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- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00001)
-
- ****NHK Develops 40-inch Wall-Mounted TV 06/12/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Japan Broadcasting Corporation
- (NHK) has developed a wall-mounted TV which features a 40-inch flat
- panel display. The display is a relatively thin 6-mm thick and
- is designed to have resolution suitable for high definition
- television (HDTV) broadcasts. NHK claims it is developing a
- wall-mounted TV with an even larger display.
-
- The wall-mounted, 40-inch display TV was actually developed by
- NHK Broadcasting Technology Laboratory in Tokyo. The size of this
- TV is 87.4 x 52 cm. It weighs 9 kg. The display consists of two
- glass plates and electrodes and it is equipped with a proprietary
- hybrid IC for pulse drive memory.
-
- NHK is also developing a wall-mounted TV with a 55-inch display
- which will be used for HDTV reception. NHK is expected
- to provide this technology to HDTV makers in order to back up
- NHK's HDTV standard.
-
- HDTV broadcasting is underway in Japan for eight hours
- each day on an experimental basis. Major Japanese electronics makers
- are just beginning to see a market for high definition television.
- They report modest sales of HDTV sets. Sony recently released a
- relatively low-cost HDTV set for 1.3 million yen ($10,000).
- Prices are expected to drop to 500,000 yen ($3,800) in the near
- future depending upon how quickly new, cheaper HDTV chips can
- be produced.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920612/Press Contact: NHK, +81-3-3465-1111)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(TYO)(00002)
-
- Minolta Becomes Macintosh Seller In Japan 06/12/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Apple has expanded its dealer
- network once again in Japan, signing on major camera maker
- Minolta to sell its Macintosh models.
-
- The agreement calls for Minolta to market the Macintosh at
- Minolta's retail shops throughout Japan. Minolta is planning to
- sell the Macintosh in combination with the firm's office equipment.
- For instance, Minolta will combine the sales of the Macintosh with
- its digital copiers, still video cameras, and printers. Minolta
- may position the Macintosh in a multimedia package.
-
- The arrangement begins July 7 at which date Minolta has agreed to
- display the Macintosh in its showrooms in Tokyo and Osaka.
-
- Minolta has recently been suffering under a huge debt as a result
- of the loss of a camera copyright suit with Honeywell. The firm
- sustained a 30 billion yen ($230) loss for fiscal 1991 which
- is expected to be reduced to nine billion yen ($70) for this fiscal
- year. Sales of the Macintosh may help pick up profits in the future.
-
- Currently, Canon and Kokuyo are mainly marketing Apple computers
- in Japan.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920611/Press Contact: Minolta, +81-3-3435-
- 5511)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00003)
-
- Toshiba Quits DAT Manufacturing 06/12/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Toshiba has stopped
- production of digital audio tape recorders (DATs). Observers
- suggest this is partly due to severe competition among DAT
- makers, but could also be the pending copyright issue of the DAT
- software.
-
- Toshiba entered the DAT market in 1987 and has released two
- DAT players. Its main competition is Sony, Japan Columbia, Pioneer,
- Aiwa and Matsushita Electric which have also released DAT players.
- A total of 60,000 DAT players were shipped in 1991, half of
- them by Sony which controls roughly half the total DAT market share.
-
- However, the market remains soft and Toshiba may be responding to
- this. DAT shipments are extremely small compared to the more than
- 1.1 million units of other audio devices that are being shipped,
- including CD radio cassette tape recorders and headphone stereo sets.
-
- Music record makers are hesitant to produce music software for
- DAT recorders because the music copyright issue has not been
- resolved yet. Consumers are also hesitant to purchase DAT players
- since there are so few titles.
-
- The recent slump in the industry is another reason why
- Toshiba has abandoned manufacturing of DATs. Other manufacturers
- may follow Toshiba's move and may shift the production to
- the DCC and Mini-Disk, both of which have potential as future
- digital audio systems.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920611/Press Contact: Toshiba, +81-3-3457-
- 2100)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SYD)(00004)
-
- Australia: NetComm Adapting ISDN Mac NuBus Card 06/12/92
- CENTRAL, HONGKONG, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Apple Computer Australia,
- NetComm, and OTC Australia have combined forces to adapt the ISDN
- Macintosh NuBus card to meet the telecommunications standards of
- Australia and other countries.
-
- The project is part of Apple Australia's ongoing Partnership for
- Development initiatives with the Australian government. NetComm's
- general manager, Paul Heath, said, "This project will see technology
- worth millions of dollars transferred to Australia and will provide
- NetComm with a springboard into the growing ISDN market. It gives us
- the opportunity to develop leading edge software and hardware
- technology for the international marketplace."
-
- OTC says its objective is to have products available in the
- marketplace which will stimulate demand for its advanced
- international ISDN services and to provide a platform which will
- permit development of imaginative applications.
-
- The product will be NetComm branded, and will enable Macs with
- NuBus to connect to ISDN basic rate services such as Australia's
- Microlink. ISDN is capable of providing high quality voice,
- high-speed data, and video communications over a single
- public-switched data line.
-
- A Macintosh equipped with the new board will be able to do all
- three things interchangeably or simultaneously, within a
- country or around the world, the companies say.
-
- (Paul Zucker/199206011/Contact: Paul Heath ph +61-2-
- 8885533 fax +61-2-8872839)
-
-
- (EDITORIAL)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00005)
-
- Editorial: Electronic Town Meetings, by John McCormick 06/12/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- It has taken just
- over 40 years for presidential candidates to recognize that the
- combination of television and telephones have opened up a new way
- of campaigning, but that recognition has finally set in.
-
- Undeclared candidate H. Ross Perot was ridiculed by mainstream
- press and political insiders alike when he began talking of
- electronic town meetings but, as President Bush learned when the
- three major networks recently refused to carry his rare prime time
- "news conference," people are fed up with political business as
- usual.
-
- The President's meeting with the elite of Washington's press
- corps was not carried by NBC, CBS, or ABC because it was
- suspected that it would be blatantly political, rather than a
- real news conference, and indeed nearly half the questions
- actually related to Mr. Perot.
-
- Governor Bill Clinton had meanwhile appeared on several of the
- talk show circuit programs, as had Mr. Perot, and, seeing that
- his recognition ratings (not to mention his approval ratings)
- were slipping in the polls, the Democratic candidate was doing
- everything from having television sax (playing blues on the
- saxophone) on the popular Arsenio Hall Show to holding a real,
- live one-hour-long electronic town meeting on NBC's Today Show.
-
- Whether because there is more interest in him, or just because
- NBC saw how well the one-hour session with Clinton went, Mr.
- Perot followed with a two-hour phone-in question-and-answer
- period of his own on the Today Show.
-
- Now, possibly shocked by the lack of interest in his press
- conference, President Bush has announced that he will make the
- talk show round, bypassing the so-called "media elite," but the
- format hasn't yet been announced and there is no indication that
- Mr. Bush is ready for questions from actual people - we will just
- have to wait and see.
-
- Why is this happening? Is it, as many political pundits are
- saying, because people distrust the reporters or is it much
- simpler than that?
-
- Are political candidates finally waking up to the fact that
- people want to have a feeling of participation, of being able, if
- only random chance will favor them, to actually ask a question on
- their own?
-
- The real situation may be far more cynical. This year there is
- the first solid candidate for president who comes from outside
- the mainstream political arena and the insiders are panicking.
-
- Mr. Perot's ratings are so high that for the first time this
- century we may have neither a Democrat nor a Republican in the
- White House and because of that the politicians are actually
- campaigning in a way that more rather than fewer people will be
- likely to vote.
-
- This isn't altruism; the entire political machine in this country
- is geared to alienating most potential voters, leaving the real
- selection of president to the hard-core voting members of the two
- major parties.
-
- This year there are so many defections from both camps to the
- Perot bandwagon that they have been forced to turn to modern
- technology in an effort to reverse the decades-long trend toward
- voter apathy.
-
- The questions asked of both Mr. Perot and Gov. Clinton by the
- Today Show's audience were generally of a high caliber, certainly
- as good as those asked by the high priests of Washington
- knowledge who possess White House press passes.
-
- But even if they hadn't been asked good questions, at least the
- people viewing would have understood that the questions were
- coming from "real people," not reporters who daily live in close
- proximity to the imperial trappings of the presidency and who
- can't help but be affected by those surroundings.
