home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1991-10-01 | 78.1 KB | 1,952 lines |
- Newsbytes Apple Report
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00001)
-
- JANUARY MACWORLD EXPO TO SEE 'O30 MAC
- SAN FRANCISCO, 1988 NOV 22 (NB) -- Apple Computer will roll out an
- upgraded Macintosh SE at the January MacWorld Expo in San Francisco,
- according to MacWeek magazine. The trade paper quotes sources at
- Apple as saying that a laptop, however, will not be unveiled at the
- same time.
-
- The new SE, based on the powerful 16 MHz Motorola 68030 microprocessor,
- will sport a 1.44 megabyte SuperDrive, a forty megabyte hard disk
- drive, and either two or four megabytes of random access memory.
- The machine is said to be four times faster than a standard SE.
- The paper adds that Apple will also announce a 21-inch gray-scale
- monitor and a "three-slot Mac" -- a scaled down version of the
- IIX.
-
- Sources at Apple reportedly say a laptop will not be released until
- at least this summer due to numerous design and marketing problems.
- There is also a problem with the battery -- Apple is said to be seeking
- an alternative to a lead acid battery -- and the active matrix
- screen, for which quality and quantity have been disappointing.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00008)
-
- NEW FOCAL POINT SHIPS
- MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- TENpointO, the Macintosh
- software arm of Mediagenic, has announced the release of
- Focal Point II, the successor to its HyperCard-based personal information
- manager program. Focal Point II, $199.95, designed by HyperCard
- guru Danny Goodman, features task and project management, a run-time
- version of Reports, with more than 60 pre-formatted reports, and
- communication functions such as electronic messaging on networks.
- The basic product includes a daily appointment book, to-do lists and
- monthly calendar, and an alarm system which will notify a user
- of an appointment. It is available to registered owners of Focal
- Point for $90 but available only through January 31 for $40.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126/Contact: Michelle Bowman, TenpointO, 415-329-0800)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00009)
-
- CLARIS LAUNCHES REGISTERED TRAINER PROGRAM
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 23 (NB) -- Claris Corporation
- has started a Registered Trainer Program aimed at recognizing and
- approving qualified software training professionals. To
- qualify for participation, trainers must demonstrate exceptional
- training ability on Claris' software products and strong
- commitment to its customers. In return, the trainers will get
- referrals from Claris. "Claris is committed to outstanding
- customer support," says Liz Harris, Clars' training manager.
- Currently both Claris and third parties are developing
- Claris-specific training curricula. When these programs are
- available, Claris will begin to evaluate additional training
- organizations on their ability to implement them.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126/Contact: Liz Harris, Claris, 415-960-2652)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(TOR)(0002)
-
- APPLE CANADA PROMOTION TIES IN WITH FREQUENT FLYER PROGRAM
- MARKHAM, ONTARIO, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Apple Canada Inc.'s
- promotional efforts are literally flying high this fall as an
- agreement with Air Canada offers frequent flyers a chance to win
- a computer. Apple has announced the Apple Means
- Business Contest for members of Air Canada's frequent flyer
- program, Aeroplan. Aeroplan participants who return an entry form
- published in the Aeroplan member bulletin in November will have a
- chance to win one of 10 computers or one of 10 free
- trips. Every member who sends in the entry form will get 1,000
- bonus miles on Aeroplan. Aeroplan members who buy Macintoshes
- during the contest -- which runs to February 28 -- will get
- additional bonus miles.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: Apple Canada, 416-477-5800)
-
- Newsbytes (Tm) Business Report
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00002)
-
- SEAGATE LAYS OFF 980
- SCOTTS VALLEY, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Seagate Technology,
- maker of disk drives, has laid off 980 workers at its Singapore
- plant, saying there is a softer market for personal computers than
- originally anticipated. The massive layoff, a tenth of Seagate's
- Singapore workforce, and a twentieth of its world employment of
- 27,000, comes as the firm has just announced a first quarter loss
- of $52.8 million. Seagate admits a delay in getting smaller
- 3.5-inch drives to market cost it dearly and that it currently has
- an excess inventory of the hardware.
-
- Seagate confirms a report which first appeared in California
- Technology Stock Letter -- that its drives are being purchased
- by Apple Computer -- but will not comment on a report, also by
- the investment analysts at CTSL, that it has signed a major new
- contract with IBM to supply its drives for future PS/2 machines.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINES)(SFO)(00003)
-
- MEDIAGENIC LAYS OFF 30
- MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 26 (NB) -- Mediagenic, formerly
- known as Activision, has eliminated 30 positions from its workforce
- of 280 worldwide. The layoffs come as retail software sales are
- called "sluggish" and the firm prepares for a "slumping economy,"
- says Mediagenic's President Bruce Davis, in a prepared statement.
- The latest figures show the game and productivity software maker
- with slumping profits, down 92 percent from a year earlier.
- Twenty two of the layoffs occurred at the company's Menlo Park
- headquarters.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126)
-
-
- (EXCLUSIVE)(BUSINESS)(LAX)(00012)
-
- PC-SIG SUIT SIGNALS BLUE SAIL'S IN THE SUNSET
- SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- The August 2 edition of
- Newsbytes' You Read It Here First reported a story about PC-SIG's
- plans to sue Blue Sail Software and Alde over rights to its public-
- domain database. The news was so exclusive that even Blue Sail's
- principal, James Wallace, didn't learn of the suit until after the
- story appeared. According to Wallace, in an exclusive interview,
- Alde finally informed Blue Sail and, a few weeks ago, Blue Sail
- ceased doing business. The CD ROM that Blue Sail was producing with
- Alde is also history.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (EXCLUSIVE)(BUSINESS)(LAX)(00013)
-
- PC-SIG TO PRODUCE CD ROM FOR EGGHEAD
- SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- PC-SIG is entering into
- an agreement with Egghead Software to market a special CD ROM with a
- selection of the best of public domain software. The disk will sell
- for approximately $129 exclusively at Egghead. Official news of the
- disk should be announced within a week or two. The Egghead deal was
- originally to have featured software from the Blue Sail public-
- domain library. However, that organization recently ceased doing
- business after a dispute with PC-SIG.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(WAS)(00003)
-
- THREE SOFTWARE FIRMS TO MERGE
- CLEARWATER, FLORIDA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- TriMark Corp., Harris
- Business Group, an Drexel Systems Corp. have announced a plan to
- merge. The directors of the three hardware and software companies
- must secure the approval of their boards of directors. The merger
- is scheduled for January. All three companies are authorized
- remarketers of IBM mid-range systems. TriMark also sells
- personal computers.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(WAS)(00011)
-
- COMMODORE EXPANDS RETAIL OUTLETS
- WEST CHESTER, PENNSYLVANIA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Commodore
- International says it has signed agreement with seven computer
- retail chains that will expanded the number of outlets where its
- computers are available to 450 new stores. The new dealers are
- Software Etc., with 230 stores nationwide; Electronics Boutique
- with 140 stores nationwide; Waldensoftware Inc. with 27 stores
- nationwide; PC Warehouse with 23 stores in the Northeast;
- DataPhaz, the largest U.S. Computerland franchise, with 12 stores
- in the West; Priority I with seven stores in California; and
- Computerland, D.C., with three stores.
-
- Computerland, D.C., Priority I, DataPhaz, and PC Warehouse will
- carry one or more of Commodore's line of personal computers,
- which includes the Amiga and MS-DOS compatible product lines.
- Software Etc., Waldensoftware, and Electronics Boutique will
- carry Commodore products with an emphasis on the Amiga 500 multitasking,
- graphics-oriented computer.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(WAS)(00012)
-
- PRIME SAYS MAI BASIC FOUR A FRONT FOR DREXEL BURNHAM
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Prime Computer Inc. has
- charged that takeover experts Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc., and
- its controversial takeover maven Michael Milkin, are behind that
- offer from MAI Basic Four for the much larger Prime. In court
- documents, Prime says that Drexel Burnham exerts control over the
- bid but hasn't disclosed that role in papers filed with the
- Securities and Exchange Commission.
-
- Prime claims that MAI owner, New York investor Bennett LeBow, has
- a series of secret partnerships with senior Drexel officials,
- including Milkin, that gives Drexel veto power over the takeover.
- Drexel stands to reap big fees from the takeover, regardless of
- whether the deal goes through. Federal authorities have long
- suspected that Drexel has manipulated takeovers in order to win
- hefty fees. Milken is a defendant in a major SEC securities fraud
- suit and target of a federal grand jury.
-
- MAI Basic Four attorney Jeffrey Bagner said Prime's allegations
- "are totally inaccurate. The decisions in this tender offer are
- being made by the directors of MAI Basic Four." MAI offered $20
- per share ($970 million) for Prime. Some takeover experts believe
- that MAI and LeBow have really been attempting to get Prime to
- make an offer for MAI Basic, a tactic known as the Pac Man
- defense. Prime's suit says that Drexel approached the company
- last June, trying to get Prime to make an offer for the MAI
- shares that LeBow and fellow investor William Weksel hold.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00010)
-
- IBM JAPAN EMPLOYS MORE LAWYERS
- TOKYO, NOV 22, 1988 (NB) -- IBM Japan, taking the cue from its
- American counterpart, has beefed up its legal department in
- anticipation of new fights for copyright protection. IBM Japan
- has six lawyers now and plans to employ two outside legal firms
- every year.
