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- [***][3/08/88][***]
- MICROSOFT'S CD-ROM CONFERENCE: APPLE BREAKS ICE WITH CD-ROM DRIVE
- SEATTLE, Wa. (NB) -- Attendance at this third CD-ROM conference was
- 80% higher than last year's with some 600 attending. While the mood
- was upbeat, the reality is still that only an estimated 100,000 CD-ROM
- drives have been sold since 1985. Nevertheless, predictions were
- rampant that 1988 will be the year of CD-ROM. Said Apple CEO John
- Sculley, "It took more than 1,000 years for paper to be used by the
- Western world after it was invented by the Chinese. If you consider how
- long it took for paper to become popular, we're not doing so bad."
-
- A major stumbling block to acceptance of CD-ROM, however, is the
- price. With most drives in the $1,000 range, CD-ROM is not expected
- to win the masses until prices of drives drop to $300 or so.
-
- But CD-ROM technology's biggest boost in credibility came as Apple
- Computer became the first major computer manufacturer to offer a
- CD-ROM drive through retail stores that both retrieves data and plays
- commercial audio compact disks. Apple expects its endorsement of this
- high-capacity data storage technology will finally, after years of sluggish
- sales, allow it to catch fire with the public. The announcement, made at
- the opening of Microsoft CD-ROM conference, was accompanied by news
- that some 11 manufacturers, aided by Apple's third party development
- effort, have already created CD-ROM disk-based information for the
- AppleCD SC drive.
-
- One CD-ROM disk, capable of storing up to 550 megabytes of
- information, or as much as can be stored on 700 Macintosh 800k disks.
- That enormous capacity has appealed to a range of vendors from
- encyclopedia publishers to compilers of public domain programs.
- (See below for complete list.)
-
- The drive, available in May for $1,199, works with the Macintosh,
- the Apple IIE, and IIGS. It can also be shared on a network connected
- to the AppleShare File Server. Apple has designed the drive to be
- compatible with the International Standards Organization's
- standard file format commonly known as "High Sierra."
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- NEW PRODUCTS FOR APPLE'S CD-ROM DRIVE
- CUPERTINO (NB) -- Here's a list of products designed to run on the
- CD SC drive:
-
- - ARIES SYSTEMS, North Andover, Ma., is offering the MEDLINE database
- of citations to biomedical literature maintained by the US government
- and the National Library of Medicine. It contains citations to over 3,000
- medical journals.
-
- - BOWKER ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING, New York, announced compatibility
- of Books in Print Plus for the CD╩SC drive. It contains over 770,000
- citations that can be accessed by any one of 17 categories, including
- author, title, subject, key word, language, etc. Also due out is
- Books in Print with Book Reviews Plus. Books in Print Plus is updated
- quarterly and sells for a one-year subscription price of $1,010.
-
- - GROLIER ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING, Danbury, Cn., has created a
- HyperCard application for CD-ROM, an educational tool called
- The Americana Series which covers the 1800-1850 time period.
- Users can search through maps, historical documents, period
- illustrations, and even songs, to explore history.
-
- - GROLIER ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING has also introduced The
- Electronic Encyclopedia for the AppleCD SC drive. It contains more
- than 10 million words and 30,000 articles on one CD-ROM disk.
- Best of all, the product includes hypertext functions allowing users to
- skip through articles quickly and return to a spot using a special
- "bookmark" icon. The Electronic Encyclopedia is expected to be available
- in July.
-
- - HIGHLIGHTED DATA, INC. of Washington, D.C., announced Electronic
- Map Cabinet, a database of 600 megabytes of geographical information
- to generate custom maps for virtually the entire United States,
- with detail down to city street level for nearly 300 of the country's
- largest metropolitan areas. List price is $199.95 when the product
- is available in the second quarter of 1988.
-
- - HIGHLIGHTED DATA INC. also promised a CD-ROM edition of the
- Merriam-Webster WEBSTER'S NINTH NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY.
- This isn't just a high-tech dictionary with text and graphics, but the
- work features recorded pronunciations of all entry words. Also
- available in the second quarter, it's scheduled to cost $199.95.
-
- - MULTI-AD SERVICES, Peoria, Illinois, announced a massive art library
- on compact disk called Kwikee INHOUSE Pal. Designed for the desktop
- publisher who wants a wide variety of line art, the pictures can be
- used in any program which requires EPSF or PICT format graphics.
- Categories include Animal Kingdom, Around the House, Careers, Education,
- Food, Hearts &╩Flowers, Holidays, Leisure Time, Personal Style,
- Religion, Sports, and Vacation. Each package sells for $149.95 and
- is scheduled to be available in May.
-
- - OPTICAL MEDIA INTERNATIONAL, Los Gatos, Ca., has two volumes
- of sound effects on CD-ROM disks -- the Sound Designer Universe series.
- Volume I is a sound effects and percussion disk while volume II has
- musical instrument, synthesizer and percussion samples. Each disk
- contains about 1,500 individual sound files and will retail for
- $595.
-
- - FACTS ON FILE, New York, is offering a collection of Apple II series
- software in the public domain, called Public Domain Software on
- File. Nearly 200 applications are on the CD-ROM disk. No price nor
- availability date was disclosed.
-
- Among the significant non-announcements was Microsoft's failure to
- announce a version of its CD-ROM disk Bookshelf for the Apple drive.
- Marty Taucher, Microsoft spokesman, told NEWSBYTES he had no comment
- on the widely-anticipated announcement at this time.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- TI/APPLE TEAM UP FOR AI MICRO
- CUPERTINO, Ca. (NB) -- Texas Instruments and Apple Computer have
- joined forces to create what is hoped will be the computer that brings
- artificial intelligence applications into the mainstream. microExplorer
- is a Macintosh II-based configuration equipped with a Texas
- Instruments LISP chip with four megabytes of memory. Complete
- with software and a 40 megabyte hard disk, the package runs $15,000
- to $30,000, a significant price breakthrough, and is aimed at everybody
- from tax advisors to computer-aided designers. Texas Instruments' only
- competing AI package, the Micro Explorer, runs $40,000 and up.
-
- Apple's endorsement of artificial intelligence, as with its investment
- in CD-ROM, comes at a time when the field is besieged by technical
- setbacks and slow sales. Apple is being viewed as a white knight in
- this arena, as well. "It could give the whole industry a boost,"
- comments Hambrecht & Quist analyst Jeffry Canin.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- ANOTHER LINK IN APPLE'S CHAIN - NETWORK INNOVATIONS PURCHASED
- CUPERTINO, Ca. (NB) -- Apple's prowl for new companies to acquire
- has resulted in its first outright conquest -- Network Innovations of
- Cupertino. The firm creates software that will links diverse computer
- systems, such as DEC minicomputers and Macintoshes, and its first new
- task, according to Apple, will be to link Macintoshes to IBM
- mainframes in both DOS and OS/2 applications. No purchase price
- was disclosed for the buy-out of the four-year-old company, although
- insiders put the cost at $10 million.
