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- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00001)
-
- Hongkong: Motorola Engages Datacraft For Network Support 05/22/92
- CENTRAL, HONGKONG, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Motorola has awarded a
- maintenance contract to Datacraft Asia for the provision of
- technical and service support to Cisco router installations on
- much of Motorola's Asia network, which encompasses more than ten
- countries. The network will allow all sites to access
- IBM hosts at Motorola's central hub as well as to tap many other
- facilities within and outside Motorola's network.
-
- Cisco's router technology is a complete and managed networking
- system for connecting local area networks (LANs) into a corporate
- wide network. Datacraft, the regional systems integrator of Cisco
- products, will provide technical and maintenance services to most of
- Motorola's sites in Asia.
-
- Datacraft Asia's director of support services, Aston Chiu, said,
- "Datacraft is well-represented in Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia,
- Thailand and Taiwan. The agreement underscores Datacraft's regional
- support capability and commitment to providing quality services to
- customers."
-
- A leading manufacturer of advanced equipment including semiconductors,
- trunk radios and communications products, Motorola requires a high
- level of data reliability and integrity and employs stringent
- standards for its mission critical data operations.
-
- Cisco products comply with Motorola's corporate requirements for
- reliable data communications. "Cisco routers are intelligent devices
- which can automatically switch data traffic to alternate paths for
- transmission when line error is detected. This ensures fail-safe data
- operations," said Lucien Wang, Asia-Pacific director for Motorola.
-
- Cisco routers support Motorola's multi-protocol environment. Various
- protocols including IBM SDLC, HDLC, and TCP/IP can be integrated into
- Cisco routers to permit efficient data communication.
-
- (Brett Cameron/NBHK9205.22/Press Contact: Ron Cattell, Datacraft Asia
- Tel 852-807 2313; Hong Kong time is GMT+8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(HKG)(00002)
-
- Tandem Profits Return In 2Q 05/22/92
- CENTRAL, HONGKONG, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Tandem Computers has announced
- that revenue for its second fiscal quarter, ended March 31, 1992,
- rose to $502.9 million, with $8.8 million net income and
- $ 0.08 earnings per share.
-
- Compared with the same period in 1991, revenues increased
- three percent from $489.4 million while net income decreased from
- $18 million, and earnings per share were down from $0.17.
-
- For the six months ended March 31 1992, revenue increased to $957.4
- million, compared with $933.2 million achieved in the year-ago
- period.
-
- However, due to a $98 million pre-tax restructuring charge taken in
- the first quarter of fiscal 1992, the company reported a net loss for
- the period of $85.8 million, with $0.79 per share.
-
- Tandem reported $25 million net income and $0.23 earnings per
- share for the first six months of fiscal 1991.
-
- "We are pleased that our efforts to restructure Tandem did not disrupt
- our business and are beginning to show results," said James Treybig,
- Tandem's president and chief executive officer.
-
- "We took steps to streamline our organization and improve our
- processes; revenue was up over the same quarter a year ago and we
- exceeded our goals on the cost side. Asset management, an area in
- which we continually do very well, was outstanding," Mr Trebig said.
-
- In Asia, Roy Olmsted, managing director of Tandem Computers (Hong
- Kong) Limited, said the company's business in the region continued to
- grow and generate good income to the Tandem group of companies.
-
- "The organization restructuring has helped us to develop our business
- in the area. We believe our performance will improve further and
- exceed the computer industry growth rate in Asia," said Mr Olmsted.
-
- Mr Treybig also believes that Tandem's business will grow. "For the
- third consecutive quarter, business in the United States posted year-
- over-year growth. We believe this is an encouraging sign that the
- recession may be abating," he said.
-
- "Besides, our strategy of selling complete business solutions is
- beginning to yield results as we recorded multiple orders for call
- center and messaging applications," Mr Treybig added.
-
- Treybig concluded, "For the remainder of the year, we will be
- implementing marketing programs to meet the challenges of improving
- revenue growth in the banking industry and to uncover new
- opportunities in other industries, while maintaining our focus on
- continuous operational improvement. We believe these programs and our
- excellent products position us well to further improve profitability
- when the world wide economy strengthens."
-
- (Brett Cameron/NBHK9205.22/Press Contact: Donough Foley Media Dynamics
- Limited Tel 852-838 3889; Hong Kong time is GMT+8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00003)
-
- Australia: Discovery Online Service Woes 05/22/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Discovery, Telecom's dial-up
- data service in Australia, continues to have major problems. A press
- release from Telesoft which provides the Discovery service told press
- to be ready for "major changes in service direction."
-
- Since the service has already wound-down considerably, it remains to
- be seen how many more sections can be lost before the it loses
- viability. Latest to go are the Australian Securities Commission and
- Business Names databases, having moved to Telecom Plus where it is
- anticipated that a number of OTC services will also find a home.
-
- The Commonwealth Bank uses Discovery top provide a national home
- banking service, and management says this will continue regardless of
- the future of Discovery. The second largest bank, Westpac, uses its own
- national home and business banking service, also using the packet
- switching network, and the Commonwealth may follow Westpac's lead.
-
- Industry speculation is that Telecom is attempting to sell the service
- to a private operator, but there is no official comment. Despite a
- number of rounds of staff cuts, yet another is expected in the next
- month.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19920522)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00004)
-
- First 900 MHz Cellular Service In Moscow 05/22/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Plexsys International of Naperville,
- Illinois, and Vimpel of Moscow, Russia has announced Euronet Telecom, a
- breakthrough 50/50 partnership which will soon bring AMPS standard
- cellular phone to Russia. Numerous attempts by large multinationals to
- sell the technology in Russia have for years been stopped by complicated
- frequency allocation problems.
-
- Euronet Telecom includes Plexsys International, which provides the
- technology; Vimpel, which pledged its 50,000 employees to develop and
- locally produce most of equipment; Comincom, the provider of
- international lines; and Ministry of Foreign Affairs telecommunications
- service, which offers government support.
-
- The company will set up the first cell at the Foreign Ministry
- building as early as July and has in place its first 100 test
- subscribers who will test drive the new system for the next four
- months.
-
- The company said it will have a huge cost advantage over existing
- competitors and will offer service of higher quality than
- competitors, according to Augie Fabela Jr., president of the
- newly founded Euronet and the chief executive of Plexsys International.
-
- Two different, current cellular service providers use the Nordic
- NMT 450 MHz standard. Previous attempts to override the problem of
- frequency allocation failed due to the lack of government support. Those
- frequencies in the 800-900 MHz range were allocated to military
- aircraft guidance systems. The Euronet system will work in 860 MHz
- frequency range
-
- "Now we have all needed licences to operate the full AMPS service,"
- Augie Fabela said.
-
- The US and Russian counterparts will share an equal stake in the
- venture. In addition to Plexsys International, Fabela Group
- International, a private investment fund, will supply the needed
- capital. Augie Fabela Jr. said the dollar investment "will be in the
- 7-digit range." He said the Russian side has pledged massive sums of
- rubles.
-
- "We will make full use of existing high quality microwave
- technology already available from Vimpel which will mean substantial cash
- savings to Euronet," Fabela said.
-
- Plexsys is an "aggressive partner, which has proprietary technology and
- provides cost-effective equipment, and has the experience to work in
- countries with a very poor communications infrastructure," said Vasily
- Bakhar, vice-chairman of Vimpel International.
-
- Plexsys International was established in 1986, employs 60 and has 32
- cellular systems established worldwide, including the first installation
- in Columbia and a 93% stake in the Carribean cellular market.