-
- This is also the first year when a major candidate was not only
- fully computer-literate but was saying that computers and high-
- tech are the wave of the future for this country if we wish to
- remain competitive.
-
- Mr. Perot's power base isn't in Washington but in Silicon Valley
- and in every small business that couldn't operate without
- computers.
-
- More importantly, he is saying to the parents of America that
- their children must be educated to world-class standards, and
- people believe him.
-
- Whether Mr. Perot becomes president or the same old parties
- eventually dominate, there will probably be a new focus on just
- how important computers and telecommunications are both to
- politicians and to the country as a whole.
-
- Of course there is a possibility that, if re-elected once again,
- the entrenched political elite will panic and try to block the
- rapid growth of bulletin boards and other electronic messaging
- systems because they will see this as their last chance to
- totally eliminate the people's direct participation in
- government.
-
- Just so you know, I have worked as a reporter in Washington and
- am a member of The National Press Club (located three blocks from
- the White House).
-
- (John McCormick/19920612)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00006)
-
- ROUNDUP: Stories Carried By Other Media This Week 06/12/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Roundup is a brief
- look at some computer stories carried in other publications
- received here this past week.
-
- Global Telephony dated June 1 says that Israel's Bezeq (the
- government monopoly of telecommunications services) may go public
- by selling off some of its holdings.
-
- Computer Reseller News dated June 8 says that IBM has been asking
- its resellers how they could participate at the delivery end if
- IBM were to go to a larger direct sales marketing plan. Another
- cover story says that if you ever wanted to own a piece of
- WordPerfect you might just be in luck because the company may be
- positioning itself to bring out an IPO (initial public offering
- of stock).
-
- The June 8 issue of Computerworld clears up the mystery of what
- IBM will do with OfficeVision LAN - it will, according to the
- lead story, kill off the project.
-
- May's Canadian Datasystems (it just began arriving at this
- office) says that there is more than one path to open systems and
- also has a report on pen-based computing.
-
- (John McCormick/19920612)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00007)
-
- GainMomentum Multimedia Will Port to Windows/NT 06/12/92
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- At some
- point after the end of this year, Windows N/T will join Unix and
- VAX on the list of software platforms for the new GainMomentum
- multimedia, multitasking, multiuser applications environment,
- Newsbytes has learned.
-
- Thomas M. Siebel, CEO of Gain Technology, made mention of a move to
- Windows during a talk this week at the "Software & Systems Outlook"
- conference in Boston. Bob Runge, marketing communication director,
- later told Newsbytes that the Windows port will be to the N/T
- system -- and that Gain will release an announcement pinpointing
- the timing.
-
- "We will be running on N/T," Runge affirmed, "but all I can tell
- you right now is that (the port) won't happen in 1992, and it will
- probably be in early 1993."
-
- Gain -- a three-year-old startup that is already partnering with
- Sun, IBM, and Matsushita Electronics -- won't add Windows to its
- roster of operating environments until the 32-bit N/T
- implementation is ready, he explained.
-
- The current 16-bit implementations of Windows don't supply the
- levels of multitasking and multiuser support that GainMomentum
- needs, he added. "N/T is the only operating system for the Intel
- hardware platform that will accommodate our software,"
- he commented.
-
- Gain is targeting the recently released GainMomentum applications
- environment at enterprise and departmental networks. The system
- incorporates animation, full-motion video, sound, graphics, and
- hypertext.
-
- "Within two or three years, we'll see 300 MIP computers on the
- corporate desktop, all networked together, and the machines will
- operate like an "interactive CNN." Gain is delivering an
- integrated family of products that will enable development of
- applications like this," said Siebel during his talk in Boston.
-
- A Sun version of GainMomentum, shipping since last month, is being
- used to build an application that will be bundled with all Sun
- workstations over a three-year span beginning this summer, noted
- the CEO.
-
- Runge told Newsbytes that the "interactive learning application"
- will employ sights and sounds to teach Sun Unix users about the
- file manager, mail tool, and other aspects of the Sun operating
- system.
-
- Versions of GainMomentum for IBM, DEC, Hewlett-Packard and Silicon
- Graphics workstations will be available by summer, and IBM will use
- the environment to develop an application for the RISC System/6000,
- according to previous company announcements.
-
- GainMomentum and another Gain product, GainExposure, are both the
- fruits of a joint development agreement with Matsushita.
- GainExposure, released in January, is designed for developing
- multimedia demonstrations of software packages, said Runge.
-
- Matsushita has announced its intentions to use the Gain development
- environments for a new generation of consumer electronics products
- incorporating HDTV (high definition television).
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920612; Press Contact: Bob Runge, Gain, tel
- 415-813-8236)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00008)
-
- ****Software Outlook: Is Mainframe Dying? Maybe Yes, Maybe No 06/12/92
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- "How much
- longer before the mainframe becomes obsolete?" asked a panel
- moderator at this week's "Software & Systems Outlook" conference --
- and the answers he got from software vendors ranged all the way
- from "Never" to "It's obsolete already."
-
- Elaborating on his initial question, moderator Richard Sherlund,
- vice president of the Goldman Sachs, probed the panel: "Are the
- days of the mainframe numbered? How many years would you give it?"
-
- One panelist responded with a question of his own, and answered it
- immediately. "Who in this room -- or what MIS manager, anywhere
- -- would buy a mainframe? I claim, `Nobody,'" asserted Joseph
- Alsop, president of Progress Software.
-
- "The economics of downsizing -- either to a low cost, high
- performance VAX or to the client server layer -- are so compelling
- that the only reason to have a mainframe is that you've already got
- the thing in the first place," remarked the top official of the
- relational database company.
-
- But Umang Gupta, president and CEO of Gupta Technologies, gave a
- response diametrically opposed. "I take exception to the notion of
- the mainframe becoming obsolete," stated Gupta. Systems such as
- IBM's MVS mainframe stand a good chance of lasting at least another
- 20 years, because customers appreciate the high level of support
- being supplied by current mainframe vendors, he predicted.
-
- And even when the current mainframes do die out, new computers with
- similar capabilities will arise to take their place, he added.
- Neither Gupta nor the other panelists brought up the name of the
- supercomputer. But Gupta did speculate that, in the future, there
- will be different gradations of servers -- large ones for central
- records storage, and smaller ones at departmental levels --playing
- host to desktop clients.
-
- Some large servers will be roughly equivalent to the mainframes of
- today, suggested Gupta, whose company builds applications, database
- servers, and connectivity software that runs on PC LANs in
- client/server as well as cooperative processing environments.
-
- Dennis McEvoy, president and CEO of Cooperative Solutions,
- concurred with Gupta to some extent. "The MVS mainframe will stay
- around because of its capacity," said McEvoy, noting that
- "capacity" should be measured in terms of "the ability to manage
- large databases" as well as in number of MIPS.
-
- Mainframe-equivalent capacity is still absent from LAN-based
- systems, although Unix will probably grow up to the same level
- eventually, said McEvoy.
-
- According to McEvoy, most customers for Cooperative's client/server
- transaction processing software need mainframe solutions as well,
- since their applications tend to include databases requiring five
- gigabytes or more in storage.
-
- Another speaker, Mitchell Kertzman, steered the middle course.
- Mainframes are still alive, but probably not forever, said
- Kertzman, president of PowerSoft, the maker of a client/server
- development environment for large commercial and government
- applications.
-
- "Nobody's building new applications for the mainframe any more,"
- commented Kertzman. As a result, the lifetime of a mainframe is
- being defined by the life cycle of its applications, together with
- the cost of maintaining the hardware and software.
-
- "Mainframes will be around for as long as the economics of keeping
- applications running on them makes sense," he concluded.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920612)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00009)
-
- UPI Saved Again, For Now 06/12/92
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Maybe it could be
- a TV series -- it certainly has enough cliffhangers. Leon
- Charney, a former advisor to President Jimmy Carter, has rescued
- UPI, for now, a day before it was to close its doors for good.
-
- United Press International reached an agreement in principle with
- Charney, who now works as an attorney, television moderator,
- producer and author, to continue operations while Charney
- prepares a formal bid for the assets of the wire service. The
- agreement was slated for signatures at noon on June 12. Charney
- will meet the company's payroll while looking at the books.