-
- Apple promises to allow the firm to operate as an independent
- subsidiary.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- HP TO SHIP OS/2 IN APRIL
- PALO ALTO, Ca. (NB) -- Hewlett Packard will begin shipments of its
- version of Microsoft's OS/2 operating system, and two new computers
- capable of running it, in April. The Vectra RS-16 and RS-20, based on the
- 80386 microprocessor from Intel, will run OS/2 applications. HP will
- become the third major manufacturer to ship an OS/2 computer
- trailing IBM and Compaq.
-
- The new operating system will cost $325. It's called OS-2 1.0 Version
- A.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- HP'S HANDS SLAPPED FOR ATTEMPT TO KILL COMPETITION
- PALO ALTO, Ca. (NB) -- A federal judge has ordered Hewlett Packard to
- stop alleged efforts to kill off a computer maintenance "insurance" firm
- and has ordered HP to live up to the terms of a contract with the
- Cleveland, Ohio company. HyPoint Technology sells discount
- contracts for Hewlett Packard service, and it suffered when HP recently
- informed its customers that service would be slow to those who
- weren't buying their maintenance contracts directly from HP. The
- judge's decision is expected to affect several similar suits which
- are pending against other large computer makers.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- ATARI TRIPLES SALES
- SUNNYVALE, Ca. (NB) -- Atari Corporation says sales increased 199%
- in its most recent quarter, adding up to nearly $277 million compared
- to $92 million for the same quarter last year. Net sales for the
- year were a whopping $493 million, up 91%.
-
- The financial picture also includes the proceeds from Atari's purchase
- of the Federated Group of discount electronics stores. The Group, not
- to be confused with the Federated Department Stores currently in a
- takeover battle in the news, continue to lose money, according to
- Atari, but are expected to become profitable sometime this year.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- INFORMATION AGE BILL OF RIGHTS PASSES IN CALIFORNIA
- SACRAMENTO, Ca. (NB) -- The California Assembly has approved landmark
- legislation which will extend the same rights of privacy and protection
- to electronic communications as are now granted other media forms.
- The "Information Age Bill of Rights" passed by a vote of 57-4 and
- now goes to a Senate policy committee for a hearing. It will go before
- California voters as a special ballot measure if approved by the
- Senate.
-
- The bill, sponsored by Assemblywoman Gwen Moore, would prohibit
- unwarranted searches of personal data stored in computers. Said Moore
- after the vote, "I'm delighted that the Assembly agrees with the purposes
- of ACA 36, to provide an hospitable environment for the new information
- industries. With the support of the Senate and the voters we can make
- California the first state to declare itself ready for the Information
- Age."
-
- CONTACT: Bob Jacobson, 916/445-8800
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- INTEL READIES NEW CHIPS, SIGNS DEAL WITH BORLAND
- SANTA CLARA, Ca. (NB) -- Intel President Andrew Grove has told analysts
- in New York that Intel is preparing to introduce several advanced new
- microprocessors this year. Grove says there will be six new 32-bit
- chips but refused to divulge further details. Insiders say the chips
- will include two new versions of the 80386 -- one a faster version
- code-named the "P-9" and another which bridges the gap between the
- 16-bit 80286 and the 80386 chip.
-
- Grove also disclosed plans for a new chip plant in Albuquerque, New
- Mexico. The $200,000 plant is designed to manufacture an even more
- advanced microprocessor one micron in diameter. Grove says
- research on the chip is still underway.
-
- Meanwhile, Borland and Intel have teamed up to bundle software and
- hardware. Buyers of the Intel Above Board will get a free copy of
- SideKick Plus from Borland. The two companies will launch an
- advertising blitz that mentions the bundle in every Above Board or
- Borland ad.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- IN BRIEF --
-
- DIGITAL RESEARCH, Monterey, Ca., is shipping a new GEM application --
- GEM 1st Word Plus. The word processor has a suggested retail price
- of $199.
-
- SYMANTEC, Mountain View, Ca., has lost Dave Winer, founder of Living
- Videotex, the company which Symantec purchased last July. Winer says
- he didn't feel exactly comfortable in the new, 170-employee merged
- company, and will devote himself to finding out if he's a "company man
- or an independent type of guy." Winer will remain a Symantec director
- and major shareholder.
-
- TANDEM COMPUTERS, Cupertino, Ca., has settled a lawsuit with shareholders
- who charged the firm with inflating sales and profit figures in 1982.
- Under the settlement, Tandem and its insurance company will pay the
- shareholders $16.5 million.
-
- UNISOFT, Emeryville, Ca., has joined forces with Motorola to develop
- Unix software for Motorola microprocessors. Unisoft has agreed to act
- as Motorola's exclusive agent in development of new Unix products.
-
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- TI -- NOT A MAC CLONE, BUT A MAC PARTNER WITH A LISP
- DALLAS (NB) -- Texas Instruments (TI) and Apple announced last
- week an innovative joint venture which should result in a
- Macintosh II which understands the artificial intelligence
- language Lisp. Under the deal, TI boards with the TI Lisp chip
- set will be packed into Macintosh II computers and re-sold by TI
- as the microExplorer at prices ranging from $15-30,000. The deal
- puts to rest (and to rout) rumors that TI was about to go into
- the Macintosh clone business, rumors which were printed in
- "Infoworld" and noted in NEWSBYTES SOUTH-MIDWEST. For Apple, the
- deal could result in big sales to industrial markets like process
- control and computer aided engineering (CAE) for the Macintosh.
- Under the deal, TI becomes an Apple Value Added Reseller (VAR).
-
- WHAT'S BEHIND THIS -- Texas Instruments had a tough time selling
- its Explorer Lisp chips in the Explorer II minicomputer,
- introduced last summer. TI president Jerry Junkins expressed a
- willingness recently to try joint ventures in areas where TI is
- weak -- TI used to shun such things. (TI made a deal with Intel
- to swap chip designs and manufacturing technologies last summer.)
- TI still has a problem, however -- a lack of good Lisp software.
- Hopefully the Mac-Lisp with its lower price tag will let 100
- programs bloom.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- INSIDE THE HAYES-PRODIGY DEAL
- NORCROSS, GA (NB) -- When Hayes Microcomputer Products Inc.
- started out a decade ago, it won success by following standards
- and hiding out in small markets. Times have changed. Now the
- modem giant prefers other giants. On February 29 Hayes released
- details of a deal it signed with Prodigy, the IBM-Sears joint-
- venture in videotex. Prodigy will bundle a special Hayes modem
- with its service which plugs directly into a wall socket, then
- into the computer through a standard phone plug and Hayes-made
- adapters for IBM or Apple computers. Install the modem, slap the
- Prodigy software into a disk drive, and you have a complete,
- graphics-oriented videotex service -- the graphics are on the
- Prodigy disk.
-
- Trintex is the latest, and probably last, attempt by giant firms
- to dominate the online market. Its information providers are the
- cream of American industry: Kroger, J.C. Penney, Dow-Jones, and
- newspaper syndicates, along with Sears itself. Profits are
- expected from transactions, not online time. Pricing will be more
- like cable TV than The Source -- a straight monthly charge. The
- system will be fed by an IBM mainframe in White Plains, NY, and
- IBM minicomputers in nodes throughout the country.