-
- Vimpel used to be a manufacturer of military radar and other military
- communications equipment. It is currently registered as a company
- operating in Russia, Ukraine, and Byelorussia, and has 60,000 employees,
- mostly in research and development.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/199204/Press Contact: Anna Belova, Vimpel, phone +7
- 095 152-9747; fax +7 095 152-9334; Augie Fabela, Plexsys International,
- phone +1-708-355-1800; fax +1-708-355-1338)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00005)
-
- Sega Links With Sony On Game Software 05/22/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Sega Enterprises has
- agreed to jointly develop multimedia game software with Sony.
- The agreement is expected to be signed in the US within a month.
-
- Sega and Sony will sign the agreement through their subsidiaries
- in the US: Sega of America in Redwood City, California, and Sony
- Electronic Publishing in New York. The games will be developed for
- Sega's Mega Drive, which is called the "Genesis" game player in the
- US. Also, the software for "Game Gear" will be developed.
-
- Sega is currently preparing to release a CD-ROM-based upgraded
- game machine, the "Sega CD," toward the end of this year, just in
- time for the lucrative Christmas season. Sony will also develop
- software for this game machine.
-
- The game software will incorporate features that use
- Sony's multimedia technology. Sony has the rights to a host of motion
- pictures and the music of big artists such as Michael Jackson.
- Sony has previous experience in CD-ROMs for game machines --
- Sony developed a CD-ROM for Nintendo's 16-bit game machine
- Super-famicom.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920521/Press Contact: Sega Enterprises,
- +81-3-5461-8331)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(HKG)(00006)
-
- Hong Kong: Sun Next-Generation Workstations 05/22/92
- WAN CHAI, HONG KONG, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Like its parent
- company in the United States, Sun Microsystems in Hong Kong
- has announced the launch of a new range of workstations. The
- SPARCstation 10 which is claimed to be the world's fastest
- desktop workstation, is based on the fast new superscalar
- superSPARC chip from Texas Instruments.
-
- The SPARCstation 10 is a major breakthrough both in terms of sheer
- processing power and in pioneering a new generation of
- workstations that brings the power of the telephone to the
- desktop," said Mary Theis, Sun Microsystems' Hong Kong-based
- marketing manager.
-
- The SPARCstation is easy to upgrade with its "snap in" replacement
- CPU boards. The compact motherboard also boasts built-in
- Integrated Service Digital Network (ISDN) capabilities. That
- means that the new machines are able to send and receive full
- blown multimedia material and also enables users to take advantage
- of digital telephone facilities.
-
- The new workstation rounds out the high end of the best-selling
- SPARCstation desktop product line, which already includes the
- entry-level SPARCstation ELC, the low-cost color SPARCstation IPC
- and SPARCstation IPX, and the SPARCstation 2.
-
- The SPARCstation 10 achieves a multiprocessing performance rating
- of up to 218 (SPECthruput89) and more than 400 MIPS in its
- four-microprocessor configuration. This represents two to four times
- the performance of previous SPARC microprocessors.
-
- In addition, SMCC has quadrupled the speed
- at which data can be processed through the memory on the
- SPARCstation 10, and has more than doubled the rate at which the
- system can retrieve data from disks. Bus speed -- the rate at
- which the system can send and receive information from peripherals
- -- has been doubled over previous SPARCstation systems.
-
- The SPARCstation 10 runs SunSoft's Solaris 1.1 operating
- environment. Later this year, the SPARCstation 10 will run Solaris
- 2.0, which provides support for symmetrical multiprocessing and
- which will feature a multithreaded kernel. The Solaris 2.0
- environment is based on Unix System V Release 4 (SVR4) and is
- source compatible with Solaris 1.1.
-
- Newsbytes inquired about prices for Hong Kong. "The pricing structure
- for Hong Kong will be a little higher than in the US," responded
- Benjamin K.H. Wong, general manager, Sun Microsystems Hong Kong
- base. "What you pay for is the back-up and support, upgrades and total
- solutions," he said, "so it's worth the extra dollars."
-
- The uniprocessor models of the SPARCserver 10 and the SPARCserver
- 600MP system with SuperSPARC will be available in Asia with Solaris
- 1.1 in the third quarter of 1992. The SPARCserver 10/Model 52 will be
- available in the fourth quarter of 1992. These systems --
- including the two-processor model -- will be shipped with a future
- version of Solaris 2.0 in the fourth quarter of 1992. Super SPARC
- upgrades for existing SPARCserver 600MP systems will be available
- in the third quarter of 1992.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920522/Press Contact: Sweedee Chin, Sun
- Microsystems Hong Kong tel: 802 4188; Hong Kong time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00007)
-
- CACI Wins Navy SUADPS Contract 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- The US Navy Fitting
- Out and Supply Support Assistance Center has awarded Washington-
- based CACI International a four-year renewal contract to continue
- to provide support for the Shipboard Uniform Automated Data
- Processing System -- Real Time (SUADPS-RT).
-
- SUADPS is a major data collection and processing system used on
- larger US Navy ships.
-
- CACI International Inc., had a 45 percent increase in net profits
- for the first quarter of 1992 on a lower gross.
-
- (John McCormick/19920520/Press Contact: John H. Baker of CACI,
- 703-841-7800)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00008)
-
- Baltic Electronic Newspaper Unveiled 05/22/92
- KALININGRAD, RUSSIA, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- The Baltic Information
- Networks (BaltIS) company of Kaliningrad, Russia, has started
- "Far West," a daily electronic newspaper.
-
- The "paper" contains 200-400 kilobytes of local news concerning
- developments in the Kaliningrad (formerly Koenigsberg) region on the
- Baltic Sea, and the development of the "Amber" free trade zone.
- It covers business, politics, cultural developments, and also
- carries the full text of local legislation.
-
- The company claims it has a powerful reporting team. It is written
- in Russian and distributed mainly through the Relcom electronic mail
- network, which now has nodes in 250 cities across the former Soviet
- Union.
-
- One kilobyte of information (approximately half-page) cost 12 rubles (12
- cents).
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/199204/Press Contact: BaltIS-Westinform, phone +7 0112
- 46-70-76; E-mail westinfo@ipc.koenig.su)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00009)
-
- DSC May Be Pulling Out of Slump 05/22/92
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- DSC Communications
- of Plano, Texas, hit hard last summer after a software bug in one
- of its signal transfer points was blamed for phone outages on
- both US coasts, may be starting to turn around.
-
- The company was also hurt by Motorola's decision to start a
- joint-venture with Northern Telecom and stop buying its cellular
- phone switches. But now it's winning some contracts, and some of
- the customers are mentioning its name again.
-
- One of its latest deals is with Advanced Telecommunications of
- Atlanta, a small long distance company which announced this week
- it will offer a virtual network product to large businesses
- starting this fall. A virtual network combines dedicated and
- public phone lines to imitate a private corporate network at much
- lower cost. ATC's offering is defined by software and aimed at
- customers which are geographically dispersed but still have a lot
- of intra-company calls. Point is, the whole thing is based on DSC
- switches.
-
- DSC still has some steep challenges. It must continue to have the
- confidence of U.S. phone companies. It must find a way to replace
- the business lost when Motorola defected. And it must find some
- way to improve its market share internationally, which is where
- the bulk of the industry's growth is right now. But, analysts
- admit, at least the public relations bleeding has stopped.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920522/Press Contact: Advanced
- Telecommunications Eileen Mullen, 404/261-5885)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00010)
-
- SMDS Consistency Achieved 05/22/92
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- The biggest news
- to come out of the recent ICA show in Atlanta may prove to be
- the announcement by major US phone companies that they'll all
- deploy so-called frame relay and switched megabit digital
- services with consistent features and identical standards.
-
- Frame relay offers fast data transmissions by reducing the amount
- of error-checking within the network. Instead, entire frames of
- data are checked at each end of the transmission. SMDS offers
- extremely fast data rates, in the range of millions of bits per
- second, which can be used for transmitting medical images and TV-
- like pictures. Such links can also be used to connect local area
- networks in different cities.