-
- Earlier, religious talk-show host and former presidential
- candidate Pat Robertson had backed off his $6 million bid for the
- service, saying its debts were too high and its equipment too
- antiquated. He'd estimated it would take $31 million just to keep
- the company operating through the end of 1993, with no assurance
- of a return on the investment. Robertson paid an estimated
- $150,000 to keep the company operating while he made his
- decision, following a dramatic appearance at a Vermont
- bankruptcy court auction where he was the only substantial
- bidder.
-
- In a news release, UPI said Charney expects to make a bid for all
- or substantially all of UPI's assets. In its Chapter 11 filing in
- the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, UPI said it owed
- creditors about $60 million.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920612)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00010)
-
- International Phone Update 06/12/92
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- While political
- leaders meet in Rio de Jenairo looking for a way to reconcile
- economic growth and environmental vitality, the relatively clean
- telecommunications industry continues to make progress throughout
- the developing world.
-
- Motorola of the US formed a joint venture with Netas AS and SGS
- Profilo of Turkey to build GSM digital cellular system in that
- country. The groups will bid on systems which could wind up
- costing several hundred million dollars. GSM is a pan-European
- digital standard, similar to the US-approved TDMA scheme, which
- could allow for continent-wide roaming by the end of the century.
- But GSM has been slow to develop in many advanced markets,
- notably the United Kingdom, because incompatible analog systems
- have not yet won substantial returns on their assets.
-
- Bulgaria said the European Investment Bank, European Bank for
- Reconstruction and Development, and World Bank have approved an
- initial loan of $50 million to modernize its 100-year old phone
- system. Germany's Siemens, Sweden's Ericsson and AT&T of the
- United States are expected to bid on the project.
-
- AT&T's NCR unit won a $55 million contract to modernize the
- computer systems at the Slovenska Statna Sporitelna in Slovakia.
- That bank has 650 branches, and the work would run through 1997.
- In recent elections, Slovakia voters supported a party committed
- to breaking off from the Czech homeland to the west, and a
- referendum on independence is expected before the end of the
- year.
-
- Far to the East, in Vladivostok on the Russian east coast,
- KDD and Nissei Iwai trading signed a deal to build a state-of-
- the-art communications system, including a digital switchboard
- with capacity for 3,600 lines. The companies said businessmen in
- Niigata, Toyama and other cities have been flooding them with
- requests for service. Japan is expected to get first dibs on
- exploiting Siberia's vast forest and mineral wealth.
-
- The Cocom trading agency, which now has Russia as a member,
- continues to resist attempts by that country to build a cross-
- country fiber optic phone network, which would be impossible for
- Western spy agencies to tap into. But China's another matter.
- That country said it will soon take international tenders on
- 15,000 kilometers of fiber linking 21 provinces and cities,
- including a line from the capital of Beijing to Guangzhou, the
- province near Hong Kong which is rapidly making progress along
- the capitalist road. Completion of the lines will double China's
- telecommunications capacity.
-
- While Mexico, Columbia and Venezuela consider a free trade pact,
- which could link a US-led trade zone with South America's
- Mercosur group, Mexico is also modernizing its banking system.
- Banco Nacional de Mexico, known as Banamex, ordered 680
- DataMover 2000 units from Comptek of the US, which will let it
- put automated tellers in locations where telephone access is
- impractical. The units use cellular technology to move bursts of
- financial data back and forth.
-
- Finally, down in that Mercosur bloc, AT&T signed a deal to
- provide cellular equipment for Curitiba, the capital city of
- Parana province in Brazil.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920612/Press Contact: Barbara Mierisch, 201-
- 606-2457, AT&T Network Systems; Robert Farkas, NCR, 513-445-2078;
- Christopher A. Head, Comptek, 716-842-2700)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00011)
-
- House Looks At Bills Making Phone Firms Liable for Fraud 06/12/92
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- The US House
- began consideration of a bill by Rep. Barney Frank of
- Massachusetts which would make phone companies and equipment
- suppliers, not consumers, liable for losses due to fraud.
-
- Mitsubishi had sued AT&T last year over its losses, claiming that
- since it made its PBX and was its long distance supplier it
- should take responsibility for a hacker's ability to infiltrate
- the system and steal over $100,000 in international phone
- service.
-
- Experts told the House telecommunications subcommittee of Rep.
- Edward Markey, which has jurisdiction on the bill, that consumers
- are losing $2.2 billion to thieves, and the fraud will continue
- as long as the industry is able to say it's not responsible. But
- a spokesman for AT&T said his company has taken steps against the
- thieves, and maintained that since PBXs are on customer premises
- and only the customer knows who is an authorized caller, that the
- customers' security measures are the best defense. AT&T has taken
- customers to court for failing to pay such fraudulent charges,
- even suing the United Nations for nearly a million dollars a few
- years ago.
-
- In addition to offering special software and fast access to
- in-house fraud experts, both AT&T and Sprint have begun selling a
- form of insurance making customers less liable for phone fraud.
- Sprint claimed its security procedures have cut such fraud by 90
- percent. "Based on current data, we anticipate less than 250
- outward bound international CPE fraud incidents in 1992,"
- testified Robert F. Fox, Sprint assistant vice president of
- security. "Since January 1992, the average loss per CPE fraud
- incident is less than $2,000.
-
- Still, many companies have voice mail systems that let their
- employees dial into their PBX machines from outside and enter a
- 4-digit identifier, like a bank-card PIN, so they can make long-
- distance calls through the company's phone plan. Hackers break
- into the voice mail systems by using their computers to dial all
- possible PIN codes, then dial out free. They can also sell the
- PIN codes they steal, leading to thieves at pay phones selling
- drug importers cheap, secure access to their international supply
- sources.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920612/Press Contact: Janis Langley, Sprint,
- 202-828-7427)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00012)
-
- Cellular Industry Gives Thumbs-Up to CDMA 06/12/92
- SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Qualcomm, a
- public company partly owned by Pacific Telesis, hailed the
- decision by the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association
- requesting expeditious development of a Code Division Multiple
- Access digital cellular standard for North America.
-
- CDMA is a digital cellular scheme which sends out calls on a
- broad spectrum of frequencies, delivering 10 times the calling
- capacity of analog phones. A competing standard, called Time
- Division Multiple Access, or TDMA, splits each call channel into
- pieces, then sends separate digitized voice streams on each piece
- of the channel. TDMA has been repeatedly endorsed by the CTIA in
- the past, which said CDMA was an unproven technology. A number of
- cellular operators, notably Southwestern Bell and McCaw, have
- committed to TDMA, which offers only three times present
- capacity, while GM-Hughes has offered an enhancement to TDMA
- which would give 15 times present calling capacity. However, many
- cellular companies have decided to wait until the smoke clears,
- supporting enhancements to the present AMPS analog system offered
- by Motorola.
-
- Back in January, the CTIA authorized the Telecommunications
- Industry Association to form a subcommittee, TR45.5, to look at
- schemes like CDMA. The group, which represents cellular phone
- operators, has now authorized that group to focus solely on the
- standardization of CDMA.
-
- Shares in Qualcomm rose about 6 percent on the news.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920612/Press Contact: Qualcomm, Allen
- Salmasi, 619/597-5060)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00013)
-
- New For PC: Softway PenDOS Extensions For Screen Dev't System 06/12/92
- SAN FRANCISCO, CA, U.S.A. 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Softway has
- announced the addition of pen programming abilities to its Hi-
- Screen Pro II screen development system.
-
- A new version of Hi-Screen Pro II, slated for July shipment, will
- come with extensions for the PenDOS operating system, a
- product of Communications Intelligence Corporation (CIC).
-
- Hi-Screen II allows the PC programmer to manage all aspects of
- user input and output, including the design of icons, menus, and
- screens, Negin Khorrami, software support engineer, told
- Newsbytes.
-
- The standard version of the product, priced at $395 and available
- since January, runs on DOS. The version with PenDOS extensions,
- priced at $795 and slated for July shipment, will operate on
- either PenDOS or DOS. The use of PenDOS will supply applications
- with character recognition and signature verification
- capabilities, according to Khorrami.
-
- Each version will work with any programming language, on any IBM
- PC-compatible hardware 8086 or above.
-
- The pen extensions consist of a new object module that supports
- PenDOS, Khorrami explained. The program provides icon, menu and
- screen editing functions specifically designed for pen.