-
- ANALYSIS -- The Hayes modem used in Trintex' bundle is not a
- standard Hayes offering -- it does not follow the Hayes command
- set, for instance. If Prodigy fails, Hayes will be left with a
- ton of non-Hayes standard modems to unload. But there persists in
- industry a myth that, if you're big enough, you can do no wrong
- and that bigger outfits always destroy industry pioneers once
- they set their minds to it. Prodigy will no doubt narrow
- competition in the online industry, perhaps even destroying some
- online firms, but it will not take over as its planners expect
- because of the requirements for special software and the special
- Hayes modem. By ignoring entrepreneurial ventures (like
- NEWSBYTES) and existing standards, Prodigy and Hayes guarantee
- that the online industry will have other winners.
-
- CONTACT: TRINTEX, Brian Ek, (914)993-8843; HAYES, Jane Dryden,
- (404)449-8791
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- LATEST SUPERCONDUCTING IDEA -- CHEMICAL VAPOR DEPOSITION
- ATLANTA (NB) -- Before you can have a superconducting wire, you
- need a flexible superconductor. Today's materials are too
- brittle. So Georgia Tech and American Magnetics Inc., Oak Ridge,
- TN, plan to heat thin filaments of silicon carbide, silicon
- dixode and carbon, commonly used to reinforce concrete, then coat
- them with a superconducting ceramic, in hopes of producing a wire
- with superconductive properties for electric motors and
- electro-magnets. The experiment will have $1.4 million in funding
- from the Defense Department.
-
- CONTACT: GEORGIA TECH, John Toon, (404)894-3444; Robert Jake,
- AMERICAN MAGNETICS (615)482-1056
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- COLOROCS SEEKS DISTRIBUTION FOR COLOR COPIER IN SAVIN BUY
- NORCROSS, GA (NB) -- Colorocs Corp. needs a distribution channel
- for its full-color copier, designed in America but partly
- financed in Japan by Mitsubishi and built by Sharp. Savin Corp.
- of Stamford, CT has such a channel in 250 dealers. (Savin once
- had an exclusive distributorship on Ricoh copiers, but has since
- run into trouble and no longer has exclusivity). Thus, the
- complex deal Charles Muench's Colorocs and Savin signed last
- week, in which Colorocs will buy 28% of Savin now owned by
- Polysar Energy & Chemical of Canada (formerly the Canadian
- Development Corp.), and take 59% control once an exchange of
- Savin stock for debt is completed. The copier is supposed to run
- off Sharp lines in volume sometime after July. The copier,
- moreover, will be sold under the Savin name.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- UNITED WINS COURT BATTLE IN ONLINE TRAVEL AGENCY WARS
- CHICAGO (NB) -- United Airlines won a judgment of $423,155
- against a large travel agency which switched from its Apollo
- computerized reservations system to Texas Air's SystemOne. The
- award affirms the validity of liquidated damages provisions in
- United's Apollo contracts. Austin Travel Corp. of Long Island had
- claimed United's contracts violate anti-trust rules. What makes
- this case so interesting is that Texas Air Corp., owner of
- SystemOne, controlled Austin's case.
-
- CONTACT: Eva Archer-Smith, SYSTEM ONE, (713) 630-5457
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- FORD PUTS THE SENSOR AND THE COMPUTER TOGETHER
- DEARBORN, MI (NB) Ford has developed a "smart" sensor which
- includes circuits to analyze input on-chip. It's made with a
- "micro machining" technique of silicon etching, and "thin film
- fabrication" techniques to make the whole unit smaller -- today's
- circuit boards use a thick film design. The sensors can be used
- to achieve very precise control of engines, transmissions and
- suspensions at low cost. The trouble until now has been making a
- chip-sensor combination which could sit on your engine,
- transmission, or suspension measuring, computing, and moving
- parts around. Only prototypes are currently available, but high-
- volume production is just around the corner. The only problem is
- that the etching requires a clean room with workers wearing
- protective "bunny suits."
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- PECAN CHIPS
-
- DOVE COMPUTER, Wilmington, NC, released an Ethernet controller
- for the Mac II called Fastnet II, a Nubus version of Dove's
- Fastnet SCSI adapter. The price is $900.
-
- EDS, Dallas, bought the data processing subsidiary of MCorp., a
- troubled Texas bank-holding company. MTech cost EDS $281 million
- in cash and notes, and employs 3,500. EDS out-bid a group led by
- Robert Bass of Ft. Worth.
-
- HBO & CO., Atlanta, won an important software and service
- contract from Humana Corp., Lexington, KY. HBO's Medical Systems
- Support Inc. subsidiary will handle the 5-year deal.
-
- INTERGRAPH, Huntsville, AL, finally shipped its Clipper RISC
- chip as a 4-chip set running at 30 MHz. Production quantities are
- expected in the third quarter.
-
- NBI, Boulder, CO, the one-time king of dedicated word processors is
- facing a buy-out from Capital Associates Inc. of Colorado
- Springs, a $33 million/year computer leasing company. Capital
- wants a friendly deal, and says cooperation from NBI has kept it
- from filing 13-D papers with the SEC.
-
- THE SOFTWARE LINK, Atlanta, shipped ParaPort, an IBM-compatible
- board with 4 parallel ports, for use with TSL LANs and parallel-
- port printers.
-
- TANDY, Ft. Worth, TX, began shipping a $300 SCSI adapter card. A
- $1,800, 80-megabyte SCSI hard disk is expected to follow.
-
- WORDPERFECT, Orem, UT, signed a co-marketing agreement with
- Bitstream to built a Fontware installation kit for WordPerfect
- 5.0, which ships this month. The new version has also been set to
- work with the Hercules' new RamFont mode, which speeds editing of
- text set in fonts, and it will ship with a sampler graphic disk
- from Marketing Graphics Inc. called Publishers' PicturePak.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- AND FINALLY...ILLINOIS TOLL ROADS TO COMPETERIZE
- SPRINGFIELD, IL (NB) -- The State of Illinois is testing a new
- type of toll road without toll booths. Here's how it works. An
- Automatic Vehicle Identification scanner will read bar codes on
- window decals as cars drive by it. A computer will then compute
- the distance traveled and mail out monthly bills to regular toll
- road users. (A special manual lane will be available for
- visitors.) Theoretically, such a system could also compute how
- long drivers spent on the road and issue speeding tickets. How
- long before Illinois figures that out?
-
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- FASTER 386 COMPUTERS COMING
- MONTREAL (NB) -- Canadian personal computer maker Ogivar Inc. is
- expected to introduce a 25-megahertz 80386 personal computer at
- the end of March. Company president Jaime Benchimol said
- recently the machine should be ready to ship by the end of this
- month. Ogivar was among the first manufacturers to introduce an
- 80386 PC in the fall of 1986, shortly after the arrival of Compaq
- Computer Corp.'s pioneering model. Compaq's and IBM's fastest
- 386 machines today run at 20 MHz.
-
- And Greff Computing Inc. of Toronto is also rumored to be
- planning an 80386 PC with a clock speed of 22 to 25 megahertz.
- The start-up maker of low-priced PCs already has a 16-Mhz 386 on
- the market.