-
- (Naoyuki Yazawa/198811125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(0001)
-
- LANPAR RESUMES TRADING, LETTER OF INTENT REPORTED
- MARKHAM, ONTARIO, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Shares of Lanpar
- Technologies Inc. resumed trading Thursday on the Toronto and
- Montreal stock exchanges after a four-week trading halt. The
- computer equipment maker requested the halt October 31. Lanpar,
- which has been losing money on its computer terminal
- manufacturing operations, has been negotiating with an unnamed
- company interested in investing in Lanpar.
-
- A Toronto daily newspaper, The Financial Post, reported that
- Lanpar has signed a letter of intent with another company, but
- said details of the agreement had not been disclosed. Earlier,
- another Toronto newspaper, The Globe and Mail, reported that
- Lanpar's creditors would lose C$4.1 million if a holding proposal
- by the company is accepted. The Globe said it had obtained a copy
- of a statement of affairs mailed to the company's creditors.
- Lanpar did not respond to Newsbytes' inquiries by this week's
- deadline.
-
- Lanpar shares opened Nov. 24 at a price of 32 cents Canadian,
- down from 80 cents at the time trading was halted. The price held
- steady throughout the day.
-
- Lanpar manufactures computer terminals and IBM-compatible
- personal computers, as well as distributing computer equipment
- and operating a third-party computer maintenance business.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(0003)
-
- COMPUTER BROKERS OF CANADA ACQUIRED
- CONCORD, ONTARIO, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Tech Data Corp. of
- Clearwater, Fla., has agreed to acquire Computer Brokers of
- Canada. Both companies distribute computer products. Nir Shafrir,
- president of Computer Brokers, said his company will keep its
- present name and staff. Shafrir will remain as president. But
- Tech Data will purchase all of the company's common stock for an
- undisclosed sum of money and shares in Tech Data.
-
- Shafrir said Computer Brokers hopes to take advantage of Tech
- Data's resources to expand its product line. Computer Brokers
- will be looking at expansion in networking and communication
- products, systems and peripherals, he said. Computer Brokers of
- Canada has about 70 employees and annual revenues of about C$80
- million. Tech Data has several hundred employees and revenues of
- about $240 million, Shafrir said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: Nir Shafrir, Computer Brokers of
- Canada, 416-736-6333)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(0007)
-
- Q.W. PAGE SIGNS AUSTRALIAN NEWVIEWS DISTRIBUTOR
- TORONTO, 1988 Nov 25 (NB) -- Q.W. Page Associates Inc. has signed
- Comprop Ltd. of Brisbane, Australia, as a distributor for its
- NewViews accounting software. NewViews, which received the 1986
- PC Magazine Award for Technical Excellence, is already sold in
- Canada and the United States. Comprop will have exclusive
- distribution rights for Australia.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: Cathy Mallove, Q.W. Page
- Associates Inc., 416-923-4567)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(0008)
-
- DATAPOINT CANADA SIGNS RESELLER AGREEMENT WITH NOVELL
- TORONTO, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Datapoint Canada Inc. has signed a
- National Reseller Agreement with Novell, Inc., of Provo, Utah.
- Datapoint will add Novell's NetWare network operating system to
- its line of local-area network products. Datapoint Canada is a
- subsidiary of Datapoint Corp. of San Antonio, Tex.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: Sam Donkoh, Datapoint Canada
- Inc., 416-222-8005)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00006)
-
- IBM TO SEEK SWEDISH STOCK EXCHANGE LISTING
- STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN, 1988 NOV 22 (NB) -- IBM Sweden has announced
- it is considering seeking a listing on the Stockholm Bourse, the
- Swedish stock exchange. Lennart Krook, IBM Sweden's finance
- manager, is quoted in Veckans Affarer, a top Swedish business
- magazine, as saying the company may seek a placing to improve its
- image in Scandinavia.
-
- Only two non-Swedish companies have achieved the exalted position
- of a listing on the Stockholm Bourse: Companie Generale D-
- Electricitie, and Companie de St Gobian. Both companies are
- French.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881123)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00007)
-
- CABLE & WIRELESS INCREASES BID FOR TELEPHONE RENTALS GROUP
- LONDON, 1988 NOV 22 (NB) -- Cable & Wireless (C&W), the
- international telecommunications group, has increased its bid for
- Telephone Rentals (TR), a UK telecoms company. The 340 pence per
- share bid has been rejected as hostile by TR representatives.
-
- The C&W bid, which values Telephone Rentals at #317 million,
- compares with an earlier September offer of 305 pence per share.
- The September offer achieved less than one per cent acceptance
- from the shareholders in the TR group. TR's"s shares rose 6 pence
- to 338 pence last week, following the announcement of the bid.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881122)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(BRU)(00005)
-
- IBM HANDS COPIER MAINTENANCE CONTRACT TO KODAK
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1988 NOV 18 (NB) -- IBM Belgium has agreed a
- major maintenance contract with Kodak. Terms of the agreement
- calls for Kodak to maintain IBM photocopiers within Belgium, and
- come in the wake of a similar deal in the US announced during
- October.
-
- To help users through the transition period, both companies have
- agreed to support users where necessary, until Kodak's IBM
- maintenance system infrastructure is up and running.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881118)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(BRU)(00006)
-
- GIGABIT SECURES MAJOR CHIP CONTRACT WITH CRAY RESEARCH
- NEWBURY PARK, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 26 (NB) -- Cray Research has
- awarded a $29 million contract to Gigabit Logic, for the supply
- of Gigabit's Gallium Arsenide logic circuits. The revolutionary
- chips will be fitted to the forthcoming Cray-3 series of
- supercomputers, and are expected to dramatically improve even the
- Cray's legendary number-crunching performance.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881126)
-
- Newsbytes General News
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00014)
-
- TRW EXPANDS SERVICES PROGRAM
- FAIRFIELD, NEW JERSEY, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- TRW has launched an
- expanded repair service aimed at original equipment manufacturers
- and system integrators. The services include warranty coverage,
- post warranty work, engineering tracking and change
- recommendations, volume subassembly repair, and more.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125/Contact: Bill Fredell, TRW, 201-575-7110 ext.
- 4265)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00002)
-
- NINTENDO UNVEILS 16-BIT GAME COMPUTER
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Nintendo Co., the world's largest
- game computer supplier and producer, has unveiled a trial model
- of its 16-bit family computer, the Super Famicom.
-
- Adoption of a 16-bit central processing unit produces beautiful
- and delicate colors on a display, and a second microprocessor
- has been provided for powerful stereo sound.
-
- The machine's game cassette will be a bit larger than the present
- type, therefore, software for current 8-bit machines will
- require a special adapter. Marketing is expected next July,
- however, we have to wait until finalization of the specifications for a
- price.
-
- (Naoyuki Yazawa/19881125/Contact: Nintendo Co., 075-541-6111)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00003)
-
- SONY AND PHILIPS LAUNCH CD-I STANDARD
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Standards for CD-I (compact disk interactive),
- so-called computer of the future, have been developed by Sony Corp.
- and Philips of the Netherlands. CD-I is an interactive system in which
- sounds, graphics and motion pictures, stored on a compact disk, are
- manipulated by the user in an interactive environment. The first
- CD-I players and software, initially entertainment-oriented, are expected
- to appear within the next year.
-
- The main concern about CD-I is now compatibility between CD-I system
- manufacturers. The Sony/Philips pact specifies that the hardware
- will have a full data capacity of 650 megabytes and a reading
- speed at 75 sectors per second. Audio sound can be selected from
- four modes: digital audio, high-fidelity, standard, and
- speech mode. Video shall conform to both National Television
- System Committee (NTSC) and phase alternating by line (PAL) standards. The
- system software is CD real-time operating by system (RTOS) which
- runs on a Motorola 68000 microprocessor.
-
- (Naoyuki Yazawa/19881125/Contact: Sony Corp., 03-448-2111)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00006)
-
- AI SOFTWARE USING FUZZY LOGIC DEBUTS
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Tokyo-based major software
- development company Knowledgewell has released a Japanese version
- of artificial intelligence (AI) software which uses fuzzy logic.
-
- Called FLOPS Japanese Version, the program is rewritten for
- Japanese personal computer users, based on the software developed
- by Cemp-Carraway Heart Institute of Alabama, in the U.S. FLOPS can
- be installed on NEC's PC9800 series and Toshiba's J3100 series.
- As the fuzzy logic is designed to execute vague instructions, the
- software can be applied to various fields, such as food
- manufacturing process management (which used to depend on an
- expert's intuition or experience), medical diagnosis, and weather
- forecasting. The total price for the software is 380,000 yen or
- $3,100.
-
- (Ken Takahashi/19881124/Contact: Knowledgewell, 03-794-6841)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00007)
-
- HAVE A GADGET, WILL TRAVEL IN EUROPE
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- On Dec. 8, Sharp will release a translation
- computer for Japanese travellers in Europe, a gadget which is small
- enough to fit into your palm. The small gadget has several
- features unique for its size, including a memory of some 350 basic
- conversation sentences and 610 words, each in English, French,
- German, Italian, Spanish, Russian, and Japanese. The device will
- translate the words between all these languages.
-
- Also, the machine includes a currency exchange calculation feature
- which is convenient for shopping. The price will be 148,000 yen or
- $1,200.
-
- (Ken Takahashi/19881122/Contact: Sharp Corp., 06-621-1221)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00009)
-
- JAPANESE GADGETS ARE WELCOMED IN THE U.S.
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Fortune magazine of the U.S. has
- announced its choices for the greatest gadget hits of 1988. In the
- magazine's column, three Japanese products are selected: Sony's
- Videowalkman, NEC's ultralight laptop computer, and Ricoh's
- autofocus camera Mirai One. NEC's machine is thin enough to fit
- into a large-sized envelop, and operates four times faster
- than an IBM XT. The ultralight laptop machine is priced at $2,999.