-
- Softway also produces a wide range of other applications
- development packages. "All our products are royalty free, and
- that's very important for developers to know," Khorrami noted.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920611; Press Contact: Fran Bollerot,
- Softway, tel 415-896-0708)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00014)
-
- ****Broderbund Nabs PC Globe, Company Delighted 06/12/92
- NOVATO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Broderbund Software
- reports it has plans to acquire PC Globe Inc., publishers of
- "electronic atlas" programs, for $1.5 million, subject to shareholder
- approval. The deal culminates a long and at one time rocky courtship
- between the two firms.
-
- Broderbund has been distributing PC Globe's products into the
- educational market since late 1991, and is still engaged in a lawsuit
- with one of PC Globe's other suitors.
-
- PC Globe sales in fiscal 1991 were $7.7 million. Its products include
- PC Globe, PC USA and MacGlobe.
-
- The deal follows a series of legal maneuvers aimed at breaking up
- a relationship between PC Globe and Intracorp, a Miami-based software
- company. In January 1992, Broderbund filed a lawsuit in US District Court
- in San Francisco to set aside a supposed acquisition agreement between
- PC Globe and Intracorp. Intracorp filed counterclaims against Broderbund
- which were later dismissed. The heart of the matter is that the Intracorp
- agreement violated an agreement that Broderbund and PC Globe had signed
- last year, as well as a line of credit that Broderbund had provided to PC
- Globe.
-
- Broderbund VP and general counsel, Thomas L. Marcus told Newsbytes
- that Broderbund and PC Globe still have claims on-going in court against
- Intercorp.
-
- PC Globe employs a staff of forty and there is no definite word as
- to what a merger will mean staff-wise. "We're working on the transition
- plan now. We expect to maintain the company's facility there [in Tempe], and
- that some functions will be integrated up here," explained Broderbund
- spokeswoman Kathleen Burke to Newsbytes.
-
- "We at PC Globe are delighted to be acquired by Broderbund," said Don
- Ditter, PC Globe's president. Spokesman Richard Burger says, "We
- are really happy, and there is a tremendous amount of relief that
- after months of uncertainty in the wake of Roy Kessler's death, that
- we finally know that the company has a positive destiny, that PC Globe
- will survive in the hands of a great publicly trade company." Kessler,
- the company's founder, died at age 35 of lymphoma on October 25th of
- last year.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19920612/Press Contact: Kathleen Burke, 415/382-4567
- or PC Globe Inc., Tempe; Richard Burger, 602/730-9000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(HKG)(00015)
-
- Synon Speeds Software Migration To AS/400 Platform 06/12/92
- WANCHAI, HONG KONG, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Synon Corporation, supplier of
- CASE tools for IBM midrange systems, has introduced a new re-
- engineering tool set that is designed to substantially reduce the cost
- of migrating applications to the IBM AS/400 platform.
-
- Called Synon Gateway, the new tool set allows users to migrate
- applications from IBM System/36 and System/38 and Unisys equipment to
- the AS/400, the company says. Early usage figures from the US
- indicate that migration costs using Gateway could be reduced by up
- to 70 percent, the firm reports.
-
- Synon Gateway accepts several source language formats including RPG II
- and RPG III from IBM System/36/38, COBOL from any IBM mid-range
- system, and LINC 4GL from Unisys. It will be used in conjunction with
- Synon/2E to provide CASE-based design, development and maintenance for
- future versions and enhancements of re-engineering applications.
-
- A separate translator and interpreter are provided for each source
- language format, allowing full recovery of data elements, definitions
- and file relations as well as very high rates of logic recovery.
-
- "By dramatically speeding migration to the AS/400, Synon Gateway helps
- users to upgrade their system in line with business growth," said Guy
- Riddle, Synon Asia's Hong Kong-based technical specialist.
- "Previously, to move applications to the AS/400, users either had to
- make the AS/400 emulate System/36/38 mode, and hence run below
- capacity, or face the laborious task of manually re-writing their
- applications. Now, with Synon Gateway, the AS/400 environment is open
- to thousands of organizations that are trapped in their current
- hardware."
-
- The announcement follows Synon's recent launch of its Client/Server
- Generator which enables cooperative processing between the AS/400 and
- PCs running OS/2. According to Riddle, both announcements are part of
- the company's long term strategy to enable cross-platform development
- without having to redesign and rewrite.
-
- "Users want flexible systems that can easily grow with their business,
- that use each platform to its best advantage, yet still protect their
- existing applications investment," he said.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920609/Press contact: Brian Paterson, Euan Barty &
- Associates, tel +852-545 7022; HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00016)
-
- New For Networks: Ethernet Switching For Intelligent Hubs 06/12/92
- CENTRAL, HONG KONG, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- SynOptics Communications
- announced the launch of an extension to its LattisNet System 3000
- intelligent hub. According to the company, the new LattisSwitch
- System 3000 marks the first time that Ethernet switching
- technology has been available in an intelligent hub.
-
- Developed under an alliance with high-performance switching technology
- vendor, US-based Kalpana Inc., the new system is designed to provide
- users with increased Ethernet throughput for network segments or
- servers, while protecting current investments in Ethernet equipment.
- It can support up to five fully managed Ethernet segments in a single
- chassis, with high-performance switching to connect the segments.
-
- "LattisNet users now have the means to interconnect multiple Ethernet
- segments with significant performance and cost advantages over
- conventional bridging," said David Coulson, SynOptics' Asia sales
- manager.
-
- The LattisSwitch System 3000 extension includes a new backplane for
- the current System 3000 intelligent hubs and several new modules. In
- addition, all previous SynOptics System 3000 Ethernet modules -
- including pre-10BASE-T versions - are compatible with the new
- LattisSwitch System 3000 and can take advantage of the hub's
- multisegment capabilities.
-
- The LattisSwitch System 3000 also continues the System 3000's support
- for Token Ring and Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI), along with
- Ethernet, in the same hub.
-
- Under the newly formed technology alliance, Kalpana and SynOptics will
- jointly develop a six-port Ethernet switching module for the
- LattisSwitch System 3000. Dubbed the Model 3328 Ethernet Switching
- Engine, it is expected to be available by the end of the year.
-
- SynOptics has implemented multisegment Ethernet by modifying the
- existing Ethernet channel "A," on the System 3000 backplane so that it
- can be divided into as many as four Ethernet segments. All existing
- System 3000 Ethernet modules can plug into any segment on this
- channel. A fifth segment is implemented via a second Ethernet channel
- on the backplane, channel "B."
-
- New SynOptics Ethernet modules will take advantage of the second
- channel to provide a variety of benefits, including configuration
- flexibility, fault resilience and enhanced network management and
- diagnostics, the company says.
-
- In addition to the new backplane, SynOptics will offer three new types
- of modules for use with the LattisSwitch System 3000 extension. These
- include a new 24-port high-density 10BASE-T module, two new Network
- Management Modules with connectors for both channels as well as the
- new Ethernet Switching Engine being jointly developed with Kalpana.
-
- "The new high-density 10BASE-T module will enable customers to build
- networks with up to 264 ports in one LattisSwitch System 3000," said
- Coulson. "The new module can be logically configured on the 'A'
- channel or the 'B' channel from a network management station. Changing
- modules between channels without physical intervention saves the time
- and effort involved in manual changes and helps keep users online if
- there are problems on either channel," said Coulson.
-
- The new network management modules are capable of managing ports on
- either channel. Both models will provide all the functionality of
- their existing single-channel counterparts and existing network
- management modules can still be used on the "A" channel.
-
- "In the new LattisSwitch System 3000, customers can choose to use one
- network management module per hub for basic capabilities such as
- Expanded View, LED status, and port control for all modules," Coulson
- said. "Or, they can use a separate network management module in each
- segment to provide more detailed statistics, support for the
- Autotopology mapping feature, node security and thresholds."
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920609/Press contact: David Coulson, Synoptics,
- Tel +852 841 7739; HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(HKG)(00017)
-
- Moves To improve US-Japan Technical Relations 06/12/92
- CENTRAL, HONG KONG, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- KTI Semiconductor Ltd, a joint
- venture between Kobe Steel and Texas Instruments, has opened its
- semiconductor wafer fabrication plant in the Japanese city of
- Nishiwaki. Volume production will begin in the third quarter.