-
- CONTACT: OGIVAR INC., 3200 Transcanadienne, Montreal H4T 1A3,
- (514) 737-3340
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- COMPLETE LOGIC TO ADD MODULES TO TRILOGY
- VANCOUVER (NB) -- Complete Logic Systems Inc. will introduce
- enhancements to its Trilogy modular programming language in
- April. An MS-DOS enhancement module will allow calls to DOS
- functions from within Trilogy programs, developer Paul Voda said.
- Among its functions will be the ability to select one or more
- files that meet set specifications.
-
- Voda said high-level graphics commands in the graphics
- enhancement module will allow programmers to specify an entire
- operation to, for example, draw a polygon.
-
- Voda also said Complete Logic plans to announce a version of
- Trilogy this summer that will manipulate data files of more than
- 64K bytes. This limitation in the present version means that
- Trilogy, introduced last fall, has been used mainly for
- prototyping and small research applications to date.
-
- CONTACT: COMPLETE LOGIC SYSTEMS, (604) 986-3234
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- NORTHERN TELECOM FACING STRIKE
- MISSISSAUGA, Ont. (NB) -- Workers at five Northern Telecom Ltd.
- plants in Ontario and New Brunswick walked off the job February
- 29. The strike was the latest move in a campaign by the Canadian
- Auto Workers union, which represents the workers, for a better
- pension plan. Contracts between Northern and the CAW expired on
- February 28. Talks were being held during the week at a Toronto
- hotel.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- ANOTHER TECHNOLOGY GROUP BACKS FREE TRADE
- MARKHAM, Ont. (NB) -- Another of Canada's high-technology
- industry organizations has come out strongly in favor of the free
- trade agreement between Canada and the U.S. Monty Richardson,
- chairman of the York Technology Association telecommunications
- committee, said assured access to the U.S. market will allow
- Canadian high-tech firms to expand and gain the strength to
- compete effectively in world markets. "It is essential that we
- strengthen our base so that high-tech industry can become a
- catalyst for growth and employment," Richardson said in a
- prepared statement.
-
- The York Technology Association is made up of 130 groups,
- associations and individuals in the Greater Toronto area who are
- involved with the high-technology industry. Richardson is also
- president of Timeplex Canada Inc.
-
- CONTACT: YORK TECHNOLOGY ASSOCIATION, Suite 132, 7305 Woodbine
- Ave., Markham, Ont. L3R 3V7, (416) 886-1987
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- RATE CHANGES WOULD FAVOR HIGH-SPEED LEASED LINES
- OTTAWA (NB) -- Telecom Canada has filed an application for rate
- changes with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications
- Commission (CRTC) that would cut the cost of leased data lines
- for large users, while smaller users would pay more or less
- depending on the speed of transmission. Under the proposal,
- filed with the federal regulatory body in the last week of
- February, high-speed 19.2-kilobit-per-second lines would cost
- C$3,810 a month, down from C$5,279. But a 1,200-bps line would
- go up from C$1,127 to C$1,319 per month, and a 2,400-bps line
- from C$1,723 to C$1,759. Lines running at 4,800 and 9,600 bps
- would become slightly cheaper. The move wouldn't affect the
- average PC and modem user, but it reflects the trend to higher-
- speed data communication.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- BITS, EH?
- -- CNCP TELECOMMUNICATIONS, Toronto, will double the capacity of
- its Dialcom electronic messaging service. The data
- communications company is installing four additional
- minicomputers from Prime Computer of Canada Ltd. to add capacity
- to the X.400-based messaging service, launched last year. CNCP
- says Dialcom's customer base is growing rapidly.
-
- -- SYDNEY DEVELOPMENT CORP., Vancouver software developer, lost
- C$5.1 million in the nine months ended Dec. 31, compared with a
- C$7.7 million loss in the same period of 1986. Revenue was
- C$14.9 million, up from C$11.8 million.
-
- -- EPIC DATA INC., Richmond, B.C., lost C$1.02 million in the
- three months ended Dec. 31, compared with a C$389,000 profit in
- the same period a year earlier. Revenue fell to C$1.79 million
- from C$4.95 million. The company manufactures data collection
- systems.
-
-
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- DUAL 68030 WORKSTATION FROM SONY
- TOKYO (NB) -- Sony has developed a 68030-based workstation it
- calls the NEWS1800. The NEWS1800 has two 68030 microprocessing
- units which run at 25MHz. The processing speed is 5 million
- instructions per second. That's almost twice as fast as the
- current version of the NEWS workstations. The NEWS1800 will be
- shipped by the end of this year. Meanwhile, the current NEWS
- version has been selling well in the U.S.
-
- CONTACT: Sony, 4-10-18 Takanawa, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- LOTUS 1-2-3 AND 4WORD FOR JAPANESE COMPUTERS
- TOKYO (NB) -- Lotus Development Japan will release Japanese
- versions of its programs, Lotus 1-2-3 R2.1J and 4word, for
- Toshiba's J3100, Fujitsu's FM-R, and Matsushita's Panacom M
- series, in April. The prices are 98,000 yen ($766) for Lotus
- 1-2-3 and 25,000 yen ($195) for 4word. Lotus Japan released NEC
- PC-9801 and IBM PS/55 (Japanese PS/2) versions of the programs in
- the fall of 1987. A spokesman for Kokusai PR, the public relations
- agent of Lotus Japan, claims 4word has been quite popular in
- Japan. As for Japanese Lotus 1-2-3, it's sold over 30,000
- copies including the initial Japanese version.
-
- CONTACT: Lotus Development (Japan), 3-10-11 Toranomon, Minato-ku,
- Tokyo 105
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- TOSHIBA-MOTOROLA VENTURE STARTS PRODUCING 1M DRAM
- TOKYO (NB) -- Tohoku Semiconductor (Miyagi, Japan), a joint
- company of Motorola U.S.A. and Toshiba, will start producing 1
- megabit dynamic RAM in July. To start, it will produce some
- 10,000 units per month. And the company will increase the
- production rate to one million units per month by the end of this
- year. Tohoku Semiconductor is also planning to produce
- Motorola's 8-bit and 16-bit MPUs. It is said the company will
- manufacture Motorola's 32-bit 68020 MPU later.
-
- Currently Tohoku Semiconductor is building its factory on
- schedule. The president of Motorola is expected to attend the
- opening ceremony late this May.
-
- CONTACT: Toshiba, Toshiba Bldg., 1-1-1 Shibaura, Minato-ku,
- Tokyo 105
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- NEC BEEFS UP 16M DRAM DEVELOPMENT
- TOKYO (NB) -- NEC will expand and beef up its semiconductor
- research and development facilities in Sagamihara office in
- Kanagawa, the suburb of Tokyo. NEC will add one of the most
- advanced test production lines for 16 megabit dynamic RAM in its
- super LSI development laboratory. Meanwhile, the company is
- planning to study and develop next-generation super LSIs,
- spending over 10 billion yen or $78 million. NEC's next-
- generation super LSI development project includes development of
- 64 megabit dynamic RAM, and the company will create this
- special development team soon.
