place. There are plans to keep the
- 235 employees left at the facility. Victor Technologies' spokesman says
- a new distribution effort for Victor computers will begin in the United
- States and that people there are wasting no time in making contacts with
- dealers.
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- APPLE CRACKDOWN:
- More pirated Apple computers were the source of new litigation from Apple
- this week. Three companies, one in Louisiana and two in California, were
- charged with importing and selling fake Apples, mainly to schools in the U.S.
- The difference between these suits and others is that they allege the
- Apple-clones came not from Taiwan, but from Korea. Meanwhile 239 Apple-like
- computers were seized by Customs Agents at a Kansas City Warehouse while
- another 700 are reportedly being stored in an undisclosed Los Angeles
- location. (A personal aside here--I saw what Apple's attorney Jeff Blatt
- confirmed is an illegal Apple in a San Francisco store on Clement Street
- this week. It's called the DataVision, alias the "Romar", alias the "Zeus",
- alias the "Breeze" computer which is made by Sailing Industries of Taiwan.
- Apparently they get around....)
- ----
- CONTACT: JEFFREY BLATT, COUNSEL TO APPLE
- LOS ANGELES, CA.
- 213-550-8282
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- APPLE TIDBIT:
- California Technology Stock Letter reports that 250 color MacIntosh computers
- have been sent to software developers. Says the newsletter, "Rumor also says
- that Apple has cut back orders for IIC components due to softening in sales."
- It adds, "Current sales (of the IIc) are somewhat softer than they should
- be."
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- ADAM'S REBIRTH:
- A $15 million advertising campaign by Coleco is gearing up to reintroduce
- the Coleco Adam computer. Undaunted by $35 million in losses during
- the fourth quarter, Coleco has spent millions to redevelop the Adam and is
- finally assured it's got a marketable product. Children will be the market
- target for Coleco's ads. The computer will be sold in Toys 'R Us stores and
- other mass outlets. While many remain skeptical the company can turn
- around its reputation for building bug-infested home computers,
- the company is certain its problems are over and is offering bundles of
- software packages with the Adam along with a $700 price tag.
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- OBITUARY:
- More magazines are running aground in their attempt to remain afloat. Sadly
- enough, I have to report the demise of "Peelings II" magazine. NEWSBYTES has
- been published there since January. John Martellaro, editor, told me there
- may be more issues later this year but for the foreseeable future "publication
- has been suspended" due to too few ads. He says refunds will be coming
- to those with current subscriptions. Among other deaths are the magazines
- SYNC, SOFTWARE SUPERMARKET, BASIC COMPUTING, PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERING,
- Softalk's ST. GAME and Atari's ATARI CONNECTION. Among those still going
- strong, in order of subscription list magnitude, are PC MAGAZINE, INFOWORLD,
- BYTE and POPULAR COMPUTING. (List courtesy Computer Publicity News.)
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- HP MEGA-PROFITS:
- Imagine if you will, a huge corporation. Its profits for the third period
- rise 47% despite some major internal problems and hardware shortages. (Thank
- you, Rod Serling.) Yes, it's Hewlett-Packard and the shortages pertain to
- chip production and manufacturing snafoos. The result is that fewer personal
- computers are being made, far fewer than demand. Of course the high profits
- come from the company's electronic test equipment division which saw sales
- jump 31 percent in the last quarter. Inotherwords, while the manufacturing
- technicalities are worked out, you'll probably have to wait a while for the
- Touchscreen or the HP 100 of your dreams.)
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- IN BRIEF--
- -
- The National Science Foundation reports that there could be a shortage of
- programmers and analysts by 1987. The study says 115,000 - 140,000 jobs
- could go unfilled based on the pace of defense and general business
- expenditures.
-
-
- -
- GENERAL MOTORS continues to expand its electronics company acquisitions,
- this week buying 18 percent of Robotic Vision Systems, Inc. of Hauppauge,
- L.I. for $8.6 million.
-
- -
- AMDAHL CORPORATION, maker of the large mainframe 580 computer, laid off 300
- people (8/15) in a move to cut costs. That amounts to half the staff. A
- spokesman attributes the surprise lay-offs to poor sales of the mainframe.
-
- -
- SEAGATE TECHNOLOGIES, maker of Winchester disk drives, abruptly cancelled
- contracts with its two main distributors--Pioneer and Wyle--to take up with
- Avent Inc.'s Hamilton/Avnet Electronics unit. The move is aimed at getting
- the "broadest base for coverage, service and support."
-
- -
- EX-IBM EMPLOYEE Charles Thomas Mann, who went on a shooting spree at a
- Bethesda, Md. IBM plant in 1982, has been given 1,080 years plus 3 life
- sentences in prison. Mann had claimed he drove his car into the plant
- and opened fire with a machine gun, killing 3 people, because he'd been
- laid off and felt, as a black, he was the object of discrimination.
