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- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00001)
-
- Jewell Technologies Releases "Juggler" Image File Converter 03/17/92
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Jewell
- Technologies has released "The Juggler," a Windows-based
- program that can convert graphics images to other formats. The
- program also allows enhancement of the image.
-
- Some of the formats The Juggler can convert to and from include
- BMP (the Windows Paintbrush format), CLP (the Windows clipboard
- format), EPS, GIF, IMG, MAC, MSP, PCX, TGA, TIF, and WMF. The
- program can export files to EPS and HPGL formats, but cannot
- import from those formats. While the manual says the program can
- also import and export PIC and PCT files, the "read-me" file on the
- program disk says that those formats are not yet supported, but will
- be available in a later release.
-
- To run The Juggler, you will need Windows 3.0 or greater, an EGA
- or higher video card, one floppy drive of either size, a hard disk with
- at least two megabytes (MB) of free space, and a mouse. The
- manual says a 256 color video capability "is highly recommended."
-
- The Juggler uses a drawing board concept, on which you can place
- a number of images. Imagine the graphics artist importing images
- created in several different formats, and then arranging them on the
- board, combining them with text. Like a physical drawing board, an
- image can be left hanging over the edge if room is tight.
-
- Images can also be "dithered." The dithering option gives the user
- a choice of four different dithering methods of color reduction. The
- present version (1.0) of The Juggler does not support either the
- "Floyd-Steinberg" or the "Burkes" methods of dithering, but the
- company says they will be included later.
-
- Other user-selectable options include a choice of palettes, the size
- of the drawing board, and a choice of modes to use when combining
- images on the same screen. The overlay mode controls the way in
- which colors of images react with each other when they are
- combined. You can change options at any time, but only images
- brought to the drawing board after the changes are affected.
-
- The Juggler can import compressed files, de-compressing them
- automatically. You can also choose to recompress a file when
- saving it. The actual import process is straightforward. After setting
- the drawing board options, select the appropriate directory, select
- the format, and select the fle you want to open. A "fit-to" box allows
- you to select the size at which you want the file to be imported.
-
- Image editing capabilities include "delete," "clip," "cut," "copy," and
- "paste." You can also resize the images, and move them on the
- drawing board. Images can be mirrored, flipped, and rotated, and
- you can also manipulate the attributes of an image.
-
- Images can be enhanced using various tools that are provided,
- including assorted shape tools, an eraser, a paint filler, a pencil,
- and a curve drawing tool.
-
- The Juggler also includes a feature called "Darkroom," which
- provides a means of adjusting the color content, balance, and
- shading of images. Brightness and contrast can be adjusted using
- a scroll bar, and adjustment of the Gamma value is provided.
- Gamma value adjustment influences how different output devices
- perceive color.
-
- The Juggler can print images to any Windows-supported printer,
- according to Jewell Technologies. Several printing options are
- available, including fitting the image to the page, filling the page,
- printing actual size, or using user-defined width and height.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920317/Press Contact: Kandy Lane-Bousley,
- Jewell Technologies, tel 206-285-6860, fax 206-285-7340)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00002)
-
- Rewritable, Optical Disk System With Compression Intro'd 03/17/92
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Ten X Technology
- has introduced what it says is the first rewritable and multi-function
- optical disk system to incorporate "real-time" data compression as
- part of the system itself.
-
- Ten X claims the system uses an enhanced version of its OCU 300
- hardware interface to provide hardware data compression for
- rewritable optical media.
-
- According to Liz Davis, Ten X VP of sales: "In many applications,
- such as medical imaging and financial data archiving, this product
- gives 5.25-inch optical the capacity of 12-inch optical technology,
- saving the user time, media, and ultimately dollars."
-
- The company said data compression ratios of two or three to one
- are typical when backingup an entire Unix system disk, and
- compression ratios over 20 to 1 are possible. Compression also
- multiplies the effective speed of the optical drive, since less data
- needs to be actually transferred to or from the optical disks.
-
- Daren Appelt, exeucitve VP at Ten X, said that a data compression
- algorithm in hardware form is used to provide transparent operation,
- with no special software or drivers needed. The product is
- compatible with all SCSI (Small Computer System Interface)-based
- computers, according to Appelt. The system includes Winchester
- hard disk emulation, and a battery backup cache.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920317/Press Contact: Jennifer Goodnight, Ten X,
- tel 512-346-8350, fax 512-346-9580)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00003)
-
- New For PC: Symantec's More Powerful JustWrite For Windows 03/17/92
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- In an effort
- to take more of the lucrative Windows word processor market
- dominated by Microsoft Word and the newly released WordPerfect
- 5.1 for Windows, Symantec has introduced a new version of its
- JustWrite package. The company claims that JustWrite 2.0 is faster
- and more powerful than the previous version, and includes new
- features that simplify the creation of sophisticated documents,
- makes mail merge easier, and enhances data sharing capabilities.
-
- The company maintains that, using JustWrite's new "floating frame"
- technology, users can place graphic, text, table, and OLE (object
- linking and embedding) frames anywhere on the page which can
- even span multiple columns, thus creating newsletters with graphics,
- proposals with charts, and tables and other sophisticated
- documents.
-
- The integrated table editor has also been enhanced with math
- calculations, allowing for the creation of tables with simple
- calculations directly in JustWrite documents.
-
- One of the new features of version 2.0, called "Quick Paste"
- provides a shortcut for moving and copying text, according to the
- company. By selecting the text and clicking the right mouse button,
- text can be moved instantly to a new location. In addition, a new
- grammar checker contains 5,500 grammar rules to automate
- editing and enhance style.
-
- A library facility allows users to quickly access most-often used
- graphics, text styles, section formatting, frames, and other
- information, allowing for them to be selected by name or from
- the graphical preview displayed in the "Library Browser."