-
- CONTACT: NEC, 1-4-28 Mita, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- AUTOMATIC PROGRAM REWRITE SYSTEM FROM FORTRAN TO C
- TOKYO (NB) -- Suri System, Tokyo, has developed a fully-automatic
- program rewrite system, which converts FORTRAN programs into C
- programs. FORTRAN is a widely used programming language for
- science technology calculation, while C language is a functional
- and easy-to-use popular programming language. In this system,
- FORTRAN programs should be based on the Japanese Industrial
- Standard (JIS) and the American National Standards Institution
- (ANSI). The converted C programs can only be used in UNIX
- computers at present. Suri System is planning to develop other
- programs to rewrite FORTRAN for IBM machines and variety of C
- programs for large computers and personal computers.
-
- CONTACT: Suri System, 2-4 Shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- WORD PROCESSING SOFTWARE WITH LANGUAGE TRANSLATION FEATURE
- TOKYO (NB) -- Japanese Software house Just Systems has announced
- a Japanese-English word processing program called Duet. The
- software is based on the company's best-selling Japanese word
- processor Ichitaro. Duet has a Japanese-English language
- translation feature. The software has a 14-megabyte, huge
- dictionary, which covers 80,000 words for both Japanese and
- English. Duet runs on NEC PC-9801 computers with a hard disk,
- and the price will be 148,000 yen or $1,156. Just System has
- also announced a powerful graphics program Silhouette. It
- supports multiple colors and 40 kinds of pen touches.
-
- CONTACT: Just Systems, 3-46 Okihama-Higashi, Tokushima-shi,
- Japan
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- ALL-IN-ONE TYPE INPUT/OUTPUT DEVICE FOR PC
- TOKYO (NB) -- NEC has developed an integrated input/output device
- for personal computers. The PC-FU101 looks just like an ordinary
- printer with a small telephone, but it has the features for a
- facsimile machine and an image scanner, as well as a printer and
- a telephone. Everything can be made with this single gadget,
- connecting with NEC PC-9801 personal computer. Also, it can
- independently be used as a facsimile machine and an answering
- phone without connecting with the computer. The gadget measures
- 33.5cm x 25.3cm x 9.5cm. It weighs only 3.9kg. The price is
- 240,000 yen or $1,875.
-
- CONTACT: NEC, 1-4-28 Mita, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- MAKING BIO-LSI IN ZERO GRAVITY
- TOKYO (NB) -- Two Japanese computer giants Hitachi and Fujitsu
- are about to launch bioscience experiments, using a special aircraft of
- the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. These
- experiments will be conducted under zero gravity, which will be
- created aboard NASA's aircraft. In these experiments, Fujitsu
- will test the creation of a heat-resistance protein for bio-LSI, while
- Hitachi will make interferon. The companies plan to perform
- experiments aboard the US Space Shuttle in the future.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- <<< SUSHI BYTES >>>
-
- TRON ASSOCIATION GETS INDEPENDENT -- The TRON Association will
- become an independent organization to promote its 32-bit computer
- architecture TRON on March 11. Fujitsu's President Takuma
- Yamamoto is expected to assume the chairman's post of this
- newly independent organization. Currently 98 computer makers
- and related companies, including IBM Japan and Motorola, have
- been the members of the TRON Association.
-
- FUJITSU FORESEES HIGH-TECH BUILDING BUSINESS PROFITABLE --
- Fujitsu, Tokyo, is pushing to install office equipment and
- network systems in high-tech buildings, which are being built in
- Japan. Fujitsu has already received 300 orders from the
- companies and organizations, including hospitals, and schools.
- The company expects a $78.1 million profit this year.
-
- YHP TO SELL MORE ENGINEERING WORKSTATIONS -- Yokogawa-Hewlett
- Packard, a joint venture of Yokogawa Electronics and Hewlett
- Packard (U.S.A.), will expand its engineering workstations
- business in Japan. YHP aims to grow by 20% per year, and it
- expects sales of $1.9 billion in 1993.
-
- ====
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- NEW JERSEY FIRMS OFFERS ANTI-VIRAL INOCULATION
- METUCHEN, N.J. (NB) -- Lasertrieve Inc., a CD-ROM publishing
- company, has unveiled a program that "inoculates" computers
- against computer viruses that spread from machine to machine,
- crashing hardware and destroying software. According to publicist
- Fred Rackmil, the Viralarm program sits on top of a program and
- uses very sophisticated error-checking routines to make sure the
- software has not been tampered with, or infected, since last
- used. If the program detects changes, it sends a warning message
- and will not allow the infected software to run. Rackmil said
- the program is aimed at large corporate users and software
- manufactures. "We hope that someday your 1-2-3 or dBase package
- will have a Viralarm seal showing that Lotus or Ashton-Tate have
- installed the program. It will be like the Good Housekeeping
- seal," Rackmil told NEWSBYTES.
-
- Lasertrieve also is developing NOAH'S ARK, a CD-ROM collection of
- shareware and public-domain software that have been inoculated so
- that they can't spread viruses. The spread of viruses over
- bulletin boards and through copies of shareware and freeware has
- cast a bit of a pall over this distribution method. NOAH'S ARK
- will be released this summer on one CD-ROM, according to
- Lasertrieve. The price will be about $200.
-
- CONTACT: Lasertrieve Inc., 395 Main Street, Metuchen NJ 08840,
- 201-906-1901.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- BRAZILIAN SANCTIONS ON HOLD
- WASHINGTON -- Citing "some progress" in easing computer trade
- barriers, the Reagan Administration says it won't impose $105
- million in punitive sanctions against Brazil. U.S. Trade
- Representative Clayton Yeutter said, "The United States will
- delay sanctions against Brazil pending review of the implementing
- regulations for Brazil's new software law." Brazil recently
- relented on its ban of Microsoft's PC operating system, saying it
- will allow imports of MS-DOS 3.3, although not earlier versions.
- It also looks like Brazil will nix a plan that would have allowed
- a Brazilian company to freely clone Apple computers, disregarding
- the American company's patents and copyrights.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- LOTUS PREVIEWS DATABASE
- CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- Lotus will plunge feet first into the
- database market once OS/2 Presentation Manager is available in
- the fall. In the works is Lotus/DBMS, which will feature
- structured query language (SQL) and a standard data interface
- driver for seamless access to other databases, without file
- translation. Lotus is working with Gupta Technologies Inc. of
- Menlo Park, Calif., on the product. "Users only need to know the
- name of a data-base in order to access it," said David Gilmour of
- Lotus' advanced products division. "They don't have to worry
- about where it is located." The program will also have a
- graphical interface and will be very closely integrated to 1-2-
- 3G, the graphical spreadsheet Lotus is developing for OS/2
- Presentation Manager.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- CHIPMAKERS WANT BIGGER PIECE OF JAPAN
- WASHINGTON (NB) -- While Japan has stopped dumping semiconductors
- in the U.S., American chip manufacturers are unhappy with their
- progress in penetrating the lucrative Japanese market. The
- Semiconductor Industry Association has called for a new round of
- consultations between Washington and Tokyo on opening up the
- Japanese market. According to SIA, U.S. semiconductor sales in
- Japan are holding steady at about 10 percent, with not much
- movement upward in the last few years, despite a 1986 agreement
- that called for Japan to stop dumping and open its market. SIA,
- the trade group for the chip makers and the American Electronics
- Association, trade group for major chip users, have issued a
- joint statement calling on the U.S. government to help open
- Japanese markets.