-
- (Ken Takahashi/19881124)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(0006)
-
- BRITISH COLUMBIA LAUNCHES HIGH-TECH RESEARCH FUND
- BURNABY, BRITISH COLUMBIA, 1988 Nov 21 (NB) -- The British
- Columbia Advanced Systems Institute has set up a C$1.25 million
- fund to support high-technology research projects in the
- province. Project must be in computer science, microelectronics,
- artificial intelligence, robotics or communications, and must be
- related to natural resource industries or to the Canadian space
- program. Proposals must come from private industry but must also
- involve cooperation with British Columbia universities. The
- deadline for proposals is December 16, and more information about
- submitting proposals is available from the institute at Suite
- 405, 3700 Gilmore Way, Burnaby B.C. V5G 4M1. Grants will be
- announced in February.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: B.C. Advanced Systems Institute,
- 604-435-0551)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LAX)(00001)
-
- SECOND LOCAL CAD SHOOTOUT SCHEDULED
- WOODLAND HILLS, CALIFORNIA 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- The second annual CAD
- Showdown has been scheduled for February 2, 1989 at the Woodland
- Hills Country Club from the hours of 10:00 am to 6:00 pm. During the
- showdown, over a dozen CAD vendors will compete in the production of
- a printed-circuit design. Attenders will be able to evaluate each
- product's performance on a score card which will be collected and
- tabulated. Results will be mailed to attenders to help in their
- purchasing decisions. The event, described as a mini trade show, is
- produced by Compudraft Engineering, a Southern California service
- bureau and CAD dealer.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125/Contact: Carmen Zabaldo, Compudraft, 818-709-
- 0202)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00009)
-
- ATARI STARTS UK AD CAMPAIGN; ST LAPTOP PRICING & AVAILABILITY
- SLOUGH, ENGLAND, 1988 NOV 22 (NB) -- Atari UK has launched a
- major media campaign which lampoons IBM. In addition, the company
- has announced pricing and availability for the long-awaited
- laptop ST, code-named Stacey.
-
- The media campaign, which centres on the statement: "I think,
- therefore IBM won't get my PC order," (a spoof on IBM's "I think,
- therefore IBM" motto) aims to increase interest in Atari's 8088-
- 2-based PC-3, 80286-based PC-4 and 80386 microprocessor-based PC-
- 5 series. The ads are impressive. What IBM's reaction will be to
- them remains to be seen.
-
- On the ST laptop front, meanwhile, Atari has announced that UK
- pricing on Stacey will be #695 in its single-floppy plus 1Mb of
- memory configuration. According to the latest Computer Trade
- Weekly (CTW) newspaper, the machine will ship in the UK next May,
- following a March/April shipment in the US.
-
- CTW also reveals that Stacey will be shown in Europe next March,
- at the Hanover CeBit Faire in West Germany. By that time, Atari
- should have finished its casing for the laptop, and beta test
- shipments will have begun in earnest.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881122/Atari: (UK) 0753-33344)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BRU)(00007)
-
- CHIP MAGAZINE ANNOUNCES 1988 SOFTWARE AWARDS
- MUNICH, WEST GERMANY, 1988 NOV 22 (NB) -- CHiP Magazine, the
- premier West German computer magazine, has announced its annual
- software awards. The winners were as follows:
-
- Games software of the year: 1st place... Tetris
- Runners-up... Lazy Larry
- Flight Simulator III
-
- Business software of the year: 1st place... Microsoft Excel
- Runners up... Timeworks
- Ichitaro 3.0
-
- Technical software of the year: 1st place... P-Cad
- Runners up... Autocad 9.0
- Mathematica
-
- Best utility software... 1st place... Turbo Pascal 4.0
- Runners up... Hypercard
- Laplink
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881122)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BRU)(00008)
-
- CHIP MAGAZINE READERS VOTE COMPAQ INTO NUMBER ONE SLOT
- MUNICH, WEST GERMANY, 1988 NOV 22 (NB) -- CHiP magazine has also
- published its best-selling hardware of 1988. The results give
- Compaq's Deskpro pole position in the business computer category,
- whilst Commodore holds onto the consumer (games) machine hot spot
- with its aging C64 machine.
-
- The best-selling business hardware (in descending order) was:
- Compaq's Deskpro 286, Atari PC-3, Apple's IIGS, Commodore's PC-20
- and PC-10 series, Amstrad's PC-1640, Apple's Macintosh II, with IBM's
- PS/2 Model 30 and 60 bringing up the rear of the field.
-
- On the home computer front, the Commodore 64 is still number 1,
- closely followed by the Amiga 500, the Atari 1040ST, the
- Commodore 128D, the Amiga 1000, the Schneider Euro PC1, the Atari
- 520STFM, with the Atari PC1 and the Amstrad CPC-464 tailing the
- leaders.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881122)
-
- Newsbytes (Tm) Government and the Courts
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00009)
-
- NASA PICKS COMPUTER SCIENCES
- WASHINGTON, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- The National Aeronautics and
- Space Administration has selected Computer Sciences Corp. to
- negotiate a computer-services contract, worth about $170 million
- over five years. The work will be done at the Ames Research
- Center.
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVERNMENT)(ATL)(00003)
-
- FOXBASE SUED AS ASHTON-TATE SEEKS COPYRIGHT OF DBASE LANGUAGE
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV. 21 (NB) -- In the wake of mixed
- legal signals on the protection of screen displays, Ashton-Tate
- is now seeking copyright protection for its dBase IV programming
- language by suing Fox Software Corp., Perrysburg, Ohio in a Los
- Angeles federal court. Ashton-Tate alleges that Fox' Foxbase
- database is a clone of dBase, the most popular database on
- microcomputers. Unlike Digital Communications Corp., which
- unsuccessfully tried to get Crosstalk-clonemaker Softklone
- Distributing Corp out of the market by claiming its main status
- screen was copied from Crosstalk XVI, Ashton-Tate is claiming
- absolute control over the dBase programming language, which is
- used extensively in business to design databases. If Foxbase is
- ruled a clone of dBase, it puts in question the legal status of
- databases written with it, and could cause a ripple effect of
- legal action around the world.
-
- Meanwhile, legal precedents in all software clone suits remain
- unsettled. Neither Apple's suit claiming control of the Macintosh
- user interface, nor Lotus' suit against clones of its 1-2-3
- spreadsheet product, is close to a settlement of decision yet.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVERNMENT)(ATL)(00004)
-
- FCC PUSHES FOR PHONE REGULATION WHICH WILL LET BELLS ONLINE
- WASHINGTON, 1988 NOV. 29 (NB) -- One of the big problems faced
- by the Bell companies in getting into the online business was
- separating their regulated interests in phone systems from their
- unregulated interests in computing. By simplifying phone company
- regulation with price caps rather than profit caps, FCC Chairman
- Dennis Patrick hopes to let the Bells into computing with less
- trauma. His plan faces opposition, but Patrick is intent on
- getting a price cap plan onto the FCC's agenda for its December 2
- meeting.
-
- Meanwhile, Bell gateways continue to proliferate. US West
- announced November 22 it will offer a gateway based on the
- Minitel model next fall in Omaha, Nebraska. NYNEX and BellSouth
- are among the Bells which already have gateways in operation.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVERNMENT)(ATL)(00007)
-
- TEXAS INSTRUMENTS CHARGES MICRON WITH STEALING ITS CHIP PATENTS
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, 1988 NOV. 28 (NB) -- Troubled by falling profits in
- memory chips, and stung by criticism that the 1986 U.S.-Japan
- chip-dumping accord was a special deal in its favor, Micron
- Technologies Inc. of Boise, Idaho now faces a patent infringement
- suit from Texas Instruments. The giant Dallas-based electronics
- and defense firm charges that Micron dynamic random access memory
- (DRAM) and video random access memory (VRAM) chips infringe on TI
- patents. (Texas Instruments scientist Jack Kirby and former Intel
- head Robert Noyce are generally given credit for creating the
- microprocessor in the late 1960s.) Over the years, TI has won
- $281 million in royalties from other chipmakers, and TI general
- counsel Richard Agnich said the company had been negotiating with
- Micron for about six months before filing the suit.
-
- Ironically, Micron's ticker symbol on the over-the-counter market
- had, until recently, been DRAM. The symbol was changed, to MCRN,
- Micron said, to prevent all bad news about the memory chip
- business from turning into panicky sell-offs of Micron stock.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVERNMENT)(ATL)(00008)
-
- SANDIA'S LATEST COMPUTER ADVANCE IS A SECURITY PROGRAM
- ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- The Sandia National Labs,
- best known for research into nuclear weapons but known recently for
- advances in parallel processing, has announced a computer program which
- combines those two ideas. The Systematic Analysis of
- Vulnerability to Intrusion (SAVI) program calculates the 10 most-
- likely paths terrorists might take in attacking a facility, given
- all their possible support from the outside, and recommends
- security improvements. It is presently being upgraded to make
- calculations based on the presence of an accomplice inside the
- facility under discussion as well. While it's designed to protect
- nuclear plants, staff scientist Alfred Winblad says the program
- can be used for any facility, even a prison. "I think you can use
- it for any facility that you had stuff you wanted to protect,
- just about any facility in a fixed location that has security
- associated with it. Banks for instance. This would be very good
- to use in the initial design of a facility, too."