-
- Mail merge documents are displayed onscreen before printing,
- and merge field information can be inserted in the document by
- selecting fields from the tool bar. Also, JustWrite allows for the
- merging of data with Q&A, dBASE, Paradox, and ASCII databases
- using full query and sort capabilities.
-
- The company maintains that version 2.0 supports both Windows'
- dynamic data exchange (DDE) and object linking and embedding
- (OLE). The package also features a conversion feature that
- imports and exports text and graphics from or to many other word
- processing and graphics formats, including Microsoft Word for
- Windows 2.0, Microsoft Word for DOS 5.5, WordPerfect 5.1, Lotus
- Ami Pro 2.0, WordStar 5.5, and Multimate 4.0.
-
- JustWrite version 2.0 is available now through Symantec's
- network of distributors and resellers at the suggested retail
- price is $249. The upgrade price is $49. Users who purchased
- JustWrite version 1.0 after January 9, 1992, can request a free
- upgrade.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920317/Press Contact: Terri Sammonds,
- Symantec Corp., 408-725-2752)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00004)
-
- Librex Claims First User-Configurable 386SX Notebook 03/17/92
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 16 (NB) -- Librex
- Computer Systems Inc., is claiming that its new Librex T386SX is
- the first fully user-configurable notebook computer. The system
- features removable hard drives and a PCMCIA industry-standard
- card slot for both memory and I/O (input/output) peripherals.
-
- The company claims that the removable high-speed 40 megabyte
- (MB), or optional 80MB and 120MB hard disk drives, can be
- configured to meet specific applications.
-
- The company maintains that the Librex T386SX is the first notebook
- computer on the market to support the recently introduced PCMCIA
- standard for memory and input/output devices. This new standard,
- which covers add-in memory modules and optional input/output
- devices, is analogous to the AT bus slot standard on desktop
- computers.
-
- The company claims that a number of peripherals are already
- either available or in development for use with the notebook,
- including internal modems, fax/modems, silicon hard drives,
- and scanners.
-
- The Librex T386SX is powered by the 386SX 20 megahertz (MHZ)
- Intel chip and comes standard with 4MB of RAM, upgradable with
- plug-in memory modules to 12MB. The unit comes configured with
- Microsoft DOS, LapLink Pro communications software from
- Traveling Software, and QAPlus from Diagsoft.
-
- The screen is a backlit 9.5-inch VGA (video graphics display)
- monochrome LCD (liquid crystal display) with 64 shades of gray.
- The unit also supports the LCD screen and an external monitor for
- simultaneous display.
-
- The Librex T386SX also includes one serial and one parallel port,
- a VGA port, a PS/2 6-pin connector for an external mouse,
- an enhanced 82-key keyboard, and the multipin connector for the
- detachable floppy drive.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920317/Press Contact: Peter W. Brown, Librex
- Computer Systems Inc., 408-452-1592)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TYO)(00005)
-
- Novell Releases Japanese LAN System 03/17/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Novell Japan, a Japanese
- office of Novell in the U.S., has announced a series of new products,
- which are related to local area networks.
-
- The software runs on Japanese personal computers and is expected
- to be available at low cost. Novell's three new products are intend to
- interconnect Apple's Macintosh and Unix computers.
-
- Under NetWare Lite J, it is said a new type of local area network is
- created connecting a maximum of 25 units of personal computers.
- According to Novell, a server computer is not required in this system,
- making it both convenient and cost-saving. Also, the software comes
- on a single floppy disk, making it is easy to install.
-
- The price of this product is still unknown, but it will not be expensive.
- The original English version of program cost $99. The program runs
- on NEC's PC-9801, Fujitsu's FMR. IBM's PS/2 55, Toshiba's J-3100,
- and AX computers.
-
- The other two programs are Netware for Macintosh J and Netware
- NFS J. Both programs are intended to interconnect the Macintosh
- and Unix computers under Netware LAN.
-
- Meanwhile, Hitachi says it plans to adopt Netware into its own
- workstations. Hitachi used to support Microsoft's LAN Manager.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920317/Press Contact: Novell Japan,
- +81-3-3927-8801)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00006)
-
- Autodesk Joins Canadian Alliance Against Software Theft 03/17/92
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Autodesk
- has become the sixth member of the Canadian Alliance Against
- Software Theft (CAAST), a group of major PC software vendors
- formed to fight software piracy. The other five members are Borland
- International, Lotus Development, Microsoft, Novell, and
- Quarterdeck Office Systems.
-
- Those five companies formed CAAST in December, 1990, saying
- they would fight piracy with a program focused on education. The
- organization has a continuing campaign to inform computer dealers
- and users about the laws on software copying and the negative
- effects of copying software.
-
- The group has also worked with law enforcement agencies and
- been involved in several software piracy prosecutions. In
- December, CAAST settled out of court with computer dealers in
- Toronto and Calgary, who were charged with selling unauthorized
- copies of DOS, Lotus 1-2-3, dBase, and WordPerfect.
-
- In November, CAAST was involved with the prosecution of a Quebec
- City computer dealer for allegedly selling personal computers
- complete with pirated software. The group was also involved with
- the seizure by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police of a bulletin
- board system in Montreal, said to be distributing illegal copies of
- commercial software.
-
- Autodesk has pursued more than 4,000 reported cases of piracy
- of its own products since 1988, company officials said. Its
- investigations have led to more than US$7 million in direct
- purchases and recoveries. Autodesk is a founding member of the
- Software Publishers Association Copyright Protection Fund in the
- United States and of the Business Software Alliance.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920317/Press Contact: Allan Reynolds, CAAST,
- tel 416-598-8988, fax 416-598-3584)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00007)
-
- Info Globe Becomes Globe Information Services 03/17/92
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Info Globe,
- the electronic publishing division of the Toronto-based newspaper
- The Globe and Mail, has been renamed Globe Information Services.