-
- In the meantime, Brookings Institution economist Kenneth Flamm,
- writing for the op ed page of the WASHINGTON POST, says the chip
- makers did the U.S. a disservice in pushing for the anti-dumping
- agreement with Japan. As a result, says Flamm, DRAM prices have
- soared, leaving the U.S. computer industry "in a steadily
- worsening fix." The price increases for memory, Flamm says, "will
- be a significant obstacle to the U.S. computer industry's game
- plan: to maintain a competitive edge over Asian clones by
- aggressively introducing new technology."
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- AT&T AND MOTOROLA IN UNIX PACT
- NEW YORK (NB) -- AT&T and Motorola have reached an agreement on
- extensions to the Unix operating system similar to an earlier
- arrangement between AT&T and Sun Microsystems and AT&T and
- Microsoft Corp. The deal is expected to defuse a controversy that
- arose when other manufacturers thought they were being aced out
- of the Unix market by the AT&T-Sun deal. The deal will make any
- of the enhancements that AT&T and Sun come up with available for
- Motorola processors as well. The deal with Sun meant a uniform
- Unix for machines with Sun's Sparc processor; the Microsoft deal
- meant a version for the Intel 80386 processor; the Motorola deal
- will mean an identical Unix for the 68000 chip family. In a
- related development, Motorola is expected to a large stake in
- Unisoft Group, the British software company that developed A/UX,
- the Apple-flavored Unix.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- TRANSISTOR BREAKTROUGH AT BELL LABS
- MURRAY HILL, N.J. (NB) -- AT&T's Bell Labs says it has built a
- tiny transistor that is too small to be seen in even the most
- powerful optical microscope. The tiny chip should be able to
- switch on and off in a trillionth of a second, paving the way for
- computers that are faster and smaller. The new transistors will
- operate with a single electron, dramatically reducing power
- system requirements for devices that use them. Bell Labs
- scientists caution that much work remains before the chips are
- practical. The new transistors work only at very low
- temperatures, 1.2 Kelvin (-457 Fahrenheit).
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- MORE FEATURES, LESS MEMORY FROM GRYPHON
- SILVER SPRING, Md. (NB) -- Gryphon Microproducts has announced
- Version 2.0 of its Weiner Shell, a programming language for
- creating terminate and stay resident program. The new version has
- 25 percent more commands, but uses only 40 K, or thirty percent
- less memory than version 1.0. According to President Al Weiner,
- the new version has a more natural DOS interface, expanded
- background telecommunications capabilities, a library, and direct
- access to dBase files. The program retails for $299 and runs of
- MS-DOS 3.0 or higher.
-
- CONTACT: Gryphon Microproducts, PO Box 10087, Silver Spring MD
- 20904, 301-384-6868.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- H-P LOSES ROUND IN COURT BATTLE OVER MAINTENANCE
- CLEVELAND (NB) -- A federal judge has enjoined Hewlett-Packard
- Co. from refusing contract maintenance service to customers of a
- third-party maintenance firm. H-P offers its customers a rapid-
- response repair service for a fee. Hypoint Technology of
- Cleveland offers contract maintenance on H-P minicomputers for
- less, but has no field repair staff. If Hypoint customers needed
- field repairs, they called in H-P technicians, and Hypoint then
- reimbursed them. But H-P formulated a policy to refuse to perform
- such maintenance and Hypoint sued. The injunction against H-P's
- policy is in effect until the case is settled. Hypoint says
- there are many similar lawsuits now pending between maintenance
- companies and computer manufacturers.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- XEROX TO MARKET DOS VERSIONS OF CRICKET SOFTWARE
- MALVERN, Pa. (NB) -- Xerox has acquired the rights to market
- graphics and desktop presentation software that Cricket Software
- Inc. writer for MS-DOS and OS/2 operating systems. Cricket's
- current software line is aimed only at the Macintosh market.
- Xerox plans to build on its base in desktop publishing, with
- Ventura Publisher, by entering the presentation graphics arena.
- Xerox will have the worldwide rights to Cricket's DOS products.
-
- CONTACT: Cricket Software, Malvern PA, 215-251-9890.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- GOLDEN PARACHUTES AT PRIME
- NATICK, Mass. (NB) -- Two key executives of Computervision Corp.
- are leaving the company, trailing golden parachutes, following
- the company's takeover by Prime Computer Inc. Robert Gable,
- erstwhile Computervision president and CEO, who had been opposed
- to the merger, turned down an offer to head Prime's
- Computervision division. Dorick Mauro, Computervision's chief
- financial officer, is also leaving. Both men had lucrative
- separation agreements. Gable will a take home a tidy lump sum of
- $1.5 million, representing three times his highest annual salary
- and bonus. Mauro will get two years' salary and bonus. Doesn't
- look like either executive will have to file for unemployment
- compensation.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- NEWS NIBBLES FROM AROUND THE REGION
-
- APOLLO COMPUTER of Chelmsford, Mass., has trumped Sun
- Microsystem's ace in the high end of the workstation market,
- rolling out the Domain 10000 line, for between $70,000 and
- $130,000. Apollo says the 64-bit desktop supercomputers using reduced
- instruction set technology easily out perform Sun's Sparc reduced
- instruction set workstations.
-
- AGS COMPUTERS INC. of Mountainside, N.J., has gobbled up C3 INC.
- of Herndon, Va., for $157 million in a friendly takeover. C3
- specializes in systems integration for the federal government,
- while AGS sells hardware and software to commercial customers.
-
- Struggling GCA CORP. of Andover, Mass., is dickering with a
- potential buyer, for about $47.5 million. GCA, which makes
- semiconductor manufacturing equipment, refuses to identify the
- suitor. The company has reported a long string of losses, but
- appears to be somewhat on the mend, making it an attractive
- takeover candidate.
-
- IBM scientists at the Almaden Research Center report they have
- come up with the hottest superconductor yet. The ceramic mix of
- thallium, barium, calcium, copper and oxygen loses electrical
- resistance at -234 degrees F, 35 degrees warmer than the previous
- record holder at the University of Arkansas.
-
- ==
-
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- RESTORING COMITY
- Editorial by Dana Blankenhorn, IP2004, NEWSBYTES SOUTH/MIDWEST
-
- Comity and courtesy are breaking down.
-
- In the U.S. Senate, where Jesse Helms and Edward Kennedy
- always call one another "honorable member," Democrats recently
- arrested Sen. Robert Packwood (R-OR) in a futile attempt to break
- a filibuster on campaign reform legislation.
-
- In the online world of public computer conferencing,
- comity has also broken down. Many conferences, in PARTI On The
- Source (POTS) and other systems, have pointed this out.
- Conference moderators have been urged to be harsh, erasing rude
- notes and removing mean users. Proposals have been made to kick
- offensive users offline. Especially in conferences involving
- politics, differences often get sharp and tempers short. Offense
- is taken -- that's how wars start.