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LON)(00008)
-
- EEC CONFIRMS JAPANESE PRINTER LEVIES FOR FIVE YEARS
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1988 NOV 23 (NB) -- The EEC has confirmed that
- its penal levies on 14 Japanese dot-matrix printer manufacturers,
- will continue for at least five years. The confirmation has
- resulted in considerable protest from the companies concerned.
-
- The levies, which range from 4.8 percent (on TEC printers) to 47
- per cent (on Fujitsu printers) were first imposed in May of this
- year, following allegations of excess inventory dumping from
- European printer companies.
-
- The Committee of Japanese printers (Japanprint) has registered a
- strong complaint with the EEC over the confirmed levies, which
- were announced after a two day meeting of EEC ministers last
- week.
-
- Only one company, Epson, appears to have come off well from the
- confirmed levies. The May 1988 levy was 433.4 per cent on Epson
- dot-matrix printers, and has been reduced to 25.7 per cent with
- immediate effect.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881123)
-
- Newsbytes IBM Report
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00006)
-
- NO DBASE INFRINGEMENT, SAYS FOX
- PERRYSBURG, OHIO, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Fox Software Inc. says it
- has not infringed Ashton-Tate's copyrights for the Dbase
- programming language in its FoxBase plus, FoxBASE plus-Mac, and
- SCO FoxBase plus. Ashton-Tate sued Fox in U.S. court in
- California, alleging the Fox products are copyright violations.
- Fox said there is no merit to the Ashton-Tate suit, that the
- language was not invented by Ashton-Tate, and is in the public
- domain.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00008)
-
- IBM TO MARKET PS/2s THROUGH DEPARTMENT STORES
- NEW YORK, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- International Business Machines has
- begun selling PS/2 models 25 and 30 in four department stores in
- south Florida. IBM may expand the test nationwide, in an attempt
- to recapture market share lost to PC-AT clones. IBM officials
- told the Wall Street Journal that a decision on broad-scale sales
- through department store channels for the low end of the PS/2
- line is several months away. The last time IBM marketed its
- personal computer products through department stores was the ill-
- fated PCJr.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00010)
-
- IBM TO PUSH MCA CLONES?
- NEW YORK, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- International Business Machines
- will issue guidelines on its policies on patent licensing,
- according to an IBM spokesman. The policy will clarify that IBM
- will not collect fees from uses of the Micro Channel Architecture
- until the patents are actually issued over the next two years.
- The Wall Street Journal speculates that this may be a move to
- encourage companies to offer PS/2 clones, and develop products
- that use the MCA technology.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00013)
-
- DOS 4.0 SELLING WELL, OS/2 AND XENIX STAGNANT
- PLYMOUTH MEETING, PENNSYLVANIA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- DOS 4.0 is
- gaining in systems software sales in retail stores, according to
- the latest audits from IMS America. The data show no growth yet
- for OS/2, but that OS/2 sales are running ahead of sales for
- Microsoft's Xenix, the Unix dialect for PCs. It's still a DOS
- world out there.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125/Contact: Patrice Johnson or Ron Rehling, IMS
- America Computer Markets Division, 215-834-4752)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TYO)(00001)
-
- SEIKOSHA LAUNCHES INTO PC-COMPATIBLE MARKET
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Seikosha, a member of Seiko group,
- and Tomcat Computer, a computer engineering company, have jointly
- developed a 32-bit multi-compatible personal computer.
-
- The machine has an i80386SX central processing unit and is
- compatible with the NEC PC-9800 series in Japanese mode and IBM PC/AT
- in English mode. Plenty of software, including 6,000 programs for the
- PC-9800 series and 60,000 programs for PC/AT, can be used on this
- machine.
-
- A high level of compatibility has been realized with eight newly-developed,
- large-scale integrated circuits (LSI), based on Tomcat's virtual
- system logic (VSL) and the adoption of an IBM PC/AT bus.
-
- Two floppy disk drives are standard and three type of media,
- double sided double density (2D), double sided double density
- double track (2DD) and double sided high density double track (2HD),
- are readable. 40 megabytes or 100 megabytes of hard disk drives
- are available as an option.
-
- The price of the machine is estimated at 400,000 yen or $3,200,
- much cheaper than a low-priced 32-bit machine. The shipping
- date is expected to be sometime this coming spring.
-
- (Naoyuki Yazawa/19881125/Contact: Mr. Negishi, Seikosha Co.,
- 03-621-8960)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TYO)(00004)
-
- MAKE PC/AT AX-COMPATIBLE
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Proside, Chiba, has developed
- software which allows an IBM PC/AT machine to run programs for an
- architecture-extended (AX) machine, which is a PC/AT-compatible
- machine with a Japanese language feature. The DOS-ADDON-AX beta
- version, which alone costs 10,000 yen ($80), needs the company's
- hardware set JEGA (Japanese enhanced graphics adaptor) which consists
- of a JEGA board, an AX board, and an AX basic input output system
- (BIOS). The total set for making PC/AT compatible with AX, both
- software and hardware, costs 82,000 yen or $670 -- very attractive
- for PC/AT users who want to add a kanji character feature to their
- machine at a very low cost. The company's spokesman told NEWSBYTES-JAPAN,
- "The price for the set is very low. PC/AT users don't have
- to purchase an AX machine. I suppose the set will get gradual
- popularity in half a year or so." Though the hardware set is being
- sold by the company, the sample shipment of the software is
- scheduled in the middle of next month.
-
- (Ken Takahashi/19881124/Contact: Proside Corp., 0472-79-3504)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TYO)(00012)
-
- MITSUBISHI TO EXPORT AT-COMPATIBLE MACHINES TO EUROPE
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Mitsubishi Electric Corp. will
- launch a major exportation effort in Europe for its personal computers
- within the next year. Mitsubishi will export desktop
- and laptop 16-bit IBM PC/AT-compatible machines to Europe.
- The machines will be sold first in England and Germany, and
- later in France and Italy. Moreover, the company is
- currently constructing an engineering center in Dusseldorf,
- West Germany, aiming at technological support for sales.
-
- (Ken Takahashi/19881124)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(0004)
-
- COMPUTER ASSOCIATES ADDS FRENCH ACCOUNTING, PAYROLL MODULE
- VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- The Micro
- Products Division of Computer Associates Canada Ltd. has
- announced a French-language version of its Accpac Easy accounting
- software. The company also unveiled a new Canadian payroll module
- for its Accpac BPI Accounting software.
-
- Comptabilite generale, the French-language version of Accpac
- Easy, has a suggested retail price of C$99. It is designed for
- small or part-time businesses with basic accounting needs.
- Although French-language versions of the company's SuperCalc4
- spreadsheet and SuperProject Plus project management software are
- available, Comptabilite generale is CA's first French-language
- accounting package.
-
- The new Canadian payroll module for Accpac BPI, the company's
- mid-range accounting software for PCs, will ship in December and
- sell for C$495.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: John Schoutsen, Computer
- Associates Canada Ltd., 604-737-3322)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(0005)
-
- FRENCH VERSION OF EXCELERATOR OFFERED
- CAMBRIDGE, MASS., 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Index Technology Corp. has
- announced a French-language version of Release 1.8 of
- Excelerator. The systems analysis and design software runs on MS-
- DOS-based PCs. Index Technology will sell the French version of
- Excelerator in Canada through its offices in Toronto and
- Montreal, and in Europe through its U.K. subsidiary Excelerator
- Software Products Ltd., London, and through Cap Sogetti
- Instruments in Paris.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: Jessica Solodar, Index
- Technology Corp., 617-494-8200)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(0009)
-
- MICRO DECISIONWARE IS IBM BUSINESS PARTNER
- BOULDER, COLORADO, 1988 NOV 22 (NB) -- Micro Decisionware has been
- named an IBM Business Partner and Authorized Application
- Specialist for IBM's large processors and relational database
- systems. Micro Decisionware developed PC/SQL-link, which lets PC
- users retrieve data from host databases using the Structured
- Query Language (SQL). The three-year-old product works with IBM's
- DB2 database software under the MV/TSO operating system and with
- the SQL/DS database software under VM/CMS. Micro Decisionware is
- working on a version to work with the Database Manager on the
- AS/400 minicomputers and under Operating System/2.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19881125/Contact: Margaret Devere, Micro
- Decisionware, 303-442-2706)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00008)
-
- MICROSOFT RELEASES PROGRAM THAT TEACHES DOS
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Microsoft has released
- Learning DOS version 2.0, software which teaches you how to
- use an IBM or compatible MS-DOS machine if you don't have a
- written tutorial. The product is a graphics-oriented, interactive
- training tool that teaches both novice and intermediate users the
- concepts and tools of MS-DOS, the Microsoft disk operating system.
- "Learning DOS should be an automatic purchase for the first-time
- computer buyers," boasts Susan Boeschen, manager of Microsoft's
- Entry Business Unit.
-
- The lessons include information about batch files, the DOS 4.0
- shell, memory and storage devices, and using the keyboard.
- The suggested retail price is $49.95.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126/Contact: Karen Meredith, Microsoft, 206-882-8080)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00002)
-
- REALITY SOFTWARE SHIPS TWO REAL ESTATE APPLICATIONS
- REDONDO BEACH, CALIFORNIA, 1988 DEC 1 (NB) -- Reality Software will
- begin shipping two new software products today. Property Management
- Plus/89 is a new version which features color for the IBM PC and
- compatibles. The program can manage single-family, multi-family,
- commercial, airport-hangar, marina-slip, and condominium properties.
- Features include tenant-information look up and posting by tenant or
- owner name or number and automatic month- or year-end processing.