- The move reflects an ongoing broadening of the division's business,
- said Douglas C. Hobbs, manager of marketing and business
- development.
-
- The Globe and Mail, which bills itself as Canada's national
- newspaper, launched Info Globe in 1977. The division's flagship
- product is an electronic edition of the newspaper, one of the first
- in the world to offer the full content of a daily paper on the
- morning of publication.
-
- The electronic newspaper is now about 40 percent of Globe
- Information Services' business, Hobbs told Newsbytes. The
- company has added a variety of other electronic information
- sources, including the Canadian Periodical Index and the full text
- of the Financial Times of Canada, a weekly financial paper
- acquired from publishing chain Southam.
-
- Globe Information Services will be divided into three business
- units. The Info Globe Online unit will provide the on-line
- information services on which the operation was built. Globe
- and Mail Publishing will put out paper, microfilm, and CD-ROM
- publications.
-
- The business consulting arm will help customers create executive
- information systems. Hobbs said Globe will act as a sort of
- information broker for customers who need electronic information
- from various sources. In addition to providing its own on-line
- services, he said, the company will negotiate access to services
- from other companies and provide a complete package to the
- customer.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920317/Press Contact: Douglas C. Hobbs,
- Globe Information Services, tel 416-585-5250, fax 416-585-5249)
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00008)
-
- AT&T Wins Kazakhstan Order 03/17/92
- BASKING RIDGE, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- AT&T
- said it has won an order to install one million digital telephone lines
- in Kazakhstan over the next 10 years.
-
- Kazakhstan is the largest central Asian republic in what used to be
- the Soviet Union, and one of the last Republics where leaders from
- the Communist era remain in charge. Included in the order are five
- digital exchanges in the capital of Alma Ata.
-
- Previously, the company had announced a partnership with the
- Ukraine to improve its phone infrastructure and make its digital
- 5ESS switch there. The Kazakhstan deal will be a simple sale for
- hard currency. Currently, AT&T said, Kazakhstan phone calls to
- the West must still be routed through Moscow, and no improved
- satellite access, which would change that, is part of this deal.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920317)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00009)
-
- Bell Atlantic To Offer Single Personal Phone Number 03/17/92
- BEDMINSTER, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Bell
- Atlantic Mobile Systems plans to offer Baltimore/Washington-area
- cellular customers a personal phone number, which would access
- either a cellular line, a paging line, a voice mail line, or a regular
- telephone service, as needed.
-
- The technology used for the service comes from AccessPlus
- Communications of Bellevue, Washington. Bell Atlantic Mobile
- intends to acquire exclusive rights to deploy the technology in
- its Baltimore/Washington system beginning early this summer,
- followed by the introduction in other Bell Atlantic markets. Bell
- Atlantic has not yet selected the name under which it will market
- the service.
-
- All calls would be routed through a single computer, which would
- handle them in line with customer instructions or an automatic
- schedule. Calls can be screened for privacy or immediacy, routed
- to voice mail, answered with a pre-programmed message, or
- callers may be instructed to call a pager number.
-
- For now, Bell Atlantic is calling this the "One Person, One
- Number" system. The monthly charge will range from $15 to $25,
- depending on options.
-
- In addition to the AccessPlus agreement, Bell Atlantic has also
- agreed to test a personal phone technology called PPS800 from
- Motorola, in Pittsburgh. "There's no reason why these and other
- technologies might not exist side by side, offering different
- services to meet different needs," the company said in a press
- statement.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920317/Press Contact: Bell Atlantic
- Mobile Systems, Karen Ann Kurlander, 908-306-7552)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00010)
-
- McCaw, TCI Testing Microcell Service 03/17/92
- ENGLEWOOD, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- The
- nation's largest cellular telephone and cable television firms
- have expanded their cooperation, agreeing to join in a market
- trial of microcell technology in Ashland, Oregon.
-
- About 200 residents of Ashland, in southern Oregon, will get
- pocket-sized phones for six months for use in their neighborhoods.
- Four low-power microcells, on standard cellular frequencies, will
- handle the service, even inside homes and office buildings.
-
- Microcells are seen as a way for existing cellular phone
- companies, including the regional Bells, to serve demand which
- might develop for microwave-based PCN systems from
- competitors.
-
- The microcells will be linked to McCaw's existing facilities via
- TCI fiber cables. The connection to McCaw's larger system will
- let the subscribers move outside the area to make or receive
- calls. While McCaw claims the test will gather valuable
- information on how PCN microwave systems should be deployed
- in the future, it will also tell cellular service providers how to
- compete with such competition. Test participants can pay either
- $19.95 per month plus 20 cents for each minute of calling, or
- $16.95 per month and 50 cents for each outbound call.
-
- Previously, the two companies had agreed to coordinate a
- test of combined cellular and cable services in Colorado.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920317/Press Contact: McCaw Cellular,
- Bob Ratliffe, 206-828-8685; Tele-Communications, Lela Cocoros,
- 303-721-5235)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00011)
-
- Octel Wins German Cellular Voice Mail Order 03/17/92
- MILPITAS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Octel will
- provide the voice mail equipment used by Mannesmann Mobilfunk's
- digital cellular system in Germany. The D2 system, under Group
- Speciale Mobile, or GSM, standards, is one of two authorized
- digital cellular systems in the country, the other of which is
- the state-owned Deutsche Telekom.
-
- Octel said the deal is its first in the German market, and
- provides for the installation of Octel's Sierra unit. The Sierra
- is Octel's largest system and is designed to support services
- such as telephone answering, voice mail, call processing, and
- audiotex. Mannesmann Mobilfunk will originally utilize the Sierra
- to offer telephone answering, or call completion services, to its
- D2-network subscribers. Octel had previously won cellular
- contracts in England and France.