-
- The companies making these announcements include all seven
- regional Bell companies, as well as GTE, Cincinnati Bell, and
- Southern New England Telephone, which are major networks historically
- independent of the old Bell System. By specifying exactly how the
- SMDS and frame relay services will connect between their local
- networks and long distance networks, all the operating companies
- made it easier for companies to buy the services. The agreements were
- made possible by Bellcore, the research unit of the 7 Bell companies.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920522/Press Contact: Bellcore, Mike Giovia,
- 201/740-4762)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00011)
-
- SprintMail Offers Encryption and Compression 05/22/92
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- At a time when
- some major electronic mail services, notably MCI Mail, still
- have trouble with Xmodem file transfers, Sprint's SprintMail has
- been enhanced with both encryption and compression features.
-
- Version 2.1 of the PC SprintMail software, first launched in
- 1986, also offers connections to other messaging platforms under
- the X.400 standard as well as menus for users who don't like
- typing long commands. It's used by companies which need to link
- with a variety of other people, including those on other local
- area networks and public e-mail services worldwide, the company
- said. The package also supports fax telex and printed mail
- delivery. SprintMail has about 350,000 users worldwide, the
- company said, and is also available in the CIS.
-
- Separately, Sprint announced it will offer 7-digit dialing for
- its virtual private network customers using cellular phones. The
- 7-digit dialing will work within a private network from a car-
- phone to both domestic and overseas destinations.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920522/Press Contact: Janis Langley, 202-828-
- 7423)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00012)
-
- Now You Can Receive Private Phone Calls 05/22/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Former
- American Citinet founder Richard Koch has improved his
- Untraceable Phone Calls service with "Untraceable Phone
- Extensions" which lets people receive calls without the caller
- knowing who or where they are. Koch's $2/minute service, which
- operates on a caller-paid "900" line, frustrates the
- controversial "Caller ID" service by running the call through a
- switch in Las Vegas, Nevada which overlays its number on the
- call. If the call's recipient has Caller ID, in other words, all
- they'll see is 1-900-STOPPER, not the original number from which
- they are calling.
-
- To use the new service, one dials the "900" line and inputs the
- number where they'll be, receiving a special extension. Callers
- then have to call the same line and enter that extension number.
- The company's switch will then match the special extension to the
- number where one is located and connect the call. Koch recommends
- it to anyone who wants to keep their location or phone number a
- secret.
-
- A recorded explanation of how "Untraceable Extensions" works is
- available toll free on 1-800-US-PRIVACY.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920522/Press Contact: Untraceable Phone
- Calls, Richard Koch, 617-784-9015)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00013)
-
- TRX Field Computing Service For Trucks 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- TRX Transportation
- Telephone, known as TransTel, announced a plan to put cellular
- base stations at truck stops, rest areas, and other truck
- terminals, offering low-cost cellular service to the nation's
- truckers.
-
- TransTel calls its system the Nationwide Transportation
- Radiotelephone Service and its base stations "Fone Zones."
- Truckers will need to use special handsets which can get so-
- called PCN microwave cellular services, to use the service. In
- addition to regular voice calls, TransTel will also offer data
- services, voice mail, fax services, vehicle location reporting,
- regional weather and traffic reports, even financial transaction
- services. The company filed a request with the Federal
- Communications Commission in early May for what's called a
- "Pioneer's Preference" on the microwave cellular technology, for
- purposes of serving truckers. David A. Bayer, president of TRX
- TransTel said in a press statement that "This not only makes the
- trucking industry more efficient, it boosts the productivity of
- other businesses that depend on trucks."
-
- As a vehicle approaches an NTRS base station, a low-power
- microwave-based transmitter will signal a receiver in the
- driver's cab. The receiver will begin blinking and emit voice
- directions if a message is waiting. After stopping, the driver
- can use the handset to access the regular public telephone
- network and contact the dispatcher or others. Perhaps more
- important, any time a vehicle is within a base station's service
- area, its location is automatically transmitted to the
- dispatcher. The dispatcher can also receive information about the
- truck's performance through an on-board diagnostic system within
- the truck, which could tell about oil and coolant levels, engine
- temperature and idle speed, average miles per hour and engine
- RPMs, even the temperature inside the truck's refrigerated
- compartment.
-
- Of course, to get all this good stuff individual trucking firms
- have to sign up for the company's service. TRX TransTel is a
- joint venture, 85 percent owned by PWTC Holding of Delaware and
- 15 percent owned by Advanced Wireless Communications Enterprises
- of Missouri.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920522/Press Contact: Mary Louise Helbig, TRX
- TransTel, 314-746-0567)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00014)
-
- SAIC And WilTel Combine For Fast Data Service 05/22/92
- SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Science
- Applications International will offer 45 million bit/second data
- services later this year for corporate private networks. The
- X.Lnet service will use the WilTel fiber optic phone network as a
- backbone, and customers will also have to use equipment from
- Alcatel at each end of the link. SAIC, a service integrator, will
- be the service provider responsible for the complete package.
-
- "SAIC believes high-speed networking will be the cornerstone of
- the computing environment of the 1990s and beyond," said Larry
- Kull, SAIC president in a press release. The service can allow
- for multimedia transmissions combining text, graphics, digital
- sound and TV pictures under the 802.6 DQDB standard, and provides
- a transition to emerging fiber transmission standards called
- Synchronous Optical NETwork or SONET. The company said its offering
- can also help companies move more smoothly to digital services under
- existing ISDN standards.
-
- SAIC said it chose WilTel as its service provider because it was
- the first long distance company to provide nationwide public
- frame relay and bandwidth on demand products and services.
- Alcatel of France was chosen for its work on SONET and in
- broadband switching research. SAIC has $1.3 billion in revenues
- and is privately held by its 13,000 employees.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920522/Press Contact: Bob King, SAIC, 619-
- 546-6492; Gil Broyles, WilTel, 918-588-5752)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(SYD)(00015)
-
- Australia: Mailout Mixup Wrapup 05/22/92
- CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- The Australian Social
- Security department has issued its official explanation on the recent
- mailout embarrassment. Around 6000 clients had their personal details
- mailed to other people, much to the chagrin of the department.
-
- The department uses Xerox Integrated Composition System (XICS) to
- produce its direct mail to millions of clients, and it was one of
- these machines that was involved in the incident. The Privacy
- Commissioner has found that a fault in printer use, and a failure to
- follow correct procedure allowed the situation to occur.
-
- Events in the chain on the fateful day include: three of the seven
- staff were on a Xerox training course; one operator was sick; one of
- the three printers was out of service; the Xerox serviceman decided to
- do a preventative maintenance on one of the working printers rather
- than fix the broken one.
-
- The fault occurred when the serviced machine was restarted without
- following the full restart procedure. A piece of adhesive tape on a
- perforation in the continuous stationery mis-set the system counter,
- and no check was made to see that the information on the front matched
- that on the back, and in fact it was one step out of synchronization.
- New policy will have every 200th document checked manually.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19920522)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00016)
-
- ****Tandy Opens Danish Superstore - More To Follow 05/22/92
- COPENHAGEN, DENMARK, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Tandy has rolled out its
- superstore concept to Europe, with the company opening its first
- Supercentre in Copenhagen this week. The store is a licensed
- seller of Apple, Compaq, HP, IBM and Victor hardware, and will
- stock a wide range of PC hardware and software, company officials
- claim.
-
- Plans call for similar stores to open Sweden and Norway within
- the next few months. UK plans have still to be decided, Barry
- Liddle, Tandy UK's managing director, told Newsbytes.
-
- "This is our fourth year of trading as a separate entity from
- Tandy US. We're aware of what they're doing, but they haven't
- made any decision on the UK," he said.
-
- Liddle added that the countries that Tandy is, or plans to
- operate a superstore in, represent markets that Intertan, the
- UK/European Tandy operation, does not sell into. "We sell
- through Belgium, France, The Netherlands and the UK," he told
- Newsbytes.
