home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1992-06-24 | 71.7 KB | 1,562 lines |
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00001)
-
- PC Expo: Mitsubishi Intros First 17-Inch Monitor, Printer 06/24/92
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- At PC Expo,
- Mitsubishi has introduced a 17-inch CRT (cathode ray tube)
- monitor for PCs, Macs and Unix, along with Windows 3.1 and
- PostScript compatibility for its midrange wax thermal and
- high-end dye sublimation printers.
-
- Craig H. Sloss, product marketing manager for Display Products,
- told Newsbytes that the new monitor, the Diamond Pro 17, is not
- only the company's first 17-inch display, but also the first
- Mitsubishi product to use a new technology called aperture grille
- cathode-ray tube. Unlike earlier flat square and precision
- in-line faceplate CRTs, the new technology lets users control
- convergence, according to Sloss. Brightness and contrast are
- also superior, he stressed.
-
- Further, he said, aperture-grille CRT technology is lowering
- monitor prices while at the same time increasing product
- availability. "This is being accomplished by improving the yield
- rates, or percentages of products that survive the manufacturing
- process without having to be discarded due to error," he
- commented.
-
- The Diamond Pro 17 will appeal to Windows, Open Look, and
- Macintosh users who want the best desktop monitors available
- for their systems, as well as to users who require high-
- performance CAD/CAM/CAE (computer-aide design/manufacturing/
- engineering) displays but don't want to spend the extra $1,000
- needed for a 20-inch product, he remarked.
-
- Outside of the benefits supplied by the new CRT technology, said
- Sloss, the monitor is noteworthy because it features the Diamond
- Match Color Calibration System, a microprocessor-based method of
- adjusting the on-screen colors to match hardcopy, Pantone, or other
- color samples. Professional designers and printers will appreciate
- these capabilities, he noted.
-
- The Diamond Pro 17 is compatible with all medium- to high-
- resolution graphics standards from 640 by 480 through 1280 by
- 1024 at 60 MHz noninterlaced. Priced at $1,599, the product is
- shipping.
-
- The color printers that have been upgraded with Windows 3.1 and
- PostScript compatibility are the 300 and S300 dye sublimation
- printers and the G650 wax thermal printer. "We like to say that
- the 300 and S300 provide photographic quality, while the G650
- provides pleasing quality," Stan Perkins, manager of Imaging
- Product Marketing, told Newsbytes.
-
- But the popularity of the midrange wax thermal color printer is
- rising with the ascendance of Windows, he emphasized. "End users
- see these beautiful color programs on their screens, and it gets
- them thinking about outputting in color," he commented.
-
- In addition to being enhanced with Windows 3.1 and PostScript
- compatibility, the G650 has been supplied with a larger paper bin,
- capable of printing on to 12- by 18-inch paper, instead of the
- 11- by 17-inch stock that was the top limit in the past.
-
- Each of the printers had previously been enhanced with Windows
- 3.0 compatibility. The Print 300 is priced at $14,995, the S340
- at $10,995, and the G650 at $6,995.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920623/Press Contact: Charles J. Marchand,
- Miller Communications for Mitsubishi, tel 310-822-4669)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00002)
-
- New For PC: Fastback Plus 3.1 Data Backup Program 06/24/92
- BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Fifth
- Generation Systems (FGS) says it is now shipping Fastback Plus
- 3.1 for DOS, the latest version of its data backup program.
-
- FGS says version 3.1 supports the most popular QIC tape hardware,
- including Irwin Archive and Colorado. Fastback Plus will backup
- hard drive data and programs to either tape or floppy disks, and the
- process can be automated. The company also publishes versions of
- Fastback for Windows, Netware, and Macintosh systems.
-
- Barry Bellue, president of FGS, said the company has returned the
- command line option based on customer request. Fastback's earlier
- versions could run from the command line, or from the program's
- menu structure. Bellue said tape support has also been added to
- automatically operate unattended at scheduled intervals.
-
- Fastback Plus 3.1 runs on IBM PCs and compatibles that have 640
- kilobytes of random access memory (RAM) and a hard drive. The
- program supports the use of a Logitech and Microsoft compatible
- mouse, and has a suggested retail price of $189.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920623/Press contact: Jorge Vallery, FGS,
- 504-291-7221)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00003)
-
- New For PC: US Version Of Tman POS Software Launched 06/24/92
- VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Bold
- Point Software has begun shipping a version of its Tman point-of-
- sale and inventory control software for the United States market.