-
- The second product is the Management Option for Property Management
- Plus/89. The Management Option provides reports for professional
- property managers. Properties can be managed for one of many owners
- from a master checking account or from individual accounts. Features
- include posting of management fees, owner balances, checks to
- owners, 1099 forms, balance sheets by owner or property, and
- calculation of interest on tenant deposits.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125/Contact: Reality, 213-372-9419)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00003)
-
- SOFTCRAFT SPINS OFF FONT PROGRAM
- ENCINITAS, CALIFORNIA 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- Softcraft, Inc. has
- released Spinfont, a program which can be used to create curved and
- slanted text images from Fontware typeface outlines. Fontware
- outlines are included with many popular software packages such as
- Microsoft Word, WordPerfect 5.0, Ventura Publisher 2.0, Aldus
- PageMaker 3.0, and GEM. Spinfont can curve text from these programs
- around arcs to create curved mastheads, logos, insignias and stamps.
- Text can also be slanted at any angle. Other options provide
- reversed text and simple graphics such as circles, arcs and thick
- lines and Spinfont can call SoftCraft's Font Effects program for
- more advanced styles. A preview feature allows results to be checked
- from within the program. Output is available in TIFF or PC
- Paintbrush (PCX) file formats which can be imported into many word-
- processing and page-layout programs.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125/Contact: Softcraft, 800-351-0500 or 608-257-
- 6733)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00005)
-
- LOW-SPEED NETWORK NOW AVAILABLE FOR ISDN
- PROVO, UTAH, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- Netline, Inc. is offering a new
- connectivity software package that allows users to network their
- computers over integrated services digital network (ISDN)
- telecommunications systems. ISDN networks provide integrated voice
- and data communications over the same network. ManyLink for ISDN
- provides circuit-switched data transfers on the AT&T 5ESS ISDN
- switch. The network provides data transfer at rates up to 19.2
- kilobits per second through a PC's standard RS232 serial port.
- ManyLink users can take advantage of the network to print files on
- remote printers or to transfer files to remote computers.
-
- ManyLink features are also available to programmers through an
- application programming interface (API). The API provides developers
- with the tools needed to write applications that use the ManyLink
- kernel for network support.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00006)
-
- NEW USER INTERFACE FOR LOW-SPEED NETWORK
- PROVO, UTAH, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- Netline, Inc. displayed upgraded
- versions of its ManyLink software at Fall COMDEX. The new software
- features a completely menu-driven user interface. The new interface
- allows users to select functions by simply scrolling through menus.
- ManyLink for PCs and a variant, ManyLink for Work Groups, allow PCs
- to connect, using serial ports and cabling, for the purposes of
- sharing peripherals, transferring files, and exchanging messages.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00007)
-
- ADAPTER PROVIDES PC WITH COM3 AND COM4 IN SINGLE SLOT
- PROVO, UTAH, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- Netline, Inc has announced a dual-
- port serial card which provides a PC, XT or AT with third and fourth
- serial ports. The card can coexist with COM1 and COM2 ports without
- conflict. Serial devices attached to other ports are not affected.
- Users without existing serial ports can also configure the card as
- COM1 and COM2.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00008)
-
- MUSICAL LUNCHBOX PORTABLES FROM SCANTECH
- IRWINDALE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- Scantech Computer Systems
- is promoting its line of "lunchbox" portable computers as an ideal
- platform for the working musician. Two 80286-based systems are
- offered in 20 MHz and 25 MHz versions which the company claims
- provide the speed required to provide multichannel MIDI sequencing
- without processing delays or bottlenecks. A MIDI adapter is not
- included with the systems however.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00009)
-
- LAPLINK OFFERED AS OPTION BY TOSHIBA
- IRVINE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Toshiba America's nationwide
- dealer network is about to begin offering a specially packaged
- version of Traveling Software's LapLink Plus as an option to the
- company's portable personal-computer line. LapLink Plus is a PC-to-
- PC laptop/desktop connectivity system. The program allows serial
- file transfers at speeds up to 115,000 bits per second over serial
- ports and provides a convenient method of exchanging data between
- machines with differing diskette-media formats.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00010)
-
- UPGRADES ANNOUNCED FOR TOSHIBA T1200 LAPTOPS
- IRVINE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 23 (NB) -- Two upgrade kits are now
- available for Toshiba's T1200 portable computers. The T1200F and
- T1200H, both originally equipped with reflective supertwist liquid
- crystal displays (LCDs), can now be upgraded with a backlit
- supertwist LCD. The T1200F or T1200FB can be upgraded with a twenty-
- megabyte hard disk. The hard-disk upgrade requires the removal of
- one of the laptop's 3.5-inch drives. In addition to Toshiba
- Authorized Service Providers, two other organizations are providing
- the conversions: Computer Products Plus (CP+) and R Services, Inc.
- (RSI).
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125/Contacts: CP+, 800-274-4277; RSI, 714-532-
- 5220)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00011)
-
- AST RESEARCH OFFERS NEW ADVANTAGE 286
- IRVINE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- AST Research has announced
- the release of Advantage 286, a new multifunction expansion card
- supporting up to 8 MB of on-board extended memory and bus speeds of
- up to 12.5 MHz. The cards are available for computers with an AT bus
- including the IBM PS/2 Model 30 286.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00012)
-
- NEW TOP-OF-THE-LINE 25 MHZ FAMILY OF COMPUTERS FROM AST
- IRVINE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- AST Research has introduced
- a line of 25-MHz. computers based on the Intel 80386 microprocessor.
- Called Premium 386/25, the new computers feature an advanced system
- architecture designed specifically for use in CAD/CAE, network file
- service, modeling, UNIX/XENIX multiuser and other demanding
- applications. The systems include AST's arbitrated SMARTslot bus as
- well as integrated cache memory and are capable of operating at 25
- MHz. with zero wait states.
-
- The SMARTslot is an arbitrated bus architecture that accommodates
- multiple, intelligent coprocessors. A precursor of the recently
- announced EISA bus, SMARTslot is divided into three components: a
- dedicated 32-bit connection from processor to memory, a feature bus
- and an arbitration bus. The arbitration bus provides efficient
- management of memory and peripherals.
-
- The motherboard includes built-in a floppy controller, two serial
- ports and a parallel port. CPU and 2 standard megabytes of memory
- reside on a card which occupies one of seven slots.
-
- Software bundled with the machines includes utilities for EMS 4.0
- expanded memory management, disk caching, shadow RAM, and a menu-
- driven interface for setting up and testing the system and
- installing and running utility programs.
-
- Storage options for the systems include up to 3 floppy drives, in
- either 5.25-inch format or the 1.44-megabyte 3.5-inch format, and up
- to 2 hard disks for as much as 640 megabytes of fixed-disk storage.
- A 1.2 megabyte, 5.25-inch floppy disk is standard. Four standard
- configurations are available in models that range in price from
- $6,595 to $11,795 for a 320-megabyte unit.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00012)
-
- AST ENHANCES PREMIUM/386 LINE
- IRVINE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- AST Research has enhanced
- its Premium/386 computer line. Designated Premium/386C, the 20 MHz.
- systems feature cache-memory architecture and expanded memory
- capacity. Sixty-four kilobytes of 25-nanosecond static-RAM cache
- improves performance by retaining most frequently used data. Maximum
- memory capacity has been expanded from thirteen to sixteen
- megabytes. Current owners of original Premium/386 computers will be
- able to obtain a cache upgrade kit in January 1989 for $1995.
-
- The Premium/386 systems offer two standard serial ports and a
- parallel port. Software bundled with the machines includes utilities
- for EMS 4.0 expanded memory management, disk caching, shadow RAM,
- and a menu-driven interface for setting up and testing the system
- and installing and running utility programs. The new line will
- become available during December and will eventually phase out the
- company's existing '386 line.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125/Contact: AST, 714-863-1333)
-
-
- (EXCLUSIVE)(IBM)(LAX)(00014)
-
- PC-SIG TO RENOVATE LIBRARY, ISSUE NEW CD
- SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- PC-SIG's enormous library
- of public-domain and shareware titles is being culled. In an effort
- to address criticism that the collection contains redundancy and
- obsolete titles, the public-domain giant has assigned a staff member
- full-time to perform the house cleaning.
-
- In a related event, the company is reissuing the CD ROM version of
- its database. The new version is due out within one or two weeks and
- will feature new access software in addition to a cleaner database.
- The new software will make it faster and easier to select programs
- from the library.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125/Contact: PC-SIG, 408-730-9291)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00001)
-
- VICTOR UK BOOSTS SALES 22 PERCENT
- LONDON, 1988 NOV 23 (NB) -- Victor UK has pulled itself out of
- the doldrums with the announcement of a 22 percent surge in
- third quarter sales to 30 September, 1988. The company's results,
- a subset of the Swedish parent, show the quarter's sales at #81.5
- million - a #14.7 million increase on the same period last year.
-
- Pre-tax third quarter profits for the UK company are equally
- pleasing at #6.4 million. According to Victor UK's managing
- director, Bob Webb, the figures show that Victor is now in third
- or fourth position as regards PC sales in Europe.
-
- "The results are much better than forecasted by Victor's
- corporate headquarters. Our business is very healthy on a
- European basis," he said.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881123/Victor UK: (UK) 0494-461600)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00002)
-
- MITSUBISHI TARGETS EUROPE WITH ITS PCS
- TOKYO, 1988 NOV 24 (NB) -- Mitsubishi, the Japanese electronics
- giant, has announced it will start exporting its range of 8086,
- 80286 and 80386-based PCs to European markets during the first
- and second quarters of 1989.