-
- The main shareholders of Mannesmann Mobilfunk are: the
- Mannesmann AG of Germany, with 51 percent; the Pacific Telesis
- Group of the US, with 26 percent; the DG Bank Deutsche
- Genossenschaftsbank of Germany with 10 percent; Cable and
- Wireless of the UK with five percent; Lynonnaise des Eaux-Dumes
- of France with 2.5 percent; and the Central Federal Associations
- for the Electronic and Automobile Trades and Industries of
- Germany, each with 0.5 percent ownership.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920317/Press Contact: Octel
- Communications, Barbara Burdick)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00012)
-
- AT&T Universal Card Marks Second Anniversary 03/17/92
- JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- AT&T
- marked the second anniversary of its Universal Card, a combined
- credit and phone card, by dropping its interest rate to as low as
- 15.4 percent for charter members, and 16.4 percent for others.
-
- The card's interest rate is pegged to the US prime rate and
- opened at 19.8 percent.
-
- The AT&T Universal Card is now the third most popular bank
- credit card in the country with more than eight million accounts,
- more than 12.5 million cards and nearly $4 billion in receivables --
- a 130 percent increase in receivables from the previous year.
-
- Since it was introduced, AT&T has lost some business as
- competing banks carved out affiliation deals with competitors,
- but that is nothing compared to the assets it has acquired from
- cardholders.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920317/Press Contact: Bruce Reid,
- AT&T Universal Card Services, 904-443-8894)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00013)
-
- Soft-Switch Collaborates With Ardis On E-mail 03/17/92
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Soft-
- Switch will collaborate with Ardis to extend its enterprise mail
- networking capability to Ardis wireless data customers.
-
- The integration of advanced radio technology, along with "store-
- and-forward" transaction processing via electronic mail will enable
- customers to leverage investments in enterprise messaging and
- wireless communications to improve customer service and
- increase enterprise productivity. Soft-Switch will use its mail
- programming interface, called the Soft-Switch Network
- Applications Programming Interface, or SNAPI, to link application
- programs via electronic mail and the Ardis wireless
- communications system.
-
- SNAPI allows applications on any platform to move information
- over a store-and-forward enterprise electronic mail network --
- thus making them "mail-enabled." The key aspect of this
- electronic mail transaction processing is that all information
- passed between people and applications is stored in an electronic
- "mail box" until ready to be used. This allows creation and
- transmission of data without the user being "on-line" with the
- application program.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920317/Press Contact: Soft-Switch, Walt
- Wilson, 215-640-9600)
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00014)
-
- ****IBM Shipping PS/1 Pro To Distributors 03/17/92
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- IBM has
- begun shipping specially configured Personal System/1 (PS/1)
- 386SX Pro models to the first two distributors chosen for its
- Authorized Distributor:VAR program.
-
- Available from Ingram Micro of Santa Ana, California, and Gates/FA
- of Greenville, South Carolina, the new PS/1 386SX Pro models allow
- value-added remarketers (VARs) to add their own enhancements
- and support, IBM said.
-
- IBM has expanded the target market for the PS/1 to include very
- small businesses as well as the home and home office market, said
- company spokeswoman Sheila Shanahan. She said IBM is
- responding to demand from home office customers who said that
- "in addition to wanting a product that they could use for the home office...
- they also wanted a product that they felt was strong enough, if their
- small business ever became a business outside the home, that it had
- the ability to run the latest software and so forth."
-
- The Authorized Distributor:VAR program enables qualified VARs to
- remarket new, specially configured PS/1s to small businesses. The
- new PS/1 Pro models use a 20 megahertz, 80386SX microprocessor,
- and come with two megabytes (MB) of RAM, expandable to 16 MB.
- The PS/1 Pro offers three AT-bus expansion slots, a 14-inch color
- VGA display, and a choice of 80 MB or 129 MB hard disk drive.
-
- VARs will add their own hardware or software enhancements to the
- machines they sell. Gates/FA and Ingram Micro are to recruit and
- authorize VARs for this program. There will be no sales minimum or
- IBM-imposed renewal criteria, Shanahan told Newsbytes. IBM
- announced the program and began recruiting VARs in early
- February.
-
- The PS/1 386 SX Pro N81, with the 80 MB hard drive, is priced
- at $1,949, and the N31, with the 129 MBdrive, has a $2,149
- price tag. Both are available immediately.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920317/Press Contact: Sheila Shanahan, IBM,
- 914-642-5407)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00015)
-
- Lotus Offers Free "Switch Kit" For WordPerfect Users 03/17/92
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) --
- For WordPerfect users who would rather switch than fight, Lotus
- Development has an offer designed to make switching a bit less
- of a battle. Lotus is offering registered users of its Ami Pro word
- processing software a free on-line training tool aimed at former
- WordPerfect users.
-
- The Ami Pro SwitchKit offers two levels of keystroke help and
- training for WordPerfect users. In level 1, if the user enters a
- WordPerfect command, the SwitchKit displays instructions for doing
- the same thing in Ami Pro, using short numbered steps. Level 2
- displays the same information, and also demonstrates how to
- perform the operation using a pull-down menu.
-
- The SwitchKit also includes a batch file conversion program that
- translates groups or whole subdirectories of WordPerfect files into
- Ami Pro format. The translator saves each file with its original
- name and a new (.SAM) extension.
-
- The batch file conversion program also converts files created in
- other popular word processors such as DisplayWrite, WordStar,
- MultiMate, Microsoft Word, and Word for Windows, Lotus said.
-
- The Ami Pro SwitchKit is a memory-resident utility and can be
- configured to load automatically at Ami Pro startup. The
- instruction window can be placed in any of the four corners of the
- screen, Lotus said, allowing users to follow instructions and work
- on a document at the same time. It includes a custom SmartIcons
- palette for easy operation, and comes with six decorative
- wallpaper choices.