-
- Peter Davies, marketing manager with Applecentre West London, a
- major stocker of Apple kit, said that Apple's sales through
- superstores such as Tandy's are climbing. "Superstores are
- assuming a more important role in the marketplace - Apple
- currently sells 20 to 30 percent of its products through US
- superstores," he said.
-
- According to Davies, Apple has been warning its resellers
- constantly over the past year that products were on the way that
- were better suited to the superstore environment rather than the
- traditional reseller channel.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920522/Press & Public Contact: Tandy UK - Tel:
- 0922-710000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00017)
-
- Siemens Scraps Plans To Establish W. German Chip Plant 05/22/92
- MUNICH, WEST GERMANY, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Siemens has scrapped
- plans to build a new plant in Western Germany to manufacture 64
- megabit chips. The electronics giant has decided instead to
- produce the chips at its existing facilities in Europe.
-
- Originally, Siemens' executives had thought that the company's
- existing facilities in Europe would be able to wind down the
- manufacture of 1 and 4 megabit chips as the market began to
- mature.
-
- Instead, demand is actually expected to increase. As a result,
- Siemens says it will be more economical to expand existing
- facilities to cope with the overall upswing in demand. A decision
- on how to relocate some of the chip manufacturing facilities will
- be made later this year.
-
- Originally, Siemens was expected to announce the location of the
- planned new German facility in the second half of this year,
- following the original announcement earlier this year.
-
- Analysts suggest that Siemens' announcement is tactical. The
- company has dropped strong hints that it would seek local
- government support from the country in which it built the plant.
- Sources suggest that support funds have not been forthcoming. As
- a result, Siemens is dangling the carrot of the potential new
- plant in front of potential government sponsors.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920522)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00018)
-
- Taiwan Strengthens Copyright Law 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Bowing to US
- pressure, Taiwan's government has passed a bill which will make
- major changes in the country's copyright laws. Taiwan has been
- widely criticized in the past for ignoring the intellectual
- property rights of US and other country's individuals and
- businesses.
-
- Of course it remains to be seen just how well the new regulations
- will be enforced, but for the first time this new law gives
- specific protection to everything from music and film to computer
- programs. Also new are heavy penalties, including large fines
- and potential jail terms, as well as the right for injured
- parties to sue for damages in civil courts.
-
- Taiwanese companies are widely known for copying everything from
- Guchi luggage to Microsoft's MS-DOS operating system, costing the
- legal owners of those properties millions of dollars each year.
-
- This new legal action follows by just one month the unsuccessful
- ending of negotiations between the US and Taiwan on the subject
- of intellectual property rights and the consequent placement of
- that country on the US Trade Representative's special watch
- list of countries whose exports would face massive punitive
- tariffs if they did not correct what the US sees as unfair
- trading practices.
-
- Merely passing the new laws will not exempt Taiwanese companies
- from potential tariffs - they will still have to convince the
- Bush Administration's trade office that there has been a
- significant change in the way the country treats violators.
-
- Critics have charged in the past that President Bush is very soft
- on such violators and cite years of efforts by the administration
- to head off any sanctions against China, despite its clear
- violations of human rights and trade violations.
-
- Washington observers say that this year things may be different,
- or will at least appear different to foreign governments because
- of the presidential elections and the need for Bush to appear to
- take a strong stand against those countries which are seen as
- taking away American worker's jobs.
-
- In other trade news, Reuters reports that Japanese companies have
- announced that there has been a major improvement in opening
- markets to US microchip makers. This is despite the fact that
- sales numbers show no noticeable improvement for the past several
- years.
-
- (John McCormick/19920522/Press Contact: L.W. Koengeter, U.S.
- Trade Representative's Office, 202-395-3204, fax 202-395-3911)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00019)
-
- Smartcard Manuf'ing Method Patented 05/22/92
- WILLOW GROVE, PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- A new
- method of manufacturing SmartCards has been patented by
- Pennsylvania-based Kulicke and Soffa Industries.
-
- Makers of semiconductor products were faced with developing a new
- technology using different wires to connect components on the
- recently developed thin package semiconductor products known as
- SmartCard, Thin Small Outline Packages, or Thin Quad Flat Pack
- devices, but this new invention gives them the option of
- continuing to use proven wire technology.
-
- The new software controlled assembly technique, known as the K&S
- low looping process, can be used instead of the Tape Automated
- Bonding (TAB) connection system which requires the use of a less
- flexible specialty wire.
-
- K&S also makes TAB manufacturing equipment, but a company
- representative told Newsbytes that an important feature of this
- newly patented technology is the fact that it will let companies
- continue to use the same wire bonding equipment they already have
- installed, extending its useful life, while still allowing the
- manufacture of more compact devices.
-
- According to K&S's Leon Oboler, by staying with standard wire
- processes, manufacturers can cut about six months of research and
- development time and costs which would have been required if they
- went with specialty wire.
-
- K&S reports that the company has already received a
- significant number of orders for the new technology and that most
- systems already shipped have gone to locations on the Pacific
- Rim, with about 70 percent of the company's sales going to
- locations outside the US.
-
- According to Mr. Oboler, K&S now holds about 60 percent of the
- world market in wirebond and interconnect devices outside Japan.
-
- While the new technology won't actually reduce costs over the
- present basis, it is more cost-effective than TAB technology and
- will therefore help prevent any increased costs.
-
- (John McCormick/19920522/Press Contact: Leon Oboler, Kulicke and
- Soffa, 215-784-6818 fax 215-659-7588)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00020)
-
- Uniquest Wins DoD Burgers And Chicken Contract 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Jacksonville,
- Florida-based Uniquest has been awarded a contract to supply Army
- and Air Force Burger King and Popeye fast food franchises around
- the world with the company's QuickServe point of sale accounting
- software.
-
- US bases in the US, as well as in Germany, Italy, Japan,
- Korea, Okinawa and the UK have American-style fast food service
- to make service personnel feel at home by providing them with the
- same sort of food they are used to having off-base at home.
-
- The Army and Air Force Exchange Service gave the hardware
- contract to NCR for its NCR 7054 food point of sale systems.
- Together the hardware and software provides for inventory, time
- and attendance, and communications, as well as the usual cash
- register functions.
-
- Uniquest reports that the company has installed its software in
- more than 2,000 locations and that the new military contract will
- involve nearly 200 more restaurants.
-
- Installation and integration of the new system is scheduled to be
- completed at all locations within two years.
-
- (John McCormick/19920522/Press Contact: Fred Goldsmith, Uniquest,
- 904-363-0103)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00021)
-
- Criticism Of Proposed Digital Signature Standard 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Milton Socolar, an
- official of the General Accounting Office, recently testified
- before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Economic and
- Commercial Law that the National Institute of Standards and
- Technology's proposed digital signature standard is too weak and
- urged that it not be approved.
-
- A digital signature standard is a software system which provides
- a method to authenticate any electronic message so the recipient
- could be certain that it was actually sent by the person who's
- name is on the document.
-
- In his testimony, Mr. Socolar said, according to the May 11 issue
- of Government Computer News, that both the FBI and the National
- Security Agency are pushing the proposed standard because it is
- relatively weak and they can "break" or decrypt the coding,
- something that both agencies feel is necessary in order to
- protect national security.
-
- The NIST has contended from the beginning that the proposed DSS
- is highly secure within the context of its proposed use although
- more secure systems are available. The NIST has pointed out that
- the proposed DSS is not intended as a commercial or international
- standard, just for internal Federal Agency use, and contends that
- for that purpose it is cost-effective.
-
- (John McCormick/19920522)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00022)
-
- Forest Service Cuts GIS Buy 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Faced with tight
- budgets, a need to economize, and spurred by criticism from the
- General Accounting Office, the US Forest Service has cut
- almost $1 billion from its proposed geographical information
- system purchase (Project 615).