-
- Jerry R. Junkins, TI's chairman, president and CEO, took part in the
- traditional ceremony inaugurating the plant, together with Kobe
- Steel's President Sokichi Kametaka, and high-ranking local officials.
- "This joint venture will contribute toward improving US-Japan
- relations in the semiconductor industry," predicted Kametaka.
-
- "For TI, the joint venture is an important piece of the company's
- commitment to serving the needs of its customers in Japan and in the
- rest of the Asia-Pacific region," said Junkins. "It is also
- an integral part of TI's long-term strategy to have
- adequate design, production, marketing and support capacity deployed
- throughout the major market regions of the world to service customers
- on a global basis, wherever they may need our products."
-
- KTI, which is 75 percent owned by Kobe Steel, was formed in May 1990
- to manufacture advanced semiconductor products in Japan. Since
- construction began in February 1991, approximately $426 million has
- been invested in the state-of-the-art plant.
-
- Initially, KTI will produce 16 megabit (Mbit) DRAM memory devices.
- However, beginning in 1993 the plant will start production of advanced
- CMOS logic devices, including application specific integrated circuits
- (ASICs). By fiscal 1995, production is expected to centre primarily on
- logic devices.
-
- "KTI's submicron-CMOS production capability addresses the fastest
- growing segment of the Japanese semiconductor market, which is
- application specific products," said Junkins. "TI is rapidly
- increasing its product mix toward a greater percentage of these
- differentiated devices such as ASICs, application processors, micro-
- controllers, advanced linear circuits and application specific
- memories."
-
- Semiconductor products from the new plant will be sold exclusively to
- TI for distribution and sale in the world's commercial semiconductor
- markets.
-
- KTI will produce semiconductors on eight-inch wafers, giving the plant
- a capacity almost twice that of wafer fabs using six-inch wafers. It
- is capable of manufacturing integrated circuits using 0.5 micron
- design rules, circuits in which the smallest structures fabricated on
- the wafer are only 0.5 microns in diameter.
-
- Over the past three years, TI has invested more than $2.4 billion
- worldwide. Additional wafer fabrication projects include a submicron
- CMOS plant in Italy that began production in 1991, a joint venture
- with Taiwan's Acer Inc., which is already shipping advanced
- semiconductors, and a joint venture with Canon, Hewlett-Packard and
- the Economic Development Board of Singapore, now under construction in
- Singapore.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920609/Press contact: Sharon Hampton, TI,
- Tel: +852 737 0338; HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00018)
-
- New For Networks: Ungermann Bass Departmental Hub 06/12/92
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Ungermann Bass
- has introduced a 12-port 10Base-T hub product that is called the
- Access/Hub. Until this introduction, Ungermann Bass (UB) has been
- primarily known as a vendor of high-end enterprise-wide
- internetworking systems and components, so this introduction came as
- somewhat of a surprise.
-
- In a telephone interview with Andrea Saliba, product marketing
- manager, Newsbytes has learned that UB has been moving towards the
- departmental LAN market over the past few months. In particular,
- Andrea pointed to the recent introduction of a 2-slot version of
- the Access/One enterprise hub. "The idea," said Andrea, "is that UB
- wants to provide solutions for all levels of the enterprise. The 2
- slot Access/One was a step in that direction. Access/Hub is another
- step."
-
- The Access/Hub is a much simpler hub than the Access/One is. It is
- dedicated to serving 10Base-T ports and offers only a single upgrade
- option. A customer can purchase the Access/Hub either with or without
- a daughterboard that provides for SNMP (Simple Network Management
- Protocol) management. Should someone buy the hub without the SNMP
- agent and then desire to add it, UB offers an upgrade package to
- accomodate this.
-
- UB's SNMP agent supports MIB I and MIB II definitions and is
- fully compliant with the IEEE 802.3K Repeater draft standard
- for SNMP hub management.
-
- In addition to the 12 ports that connect 10Base-T devices, the
- Access/Hub also has an AUI connector. This connector and the semi-
- special port allow the customer to connect several of these
- hubs together. UB mentions that by connecting hubs in this manner
- it is possible to build a network of up to 276 nodes. The hub also
- sports an array of 28 LEDs to support on-board diagnostics; an
- electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM) device
- for faster startup after power shutdown; and can be managed by any
- SNMP compliant manager. Of course, UB's NetDirector product can
- manage the new hub.
-
- The Access/Hub is available now. The unmanaged version sells for
- $1395. The managed version for $1995. The upgrade to add SNMP
- management functionality sells for $750.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920611, Press Contact: Laura Irwin, Ungermann Bass,
- 408-987-6509)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00019)
-
- New For PC: Runtime For Windowbase 1.5 06/12/92
- SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- One of the first
- companies to offer database application software for Microsoft
- Windows, Software Products International (SPI), says it is now
- offering an unlimited runtime version of its database development
- product, Windowbase 1.5.
-
- The runtime version allows applications developed in Windowbase to be
- compiled and run on computers without Windowbase installed.
-
- SPI says Windowbase offers an improved graphical user interface, and
- provides gateways to dBASE III and Btrieve file formats. The company
- says the product also allows users to input, view, and update data
- through forms, reports, or tables. Structured query language (SQL)
- support is also included so users who know very little about SQL can
- still produce queries using button selections, edit controls, and
- check boxes.
-
- SPI points out that under Windows, Windowbase can use Dynamic Data
- Exchange (DDE) which allows the exchange of data with other Windows
- spreadsheets, word processors and communications packages. The
- company also says the product has passed Microsoft's certification
- for Windows 3.1 compatibility. That means drag and drop, Truetype
- fonts, and common dialog boxes are all supported, SPI added.
-
- The suggested retail price for Windowbase 1.5 is $495, while the
- runtime version is an extra $249, SPI said. Registered users can
- upgrade to the runtime version for $199 directly from SPI, however a
- special $299 offer for both Windowbase 1.5 and the runtime is offered
- by SPI to developers until July 31 of this year, Connie Roloff of
- public relations told Newsbytes.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920611/Press Contact: Connie Roloff, Software
- Products International, tel 619-450-1526 ext 414, fax 619-450-1921)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LAX)(00020)
-
- Symantec Buys Further Into Programmer's Tools Market 06/12/92
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Symantec, the
- company which last year bought Santa Monica, California-based Peter
- Norton Computing, says it has acquired two more companies -- Mountain
- View, California-based Multiscope and Evanston, Illinois-based The
- Whitewater Group.
-
- Multiscope develops Debuggers for Windows, DOS, and OS/2 for use by
- software developers in locating and fixing programming errors. The
- Whitewater Group is probably best known for its Whitewater Resource
- Toolkit for interactively designing and modifying the look and feel
- of Windows applications. Whitewater's products are geared toward
- object-oriented programming (OOP) tools and class libraries for the
- development of Windows applications.
-
- Symantec says the acquisitions will be accounted for as a pooling of
- interests and will issue approximately 165,000 shares of its common
- stock for the current outstanding shares of MultiScope stock and
- approximately 80,000 shares for the current outstanding shares of The
- Whitewater Group stock. The company expects the merger will cost $2.1
- million or $.06 per share after tax in a one-time expense.
-
- No moves are planned for the personnel of the two purchased
- companies, though both companies will report to newly appointed
- director of development tools Carol Clettenberg, Symantec said.
-
- Though Symantec is probably best known for its utility products for
- Macintosh, DOS, and Windows, the company says it has a strong
- presence in the development tools market. Its development tools
- include Think C and Think Pascal, both integrated development
- environments, and Zortech's 32-bit C++ compilers for DOS, Windows,
- OS/2, Unix, and Macintosh.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920611/Press Contact: Brian Fawkes, Symantec, tel
- 408-446-8886, fax 408-253-3968)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00021)
-
- EC Opens Leased Phone Line Market 06/12/92
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- In its continuing battle
- against individual government monopolies in the European telecom
- marketplace, the European Commission (EC) has introduced
- legislation to make it easier for companies to set up pan-
- European networks for data-only applications.
-
- The legislation, which will take effect in about a year,
- effectively forces all telecom companies in Europe to sell their
- services to whoever wants that service, and for there to be no
- discriminatory pricing. This means, for example, that Deutches
- Bundespost Telekom, the state-controlled German telecom company
- which is not noted for its open market arrangements, must rent
- its data lines to all comers, rather than favor any group of
- companies.