- Bold Point has also signed a distribution agreement with
- DistribuPro of San Jose, California.
-
- The United States version of Tman differs from the Canadian
- version, which has been on the market for some time, mainly in
- tax handling, said Kerry Johnston, president of Bold Point. It
- replaced the Canadian provincial sales taxes and Goods and
- Services Tax with state tax and federal excise tax.
-
- Tman has always been able to handle inventory on either a
- first-in, first-out, or a last-in, first-out basis, Johnston said,
- noting that the latter approach is more popular in the United
- States.
-
- Johnston said the potential market for Tman in the United States
- is at least 10 times that in Canada. He added that he expects the
- product's availability in the US will actually help Canadian
- sales as well, observing that Canadian customers are often
- suspicious of Canadian software and regard sales outside the
- country as proof the product is a good one.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920623/Press Contact: Kerry Johnston, Bold
- Point Software, 604-687-2000, fax 604-683-4911)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TOR)(00004)
-
- New For Unix: Image Program Update Slated For SIGGRAPH 06/24/92
- MONTREAL, QUEBEC, CANADA, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- At the SIGGRAPH
- show and conference in July, Discreet Logic plans to introduce a
- new version of Eddie, its interactive special effects and
- compositing program for Silicon Graphics workstations.
-
- Eddie offers an assortment of software tools for enhancing and
- combining images from video, film, and computer graphics. Its
- capabilities include "morphing," the ability to convert one image
- smoothly into another through computer processing rather than
- tedious hand-animation.
-
- New capabilities in the upcoming release will include a feature
- called "3D from 2D," which will use a computer algorithm to add
- shading to two-dimensional drawings, giving the appearance of
- depth, a spokeswoman for the company said.
-
- The morphing tool will get a number of new features designed to
- make it easier to use, the spokeswoman said. Finally, a built-in
- paint program will be added to the software.
-
- The spokeswoman said Eddie is complementary to three-
- dimensional animation software.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920623/Press Contact: Pat Hunter, Artemis
- Hunter Public Relations for Discreet Logic, 416-487-4488, fax
- 416-487-7335; Discreet Logic, 514-272-0525, fax 514-272-
- 0585)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00005)
-
- Compatible Systems Ships DECnet Support For Router 06/24/92
- BOULDER, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Compatible
- Systems Corp. (CSC) has introduced a new software module that
- will become a part of their EtherRoute/TCP product. The
- EtherRoute/TCP is a router that supports LocalTalk and TCP/IP
- installations. The new module allows the AppleTalk side to talk
- with DECnet networks, a capability which previously was not
- available.
-
- Matt McConnell, president of Compatible Systems said: "There are
- several popular software packages available for Macintosh to DEC
- communications which depend on DECnet support being available in
- a router, including Digital's Pathworks and Thursby Software's
- TSSNet. We have found that DECnet is a requirement in some sites
- with DEC machines installed, although TCP/IP is commonly used
- for this purpose. And we see more and more DEC installations
- wanting to connect their Macs to the corporate network."
-
- This DECnet phase IV support module is shipping now with all new
- purchases of EtherRoute/TCP. There is no additional cost for the
- software module. Existing users who wish to add this capability
- to their router should contact the company to arrange for a free
- upgrade. It is CSC's policy to add more and more software
- functionality to their routers without charging their customers
- for these capabilities. CSC routers retail for $1,895 with TCP/IP
- support.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920623/Press Contact: Sally Smith, SSSMith
- and Associates, 513-897-0654)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00006)
-
- New Direction For NIKE With Sun Microsystems And Oracle 06/24/92
- TSIMSHATSUI, HONG KONG, JUN 24 1992 -- The US sports footwear
- and apparel giant, NIKE Inc., has installed a Sun Microsystems server
- and Oracle Financials software as part of a plan to establish its
- own distribution, marketing, and retail sales operation in Hong Kong.
-
- Running on a powerful dual-processor SPARCsystem 670MP server
- from Sun Microsystems, Oracle Financials will enable NIKE to
- monitor and control every aspect of its retail business.