-
- The massive cut from $1.6 billion to just over $900 million was a
- 42 percent reduction that has been attributed to locating an
- error in the agency's estimates of "overhead" costs, and is not
- due to a major change in the services which will provided by the
- proposed system.
-
- The main object of the eight-year contract is to upgrade computer
- hardware by replacing 900 Data General minicomputers with less
- expensive file server networks and powerful workstations.
-
- The GIS provides an information retrieval system to managers who
- must supervise hundreds of millions of acres of US forests and
- grasslands.
-
- The initial request for proposals (RFP) was scheduled for March
- of 1991, and delayed to October 1991 after a review by the GAO.
- GAO approval of the latest plan means that the RFP may now be
- issued in June and the contract will be ready for the first round
- of protests after an initial award in December of next year.
-
- (John McCormick/19920522)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00023)
-
- ROUNDUP: Stories Carried By Other Media This Week 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Roundup is a brief
- look at some computer stories carried in other publications
- received here this past week.
-
- June 16's PC Magazine carries the results of the magazine's first
- annual Reader's Software Rating Survey
-
- Federal Computer Week dated May 18 says that federal buyers are
- not very interested in Intel's latest price drop in the 80486SX
- microprocessor because they are anticipating further price wars.
-
- The May 11 Government Computer News has a feature on POSIX or the
- Portable Operating System Interface for UNIX standard set by the
- IEEE.
-
- Computer Reseller News for the 11th says that IBM will call on
- Borland International to help it boost the object-oriented
- Systems Object in OS/2.
-
- Network World for the week of May 18 says that Apple is ready to
- take the Macintosh down the path to OSI or Open System
- Interconnection, a seven layer protocol system intended to insure
- data communications compatibility.
-
- May 18th's Computerworld has a front page story explaining why
- the federal government just can't seem to get its act together
- when it comes to improving computer systems.
-
- (John McCormick/19920522/)
-
-
- (REVIEW)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00024)
-
- Review of: Quality Software Mgt V.1: Systems Thinking, 05/22/92
-
- From: Dorset House Publishing, 353 West 12th St. New York, NY 10014,
- (212) 620-4697
-
- Price: $40.00
-
- PUMA Rating: 4 (on a scale of 1=lowest to 4=highest)
-
- Reviewed for Newsbytes by: Naor Wallach, 05/22/92
-
- Summary: A must-read book for every software manager. This is the
- first of a series of books that will lead you to become a more
- effective manager and in turn will cause the quality of your products
- to go up.
-
- ======
-
- REVIEW
-
- ======
-
- Gerald Weinberg is a well-known author in the computer field. In his
- forty year career in computing, he has published about as
- many books. This time he turns his sights on the process of managing
- the development of software. This is a 3-part series
- in which the author examines what is happening in the field today,
- and provides his prescriptions for how to improve the situation.
-
- Volume 1 in the series is titled Systems Thinking. In this volume,
- the author takes us on a tour of the patterns that he has identified
- in software development. The author first discusses the six different
- patterns that software organizations fall into in the ideal sense.
- This is more of an upper level view as he does not believe that there
- are any Pattern Four or higher organizations today.
-
- With examples that are derived from his experiences, the author
- shows us what characterizes organizations at the levels that he
- believes most of the organizations are, and then points towards
- the way that those organizations need to move to get to the next
- stage.
-
- The author believes (and I concur) that most software development
- organizations have reached the level of routing development that he
- characterizes as level 2. At this level, managers are comfortable in
- the process and can guide it along smoothly as long as nothing
- untoward happens. Once something that is outside of the routine
- occurs, the organization essentially falls apart and the obvious
- and immediate consequence is that the quality of the products suffer.
-
- The author identifies the Pattern 3 organization as one that has its
- managers steering the process so that when nonroutine things happen,
- the organization responds well and does not decrease the quality
- of work.
-
- There are eighteen chapters in this 300-page book divided into five
- sections. Each of the sections examines a different aspect of the
- Pattern 2 organization and how it reacts. Section 1 is called Patterns
- of Quality. The three chapters in this section concentrate on defining
- the author's views of organizational patterns, defines the patterns,
- and talks a bit about the need to move from one level to the next and
- why it is important that organizations do so.
-
- The second section, "Patterns of Managing," contains five chapters that
- dissect management. Managers are observed for what they do and how
- they effect the real productive workers. Jerry pokes fun at many of
- the myths of managers and outlines management behaviors that are well
- known to any software developer who has worked in a company that had
- a programming staff larger than one. Then he proceeds to explain the
- real consequences of these behaviors and show how destructive they
- can be when amplified. He introduces the reader to his diagram of
- effects and explains the symbology as he introduces new concepts.
-
- Many of the things he says are just plain good sense yet it is easy
- to see how organizations can devolve into the absurd examples he
- showcases. As a person who was involved in the software development
- process in several companies, I can personally vouch for the veracity
- of many of his examples. If you are laughing and shaking your head at
- the stupidity of some of those managers that are described in the
- book, you'd better make sure that your organization is not guilty of
- the same follies!
-
- The next section of three chapters goes into the reasons
- why it's so easy to fall into the traps of mismanaging projects.
- He clearly points out how things tend to get out of control, and
- why. It is obvious from this description that most level 2
- organizations cannot hope to avoid the problems that the commonly
- encounter when under stress simply because of the kind of organizations
- that they are. This section speaks as eloquently as any about the
- need to move on to the next Pattern Level.
-
- The fourth section "Fault Patterns" uses its four chapters to talk
- about how an organization breaks. Anything will break if subjected
- to stresses beyond its capabilities and human organizations are no
- different. Jerry shows example after example of broken organizations.
- He explains why and how they broke and proves that the signs of
- stress in the organization were visible long before the tumultuous
- breakup if the managers were simply capable of observing them and
- realizing their significance.
-
- The final section "Pressure Patterns" is a wrap-up section. He again
- covers some more ways in which organizations fail. However he makes
- an eloquent case for learning from these mistakes and shows how
- all of what he spoke about before can actually be used to learn and
- improve and move towards becoming a Pattern 3 organization.
-
- I liked this book immensely. As I am someone who has managed software
- development projects, the anecdotes and stories spoke to my heart. I
- have personally seen many of the examples to which he refers.
- If they did not occur to me, they happened to my colleagues or to
- others in the organization. I can clearly see, as a result of reading
- this book, that my company was mired in being a Level 2 organization.
- On the good side, we had recognized this and are well on our way to
- transforming ourselves to the Pattern 3 organization. I can only
- hope that the next books in this series will be as good as this one.
-
- The reason for the title is obvious once you have read the book. The
- only way to bring about quality improvements in software products
- is to manage the process better. The way to improve the process is to
- see it as such and to start thinking about it from a systems level.
-
- This book should be a must-read for any current and
- prospective software manager. I would also highly recommend it to
- any manager who has software components to his products or divisions
- all the way to and including CEOs.
-
- ===========
-
- PUMA RATING
-
- ===========
-
- USEFULNESS: 4 This is a really good book. I enjoyed reading it very
- much. As a matter of fact, I had to purposely pace myself so as not
- to finish it in one or two sittings. The author identifies certain
- characteristics of software development organizations. From my
- experience, he has hit the nail on the head. He also offers ways
- to improve the situation.
-
- AVAILABILITY: 4 My local bookstores had copies. I also saw that this
- book was selected as the lead book for a technical book club. It should
- not be too hard to find.
-
- (Naor Wallach/ 19920418)
-
-
- (REVIEW)(IBM)(TOR)(00025)
-
- Review of: CA-Textor, word processor for Windows, 05/22/92
-
- Runs on: Any PC with 286 or higher processor, minimum one megabyte
- of memory, DOS 3.1 or higher, Microsoft Windows 3.0 or
- higher, and about 2.5 megabytes of free hard disk space.