-
- At present Lotus offers the SwitchKit only for WordPerfect users.
- Michelle Goguen, a spokeswoman for the company, said there
- are no official plans to offer similar kits for other popular word
- processors, but "Lotus will probably be working on anything that
- makes sense."
-
- Registered Ami Pro users can order the SwitchKit, comprised of a
- diskette and manual, by calling 800-872-3387, extension 6470.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920317/Press Contact: Michelle Goguen,
- Alexander Communications for Lotus, tel 404-876-4482,
- fax 404-876-4516)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(DEN)(00016)
-
- ****Judge Orders Hacker To Stay Away From Computers 03/17/92
- DENVER, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- A computer
- hacker who pleaded guilty to breaking into space agency computer
- systems was ordered Monday to undergo mental health treatment
- and not use computers without permission from his probation officer.
-
- The 24 year-old man, a resident of suburban Lakewood, was
- sentenced to three years probation in what is said to be one of
- only five prosecutions under the federal computer hacker law.
-
- The man pleaded guilty last year to one count of breaking into a
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) computer,
- after NASA and the Federal Bureau of Investigation agents
- tracked him down in 1990. Prosecutors said the man had spent four
- years trying to get into computer systems, including those of some
- banks.
-
- Prosecutors said the man had gained access to a Defense
- Department computer through the NASA system, but declined to
- give any details of that case. The indictment did not explain what
- had occurred.
-
- In the plea bargain agreement, the man admitted he gained access
- to NASA's computers "by exploiting a malfunction...in a public
- access NASA computer bulletin board service."
-
- The man was described as an unemployed loner who had spent
- most of his time using a computer at home. The prosecutor was
- quoted as saying the man needed counselling "on a social level
- and for personal hygiene."
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920317)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00017)
-
- Microsoft Intros Toolkit For Visual Basic 03/17/92
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Microsoft
- has introduced its Professional Toolkit For Visual Basic, the
- programming system for Windows.
-
- Microsoft said new programming tools and controls in the toolkit
- make it easier for programmers to access the newest Windows
- technology, including multimedia, handwriting recognition, and
- OLE (object linking and embedding). The toolkit also includes a
- collection of custom controls that allow programmers to take
- advantage of features such as graphing, spreadsheet-like grids,
- and graphical three dimensional user interface components.
-
- Visual Basic, released in May 1991, has become a popular
- programming tool for Windows. It uses an event-driven
- programming model designed specifically for fast Windows
- programming. Programmers use Visual Basic to develop new
- Windows applications as well as enhance existing ones.
-
- Microsoft said it teamed with six ISVs (independent software
- developers) to create the toolkit. Participating in the development
- were Crescent Software, Desaware, MicroHelp, OutRider Systems,
- Pinnacle Publishing, and Sheridan Software Systems.
-
- "The ability of these developers...to quickly create add-ons for
- VisualBasic demonstrates the extensibility built into Visual Basic
- and Windows." said a Microsoft spokesperson.
-
- The toolkit has a suggested retail price of $299. Both the toolkit
- and Visual Basic together carry a price tag of $495.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920317/Press Contact: Marty Taucher, Microsoft,
- 206-882-8080)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00018)
-
- ****MCI Wins $560 Million FAA Contract 03/17/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- MCI
- Communications has been awarded a massive, $558 million
- contract by the Federal Aviation Administration to implement the new
- Leased Interfacility National Airspace Communications System, or
- LINCS. The system, which will replace and expand upon the present
- FAA communications network, is intended to provide improved air
- traffic controller communications between airports and between
- control tower personnel and pilots.
-
- MCI is scheduled to begin work on the telecommunications system
- this summer and should complete the installation in three years.
- To earn the entire $558 million, the company will require the FAA to
- take advantage of all the options provided for in the total 10-year
- contract.
-
- In addition to pilot-to-ground voice communications, the LINCS
- network will carry computer and radar data between the thousands
- of FAA installations supporting traffic in United States air space.
-
- Ever since President Reagan fired striking air traffic controllers in the
- early 1980s, some analysts have been saying that there are not
- enough trained personnel working for the FAA.
-
- The existing communications systems have also been blamed
- for some of the long delays experienced at many airports. FAA
- personnel claim that the new LINCS system will help smooth out
- domestic operations but they also point out that the US commercial
- aircraft safety record has been very good, even during the 80s.
-
- The reason FAA stations require such massive communications
- capabilities is that aircraft at one airport cannot be permitted
- to take off if their destination airport is closed due to poor
- weather or other conditions. There is also a tendency to link the
- radar systems of airports which are physically close together -
- this is why when the radar systems at O'Hare Airport in Chicago
- went out for an hour recently nearby Midway also had to shut down.
-
- (John McCormick/19920317/Press Contact: Fred Farrar, FAA,
- 202-267-8521)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00019)
-
- Australia: AOTC To Trial CT2 Network In Hong Kong 03/17/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- The Australian and
- Overseas Telecommunications Corporation (AOTC) is to trial a
- second generation cordless telephone (CT2) network in Hong
- Kong in partnership with local automation firm Chevalier.
-
- The service to be offered, Chevalier Telepoint, is expected by the
- joint venture operation to attract around 25,000 subscribers by the
- end of the year, and will be operational from April. The
- establishment of the network in Hong Kong will be used by AOTC
- to test-run the CT2 network before it makes a decision (due in late
- May) on the possibility of introducing a CT2 network in Australia.
-
- The Hong Kong network was expected to be delayed due to a lack
- of CT2 handsets, but suppliers have now given minimum supply
- commitments which will see the network begun on schedule. The
- AOTC/Chevalier has now become one of only two of the four
- companies granted licenses to operate CT2 networks in the colony
- to secure supply guarantees. The other two companies have
- delayed introduction of their services by nine to 12 months while
- awaiting handsets.