-
- Analysts are hailing the legislation as the first step in the
- EC's Open Network Provision (ONP) for opening up the telecom
- market in Europe. Many are waiting for similar arrangements for
- voice and data lines, though the EC has said nothing about these
- services.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920611)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00022)
-
- Correction: Top Company BCE's Revenue C$19,884 Million 06/12/92
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Revenue and
- income figures for several Canadian companies reported recently in
- Newsbytes were wrong, due partly to a typographical error in the
- annual Top 500 report published by Canadian Business magazine.
- Errors by Newsbytes complicated the confusion.
-
- The magazine labelled columns of revenues and net income figures
- as being in thousands of dollars when they were in fact in millions.
-
- In a story reporting that BCE, the holding company that owns
- Northern Telecom and Bell Canada, had replaced General Motors
- Canada as the largest firm in Canada, BCE's 1991 revenue should
- have read C$19,884 million. GM Canada's revenue was C$19,304
- million. BCE's net income was C$1,329 million, while GM Canada's
- was C$323.31 million (this figure was correct in the original story).
-
- Also, Newsbytes should have given IBM Canada's revenue as C$6,255.0
- million (not C$6.255 million), that of Telus as C$1,227.2 million,
- and that of Rogers Communications as C$995.1 million. The figure
- for Digital Equipment Canada should have been C$941.4 million. The
- revenues of InterTan Canada were correctly reported as C$814.9
- million.
-
- Newsbytes should have seen that the figures as printed were out of
- line, and must also take responsibility for our own errors, even
- though they had the effect of cancelling out the typo in the table.
- Apologies.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920601/Press Contact: Canadian Business,
- 416-364-4266, fax 416-364-2783)
-
-
- (REVIEW)(APPLE)(SYD)(00023)
-
- Review of: Apple Macintosh PowerBook 140 2/40, 06/12/92
-
- From: Apple Computer, 20525 Mariana Avenue, Cupertino CA 95014-6299,
- (408) 996 1010
-
- Price: varies depending on retailer - average $US3199
-
- PUMA Rating: 3.6 on a scale of 1=lowest to 4=highest
-
- Reviewed for Newsbytes by: Sean McNamara 06/12/92
-
- Summary: The PowerBooks represent the first offerings from Apple
- which truly are in the laptop class. Incorporating many of the
- design features of the Mac Portable, but with true laptop size and
- weight, Apple is set to reap the benefits of giving users what they
- want from a laptop. Increasing the entry level memory to 4MB
- (megabytes) would be a major improvement.
-
- ======
-
- REVIEW
-
- ======
-
- There was a time when portable Mac computing meant either having a
- concrete block on your lap, or using a third party solution. Many
- users preferred to stay with Apple and cried out for a light,
- powerful and reliable machine which would let them run their Mac
- software when on the road. Despite its battery-saving features,
- good screen and long lasting battery, the Portable was doomed to
- failure, and Apple was sure to bring out realistic replacements.
-
- Enter the PowerBook range. With the same battery saving features as
- the Portable and a good screen on the 170, the PowerBooks have a
- good start. But there's a lot more to these Macs. Apple has learned
- its mistakes from the Portable, and the PowerBooks come across as a
- generally well thought out line of laptop computers. This review
- will concentrate on the PowerBook 140.
-
- The PowerBook 140 is as compatible with normal Mac software as any
- other Mac. There are some programs which won't work, but these will
- dwindle in number as upgrades are released. Using the 140 is really
- very much like having a full-blown Mac - the keyboard is full size,
- the 40MB hard disk drive would be adequate for most users, a mouse
- can be connected, internal modems are available, it has sound input
- and output sockets, the normal modem and printer ports and
- reset/interrupt switches, and an external hard disk drive interface.
-
- Most of the time, users would use the trackball on the PowerBook,
- rather than carry around a mouse. Although use of the trackball
- takes a bit of getting used to, it does become as easy to use as the
- mouse, and I found no trouble switching between the two.
-
- Users may consider three types of utilities which may make the
- transition to the PowerBook easier. The first is one which allows
- the user to "tear-off" the menus and just click on the options in a
- little "menu window." One of the hardest things to get used to with a
- trackball is accessing the menu, and tear-off menus can help a lot.
- An alternative to this is a utility which allows you to click on a
- menu and have it stay open without needing to drag (menus operate
- like this in Windows). Options are then selected by just clicking on
- them (almost like a temporary stationary tear-off menu). The third
- is a utility which allows keyboard navigation of dialog buttons and
- marks. There are shareware versions of such utilities available, and
- they are well worth the registration for the increased ease of use
- they afford the PowerBook user (and in many cases, "normal" Mac
- users).
-
- Despite the lack of memory on the entry level machine, the PowerBook
- is no slouch, operating as a whole at about four times the speed of a
- Mac Classic (the PowerBook 140's processor is a 16MHz 68030).
- Increased memory would improve this further by negating the need to
- use Virtual Memory (which chews up battery life) and by allowing the
- user to set up a RAM disk, which would not only speed performance,
- but also cut battery use. The investment in memory is well worth it
- considering the cost of memory, but more memory could really be
- offered with minimal increase in price (no increase would make the
- PowerBook even more attractive).
-
- The system has been designed to give the maximum possible battery
- life from the nickel cadmium battery, and, although adequate,
- battery life is not as impressive as with the Mac Portable.
- Incorporating the useful "sleep" feature saves battery power, and
- the sleep settings are user-adjustable (and can be turned off if
- desired). As the battery level reaches "reserve" power, the system
- gives a warning dialog and automatically dims the screen slightly.
-
- Putting the computer to sleep manually at this time until mains
- power can be connected is a handy feature, as the state of the
- computer is maintained, and when it is woken, the system is where it
- was left. One minor hitch comes when plugging the power pack into
- mains power. The pack is at a size where it cannot sit in a double
- socket with another power cord plugged in next to it, and on some
- single sockets the socket switch hampers the pack sitting in the
- socket neatly. Some ways around this are: to use a short extension
- lead; to use a 4-socket powerboard and lose a socket; or use the
- external charger.
-
- ===========
-
- PUMA RATING
-
- ===========
-
- PERFORMANCE: 2.5. While the PowerBook 140 runs just about all Mac
- software, its performance is severely hampered by the standard 2MB
- of memory. Surely with System 7 taking up 1MB of this at its
- leanest, and most programs requiring 2MB clear these days, 4MB would
- be a more realistic entry-level, especially with the price of memory
- these days.
-
- USEFULNESS: 4. Mac users have been dreaming of a Mac laptop for
- years now, and the wait was worth it. With the three models covering
- most people's needs (and the PowerBook 140 being a nice middle-
- ground machine), and with Apple using realistic pricing structures
- for what they deliver, most users would be satisfied with what the
- receive.
-
- MANUAL: 4. Apple is renowned for its manuals, and the PowerBook is
- a great example of why. With clear layout, numerous screen shots and
- illustrations, and System 7's Balloon Help, users should have no
- trouble working out the ins and outs of the PowerBook.
-
- AVAILABILITY: 4. Supplies are said to be increasing, with no more than
- a week's wait at most retailers.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920610)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(TOR)(00024)
-
- ****Wang Sues Japanese SIMM Vendors 06/12/92
- LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- In the latest
- installment of a patent battle that has gone on since 1989, Wang
- Laboratories has filed lawsuits against the US subsidiaries of
- two Japanese manufacturers and against three American companies.
- Wang alleges that single in-line memory modules (SIMMs) made by the
- companies violate two Wang patents.
-
- Wang is suing Mitsubishi Electronics America and NMB Technologies,
- the US subsidiaries of Mitsubishi Electric Corporation of Tokyo
- and NMB Semiconductor of Chica, Japan.
-
- Wang filed the complaint in US Federal District Court in
- Alexandria, Virginia, seeking preliminary and permanent court
- orders to stop both defendants from manufacturing, using, and
- selling SIMMs in the United States. In addition, Wang seeks treble
- monetary damages for Mitsubishi's and NMB's alleged infringement
- and attorney's fees, contending their conduct has been willful.