-
- From: Computer Associates International, Inc., One Computer
- Associates Plaza, Islandia, New York, U.S.A. 11788-7000
- 516-342-5224
-
- Price: $225
-
- PUMA Rating: 3.125 (on a scale of 1=lowest to 4=highest)
-
- Reviewed by: Grant Buckler
-
- Summary: CA-Textor is a word processor for Microsoft Windows, with
- most of the features one expects in a Windows word processor and
- few surprises. Some features need improvement.
-
- ======
-
- REVIEW
-
- ======
-
- One of the beauties of graphical user interfaces like Microsoft
- Windows is that, like Apple's Macintosh, they enforce some
- consistency among applications. Essentially the same menu structure
- appears whether you're using a word processor, a spreadsheet, a
- graphics program, or whatever. This makes software easier to learn,
- and makes life simpler for those of us who use a lot of applications.
- It also means that all the packages in an application category tend
- to look a lot alike.
-
- So, Computer Associates' CA-Textor word processor has a lot in
- common with other Windows word processors. The menus are similar,
- the display looks much like that of Word for Windows, WordPerfect
- for Windows, or Ami Pro, and like other Windows applications these
- days, Textor has a series of icon buttons -- CA calls this a tool
- bar -- at the top of the screen to streamline common operations
- like printing.
-
- So what's different? Mostly little things, though as the old saying
- goes, those can mean a lot.
-
- One problem arises with the mail merge features in Textor. The key
- complaint is that in form letters, the merge fields are not visibly
- identified by name. You can give the fields descriptive names like
- Name, Address, Salutation, and so on -- which is better than the
- Field1, Field2 limitation of some word processors -- but all that
- appears in the document is #Ref#. If you forget which field is
- which, you have to edit the field to find out.
-
- Also, Textor has trouble with carriage returns within a field. The
- software uses the carriage return to separate records in its data
- files. You can have a carriage return within a field if you put
- quotation marks around the whole field. So far so good, but we
- found that a single carriage return in a mail merge field always
- turned out double-spaced in the final merged document.
-
- On the other hand, Textor's mail merge functions include the
- ability to select only certain records from a larger list according
- to certain criteria -- for example, to send a form letter only to
- those clients in a certain state. This is a database management
- function not found in many word processors.
-
- Another nice feature of CA-Textor is the way it saves documents
- within its own "libraries" rather than as DOS files. The advantage
- of this is that it lets you assign longer file names than DOS
- allows. The minor disadvantage is that the documents are then not
- easily accessible from outside Textor, but you can get around that
- through an option that lets you save a document as a DOS file, in
- Textor format, plain ASCII, or other formats.
-
- Another nice feature, hardly earth-shaking but worthy of a passing
- comment, is the fact that Textor's spelling checker can figure out
- run-together words. Given "thisthing" in text, it will propose
- "this thing" as a replacement. Not all word processors will do
- this, and they should. What is not so nice about Textor's spelling
- checker, though, is the fact that it does not propose any
- replacements until you ask for them, which makes corrections slower
- because it adds an extra mouse-click.
-
- If you aren't crazy about working with a mouse, CA-Textor will not
- suit you well. Like other Windows word processors, it provides
- pull-down menus for all operations and expects you to do things by
- pointing and clicking. But some Windows packages provide keyboard
- alternatives for pretty nearly all operations. Textor does not. It
- does offer keyboard shortcuts for some things, but many operations
- can only be executed through the mouse-and-menu route.
-
- Textor offers a choice of viewing modes. The default is called
- Standard mode. The document looks almost the way it will when
- printed -- you see bold face, italics, underlines and the
- differences in fonts. However, columns are not shown side by side
- on the screen, and headers and margins don't appear. In WYSIWYG
- (What You See Is What You Get) mode, everything appears as it will
- print. You can type and edit in this mode, and it works tolerably
- well except if you get into columns and such things, at which point
- the WYSIWYG mode becomes too slow to be workable.
-
- In fact, even in Standard mode, Textor gets pretty slow when you're
- inserting text in the middle of a document -- at least on a 386SX
- machine. The screen takes time to redraw, and while you can keep
- entering text, you don't see what you've typed until the software
- catches up.
-
- To match the responsiveness of a character-based word processor,
- you have to go to draft mode, which gives you something less than
- the sort of display you'd get with a good character-based word
- processor -- all text in one screen font, and no indication of
- attributes such as underlining, italics, bold face, and type size.
-
- Slowness in full WYSIWYG mode is tolerable, but CA should try to
- speed up Standard mode or, failing that, at least make things like
- bold face and underlining visible in Draft mode as they are in most
- character-based word processors.
-
- Another worry for some users is the lack of a keystroke macro
- capability. Textor does let you create and store formats that
- automate much of the work of formatting part or all of a document,
- and it handles "glossaries" that let you recall chunks of
- boilerplate text with a few keystrokes. However, neither of these
- is quite as flexible as the ability to record any sequence of
- operations as a macro.
-
- ===========
-
- PUMA RATING
-
- ===========
-
- Performance: 2.5. We found it easy to outrun the software when
- inserting text in an existing document in any but Draft mode, and
- Draft mode is unsatisfactory because it does not show character
- attributes such as bold face and type size. If the software can't
- be speeded up in Standard mode, Draft mode should be made to convey
- more information to the user.
-
- Usefulness: 3.5. CA-Textor is a full-function Windows word
- processor suitable for most word-processing needs, though we have
- reservations about its mail-merge capabilities.
-
- Manuals: 3.5. There is a Getting Started manual with tutorials,
- which we thought would be well suited to a complete novice and
- rather too elementary for someone with experience using another
- word processor. The Reference manual is more suitable for the
- computer-literate user.
-
- Availability: 3.0. Computer Associates is a big company; its
- products are widely distributed. However, CA provides free initial
- support only for 90 days, and without a toll-free number. For toll-
- free support or for support after the initial support period, you
- have to pay for CA's SupportPlus program. In fairness, though, we
- should note that the price of the software is, at $225, low
- compared to most competitors.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920518/Press Contact: Kim Commerato or Bob Gordon,
- 516-227-3300, fax 516-227-3937)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00026)
-
- Microphone II For Windows Price Cut To $74 05/22/92
- BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- In an
- effort to entice DOS communications users to migrate to its
- Microphone II for Windows 2.0 software package, Software
- Ventures is offering two summer promotions that run from
- May 18 to July 18.
-
- The first of the two deals offers Microphone II for Windows 2.0
- any users of DOS telecom products, such as ProComm Plus,
- for just $49.95, plus shipping and handling. Additionally, the
- regular price of 2.0 will be cut for that period from $129 to $74.
-
- Greg Ogarrio, spokesman for the company, told Newsbytes
- that Microphone has considerable "dominance in the Mac"
- market, but that the Windows market is still a "completely
- different field" for the company. He said that Software
- Ventures sees the Windows "field as wide open for us."
-
- P. Schmidman, vice president of sales and marketing for
- Software Ventures, said: "Windows gives users so much more
- power and flexibility, especially when they go on-line. Windows
- users are moving their mainstream Windows applications
- to the new environment, but are mainly reverting to DOS for
- telecommunications."
-
- Microphone II for Windows allows for most functions and
- features to be accessed via the click of a mouse, and its own
- graphical interface. In addition to a built-in script editor and
- context sensitive help, the package also offers preformatted
- front-ends to popular information services such as GEnie.
-
- Additionally, the company claims that version 2.0 offers
- complete implementation of dynamic data exchange (DDE)
- to make it easier to share data with other Windows
- applications, and the ability to run multiple sessions
- simultaneously. The program also offers multitasking
- capabilities and ZMODEM protocol support. Network support
- is also included for such networks as Novell, NetBIOS,
- ComBIOS, and DOS devices.