-
- Like Jimmy Swaggart, I too have sinned in this regard. In
- my own PARTI experience, I have frequently become angry enough at
- others' postings to launch into diatribes of my own. These were
- taken as vicious personal attacks and answered in kind, to the
- detriment of all users, most especially those who only read
- conferences and are thus known as lurkers.
-
- What's true in conferencing is true also in electronic
- mail. As businesses install electronic mail systems, they're
- finding these same problems, and reacting with top-down rules,
- enforced on pain of dismissal. The trouble is, such rules destroy
- the honesty mail and conferencing were designed to foster.
-
- The time has come to call a halt. The time has come to
- restore comity to the online world, as well as the Senate floor.
- Otherwise none of us will get any work done. As usual, I have
- some modest proposals:
-
- 1. Remember the Golden Rule. Rudeness is always answered
- by rudeness.
-
- 2. First, apologize. Then make sure you know what you're
- dealing with. Remember what happens when you assume. (Ass-u-me.)
-
- 3. The best way out of a conversation starts by shutting
- up.
-
- 4. If A and B get mad and A tells C about it, B better
- not tell D unless B wants E to find out what a loudmouth jerk
- B is.
-
- 5. Tyranny cannot be enforced by mail unless it exists in
- real life. (Or in software.)
-
- 6. A should get permission before telling C what B said
- in a private note to A.
-
- Now, back to the Senate. Put Sen. Packwood down, Mr.
- Guigni. Apologize, Mr. Byrd. Go back to accepting unanimous
- consent agreements. We'll see the whole fussy lot of you this
- fall. (And while we're at it, can't you play something American
- during quorum calls, instead of 18th century European piano
- solos? Gershwin, Rodgers, Sondheim, Springsteen. Even Frank
- Zappa. But American.)
-
- ---Dana Blankenhorn
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- DRAM SHORTAGE BITES #1 - ATARI ST PRICE RISES
- Slough, Berkshire (NB) -- In one of several linked industry
- announcements made last week, Atari UK announced that, with
- immediate effect, the price of the 520 and 1040 ST computers will
- rise by #100. The price rises are blamed on the soaring cost of
- DRAM ships, which have tripled in price over the past year.
-
- This pushes the price of the basic 520 STFM, complete with colour
- TV modulator etc., up from #299 to #399. The price of the 1040
- ST range rises correspondingly by #100. Similar price rises on
- the Mega ST range were rumoured, but unconfirmed as NEWSBYTES UK
- went to press.
-
- So, where does this leave the Atari ST in the UK? It could mean
- a big boost in sales of the Amiga 500 (see story below) which is
- now just #100 more than the 520ST. It could also mean that a
- number of low-end retailers - i.e. those stocking the 520STFM as
- a 'bubble pack,' may decide to move out of the market.
-
- * NEWSBYTES UK also notes that the actual cost of the price
- increase on DRAM chips in the 520 ST works out to be $48 -
- calculated as 16 256 kilobit chips costing $5 today, compared
- with $2 each this time last year. At current exchange rates, $48
- does not equal #100. The #100 price hike only begins to make
- sense when it comes to the 1040ST. Is there something we should
- be told?
-
- CONTACT: ATARI UK, Atari House, Railway Terrace, Slough,
- Berkshire SL2 5BZ. Tel: 0753-33344.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- DRAM SHORTAGE BITES #2 - AMSTRAD HIKES ITS PRICES
- Brentwood, Middlesex (NB) -- Only hours after Atari UK announced
- its price rises, Amstrad followed suit, with rises of between 4.2
- and 12.5 per cent on its entire range of PCW machines and PC
- compatibles.
-
- The brunt of the price rise falls on the Z80-based PCW8512, which
- now sells for #449, compared with #399 before the increase. The
- price rises on the Amstrad range aren't as steep as those of
- Atari, but come at a bad time for the company, with the PPC
- portable just beginning to reach the shops in the UK.
-
- CONTACT: AMSTRAD PLC, Brentwood House, 169 Kings Road,
- Brentwood, Essex, CM14 4EF.
- Tel: 0277-230222.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- DRAM SHORTAGE BITES #3 - COMMODORE SITS TIGHT
- Maidenhead, Berkshire (NB) -- After several months of watching
- Atari 520STFM sales rocket ahead of the Amiga 500, Commodore UK
- executives must be grinning broadly. With the baby Amiga now
- just #100 more than the basic 520 STFM, the difference between
- the two machines is very narrow.
-
- Despite much rumour to the contrary last week, Commodore UK
- announced late Friday that no price rises were contemplated for
- the foreseeable future. Commodore UK's marketing director Dean
- Barrett is quoted on MICRONET 800 on Prestel as saying that
- Commodore can afford to sit tight, thanks to a watertight
- contract for DRAM chips.
-
- "We were paying more for our DRAM chips than Atari," revealed
- Barrett, who surmised that this explains why the Atari 520STFM's
- previous pricing (#299) reflects that situation. "We feel that
- the Amiga 500's price premium over the ST of just #100 is well
- worth it to the customer," said Barrett.
-
- * Potential Amiga buyers might still be wise to buy their
- machines soon. NEWSBYTES UK's previous experience of Commodore's
- "foreseeable future" leads us to equate this to as little as one
- week (grin).
-
- CONTACT: COMMODORE (UK) LTD, Commodore House, The Switchback,
- Gardener Road, Maidenhead, Berkshire SL6 7XA.
- Tel: 0628-770088.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- APPLE LAUNCHES CD-ROM DRIVE
- Hemel Hempstead, Herts (NB) -- In a parallel launch with the US,
- Apple UK unveiled its CD-Rom drive to the masses last week. The
- Apple CD-SC can store up to 550Mb of data, feeding in to a
- suitably-equipped Mac Plus, SE or Apple II at very high speed.
- Data transfer between the two machines is enhanced thanks to the
- use of 64K Ram buffer on the CD-SC drive itself.
-
- The CD-Rom drive plugs directly into the SCSI port on the Mac
- Plus, SE and II series of computers. An Apple SCSI card is
- required for use with the IIe and IIGS series. The drive comes
- with an accessory kit which contains a CD caddy, software drivers
- and utilities to enable the unit to function as an audio CD
- player.
-
- Pricing on the Apple CD-SC has been set at #895 for the UK, with
- initial deliveries expected in June.
-
- CONTACT: Apple UK, Eastman Way, Hemel Hempstead,
- Hertfordshire HP2 7HQ.
- Tel: 0442-60244.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- BAD DEBTS ONLINE WITH ONE-TO-ONE
- London, UK (NB) -- In one of the more unusual applications of
- online services, the One-to-One Email company has opened a
- gateway into the computers of William Prior & Co., a London-based
- solicitor. The gateway allows users of One-to-One to access the
- status of bad debts which Messrs Prior & Co will collect on
- customer's behalf.
-
- Unusually for a debt collection agent, Messrs Prior & Co do not
- charge for their services. Agents fees are collected in the form
- of online charges, which work out at 60 pence a minute for use of
- the gateway.
-
- NEWSBYTES UK has to admit that this is one of the strangest
- applications of electronic mail technology we've yet seen. Can
- anyone better this?