-
- The company also said it was about to file suits against American
- Computer & Digital Components of Baldwin Park, California, Wintec
- of Fremont, California, and Clearpoint of Hopkinton, Massachusetts.
- Wang charged all three companies with infringing its SIMM patents,
- and said further lawsuits can be expected.
-
- The Wang patents cover the structure of a SIMM, a modular device
- containing several memory chips. SIMMs are widely used in personal
- computers and peripherals. The Wang patents are effective until the
- year 2004.
-
- Mitsubishi and NMB were among seven companies named in a complaint
- that Wang filed with the United States' International Trade
- Commission (ITC) in January. The others -- Fujitsu, Hitachi, Intel
- Japan, Matsushita, and Oki, have signed licensing agreements with
- Wang. Wang's complaint asked the ITC to ban the importation into
- the United States of both SIMMs and products using SIMMs that
- violate the Wang patents.
-
- Wang said it has withdrawn the ITC complaint and asked the ITC to
- end its investigation, preferring to pursue the last two companies
- in court, where monetary damages are available. The ITC does not
- grant monetary damages.
-
- Wang has already signed licensing agreements with most of the
- world's major manufacturers and distributors of SIMMs. As well as
- those named above, they include Goldstar Electronic Co., Samsung
- Electronics, and Siemens Components.
-
- In the third quarter of last year, Wang reported $7.6 million in
- income from patent royalties, primarily from SIMM patents, company
- spokesman Ed Pignone told Newsbytes.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920612/Press Contact: Ed Pignone, Wang
- Laboratories, 508-967-4912)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TOR)(00025)
-
- Systemhouse, BCE, Bell Canada Call It Off 06/12/92
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- After extending
- negotiations twice, integrator SHL Systemhouse, telephone company
- Bell Canada and BCE, the holding company that owns Bell Canada as
- well as Northern Telecom, have called off a strategic partnership
- announced in February.
-
- Had it been concluded, the deal would have involved Systemhouse
- taking over the operation of Bell Canada's data center and offering
- systems integration and outsourcing services to Bell Canada
- customers. The two companies were also to create a joint venture to
- sell computer systems and services to the telecommunications
- industry worldwide.
-
- Systemhouse was to buy some assets of Bell Canada for cash, while
- BCE would have paid cash for enough Systemhouse shares to give it
- 60-percent ownership of the company. BCE currently has a
- 25.3-percent stake in Systemhouse.
-
- The companies signed a memorandum of understanding February 6.
- Details were to have been worked out by the end of April, but as
- they failed to come to an agreement, the firms extended that
- deadline first to May 15 and then to June 25.
-
- After the mid-may extension, Harry W. Schlough, senior
- vice-president of Systemhouse, told Newsbytes the financial details
- of the agreement were essentially set and the companies were
- working out legal details and "tuning" the agreement to meet
- regulatory requirements.
-
- Marcel Saint-Germain, a spokesman for BCE, said the obstacles to
- the deal were management, business, and financial issues," and
- would not be more specific. He did say, though, that human
- resources, real estate, and marketing issues had been agreed upon.
-
- In the wake of the agreement's collapse, BCE is reviewing its
- 25.3-percent ownership of Systemhouse, a move that officials said
- could lead to that stake being sold, kept, or increased.
-
- Saint-Germain said BCE reviews its investments regularly, and this
- review "doesn't mean a specific thing."
-
- BCE and Bell Canada have no plans to seek a similar arrangement
- with some other partner, Saint-Germain added.
-
- SHL Systemhouse reported revenues of C$700 million in 1991. It has
- more than 3,000 employees. BCE, Canada's largest company, had
- revenues of C$19,884 million in 1991. Aside from its
- telecommunications holdings, BCE has interests in financial
- services and other businesses.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920612/Press Contact: Harry W. Schlough,
- Systemhouse, 416-366-4600; Marcel Saint-Germain, BCE, 514-499-7090)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TOR)(00026)
-
- Canadian Long-Distance Decision Expected Today 06/12/92
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- The Canadian
- Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) is to
- announce this afternoon whether long-distance telephone service in
- Canada will be opened to competition.
-
- A spokeswoman at the federal regulator's offices told Newsbytes the
- decision on two applications to provide competitive long-distance
- service will be announced at a 4:00 pm press conference.
-
- In May, 1990, Unitel submitted its second application to compete
- with most of Canada's regional telephone companies in providing
- long-distance service. The company had been turned down in its
- first bid, in 1985 when it was still named CNCP Telecommunications.
-
- Between the denial of the first application and submission of the
- present one, Rogers Communications of Toronto, a major player in
- the cable television business, bought 40 percent of Unitel, putting
- some extra capital behind the company.
-
- Unitel is asking the CRTC to let it charge long-distance rates 15
- percent below those of the telephone companies. Company spokesman
- Peter Janecek said when the application was filed that the discount
- would be necessary to induce customers to change services, and to
- compensate for the inconvenience of dialing extra digits to place
- a call through Unitel. The need for the extra digits can be
- eliminated later, Janecek added.
-
- In August, 1990, Toronto-based Lightel teamed up with B.C. Rail
- Telecommunications and filed an application to offer its own
- competitive long-distance telephone service. Though the initial
- application covers only Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia --
- Canada's three most populous provinces -- Thomas Elliot, president
- of Lightel, told Newsbytes at the time that his company would like
- to do business throughout the country.
-
- Lightel is a spinoff of Call-Net Telecommunications, a Toronto firm
- that resells telephone company services. BC Rail
- Telecommunications offers private communications services using the
- facilities of British Columbia Railway. Both companies own some
- network facilities of their own, Elliot said; they would lease
- additional lines from the telephone companies and Unitel
- Communications of Toronto to run long-distance services.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920612/Press Contact: CRTC Information Services,
- 613-997-0313; Peter Janecek, Unitel, 416-232-6365; Thomas Elliot,
- Lightel, 416-496-0166)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00027)
-
- IBM Unveils 486SLC2 Chip, Offers Upgrades 06/12/92
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- IBM has
- unveiled a second custom-built microprocessor, which will be
- available this fall as an upgrade to two existing models in the
- PS/2 line. The 486SLC2 builds on IBM's present 386SLC chip,
- doubling its internal cache and using clock-doubling technology
- like that in Intel's 80486DX2 chip.
-
- IBM said that upgrading its mid-range Personal System/2 Models 56
- and 57 with the new chip will roughly quadruple their performance.
- The company also plans to use the chip as the basis of new PS/2
- models in the future, company spokesman Michael Reiter said.
-
- Reiter told Newsbytes the 486SLC2 is really an enhanced 386SLC,
- though both the 386SLC and the new chip use the 486 instruction
- set. Both chips were developed under an agreement with Intel that
- gives IBM the right to enhance 386 technology to create its own
- chip designs.
-
- IBM also said a PS/2 powered by the 486SLC2 chip will perform up to
- 20 percent faster than a system using a 25-megahertz 486SX chip.
- The 486SLC2 will be packaged similarly to the previously announced
- PS/2 Cached Processor Option, an upgrade card designed for the
- Models 56 and 57.
-
- Customers who buy a Model 56 SLC or Model 57 SLC between June 11
- and October 1, 1992, will be able to buy the 486SLC2 upgrade for
- $259 when it is available -- subject to Federal Communications
- Commission (FCC) approval -- in the fourth quarter. For other
- buyers, the street price for the upgrade is expected to be in the
- $600 range.
-
- The 486SLC2 has 16K bytes of internal cache, twice that found in
- the 386SLC, Reiter said. It also has an internal cache controller,
- which IBM said improves performance by accessing data from high
- speed cache memory rather than system memory whenever possible.
- Clock doubling technology lets the chip run internally at twice the
- external clock speed. In the 20-megahertz Models 56 and 57, that
- means the 486SLC2 will run at 40 megahertz internally. The 486SLC2
- also has power management and an optimized instruction set.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920612/Press Contact: Michael Reiter, IBM,
- 914-642-5368)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00028)
-
- ****Compaq To Announce New Models Monday 06/12/92
- HOUSTON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Compaq will announce a
- new series of entry level PCs as well as some advanced technology on
- its high end systems, a Compaq source told Newsbytes.
-
- Included in the roll-out will be a low-cost desktop family which the
- company is reportedly calling Prolenia, as well as the Contura
- notebook family. Also expected are four new models in the Deskpro/I
- line.