-
- Ogarrio also told Newsbytes that the two promotions are just
- incentives to encourage people to migrate to a Windows
- communications product, instead of DOS.
-
- The current promotion comes just seven months after Newsbytes
- reported on the initial release of Microphone II for Windows 2.0 in
- October, 1991.
-
- In December Newsbytes reported that Software Ventures
- was offering a free software package with each purchase of its
- MicroPhone II for Windows or the Macintosh communications
- products. That promotion was due to run until January 15, 1992.
- With that promotion each purchase of either MicroPhone II 3.0 for
- the Macintosh or MicroPhone II 2.0 for Windows, customers were
- entitled to a free copy of the screen saver After Dark, or the Spectre
- action computer game, or the JetFighter II flight simulation game.
-
- Ogarrio told Newsbytes that a new version -- "2.x" -- would be
- "coming out this summer," although the specific date was not
- yet available.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920522/Press & Public Contact: Greg Ogarrio,
- Software Ventures, 510-644-3232)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00027)
-
- Congress Proposes $100 Million For SEMATECH 05/22/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- SEMATECH, the group
- of American companies which joined together several years ago in
- an effort of share resources and keep the US ahead of other
- countries in the development of microprocessor and memory chip
- manufacturing, may see a solid boost from the Federal Government
- in the form of a $100 million investment.
-
- SEMATECH, which has the goal of protecting and advancing the
- US's world leadership in the semiconductor field through joint
- research projects, is an acronym for SEmiconductor MAnufacturing
- TECHnology.
-
- SEMATECH member companies include Advanced Micro Devices, AT&T,
- Digital Equipment Corp., Harris Corp., Hewlett-Packard, IBM,
- Intel, Motorola, NCR, National Semiconductor, Rockwell
- International, and Texas Instruments, as well as the Department
- of Defense's DARPA or Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
-
- On Thursday the House Armed Services Committee included the $100
- million in SEMATECH funding in the 1993 Department of Defense
- Authorization Bill. This amount, if it is left untouched in the
- final bill and accepted by the President, will be $20 million
- more than the amount requested by the White House in its 1993
- budget proposal.
-
- Congress has also included more than a billion dollars in the
- bill to fund the building of one more Sea Wolf submarine at the
- General Dynamics Shipyard in Connecticut, a boat which the
- administration does not want to build because the Pentagon says
- it isn't needed since the collapse of the Soviet Union and its
- massive naval presence.
-
- There is some concern that during this political year when
- everyone is criticizing the administration for the budget deficit
- and Congress is trying to fund every project in hopes of gaining
- local votes, the entire budget process could run afoul of the
- election year wrangling.
-
- The next step in the funding battle will come after expected
- approval by the House Appropriations Committee, when the Senate
- committees will consider just how money should be allocated in
- the next budget. After the bill clears all committees it will be
- voted on by both houses of congress and go to the President for
- his signature - or veto.
-
- The Bush Administration believes that Federal subsidies for
- SEMATECH should be gradually cut because it is now a mature
- organization which should be able to stand on its own feet with
- industry support. That is the reason the White House puts forward
- for its proposal to cut $20 million from the $100 million per
- year allocation which the organization received during the first
- five years.
-
- Another $100 million in funding comes each year from the private
- corporations which are members of the consortium.
-
- At the beginning of the year LSI Logic left the SEMATECH group
- just at the time it was reporting record revenues and a return to
- profitability. At that time the company said that it wasn't
- receiving good value for its investment in SEMATECH.
-
- Present funding requirements for members is that they contribute
- one percent of their total semiconductor-related revenue to the
- group effort, with a minimum investment of $1 million and a
- maximum of $15 million. LSI Logic's dues for 1991 amounted to $7
- million.
-
- Leon Oboler, spokesperson for Kulicke and Soffa, the world's
- largest maker of wirebond and interconnect devices for the
- semiconductor industry, told Newsbytes that his company, which
- was a founding member of SEMI-SEMATECH (a SEMATECH sub-
- organization) was very pleased with Congress's move to reinstate
- funding to the full $100 million level.
-
- Micron Technology, also citing poor return on investment, also
- dropped out of SEMATECH at the beginning of 1992.
-
- At the time when Micron and LSI were dropping out it was thought
- by some observers that SEMATECH was doomed and Intel rushed to
- make a statement confirming its support for the group, with Intel
- Executive Vice President Dr. Craig Barrett saying, "We believe
- Sematech's success is critical for the continued success of
- America's high technology industry."
-
- A recent report by research firm San Jose, California-based VLSI
- Research released at the beginning of April said that US-made
- chip manufacturing equipment sales had jumped from holding 38
- percent of the world market in 1990 to 41 percent in 1991. The
- researchers and SEMATECH agreed that part of the reason for the
- increased market share was due to the efforts of the joint
- industry/government consortium.
-
- Part of SEMATECH's goal is to reduce harmful emissions and
- pollution due to the semiconductor manufacturing process.
-
- Critics of SEMATECH include people like T.J. Rogers, president of
- Cypress Technology, a chip manufacturer too small to pay the
- minimum membership fee needed to gain immediate access to the
- high-technology developed half with public funds.
-
- (John McCormick/19920522/Press Contact: Buddy Price, SEMATECH,
- 512-356-7107)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00028)
-
- Quantum Teams With Panasonic On Irish Plant 05/22/92
- DUNDALK, COUNTY LOUTH, IRELAND, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Matsushita,
- the parent company of Panasonic, has teamed up with Quantum, the
- Californian disk drive giant, to set up a joint venture company
- in Ireland. Called Ireland Kotobuki Electronics, the company will
- create 430 jobs over the next three years.
-
- The decision to site in Ireland was directly due to local tax
- breaks. According to the Industrial Development Board of Ireland,
- the decision by the two companies to locate the new plant in
- Ireland represents one of the most significant overseas high-tech
- investments for several years.
-
- Plans call for the plant to manufacture disk drives from scratch,
- rather than simply assemble drives, as is the case with several
- other European disk drive plants. The disk chassis units will be
- supplied to third-party manufacturers, although the bulk of the
- drives will be customized by Quantum for sale under the
- Quantum brand name.
-
- Ireland is fast becoming the European equivalent of California in
- computing terms. Disk manufacturers such as Verbatim and hardware
- manufacturers such as Apple have invested heavily in production
- facilities in the town, solely due to the tax breaks the Irish
- government has given companies wishing to locate in the country.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920522)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00029)
-
- Mitel Reports Reduced Annual Loss 05/22/92
- KANATA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Communications
- equipment maker Mitel has reported a profit on record sales in its
- fourth quarter, but a loss for fiscal 1992. However, the 1992
- annual loss was much smaller than 1991's deficit.
-
- In the year ended March 27, Mitel had an operating loss of C$8.1
- million on revenues of C$406.1 million. Net interest income brought
- the net loss to C$5.7 million. That compares to an operating loss
- of C$31.8 million on revenues of C$431.3 million in 1991. The net
- loss in 1991 was C$107.0 million, including special provision for
- restructuring costs.
-
- In the fourth quarter of fiscal 1992, Mitel earned a C$5.0 million
- profit on record sales of C$121.7 million. Sales were up from
- C$11.3 million in the same quarter last year. In the fourth quarter
- of 1991, Mitel reported a loss of $94 million.
-
- The company said it has reduced selling and administrative expenses
- to 30 percent of sales from 33 percent, thanks to last year's
- restructuring program. However, Mitel officials were cautious about
- the prospects for the next six months.
-
- The company's revenues are usually lower in the first half of the
- fiscal year, officials noted, and the generally weak economy is
- expected to continue hurting results for the next few months. The
- company also expects to incur some additional costs as it launches
- new products during the first and second quarters.