-
- Mitsubishi aims to sell at least 10,000 PCs a year initially,
- with the sales emphasis on its new 80286-based laptop. Initial
- European markets which have been targeted by the Japanese company
- are West Germany and the UK. France and Italy are next on the
- company's lists.
-
- Mitsubishi is Japan's third-largest electronics company, and
- follows Epson, NEC, and Toshiba into the lucrative European
- marketplace.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881124)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BRU)(00001)
-
- IBM ANNOUNCES NEW TOKEN-RING PRODUCTS
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1988 NOV 18 (NB) -- IBM Europe has staged a
- European launch of its turbo sixteen megabits/second (Mbps) Token Ring
- system. The products were unveiled in the US at Comdex Fall late
- last month.
-
- The 16Mbps Token Ring system conforms to the IEEE 802.5 standard
- and appear on the latest series of IBM boards which will ship
- early next year. Unlike other competing products, the high-speed
- IBM Token Ring system is not based around the new Texas
- Instruments chip set, although its performance is very similar.
-
- The bad news about the 16Mbps Token Ring system is that the top
- speed cannot be achieved over the traditional twisted pair
- circuits. To go beyond the current 10Mbps speed barrier, IBM
- recommends that coaxial cable is used. The system will work with
- twisted-wire cabling, say IBM, but don't expect turbo speeds out
- of the system.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881118)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BRU)(00002)
-
- POSITRONICA SHIPS NEW 3COM WORKSTATION SERIES
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1988 NOV 20 (NB) -- Belgium's primary 3Com
- distributor, Positronica, has announced the availability of the
- 3Station/2E system, 3Com's new 80286-based workstation.
-
- The new workstation hums along at 10MHz into 1Mb of main memory
- and is specifically designed to work with 3Com's 3+ and 3+ Open
- networking systems. For users with less powerful needs, the
- system comes with SNA, TCP(IP) and Ethernet connections fitted as
- standard.
-
- The 3Com/2E workstation features VGA support to 640 by 480 and 800
- by 600 pixel standards, with 16 colours displayed on-screen
- simultaneously. The system supports Windows/286, as well as
- graphics-intensive packages such as Autodesk's Autocad, Xerox
- Ventura Publisher and Aldus Pagemaker.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881120)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BRU)(00003)
-
- POSITRONICA LAUNCHES PC MOUSE II
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1988 NOV 20 (NB) -- Positronica has launched
- Mouse Systems' PC Mouse II onto the Belgian market. The two-
- buttoned mouse is the first optical unit available in Belgium and
- works to 2000 dots per inch (dpi) resolution.
-
- Unusually, PC Mouse II connects to either an AT (9 pin) or a
- standard PC (25 pin) serial port without modification, and ships
- with bundled pop-up designer software.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881120)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BRU)(00004)
-
- TOSHIBA LAUNCHED T3100E LAPTOP IN EUROPE
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1988 NOV 24 (NB) -- In confirmation of the
- announcement made at Comdex Fall last month, Toshiba Europe has
- launched the T3100e laptop onto the European market. The machine
- is lighter than its T3100 forebear at 12 pounds and comes with a
- turbo 12MHz microprocessor and fast-access (27 milliseconds) 20Mb
- hard disk as standard features.
-
- Externally, the T3100e looks much the same as the original T3100,
- comes with a 640 by 400 pixel gas plasma screen and can
- accommodate up to 5Mb of system memory for memory-hungry
- applications. As with the rest of the Toshiba laptop range, the
- new laptop, which ships immediately, has a single proprietary
- expansion slot.
-
- Pricing on the T3100e has yet to be confirmed for each individual
- European country, but is expected to be in line with existing
- T3100 pricing levels.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881124)
-
- Newsbytes (Tm) Telecommunications Report
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00003)
-
- BIX INTRODUCES MENUS, BBS SERVICE AND PRINT NEWSLETTER
- PETERBOROUGH, NEW HAMPSHIRE, 1988 NOV 26 (NB) -- BIX, Byte
- magazine's Byte Information eXchange, has announced a number of
- enhancements for its subscribers. The enhancements include system
- menus, an electronic service for bulletin board system operators
- and a new weekly print magazine.
-
- The menuing system, introduced to subscribers last week, gives
- BIX a user-friendly front-end system on a par with Compuserve and
- The Source. Users can also obtain fast access to all their
- messages, which can be downloaded en-masse from the system.
-
- The BIX BBS service is called the BBS Exchange, or BBX for short.
- Charter memberships cost $160 for the first year, or $50 for a
- three month trial period. From January 1989 onwards, the service
- will cost $199 a year. Amongst the many benefits to sysops is the
- offer of a limited licence to reproduce BIX's daily news in an
- annotated form, and an interaction between a single line BBS and
- the BIX system proper.
-
- The third enhancement from BIX is called Byteweek, a weekly print
- newsletter drawing on the resources of BIX's daily Microbytes
- computer news service. Byteweek is to be published 50 times a
- year at a charter subscription cost of $395. From January 1989,
- the service will cost $495 per year.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881126/BIX: (US) 603-924-7681)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELCOM)(WAS)(00002)
-
- FIBER OPTICS CABLE DAMAGE DISRUPTS PHONES AND DATA
- SOUTH AMBOY, NEW JERSEY, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- A severed fiber
- optics cable in New Jersey in late November disrupted telephone
- and data communications services as far away as California, said
- an AT&T spokesman. Some emergency crews were forced to use hand-
- held radios and beepers for communications while the line was out
- for about nine hours. According to the spokesman, during the
- outage, about 53 million calls were made on the AT&T network,
- about 3.5 million of which were blocked.
-
- The line break, caused by construction equipment, also brought
- down computers at the New Jersey state lottery and the state
- Department of Motor Vehicles. Frustrated motorists who waited in
- long lines were angered when they discovered they would have to
- return another day.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELCOM)(WAS)(00004)
-
- AT&T ROLLS OUT TELECOMMUNICATIONS PRODUCTS
- NEW YORK, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- American Telephone & Telegraph has
- introduced a series of products designed to make it easier for
- computer and telecommunications user to send and receive data.
- The products include a terminal that telephone companies can
- provide to customers, using a fiber optic link. AT&T also
- unveiled a new switching product that is designed to transfer
- service from one fiber optic cable to another if the cable is
- damaged.
-
- Also, AT&T and Wang Laboratories have entered an agreement in
- which the communications links in the Wang Integrated Image
- Systems, or WIIS, will be compatible with the Integrated Service
- Digital Network over AT&T's new high-speed switch. Wang will
- create the ISDN interfaces for WIIS to work with 5ESS switches,
- while AT&T will provide technical support and testing.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELCOM)(WAS)(00007)
-
- IDE BUYS THREE ALCATEL LINES
- BILLERICA, MASSACHUSETTS, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- IDE Corp. has
- acquired three divisions of Alcatel N.V.'s U.S. unit, located in
- Tempe, Ariz., for more than $100 million. Alcatel is 63 percent
- owned by Compagnie Generale d'Electricity of France and 37
- percent by ITT Corp.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00001)
-
- GE SIGNS ELF TO TELECOMMUNICATE TAX RETURNS TO IRS
- ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND, 1988 NOV. 25 (NB) - One major hindrance to
- the adoption of electronic invoicing by small businesses is that
- we want someone to make sure we've formatted everything correctly
- before trusting an online system with something like a tax
- return. ELF Communications is now offering that kind of service,
- having signed a Value-Added Service Provider (VASP) agreement
- with GE Information Services (GE IS) under which it will use GE
- IS' teleprocessing network for collecting and processing. ELF
- will monitor transmissions and verify returns through the
- Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) electronic filing system. ELF
- will then file the return in the IRS format.
-
- The deal is a coup for General Electric, which gets a high
- volume re-seller of its invoicing network. ELF will also
- integrate GE IS' BusinessTalk communications capability with its
- own ELF/MATE, ELF/LINK, and other electronic filing products for
- resale to the tax preparation industry.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125/Contact: Elf Communications at 800-
- 255-0880)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00002)
-
- INTEGRATION OF ONLINE AND FAX TO BE MAJOR 1989 THEME
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA,1988 NOV. 25 (NB) -- Electronic component
- manufacturers and online networks, stung by the quick acceptance
- of Group III fax by U.S. businesses, are now rushing to integrate
- fax with their products and services. The recent Fall Comdex show
- featured over a dozen PC fax products, from plug-in cards which
- give your PC fax functions alongside a modem, to the Worldport
- 2496, a .2 KG device which plugs into the serial port at the back
- of a laptop computer and offers both fax and modem service for
- $600.
-
- Online services which now claim fax compatibility include MCI
- Mail and GEnie, with pricing based on the half-page of kilo-
- character. Xpedite Systems of Eatontown, New Jersey has also
- begun offering a service which translates your modem's input into
- fax output at about 70 seconds per page, plus $49 for software.
- In addition to bring fax to its MCI Mail product, that company
- has also introduced MCI Fax with great fanfare, which offers
- store-and-forward and broadcasting capabilities not found on the
- $1,000 fax machines which have quickly become popular in American
- business. As with any set of new products or services,
- introductions will be followed by vapor, horror stories, and bug
- fixes.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- FCC PUSHES FOR PHONE REGULATION WHICH WILL LET BELLS ONLINE
- WASHINGTON, 1988 NOV. 29 (NB) -- One of the big problems faced
- by the Bell companies in getting into the online business was
- separating their regulated interests in phone systems from their
- unregulated interests in computing. By simplifying phone company
- regulation with price caps rather than profit caps, FCC Chairman
- Dennis Patrick hopes to let the Bells into computing with less
- trauma. His plan faces opposition, but Patrick is intent on
- getting a price cap plan onto the FCC's agenda for its December 2
- meeting.