-
- CT2 works with a combination of a cordless handset and base
- stations. Subscribers would have a base station in their home, and
- in conjunction with the handset, this would work like any other
- cordless phone. However, when travelling, the subscriber can carry
- the handset, and if within approximately 200 meters of a base station,
- can make outgoing calls. Chevalier Telepoint expects around 1,500
- of its base stations to be operational by the launch date, and 4,000
- within three years.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920317)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00020)
-
- Optus Begins Telecom Competition In Australian Outback 03/17/92
- GOULBOURN, AUSTRALIA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- The first length of
- optical fiber cable to be laid by Optus was planted in the New South
- Wales (NSW) country town of Goulbourn. The cable is the first small
- part of what is to become Optus' national network, and marks Optus'
- serious entry into the deregulated telecommunications market.
-
- Competition between AOTC (Australian and Overseas
- Telecommunications Corporation) and Optus is due to begin in June,
- when Optus' cellular mobile services begin. Optus has been quick to
- point out the speed in which it has begun cable laying (36 days after
- its license was awarded), and the fact that the next generation of Aussat
- telecommunications satellites will become operational with the launch
- of Aussat B-1 on March 22.
-
- Optus' cable in Goulbourn will initially be only one end of a 60
- kilometer (km) cable to Canberra, the national capital. Once testing
- and evaluation has been done, the cable will be extended north to
- Sydney and south to Melbourne, and this work is expected to be
- completed by mid-1993.
-
- By 1997, Optus plans to have the cable stretching from Cairns in
- northern Queensland, through coastal New South Wales, down to
- Melbourne, then across to Perth - a total distance of 8,000km. Optus'
- plans to offer long-distance and international call services by the
- end of the year are also on schedule.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920317)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00021)
-
- Pay TV Enters Australia Through Hotel "Back Doors" 03/17/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Pre-empting the
- Australian government's decision on whether to allow the introduction
- of widely available pay-television, Cable TV Services, of Sydney,
- has begun beaming in CNN International signals to subscribers.
- The first to receive the signals were two of Sydney's leading hotels -
- the Regent and the Sheraton.
-
- Chief executive of Cable TV Services, George Frame, said at the
- announcement: "Technology doesn't wait for governments to make
- decisions." Commenting on the 118 groups which have made
- submissions to the government (of which Cable TV Services is one),
- Frame went on to say that, "everyone has talked about it. We're
- doing it".
-
- Australian companies and potential subscribers have been waiting
- for an official decision from Canberra, and cables have already
- been laid in Sydney's main cities. However, due to the widespread
- population (17 million people on a continent the size of mainland
- US), satellite technology would be as important as cable
- technology in any widely-available service offered to Australian
- subscribers.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920317)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00022)
-
- Papua New Guinea To Use First Digital Exchanges 03/17/92
- PORT MORESBY, PAPUA NEW GUINEA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) --
- Papua New Guinea's (PNG) telecommunications services will be
- greatly improved once two digital exchanges start to operate in
- April. The exchanges, in Port Moresby and Lae, mark the beginning
- of PNG's Post and Telecommunications Corporation to convert its
- network to fully-digital operation.
-
- PNG's telecommunications network currently employs ageing
- electro-mechanical crossbar exchanges. The upgrade will see the
- introduction of 35,000 additional local lines and a further 11,000 trunk
- lines in 28 locations. The exchanges are being supplied by Alcatel
- Australia in conjunction with its Belgian sister-company, Alcatel Bell.
- Digital services will be offered in remote areas via self-contained
- and self-cooled exchanges, with power backup.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920317)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00023)
-
- Australians To Join European Company Matchmaking Network 03/17/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Australia is to
- participate in an EC (European Community) network which aims
- to bring together Australian companies and their European
- counterparts.
-
- The network, BC-NET (Business Cooperation Network), operates
- out of Brussels, and allows companies to submit profiles for matching
- with companies with like interests. Since 1988, when BC-NET was
- established, 55,000 companies have submitted matching requests.
-
- Australian companies will make their requests via local consultancy
- firms, who forward the requests to Brussels. Gareth Evans, Minister
- for Foreign Relations and Trade, said at the announcement of
- Australian involvement in the network that although Australia
- needs to look increasingly to the Asia-Pacific region for trade
- opportunities, there is still enormous potential for trade in Europe.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920317)
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00024)
-
- DCA Signs Up New Volume Reseller 03/17/92
- ALPHARETTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Digital
- Communications Associates (DCA) has announced that they have
- signed a volume reseller agreement with Compucom systems.
-
- DCA maintains a two-tier distribution arrangement. In the first tier are
- the distributors such as Merisel, Tech Data, and Ingram Micro. This
- tier is responsible for serving the smaller resellers such as local
- computer stores.
-
- The second level is where larger resellers fit in. In this level,
- the reseller deals directly with DCA and receives preferred pricing
- and treatment. Only those resellers who have sufficient volume can
- qualify for this tier. Compucom is joining only two other companies
- that have achieved the status of volume resellers. The other two
- companies are Computerland and Intelligent Electronics.
-
- Under this agreement, Compucom will be reselling all of DCA's
- products that are targeted towards the IBM SNA and 3270 market.
- This includes the DCA/Microsoft Communications Server,
- IRMALAN/EP gateway, IRMAtrac Convertible Token Ring adapter,
- IRMA WorkStation for Windows, and the Select Communications
- Server.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920317/Press Contact: Meg Owens, DCA,
- 404-442-4521)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00025)
-
- AST Ships Color Premium And Advantage Notebooks 03/17/92
- IRVINE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- AST says it has
- begun shipping its color Premium Exec 386SX/25C notebook and
- the Advantage! NB-SX notebook.