-
- Asked about the prospects for the balance of fiscal 1993, company
- spokeswoman Bonnie Perrigard said the results will depend largely
- on whether an economic recovery takes place or not. "We're
- definitely hoping things are going to turn around this year," she
- said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920522/Press Contact: Bonnie Perrigard, Mitel,
- 613-592-2122)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00030)
-
- Corel Announces US Stock Offering, NASDAQ Listing 05/22/92
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Corel, maker of the
- popular Corel Draw graphics software, has announced plans for a
- primary offering of its stock in the United States and a listing on
- the National Association of Securities Dealers' NASDAQ trading
- system.
-
- Corel's stock has traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange since the
- company went public in November, 1989. John Hladkowicz, an investor
- relations official at Corel, said the company hopes to make the
- primary US offering of one to two million shares in August or
- September.
-
- Since the company went public, Hladkowicz said, investors in the
- United States have been urging Corel to arrange for its shares to
- be traded on a stock exchange in that country. "A lot of US firms
- find it difficult right now to trade our stock," he told Newsbytes.
-
- The US offering will give Corel additional cash, providing "the
- ability to be more opportunistic in acquiring technology and
- continuing to be a leader in the area," Hladkowicz said. He added
- that the timing of the stock offering capitalizes on Corel's recent
- introduction of Version 3.0 of Corel Draw, which adds a number of
- new capabilities to the software and is expected to spur market
- interest in the company.
-
- Corel stock closed at C$22.375 on the Toronto exchange May 22. The
- 52-week high and low were C$25.625 and $13.25 respectively.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920522/Press Contact: John Hladkowicz, Corel, 613-
- 728-8200 ext. 1194, fax 613-728-9790)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00031)
-
- Systemhouse, BCE Extend Talks Again 05/22/92
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- Systems integrator SHL
- Systemhouse, Bell Canada, and BCE, the holding company that owns
- Bell Canada and Northern Telecom, have extended the deadline on
- negotiations for a strategic partnership they announced in
- February. This is the second extension.
-
- Harry W. Schlough, senior vice-president of Systemhouse, told
- Newsbytes the financial details of the agreement are essentially
- set now and the companies are working out legal details and
- "tuning" the agreement to meet regulatory requirements.
-
- "It's been a very complex negotiation and both parties were trying
- to accomplish a lot of work in a very short period of time,"
- Schlough said.
-
- The memorandum of understanding signed February 6 was first
- extended from April 30 to May 15. Now it has been extended to June
- 25.
-
- The deal calls for Systemhouse to take over the operation of Bell
- Canada's data center and to provide systems integration and
- outsourcing services to Bell Canada customers. The companies also
- plan to create a joint venture to sell computer systems and
- services to the telecommunications industry worldwide.
-
- The companies said earlier that the deal would involve Systemhouse
- buying some assets of Bell Canada for cash. BCE in turn is to pay
- C$12.75 per share in cash for enough Systemhouse shares to give it
- 60-percent ownership of the company. BCE currently has a 25-percent
- stake in Systemhouse.
-
- The deal also calls for BCE to have a quarter of the seats on an
- expanded Systemhouse board of directors. Currently BCE is
- represented by two out of 10 directors on the Systemhouse board.
-
- The companies said in a brief statement that they could give no
- assurances the deal would be concluded. However, Schlough said
- Systemhouse is "encouraged" by the progress made so far.
-
- SHL Systemhouse reported revenues of C$700 million in 1991. It has
- more than 3,000 employees.
-
- BCE's involvement with Systemhouse dates back to 1987, when it
- loaned money to Kinburn Technology, a holding company that formerly
- controlled Systemhouse, to help it buy Computerland Canada, the
- Toronto-based firm which operates Computerland retail franchises in
- Canada. Kinburn defaulted on the loan in 1990, leaving BCE with its
- 25-percent share in Systemhouse.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920522/Press Contact: Harry W. Schlough,
- Systemhouse, 416-366-4600)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00032)
-
- ****RasterOps/TrueVision Merger Is On Again 05/22/92
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 MAY 22 (NB) -- The
- on-again/off-again merger between RasterOps Corp. and Truevision
- Inc., is back on again. The firms have now announced that they
- have signed a definitive agreement to merge the two companies.
-
- The agreement, which is subject to shareholder approval, and
- scheduled for completion in August, 1992, will make Truevision
- a wholly owned subsidiary of RasterOps. It calls for issuance of
- 2.4 million shares of RasterOps common stock in exchange for all
- existing Truevision capital stock. The transaction has been
- approved by both companies' boards of directors and will be
- accounted for as a pooling of interests.
-
- Newsbytes first reported on a proposed merger in May 1991. At
- that time the companies said that Truevision would be scheduled
- to become a wholly owned subsidiary of RasterOps sometime in
- August, 1991, after the issuance of 2.8 million shares of RasterOps
- common stock in exchange for all existing Truevision capital stock.
- Then, in August, 1991, Newsbytes reported that the two companies
- had terminated the deal, citing an inability to reach an agreement
- on the transaction.
-
- Commenting about the failed merger in August, Keith Sorenson,
- president of RasterOps, said at the time: "We continue to have the
- greatest respect for Truevision, but it unfortunately does not appear
- that we will be able to reach agreement on a transaction that would
- be satisfactory for both sides."
-
- Cathleen Asch, Truevision's president, agreed with Sorenson's
- assessment. "We have two fine companies," she said, "but I
- think it is better that they remain independent of each other."
-
- At the time of the original merger announcement in May, Keith
- Sorenson, told Newsbytes that he saw the merger as a benefit to
- both companies. He considered RasterOps as the market leader in
- Macintosh video products, while Truevision was the market leader
- in IBM products, "but the underlying technologies are basically the
- same," he said.
-
- "Both companies share the same vision for the future," Sorenson
- told Newsbytes. Additionally, of added benefit to RasterOps is
- that Truevision has a "loyal reseller network on the IBM side,"
- of which the company hopes to take advantage.
-
- Suzanne Crocker, spokesperson for the company, told Newsbytes
- today that the problems that led to the termination of the original
- deal last year have now been resolved.
-
- According to Crocker, the companies just "weren't able to come
- to terms last August." However, she said that when the deal
- was terminated, "both sides still felt it was a good idea." The
- merger "makes even more sense now than it did a year go," she
- said, especially after both companies had "more time to think
- about how it would work."
-
- RasterOps, headquartered in Santa Clara, designs, manufactures
- and markets photorealistic color-imaging products for Apple
- Macintosh, IBM Micro Channel, and Sun SPARCstation platforms.
- RasterOps' products are designed primarily for the graphic
- arts, printing, and publishing industries.
-
- Truevision Inc., a private company headquartered in
- Indianapolis, designs, manufactures and markets broadcast
- quality video products for PC AT, Apple Macintosh II and IBM
- Micro Channel platforms. Its primary focus is on desktop video
- production and high color resolution applications.
-
- "The pooling of resources, such as R&D and distribution, gives
- our combined company the critical mass to define what's possible
- in graphic arts and video arts on the desktop. We're the only
- company with strong brand names and leading products on both
- the Macintosh and PC platforms," said Asch. "Our joint planning
- has already started."
-
- Crocker also told Newsbytes that the share numbers were
- determined by the relative contributions of both companies. The
- lower number of shares now offered reflects the lesser
- contribution expected by Truevision.
-
- Crocker also said that "both boards have approved" the merger. All
- that is left, she said, is a shareholder meeting and approval. The
- meeting has been set for August, she told Newsbytes.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920522/Press Contact: Keith Sorenson, RasterOps
- Corp., 408-562-4200; Cathleen Asch, Truevision Inc., 317-841-0332;
- Mike Nikolich,Selz, Seabolt & Associates, 312-372-7090; Mary
- Looram, Cunningham Communications Inc., 408-982-0400)
-
-
-
-
-