-
- CONTACT: ONE-TO-ONE LIMITED, Scorpio House, 102 Sydney Street,
- Chelsea, London SW3 6NL. Tel: 01-351-2468.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- BRAINSTORM RELAUNCHED IN THE UK
- Ruislip, Middlesex (NB) -- Brainstorm, the PC and PCW series
- outliner program, has been relaunched in the UK. The relaunch,
- which coincides with the release of a memory-resident version of
- the package, celebrates the fact that Caxton Software, which
- handled Brainstorm since its launch in 1983, has moved out of the
- budget end of the market.
-
- "The rights to the package have now passed back to Brainstorm
- software," David Tebbutt, MD of the company, told NEWSBYTES UK.
- "The end result has meant a relaunch - hence why we're now doing
- a pop-up, or memory-resident version of Brainstorm on the PC," he
- added.
-
- Brainstorm retails for #52-95 for the PC, Amstrad PCW and a
- number of other CP/M based computers. Existing users can upgrade
- for #15-00. A demo version is available for just #5-00, although
- file size if limited to 4K on the demonstration package.
-
- * PC readers of NEWSBYTES UK should keep an eye out for the March
- issue of WHAT MICRO magazine, which has a freebie demo of
- Brainstorm taped to the cover.
-
- CONTACT: BRAINSTORM SOFTWARE, 18 Courtlands Close, Ruislip,
- Middlesex HA4 8AX. Tel: 0895-677845.
- Email on Dialcom/Telecom Gold 83:JNL242
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- DBASE IV A FOXBASE+ CLONE?
- Bradford, West Yorkshire (NB) -- Alan Wallis, MD of Raven
- Computers, distributors of Foxbase+ in the UK, rates the recent
- launch of dBase IV from Ashton-Tate as a non-event.
-
- "Whilst dBase IV is undoubtedly an improvement on its predecessor
- it has to be said that its incorporates many of the features
- already offered by Foxbase+," said Wallis.
-
- Over lunch with NEWSBYTES UK soon after dBase IV's launch last
- month, Wallis also called dBase IV little more than a Foxbase+
- clone. Brave words, but Wallis may have a point - dBase IV will
- cost #595 when it appears later this year (later rather than
- sooner), whilst Foxbase+ is already on sale at #395. These
- prices are for the single-user version of each packages.
- Substantially increased savings accrue when looking at the
- networking versions of each product.
-
- Wallis thinks that the (claimed) 25 per cent speed advantage that
- Foxbase+ has over dBase IV, coupled with its availability under
- Xenix and for the Mac, will make Foxbase+ even more popular.
-
- "Taking into account all of the above, I'm expecting Foxbase to
- become even more popular as users recognize the very real
- benefits that the product can offer them right now," said Wallis.
-
- CONTACT: RAVEN COMPUTERS, 28/32 Cheapside, Bradford,
- West Yorkshire BD1 4JA. Tel: 0274-309386.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- + BRITBYTES - Bytes of news from around the UK... +
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
- ACORN of Cambridge is now supplying a card emulator for its
- Archimedes series of RISC-based computers. The #79 card gives
- the Archimedes the capability to hardware emulate the BBC Model B
- and Master series of micros.
-
- APRICOT of Birmingham has signed a deal with RELATIONAL
- TECHNOLOGY for a joint marketing initiative to supply the Ingress
- relational database package on its VX9000 series of computers.
-
- AST RESEARCH has announced price rises on its PCs, printers and
- PC add-in cards. Rises of between 10 and 15 per cent take effect
- immediately, but can be avoided provided the dealer/shop
- concerned takes delivery of orders before 1 June. The rises are
- blamed on (guess what?) the shortage of DRAM ships.
-
- COMMODORE of Maidenhead is organizing an Amiga software
- developer's conference for the 9/10 April. The conference will
- involve 26 top UK software developers and is designed to boost
- confidence in the machine's capabilities. Sources suggest that a
- UK software marketing initiative for the Amiga is about to be
- announced around the same time as the conference.
-
- DESKTOP ENGINEERING SYSTEMS of Ruislip, Middlesex, will launch
- two new Apple Mac-based Cad/Cam packages at the CAD/CAM 88 show
- later this month. McCAD is a 3D Mac-based Cad/Cam package,
- whilst Pegasys 1 is a 2D-based Cad-Cam package. Pegasys Expert
- allows Pegasys 1 users to upgrade to 3D operation. Prices on the
- packages aren't given, but will be revealed at CAD/CAM 88, which
- is scheduled for 22/24 March at the Birmingham NEC.
-
- The MICROLINK electronic mail company of Macclesfield has
- launched a modem package for the Amstrad PCW series. The
- MIcroLink modem costs #169 including tax for a V21/22/23 Hayes-
- compatible unit. That price includes a serial cable, plus comms
- and word processing software. A PCW serial interface is also
- available for #39-95.
-
- The full edition of NEWSBYTES is now available to subscribers of
- the COMPUNET system based in London. Compunet is an online
- service for Commodore 64 users. Plans are in hand to include
- Atari ST and Commodore Amiga users on thee Compunet network.
-
- OFTEL has revealed that BRITISH TELECOM managed to get 77.5 per
- cent of its public coin boxes operational during January. This
- compares with 75.8, 77.2 and 72.4 per cent in October, November
- and December respectively. BT officials are quoted as confident
- of achieving the 90 per cent efficiency target set for 1 April
- this year, at which time Oftel will review the situation
- regarding UK coin box operations.
-
- SCHNEIDER has given notice that its agreement with AMSTRAD to
- distribute the latter's kit on the continent is about to expire.
- Schneider is expected to launch a range of 8086, 80286 and 80386-
- based PCs in the UK this Spring. Keynote to the range is an
- 8086-based LCD-screen laptop in the Toshiba T1100 style. Pricing
- on the Schneider laptop is expected to be around the #800 mark.
-
- [***][3/08/88][***]
- UK DATES FOR YOUR DIARY...
-
- Event: BBC Micro and Electron User Show
- Dates: 18/20 March 1988
- Location: Manchester
- Organisers: Database Exhibitions - 0625-878888
-
- Event: The European Unix User Show
- Dates: 7/9 June 1988
- Location: London
- Organisers: EMAP Conferences - 0203-470075
-
- Event: X400 Message Handling Recommendations
- Dates: 27/29 June 1988
- Location: London
- Organisers: Frost & Sullivan - 01-730-3438
-
- Event: The PC User Show
- Dates: 28/30 June 1988
- Location: London
- Organisers: EMAP Conferences - 0203-470075
-
- Event: The OSI Reference Model & Network Architecture
- Dates: 13/15 July 1988
- Location: London
- Organisers: Frost & Sullivan - 01-730-3438
-
- Event: X-25 and Packet Switching Networks
- Dates: 18/20 July 1988
- Location: London
- Organisers: Frost & Sullivan - 01-730-3438
-
- Event: ISDN - Fundamentals, Status & Trends
- Dates: 25/27 July 1988
- Location: London
- Organisers: Frost & Sullivan - 01-730-3438
-
- Event: ISDN - Protocols & Implementation
- Dates: 28/29 July 1988
- Location: London
- Organisers: Frost & Sullivan - 01-730-3438
- ====
-
-