-
- AST has lowered prices on the color notebook over 20 percent,
- making it the first to ship a color notebook priced under $4,000, the
- company maintains.
-
- The Advantage! is preconfigured with a data modem, DOS 5.0,
- Borland Sidekick 2.0 and Prodigy software and will be sold
- nationwide at Circuit City, Computer City Supercenters, and
- Computerland Express stores, AST said.
-
- The Advantage! NB-SX/25 is has a 25 megahertz (MHz)
- microprocessor, weighs 7.3 pounds, includes a 60 megabyte (MB)
- hard disk drive, a 1.44 MB 3.5-inch diskette drive, a 2,400 baud
- internal data modem, and four MB of RAM expandable to 8 MB. It
- also includes one serial port, one parallel port, one external monitor
- port, one numeric keypad/mouse port, a fast-charge AC adapter,
- and a nylon carrying case.
-
- Not available thorough nationwide retail distribution outlets, AST
- says the Premium Exec color notebook has been shipped in limited
- quantities to select major accounts since February. The computer
- weighs just over seven pounds, is battery powered with a nine-inch
- diagonal video graphics array (VGA) color screen at 640 by 480 pixel
- resolution, and 16 simultaneous colors. The screen can display up to
- 256 colors, but at a lower resolution of 320 by 200. The screen is
- based on thin-film supertwist nematic (FSTN) technology and
- contains two backlit cold cathode flourescent tube (CCFT) panels,
- AST added.
-
- The Premium Exec also has a SuperVGA port for an external
- monitor and AST said the unit can display on both the external
- and built-in screen at the same time for use in presentations.
-
- Two models of the Premium Exec, one with a 60 MB hard disk and
- one with an 80 MB hard disk are available, each with 4 MB of RAM,
- expandable to 8 MB. The 60 MB hard disk model, 63V/4, retails for
- $3,995, while the 80 MB model 83V/4 is $4,295.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920317/Press Contact: Lisa Parkhurst, Ast
- Research, tel 714-727-7961, fax 714-727-8592)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00026)
-
- WordPerfect For Windows 5.1 Users Angry Over Product 03/17/92
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) --
- WordPerfect Corporation, known for cheering crowds of loyal users,
- may be in for a tough time. WordPerfect for Windows users said they
- are angry to WordPerfect Vice President of Marketing, Andre
- Peterson, at a recent demonstration of the product by Peterson
- given at a meeting of the Los Angeles Computer Society (LACS).
-
- WordPerfect users are well-known for their loyalty to the product.
- However, after the demonstration of the WordPerfect for Windows
- product at the LACS, during which Peterson kept commenting that
- the audience was a "tough crowd" several WordPerfect users who
- had purchased the Windows product stood up and complained
- loudly and bitterly about serious problems.
-
- WordPerfect users are trained to use combinations of keystrokes
- for almost every operation in the DOS product except the actual
- typing of the text. At installation of WordPerfect for Windows, users
- are given a choice of a common user access (CUA) keyboard or
- a DOS WordPerfect 5.1 keyboard, with the CUA keyboard as the
- default first choice. While keystrokes in the DOS WP keyboard
- remain the same, keystrokes in the CUA layout are different. Some
- unsuspecting users who didn't understand the difference and
- understood keystrokes for WordPerfect for DOS would work the
- same in the WordPerfect for Windows product have instead found
- have unexpected and disastrous consequences in Windows.
-
- One user who described herself as just plain mad said she'd spent
- some time on a document in WordPerfect for Windows, then went to
- use the WordPerfect version 5.1 block text keystroke Alt-F4 (holding
- down the Alt key and then pressing the F4 key) to highlight text to
- move it. She said she suddenly found herself out of WordPerfect with
- no warning and no opportunity to do a save. She said she was so
- angry, she didn't even bother to call customer support.
-
- Peterson blamed Windows saying certain keystrokes in the CUA
- keyboard give commands to Windows such as Alt-F4, which is the
- command to exit an application without saving and WordPerfect
- cannot do anything about it. Another such command is Ctrl-F4, which
- in WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS allows the user to move, delete, or copy
- text, but in the Windows CUA keyboard, closes down the active
- document in an application.
-
- Keystrokes were not the only complaints, however. Another woman
- wanted to know why printing was so slow in WordPerfect for Windows.
- She said: "I give the print command and I could knit a sweater before
- the document actually prints."
-
- Other users complained about the slowness of the graphically-based
- WordPerfect for Windows. Peterson said he personally handles that
- problem by creating the document in the DOS version, then starting
- Windows and doing all his formatting there.
-
- One interesting note, WordPerfect had an interesting promotional
- item it gave out to members of the LACS. WordPerfect for Windows
- has a feature called the "button bar" which allows users to pull
- commonly used commands from the pull-down menus to "buttons"
- that perform the command. The buttons are user selectable and can
- also be macros the user has written themselves to automate common
- tasks.
-
- To commemorate the button bar, Peterson had everyone in the
- audience receive a "Button Bar" -- a chocolate candy bar that said on
- the package "WordPerfect's Original Button Bar for Windows, Version
- 5.1." On the wrapper, the button bar had the system requirements for
- WordPerfect for Windows, as well as a description of WordPerfect for
- Windows under the heading "WordPerfect for Windows Ingredients."
- Inside the chocolate was impressed with example "button" icons
- from a sample button bar, and a toll-free number, 800-284-5272,
- provided on the package for WordPerfect questions.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920317/Press Contact: Andre Peterson,
- WordPerfect company, tel 801-225-5000, fax 801-222-5077)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LAX)(00027)
-
- ****Silicon Graphics Had To "Buy" MIPS, Says Dataquest 03/17/92
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 16 (NB) -- Workstation
- manufacturer Silicon Graphics was faced with no alternative but to
- merge with MIPS Computer Systems, which can be viewed as Silicon
- Graphics buying MIPS, says a Dataquest report.