-
- Compaq spokesperson John Sweney declined to discuss specific details
- of the announcement but did confirm that articles in some computer
- publications are correct. "The speculative articles that you have
- seen have been reasonably accurate," said Sweney.
-
- Sweney also confirmed that Compaq would announce price cuts on
- existing models, but declined to discuss details. Earlier this month
- the company announced price cuts on Systempro units of 20 percent.
-
- Compaq, which several years ago had a reputation for quality, didn't
- attempt to compete with the less expensive PC clones that flooded
- the market. But in the past year, quality hasn't been enough. The
- company has been forced into a position of having to do battle with
- low-cost competitors such as Dell and AST. Compaq has said that it
- will compete on price while maintaining quality.
-
- As part of the business plan announced after Compaq's change in
- leadership last October, the company said it would engage in a
- vigorous ad campaign. Those ads are now appearing in various
- publications. The ads, which run several full pages, talk about
- engineering a lot. They don't talk much about features and
- benefits.
-
- One complete page, including text and a photo, talk about how a
- Compaq notebook owner ran over the computer with her car. Whether
- readers will take the time to read a twelve-page ad is questionable.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920612/Press contact: John Sweney, Compaq,
- 713-374-1564)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00029)
-
- Microsoft Comfortable With 4Q Earnings Estimates 06/12/92
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Microsoft's chief
- financial officer says the company is "comfortable" with the Wall
- Street earnings estimates for the fourth quarter.
-
- Analysts estimated the company's shares will earn $1.00 to $1.05 for
- the fourth quarter, up from the $0.73 earnings for the same quarter
- last year. Some analysts estimated that Microsoft will achieve net
- margins of 26 percent in fiscal 1993, but Microsoft CFO Francis
- Gaudette said that earnings as a percentage of sales ratio would be
- difficult to maintain.
-
- Gaudette told investors at the Ragen MacKenzie investments
- conference this week that Microsoft plans to launch 70 products in
- fiscal '93, but said none of those is expected to have the same sales
- growth momentum as did upgrades of existing programs that were
- released in the last quarter of the past three fiscal years.
-
- Gaudette also announced that Microsoft will open sales offices in
- Eastern Europe and Russia by the end of fiscal '93, adding that he
- sees no slowdown in worldwide sales. "We don't see any softening in
- any of our markets at this time," Gaudette said.
-
- He also said the company is confident it will get a favorable ruling
- in the pending patent suit brought by Apple Computer. A hearing
- scheduled earlier in the week was postponed. "It's possible that
- the damages hearing will not be necessary, depending on the judges
- rulings," Gaudette said.
-
- Microsoft's stock experienced a sharp sell-off on Thursday,
- apparently over concerns about net margins, then rebounded. The
- stock closed at $108 Thursday, off $4.50. At today's opening it was
- trading at $109.75.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920612)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(DEN)(00030)
-
- New For Macintosh: Personal Press 2.0 From Aldus 06/12/92
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Aldus Corporation
- has announced that it has started shipping Personal Press 2.0 for
- the Macintosh, a page layout program which allows the user to design
- and assemble text and graphics automatically.
-
- Personal Press was developed by Aldus subsidiary Silicon Beach
- Software. According to product marketing manager Kathy David,
- version 2.0 includes more than 50 design templates that help the
- user automatically create documents. David said the automation of
- the templates guides the user through the creation of a document
- using their own text and graphics.
-
- David said a copy-fitting feature automatically adjusts the font
- size and spacing of text to fit the document into a designated
- space. For example, if you could only allocate nine column inches for
- an article in a newsletter, Personal Press 2.0 would make the
- adjustments necessary to fit that space.
-
- Personal Press 2.0 also has an autoflow feature that automatically
- adds pages to a document to accommodate all the imported text and
- pictures.
-
- David said the recently announced Aldus Additions technology has
- been incorporated into Personal Press, automating production tasks
- such as the creation of drop caps, setting up bulleted text
- paragraphs, and making enlarged pullquotes within the body of the
- text.
-
- Personal Press imports graphics in a variety of formats, including
- PICT, TIFF, EPS, MacPaint, ThunderScan, and Aldus Digital Darkroom
- Archive. It recognizes text files from most popular word processing
- program, including Microsoft Word and Works, MacWrite, and text-only
- ASCII.
-
- The program is compatible with Apple's System 7, and supports Balloon
- Help, Apple Events Subscribe, TrueType, 32-bit addressing, virtual
- memory, and QuickTime movies.
-
- Aldus said it is already shipping Personal Press, which carries a
- price tag of $199. Registered owners of earlier versions can
- upgrade for $39.99. The company said it will ship a Canadian
- English version later this quarter, with European and Pacific Rim
- versions due out at a later date.
-
- To run Personal Press 2.0 you need any Macintosh with at least 1MB of
- memory, System 6.0.3 or later, and a hard drive. Aldus recommends
- at 2MB of RAM, and says a color monitor is required for viewing
- color, but not for applying it.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920612/Press contact: Kathy Episcipo, Silicon Beach
- Software, 619-695-6956)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LAX)(00031)
-
- ****Media Vision Countersues Creative 06/12/92
- FREMONT, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 12 (NB) -- Personal computer
- sound card manufacturer Media Vision is responding to a lawsuit filed
- against it by competitor Creative Technology by filing a suit of its
- own in the Northern District Court of California in San Francisco.
-
- The company says it is charging Creative Technology with restraint of
- trade, unfair competition, and monopolization. Media Vision says it
- has made its Thunder Board sound card compatible with the Sound
- Blaster board from Creative Technology. However, Media Vision now
- says Creative Technology introduced software that has caused some of
- its Sound Blaster-compatible software to crash, making the Media
- Vision sound board incompatible.
-
- Creative Technology has the advantage of having its software drivers
- supplied with Microsoft Windows 3.1. Other sound boards, then, can
- offer their customers Windows compatibility if they can use the Sound
- Blaster drivers.
-
- The Creative Technology suit, filed May 29 against Media Vision,
- claims Media Vision reverse engineered its Sound Blaster product in
- order to produce the Thunderboard and charges copyright infringement.
-
- Creative Technology is pointing to the pending case filed by video
- game hardware manufacturer Sega against software manufacturer
- Accolade as a similar case. The Sega suit charges Accolade with
- reverse engineering, however Accolade says reverse engineering was
- necessary to produce compatible products.
-
- Media Vision announced, despite Creative Technology's claim to the
- contrary, the Sega vs. Accolade case has nothing to do with the
- current conflict. Despite that claim, Media Vision has engaged Thomas
- F. Smegal as legal counsel, who the company claims is expert in
- cases of this type.
-
- In a paper entitled, "Reverse Engineering of Software Scrunitized In
- Sega," Smegal says the Sega vs. Accolade suit "... is the strongest
- challenge yet to what seems to have been a widely held assumption in
- the law that a reverse engineer may make fixed "interum" copies of a
- copyrighted program so long as the final product is non-infringing."
- Smegal says criticism levied at the Sega vs. Accolade case contends
- that only the final product that is sold on the market or used in a
- functional manner should be scrutinized for copyright infringement.
-
- The Sega vs. Accolade case seems to be a major deciding point in the
- computer industry and one whose decision may effect the future of the
- industry as a whole. The American Committee for Interoperable Systems
- (ACIS) which includes companies such as Chips and Technologies,
- Phoenix Technologies, Seagate Technology, Zenith Data Systems, and
- Sun Microsystems, has publicly endorsed Accolade's position. Peter
- Choy, chairman of ACIS and deputy general counsel of Sun Microsystems
- said: "The life blood of the computer industry is the ability of any
- competitor to make and distribute interoperable software and
- hardware."
-
- In conjunction with the suit against Creative Technology, Media
- Vision has also announced it is licensing its Pro Audiospectrum sound
- technology for use by any software or hardware developer at no
- charge. Despite the seeming contradiction between Media Vision's
- announcement of free licensing to developers for its technology and
- it's claim that it should be able to interoperate with Creative
- Technology's hardware without licensing, the company says it is
- interested in open systems. "We live in an era of open computer
- architectures. Ultimately, we want the end user to win," said Jain.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920612/Press Contact: Abigail Johnson, Roeder-
- Johnson for Media Vision, tel 415-579-0700, fax 415-347-5238)
-
-
-
-