- Judge William Miller was quoted as saying the man has "a twisted mind."
-
- -
- CONVERGENT TECHNOLOGIES has a you-scratch-my-back-I'll-scratch-your approach
- to getting out of financial trouble. The maker of the defunct "Workslate"
- computer is allowing Burroughs and NCR, two big stockholders, to get more stock
- if the companies purchase big loads of Convergent products.
-
- -
- COLUMBIA DATA SYSTEMS of Columbia, Md. has axed 35% of its staff--amounting
- to 135 people at its Md. and Puerto Rican facilities--due to financial
- problems. Columbia makes IBM-compatible computers
-
- -
- COMPUCORP of Santa Monica, Ca. is also having money trouble. It's reported
- a second quarter loss of $2.9 million. A terse company statement says
- "marketplace changes" are the reason. Compucorp makes office automation
- systems.
-
- -
- VERBATIM "has no assurances" that sales will peak over last year's at this
- time so it's expecting another weak quarter. The Sunnyvale, Ca.-based
- floppy disk manufacturer is undergoing a major assembly-line revamping
- project and claims that is adding to the financial set-back.
-
- -
- SILICON VALLEY'S ELECTRONICS FIRMS may be added to the E.P.A.'s "superfund"
- list following the recommendation such action be taken by E.P.A. staffers.
- The clean-up would include up to 20 chemical leaks from semiconductor firms
- which have poisoned local water.
-
- -
- ATARI's creditors are considering joining together to file a class-action
- suit against the company. Several million dollars are owed to such diverse
- firms as print shops and software suppliers. Meanwhile, credit talks are
- underway in New York regarding Atari's debts between old parent company
- Warner and the banks. Among the claims is that of James Morgan, former Atari
- CEO who wants Warner to make good on his contract. Several millions are
- owed to the former Phillip Morris exec who was ousted when Tramiel took over.
-
- -
- PLAYNET of Troy, New York is test-marketing an online game-playing network
- in which the participants can play video games with anyone else in the
- country. To get in on the action, you need a Commodore 64 computer and a
- modem, and just dial up a 800-752-9638. You can play several
- Commodore games with strangers as real-time opponents. The system may expand
- to Apple, IBM, Atari and Radio Shack machines if the test draws enough
- response. The company goal is 5,000 members by December. The service
- costs $6 a month plus $2 an hour.
- -
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- THE HOMEMAKER OF THE 80'S:
- General Electric has announced plans to introduce the first television set-
- controlled appliance that regulates all your other appliances. The HomeMinder,
- available by Christmas, will regulate all your electrical beasts, even
- be a message-taker for your telephone. There are two versions of the system--
- one priced at $500, the other at $1,300--but each require that every appliance
- be hooked into a small module that connects to an electrical outlet. The
- actual hardware details have not been disclosed. GE expects only a tiny
- fraction of the public to buy the device at first. "But as people get
- familiar with it, we think the market will boom," said Judy Ziegler of GE.
- ----
-
- [***][7/21/84][***]
- IBM'S "POPCORN"
- IBM's newest computer "Popcorn" which follows IBM's tradition of naming
- hardware after junk food (Peanut, Crackjack--coming up) was unveiled
- Tuesday. The actual name for the computer is the PC/AT and it is
- a limited multi-user system (capable of supporting three users at once)
- and not the system most analysts had predicted would come from the IBM
- PC third birthday party.
-
- -
- The $3995 system uses the 80286 microprocessor, is capable of handling
- several tasks at once, has 256 kilobytes of internal memory and a single
- floppy drive which stores 1.2 megabytes. Upgraded PC/AT computers cost
- $5795, have 512K of internal memory and a hard drive that can store 20
- megabytes.
-
- -
- IBM says the new computer can run most PC-DOS programs (written for the
- PC) but for those programs it can't run, one can purchase an optional
- 360 kilobyte disk drive for $425, which should solve the problem.
-
- -
- Perhpas the most significant part of the new machine is the fact that it
- will also run Xenix operating system software.
-
- -
- While the machine is significant, in that it is IBM's first major step
- toward giving users the ability to network, it was met with some sour looks
- by analysts who had hoped it might be capable of linking more computers.
- Perhaps we'll have to wait a little longer for that...
-
- -
- Meanwhile a company called Sytek shared some of the spotlight in Dallas,
- introducing its cables and peripheral cards supposedly capable of linking
- 72 IBM PC, XT amd AT computers as long as they're all in the same building.
- IBM officials hinted there will be other third party developers who will
- offer equipment that will link up more PC's.
-
- -
- More on IBM's announcement this Saturday...
- ---WW
-