-
- The merger was imperative as MIPS was moving toward financial
- collapse and Silicon Graphics, who is dependent on MIPS' reduced
- instruction-set computer chip (RISC) technology, had to make the
- merger investment, market research firm, Dataquest, asserts.
-
- In the short term the merger is expected to be a drain on Silicon
- Graphics, but in the long term the company's control over the
- underlying technology is expected to benefit Silicon Graphics
- customers, Dataquest says. Silicon Graphics is following a tradition
- established by other major players in the workstation market who
- have also purchased the underlying technology for their workstations.
- For example, Sun owns SPARC; IBM owns Power RISC; Hewlett-
- Packard owns PA-RISC; and DEC owns Alpha.
-
- A further downside to the merger, according to Dataquest, is business
- conflicts that might arise within the Advanced Computing Consortium
- (ACE) if MIPS processors lose their vendor-neutral technology. As
- ACE is looking for a platform to back as a standard, the merger is
- likely to affect whether ACE backs a MIPS platform or goes with the
- new 586 chip expected from microprocessor giant Intel for Microsoft's
- new Windows NT operating system.
-
- Dataquest is implying that Silicon Graphics cannot manage MIPS as a
- technology-independent product. If it cannot, the market research firm
- asserts the other manufacturers will move away from MIPS, and Silicon
- Graphics will lose the economies of scale in hardware and software to
- make the technology viable. Dataquest says if Silicon Graphics can
- keep MIPS products technology independent, it will be the first to do
- so. No other company has proven it can manage both a systems
- business and a technology licensing business, Dataquest asserts.
-
- Silicon Graphics however, claims it can manage MIPS as technology-
- independent with equal access to the product for other vendors as
- well as addressing genuine or perceived time-to-market and design
- control advantages it has over other vendors who license MIPS.
- Silicon Graphics says it expects to become a $5 billion a year
- company who can compete with the mainstream players in the
- workstation market, instead of remaining in its traditional niche in
- the technical, three dimensional graphics market.
-
- San Jose-based Dataquest decribes itself as a market research
- and consulting company that provides services to the high
- technology and financial community.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920317/Press Contact: Mary Hand, Dataquest,
- tel 408-437-8000, fax 408-437-0292)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00028)
-
- Safeware Offers New PC Insurance 03/16/92
- COLUMBUS, OHIO, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- Safeware The
- Insurance Agency Inc., a major supplier of inexpensive computer
- insurance, especially for home and small business computer users,
- has announced an expanded coverage option which includes a
- service contract designated SAFEWARE FIX:IT. The company,
- which previously insured against theft, fire, and electrical surge
- damage, says that seven out of ten computer users experience
- problems every year, but that some warranties are limited to only
- 90 days.
-
- FIX:IT differs from normal service contracts in several ways. For
- one thing, the cost is between five and nine percent of equipment
- value, verses up to 24 percent for service contracts. But
- probably more important, the Safeware policy includes
- comprehensive insurance for such items as theft and power
- surge damage, while service contracts only cover mechanical
- breakdown. Safeware's policy also covers software.
-
- As for the need to have other coverage, the company claims that
- computer theft rose by nearly 36 percent during the recession of
- last year.
-
- For more information, contact Safeware, 2929 N. High St.,
- Columbus, OH 43202-9979. The Safeware policy is underwritten
- by the American Bankers Insurance Company.
-
- (John McCormick/19920317)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00029)
-
- Plasmon Expands Lease System Program 03/17/92
- MILPITAS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- In a move
- which the company says will aid its value-added resellers, Plasmon
- has expanded its leasing program for write-once and multifunction
- optical drives to include complete systems for information storage
- and image management.
-
- Plasmon says that there has been a big increase in demand for
- optical storage systems, but the state of the economy has put
- some contracts on hold because of the high initial cost of
- purchasing a complete system. The lease option is expected to
- ease some of the economic pressure on government agencies,
- as well as legal, medical, and financial sector customers.
-
- All hardware, software, media, service, and support can now be
- included in the lease program offered by Plasmon VARs, not just
- the optical drive hardware.
-
- Optical storage systems can place file cabinets full of document
- images or text on one or two archival-quality discs which cost
- only a couple of hundred dollars. At the same time the amount of
- storage space is greatly decreased, access to the documents is
- greatly enhanced because not only can they be searched by
- software and accessed on a local area network, they can be
- accessed from a remote site.
-
- (John McCormick/19920317/Press Contact: Brad Lee Brenner,
- Marken Communications, tel 408-296-3600 or fax 408-296-3803)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(MOW)(00030)
-
- Moscow: Fox Software Distributor Announced 03/17/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 MAR 17 (NB) -- The distribution
- agreement between Technopolis Company of Zelenograd, near
- Moscow, and FOX Software (U.K.), is to be signed soon.
-
- Technopolis Company, along with the Russian New Information
- Technologies center, claims to provide complete localization of
- the Fox software products, offers a 24 hours-a-day user hotline,
- and support seminars
-
- In addition to the already available FoxPro 2.0, company said it
- will also launch in Russia FoxPro Unix, FoxPro Windows, and
- FoxPro/MAC, later this year.
-
- Technopolis said it will sell for both dollars and rubles, at the
- market exchange rate.
-
- Several companies attempted last year to become an agent to
- sell Fox software products in former Soviet Union and then in
- Russia. Despite the fact that illegal copies of FoxPro are widely
- used by database developers in the country, nobody came
- through.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920317/Press Contact: Yuriy G. Goron,
- Technopolis, fax +7 (095) 536-55-37, e-mail
- yuriy@technopolice.zgrad.su)
-