-
- Meanwhile, Bell gateways continue to proliferate. US West
- announced November 22 it will offer a gateway based on the
- Minitel model next fall in Omaha, Nebraska. NYNEX and BellSouth
- are among the Bells which already have gateways in operation.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00005)
-
- X.25 WINS MAJOR SUPPORT FROM HARDWARE VENDORS AND ONLINE NETWORKS
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Lost amid the Comdex product
- hoopla were major moves to implement X.25 as a standard for online
- communications at speeds faster than 1200 baud. CompuServe
- announced its dial-up network will now support X.25, and Tymnet
- added new 2400 baud access to its TymDial X.25 service in
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Kansas City, Missouri and Bloomfield,
- Connecticut. X.25 connections, which have been implemented on
- Telenet for quite some time, allow provide built-in error-
- correction and make PCs a seamless part of a mainframe network.
- They also allow for multitasking, because your PC modem is no
- longer waiting for each character to be echoed back from the
- computer it's calling, which is the case in asynchronous
- communications.
-
- Hayes Microcomputer Products, the largest micro modem maker, has
- also joined the X.25 club by announcing it will make the protocol
- a standard feature in its V-Series modems, starting in January.
- Hayes will combine X.25 with a Packet Assembler/Disassembler
- (PAD) so PC users can carry out X.25 communications directly,
- without having to resort to a packet switch system like Telenet
- or Tymnet. Hayes announced it will also support the V.42 protocol
- for synchronous transmission, including the LAPM protocols it had
- previously resisted, and negotiate site licenses for the first
- time.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TYO)(00008)
-
- OSI IS GETTING PROMOTED
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- As a way for promoting the
- international standard Open Systems' Interconnection (OSI), the
- Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications will supervise the development of
- OSI-based telecommunication programs, such as a directory system.
- The research and development will be conducted by the government-
- affiliated OSI/ISDN Promotion Liaison Association, which
- will propose a concrete development project as early as next
- month. OSI would realize a free exchange of data via different
- kinds of computers.
-
- (Ken Takahashi/19881124)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOMMUNICATION))(00005)
-
- PACIFIC BELL WANTS TO OFFER TALKING NEWS OVER THE PHONE
- SAN FRANCISCO, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Pacific Bell has asked the
- Federal Communications Commission to allow it to offer voice
- information services to customers. Voice information services
- would allow consumers to send and receive information over the
- telephone without having to reach a person on the other end.
- Callers would use the phone's Touch-Tone keypad to get a variety
- of information such as a business' hours of operation, specific
- health topics, weather forecasts, and individual stock performance.
- Callers could also send information through the phone lines to
- respond to polls, pledge contributions, order items from catalogs,
- and transfer money between bank accounts, all without speaking
- to a real live person.
-
- Pacific Bell would own, operate and maintain the voice storage
- equipment necessary for businesses to offer these services. That
- would eliminate the need for the business to purchase their own
- voice storage and forwarding equipment. "We are hoping to
- develop the concept of 24-hour customer service," says Kennebec
- Kious, director of voice information services for Pacific
- Bell's Information Services Group.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126/Contact: Dori Sera Bailey, Pacific Bell,
- 415,542-4033)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SFO)(00006)
-
- PACIFIC BELL TO OFFER VOICE MAIL
- SAN FRANCISCO, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Pacific Bell has announced the
- first trials of a new voice mail service for small businesses and
- residential customers will take place this spring in Milpitas and
- San Pedro, California. Pacific Bell hopes to fully expand the
- service throughout California by 1990.
-
- Pacific Bell Voice Mail allows users to send, receive, store,
- forward and erase messages from any Touch-Tone phone 24 hours a day.
- Messages are stored in and sent through voice "mailboxes," which
- correspond with an individual's regular telephone number. The Voice
- Mail will initially be available to Pacific Bell business customers
- with Centrex telephone systems.
-
- The Pacific Bell Voice Mail uses Digital Sound Corporation
- equipment and custom application software. Digital Sound is based
- in Santa Barbara, California.
-
- Voice mail is one of the first information services Pacific Bell
- is offering to the public since the U.S. District Court
- removed information services restrictions on the Bell Operating
- Companies.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126/Contact: Dori Bailey, Pacific Bell, 415-542-4033)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LAX)(00005)
-
- LOW-SPEED NETWORK NOW AVAILABLE FOR ISDN
- PROVO, UTAH, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- Netline, Inc. is offering a new
- connectivity software package that allows users to network their
- computers over integrated services digital network (ISDN)
- telecommunications systems. ISDN networks provide integrated voice
- and data communications over the same network. ManyLink for ISDN
- provides circuit-switched data transfers on the AT&T 5ESS ISDN
- switch. The network provides data transfer at rates up to 19.2
- kilobits per second through a PC's standard RS232 serial port.
- ManyLink users can take advantage of the network to print files on
- remote printers or to transfer files to remote computers.
-
- ManyLink features are also available to programmers through an
- application programming interface (API). The API provides developers
- with the tools needed to write applications that use the ManyLink
- kernel for network support.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00004)
-
- DOWTY SHIPS QUATTRO PLUS PC MODEM
- CHIPPENHAM, WILTSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1988 NOV 23 (NB) -- Dowty
- Information Systems has begun shipping its flagship PC modem, the
- Quattro Plus, at #795. The modem is capable of 300, 1200/75,
- 1200/1200, 2400/2400 baud working to CCITT standards, as well as
- proprietary V29 (9,600 bits per second) system.
-
- Unusually, the modem has much of its innate intelligence within
- software which is downloaded from the PC's memory (loaded from
- disk) and into the Random Access Memory (RAM) of the modem
- itself. This allows future upgrades to the modem to be executed
- primarily from software, thereby avoiding complex (and costly) UK
- telecoms approvals procedures.
-
- Amongst the many features of this expensive modem are MNP
- (Microcom Networking Protocol) level 5 error-correction and data
- compression, and an effective 19,200bps data throughput using the
- proprietary V29 system. The V29 system can only be using on a
- point-to-point basis with other Quattro Plus modems.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881123/Dowty Information Systems: (UK) 0225-891881)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00005)
-
- TRICOM POWERS UP FOR FASTER MODEMS
- HIGH WYCOMBE, BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1988 NOV 24 (NB) --
- Tricom Communications will launch two new high-speed modems this
- week at the Telecommunicationscoprocessor Managers Association's annual
- conference. The
- modems bring the benefits of MNP (Microcom Networking Protocol)
- level's 7 and 9 to the UK modem marketplace for the first time.
-
- The first modem is the Turbo 12 MNP which is capable of 300, 1200
- and 2400 baud full duplex over the Public Switched Telephone
- Network (PSTN). Thanks to the use of MNP level 7 error-correction
- and data compression, an effective data throughput of 12,000 bits
- per second (bps) can be achieved using a 2,400 baud carrier
- pumping 7-bit data down the line.
-
- The second new modem is the Tornado 30, an MNP level 9-equipped
- unit capable of squeezing up to 30,000 bps over the PSTN on a V32
- (9600 baud full duplex) carrier. The modem is also downwards-
- compatible with MNP level's 7, 5 and below. MNP level 6's
- Automatic Speed Selection (ASS) is not available on the unit,
- however.
-
- Pricing on both modems was not available to NEWSBYTES UK at the
- pre-press launch last week. Both modems will be available in the
- latter part of January, 1989.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881124/Tricom: 05827-65171)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(BRU)(00009)
-
- EUROCOMM '88 TO OPEN ON 6 DECEMBER
- AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS, 1988 NOV 26 (NB) --Eurocomm '88, the
- annual European communications exhibition and conference, opens
- its doors on the 6th of December. More than 100 exhibitors will
- display their wares for the crowds.
-
- Amongst the many products expected at the show are the latest
- high-definition TV systems which will be available via fledgling
- satellite TV stations in the first and second quarters of 1989 in
- Europe.
-
- Also scheduled for unveiling are firmer details of the new mobile
- telephone services working to TACS and CT-3 standards. Although
- the new pan-European mobile phone services are not due until the
- early 1990's, considerable interest is being shown by both
- consumers and national network providers alike.
-
- (Peter Vekinis/19881126)
-
- Newsbytes (Tm) Trends and Technology
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(WAS)(00015)
-
- SOFTWARE COMPANIES TOPS IN RETURN ON INVESTMENT
- NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Software companies
- grabbed the top three spots on Electronic Business magazine's
- list of return on investment by high tech companies in 1987.
- Return on investment, a measure of corporate efficiency, is the
- ratio of net earnings to total capital in the business. The top
- three on the magazine's list were Lotus Development (30 percent),
- Oracle Systems (29.3 percent), and Microsoft (29.2 percent).
- Number four on the list was Apple, at 26 percent, followed by
- Compaq at 24 percent. IBM didn't make the list of the top 25
- performers.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(WAS)(00016)
-
- COMPUTER AND OFFICE EQUIPMENT SHIPMENTS UP 40.9 PERCENT
- WASHINGTON, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Shipments of U.S. office
- and computing equipment jumped 40.9 percent in September,
- according to the Computer and Business Equipment Manufacturers
- Association. CBEMA said the value of shipments rose from $5.2
- billion in August to $7.4 billion in September. Shipments for the
- first nine months of the year were 11.8 percent higher than the
- first nine months of 1987, at $49.4 billion compared to $44.2
- billion.
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(ATL)(00006)
-
- AMD TO SNUFF OUT SMOKERS FROM ITS CHIP-MAKING FACILITIES
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, 1988 NOV. 28 (NB) -- Advanced Micro Devices, which
- recently gave pink-slips to about 7% of its workers, is telling
- the rest of them to quit smoking or else. Starting January 2, the
- chip-maker will begin enforcing a new anti-smoking policy at its
- Texas plants in Austin and San Antonio, banning smoking from all
- buildings and ridding them of ashtrays.
-
- Health concerns are only part of the story. Keith
- Dillenbeck, manager of contamination for the Sematech chip-making
- research consortium, said studies have shown that smokers can
- exhale contaminants for hours after a cigarette, generating as
- many as 10 times the pollution of non-smokers. About 3,100
- workers fall under the new rules, and smokers among them will be
- offered free stop-smoking classes to help them along. Once the
- results of the tough Texas line are known, AMD spokesman David
- Frink said, the policy might be extended to California plants.
- "It's kind of a pilot project in Texas," Frink said. "It's not
- being implemented at this time in California, although it's being
- watched very closely."
-
- The new scientific evidence and AMD's action has spurred
- speculation that chipmakers will eventually ban all smoking
- employees from clean rooms. Texas Instruments, for instance,
- allows smokers to work in its clean rooms, asking that smokers
- coming off break rinse their mouths with water and wait five
- minutes before returning to the line.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00010)
-
- IBM JAPAN EMPLOYS MORE LAWYERS
- TOKYO, NOV 22, 1988 (NB) -- IBM Japan, taking the cue from its
- American counterpart, has beefed up its legal department in
- anticipation of new fights for copyright protection. IBM Japan
- has six lawyers now and plans to employ two outside legal firms
- every year.
-
- (Naoyuki Yazawa/198811125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00011)
-
- MATSUSHITA LAUNCHES 100 MIPS WORKSTATION
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Solbourne Computer, a subsidiary
- of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. in the U.S., has developed
- an engineering workstation with a supercomputer-like processing
- speed of 100 million instructions per second (MIPS) and has plans to
- commercialize it by the end of next year.
-
- Solbourne is expected to produce 10 MIPS engineering workstations
- (EWS) using AT&T's and Sun Microsystems' SPARC technology this coming
- spring. Meanwhile, the company claims to have successfully achieved
- a processing speed of 100 MIPS with four 30 MIPS central processing
- units working in parallel.
-
- Matsushita will market the EWS both in the U.S. and Japan.
-
- (Naoyuki Yazawa/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00004)
-
- DRAMS IN AMPLE SUPPLY AGAIN
- SAN FRANCISCO, 1988 NOV 26 (NB) -- DRAM, or dynamic random access
- memory chips, are available in quantity again following a year of
- shortages. The New York Times quotes Silicon Graphics Vice
- President Thomas Jermoluk as saying, "The DRAM situation has
- definitely eased." Hewlett Packard, as well, is now shipping
- products it forecast would be delayed due to chip scarcity.
- Shortages of an adequate number of memory chips caused various
- computer and component manufacturers to raise their prices and
- hold back products. Further complicating matters was the switch
- many semiconductor firms were making from 256 kilobit DRAM to one
- megabit chips, a switch which involved the retrofit of assembly lines.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00007)
-
- SPARC GROUP HOPES TO IGNITE NEW TECHNOLOGY
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Five firms involved
- with the new SPARC microprocessor have banded together to form
- an organization to promote standards and proliferation for the new
- chip. Designed by Sun Microsystems, the SPARC chip is based on
- RISC, or reduced instruction set computer, technology, which allows
- a computer to run faster and more efficiently than general-purpose
- microprocessors. The Sparc Vendor Council is composed of
- Texas Instruments, LSI Logic, Fujitsu, the Ross Technology subsidiary
- of Cypress Semiconductor, and Bipolar Integrated Technology.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19881126)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00004)
-
- NEWGEN PRINTERS CLAIM 30-FOLD INCREASE IN THROUGHPUT
- SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA, 1988 NOV 14 (NB) -- Startup NewGen Systems
- Corporation has entered the market with its TurboPS/300 and
- TurboPS/400 series laser printers. NewGen claims that its new
- printers are capable of generating complex Adobe Postscript output
- at speeds up to 30 times faster than other laser printers now on the
- market. In addition, the TurboPS/400 is capable of print resolutions
- of 400 dot per inch, nearly twice the resolution of most laser
- printers which produce just 300 dots per inch.
-
- Both printers are based on the Canon SX engine but utilize two
- processors to achieve their performance improvements: a 10 MIPS
- (million instructions per second) Weitek 8100 series processor and
- an I/O coprocessor. Emulations for the HP LaserJet Series II and
- Epson LQ800 complement the printers' Postscript-compatible
- interpreters. The two TurboPS printers are scheduled to ship during
- the first quarter of 1989.
-
- (Wayne Yacco/19881125)
-
- Newsbytes Unix Report
- Week of November 29, 1988
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(WAS)(00001)
-
- HARVARD SCIENTISTS SUMMONED TO VIRUS GRAND JURY
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- A federal grand
- jury meeting in Syracuse, N.Y., has summoned three Harvard
- computer experts to testify about their relationship with the
- Cornell graduate student suspected of creating the monster
- computer virus that swept the nation earlier in November.
- According to officials, the three are not targets of the grand
- jury inquiry. Called by the grand jury were computer science
- professor Mark Friedell, programmer Andrew Sudduth and graduate
- student Paul Graham. All three have ties to Robert Morris Jr., a
- 1988 Harvard graduate who is believed to have written the virus
- that spread through nationwide computer links through a flaw in
- the Unix operating system.
-
- Friedell was Morris's undergraduate thesis adviser. Sudduth and
- Graham worked together at Aiken Computational Laboratories, the
- Harvard computer lab, the night the virus spread and when Morris
- allegedly telephoned the lab from Cornell, panicked about what he
- had created. Morris has not been charged, and is at his family
- home in Arnold, Md., outside Washington.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(WAS)(00005)
-
- UNISYS ANNOUNCED UNIX HOTEL SYSTEM
- BLUE BELL, PENNSYLVANIA, 1988 NOV 25 (NB) -- Unisys Corp. has
- announced a Unix-based hotel revenue system. The software can be
- used by a single hotel or a chain, and can be used at the
- property level, or at the central reservations level, or both.
- Unisys says the system will be delivered in the first quarter of
- 1989.
-
- Unisys has changed it proposed acquisition of Convergent, Inc.,
- slightly. Under the merger agreement, Unisys will pay $7 in case
- for each Convergent share, as opposed to $2.80 in cash and $4.20
- in Unisys stock, as previously announced.
-
- Also, Unisys says it has received a contract from Datatronic,
- S.A. de C.V., for airline reservation terminals, printers, and
- communications equipment. Datatronic is a Mexican company owned
- by the national airlines Mexicana and Aeromexico. The deal will
- be for some 4,000 Unisys Airline Terminal System workstations
- over the next three years.
-
- (Ken Maize/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TYO)(00005)
-
- IBM JAPAN IS AGGRESSIVE ON AIX PROMOTION
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- In order to promote the Unix operating
- system AIX against AT&T's UNIX, IBM Japan will support software
- programs which allow a great amount of PC-DOS programs to operate
- on AIX. IBM Japan will supply AIX for its engineering workstation
- IBM6100 starting next January, and its personal computer PS/55
- series, next May.
-
- (Ken Takahashi/19881124/Contact: IBM Japan, 03-586-1111)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TYO)(00013)
-
- SUN TO ASSEMBLE WORKSTATIONS IN JAPAN
- TOKYO, NOV 29, 1988 (NB) -- Nihon Sun Microsystems K.K.,
- a subsidiary of the U.S.-based computer producer Sun Microsystems,
- will establish a workstation assembly plant in Atsugi-shi, Kanagawa,
- Japan by this coming April.
-
- The parent company has been importing disk drives and display units
- from Japanese makers, such as Fujitsu, Hitachi and Sony, and has assembled
- these in the U.S. The establishment of the assembly plant in
- Japan will make it easier to produce workstations to meet Japanese demand;
- also it will cut import cost for the company.
-
- (Naoyuki Yazawa/19881125)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(LON)(00010)
-
- RESEARCH MACHINES LAUNCHES NEW 80386-BASED PCS
- OXFORD, ENGLAND, 1988 NOV 21 (NB) -- Research Machines (RM) has
- launched no less than eleven new machines to boost its 80386
- microprocessor-based range of PCs. The machines are pitched at
- the medium- to high-end Unix workstation CAD/CAM market dominated by
- Apollo and Sun Microsystems.
-
- All machines in the VX-286/2 range features 20 or 25MHz 80386
- microprocessors. Coupled with high-speed disk drives and Ram-
- caching in firmware, the machines are capable of processing 5
- million instructions per second (MIPS). Pricing on the VX-386/2
- series varies, dependent on configuration, but a typical modem
- with 19 inch VGA monochrome screen, 25MHz microprocessor and 90Mb
- hard disk costs #6,895. All machines in the new series feature
- VGA graphics support as standard.
-
- Pricing on RM's existing lower-speed 80386-based machines, also
- designated the VX-386/2 series, has been cut to make room for the
- new PCs. A 16MHz VX-386/2 with 16MHz microprocessor, 1Mb of
- memory and fast 20Mb hard disk falls from #3,250 to #2,895.
-
- (Steve Gold/19881121/Research Machines: (UK) 0865-249866)
-
-
-
-