-
- "Though NIKE has had a presence in Hong Kong for more than 10 years,
- we used to rely on independent distributors to market our shoes and
- sportswear," said LAN Administrator Helen K.P. Tang. "We have been
- using a Banyan Vines PC network, but its previous configuration was
- not capable of supporting the kind of business that NIKE is moving
- towards."
-
- NIKE previously used a range of different software packages in each
- of its Asian offices. As this software disparity made it difficult to
- consolidate and analyze vital financial information, the company
- decided to standardize on Oracle Financials. "Now we can establish
- common reporting procedures, achieve better and faster management
- information and consolidate support throughout the region," said
- Tang.
-
- Nike's US headquarters spent over a year examining and evaluating
- more than 30 packages, before choosing Oracle. Power,
- flexibility, an international presence, and support were major
- factors in Oracle's favor.
-
- "We needed a powerful solution that could deal with a large number
- of variables," said Tang. "For example, with the case of footwear,
- we have to do inventory by a great many different criteria like size,
- width, color, and style. Some of our product codes are 28
- characters long."
-
- In addition, NIKE needed a computing system with a wide range of
- binary-compatible products. While some of its offices could utilize
- the low-cost SPARCstation2, in Hong Kong, with business expanding
- rapidly, NIKE System Analyst Michael Y. W. Liu selected the powerful
- dual-processor SPARCsystem 670MP, in order to have the capacity
- to handle future needs.
-
- "Oracle Financials software is compatible with Unix," Liu said. "We
- tested it on the SPARCsystem 670MP and were very comfortable
- with it's performance."
-
- Service was also a critical consideration. According to Liu, the
- fact that Sun Microsystems and its Open Systems Support Partners
- were capable of providing support at all NIKE's sites throughout
- the Asia-Pacific region had a definite impact on the selection
- criteria.
-
- With the new system up and running, NIKE is able to analyze exactly
- how its marketing activities are progressing and develop better
- management information. Data on size preferences in Hong Kong or
- this season's most popular colors, can be extracted and used to
- streamline sales efforts.
-
- However, according to Tang, knowing what has been selling well is
- only half the battle. She is looking towards the day when NIKE's
- Hong Kong sales office will be able to see into the future.
-
- "Our US headquarters is using Oracle development tools to create
- applications that will help us project future trends. Such
- applications would enable orders to be placed well in advance. They
- would also help factories schedule their production runs with more
- precision, allow better control of raw materials and, in the end,
- make prices more competitive in the stores," said Tang.
-
- The new sales office, which officially opened at the beginning of
- June, will house accounting, sales, marketing, MIS, retail and order
- entry. It is envisaged that demand on computer resources will
- increase.
-
- "That was one of the reasons we chose a client/server solution,"
- said Liu "It gives us the flexibility to meet our existing needs
- without compromising our ability to cope with the demands of
- the future."
-
- According to Liu, the choice of the Sun Microsystems SPARCsystem
- 670MP server was result of stringent hardware evaluation by NIKE's
- headquarters. "When the head office tried SPARCstation, it provided
- good performance, supported a large number of users and was in the
- right price range. It has been recommended to our other distribution
- offices," said Liu.
-
- The region-wide implementation will enable NIKE to link all of its
- regional offices into a wide area network over leased lines.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920622/Press contact: Brian Paterson, Euan
- Barty Associates, Tel: +852-545 7022;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(NYC)(00007)
-
- Marvin Kalb Moderates "Great Technology Debate" Panel 06/24/92
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUNE 24 (NB) -- At a June
- 22nd panel discussion in New York City's Lincoln Center sponsored by
- Computerworld and Computer Associates, former CBS-TV newsman
- Marvin Kalb asked a distinguished group industry figures: "Whether
- the United States needs a national technology policy and, if so, who
- should run it?"
-
- The panel to which the question was addressed was composed of
- Gordon Bell, designer of much of Digital Equipment's early systems
- and 1991 recipient of the National Medal of Technology; Senator Jeff
- Bingaman (D-NM), chair of the Senate Defense and Technology
- Subcommittee; Lewis Branscomb, Harvard professor and former chief
- scientist, IBM; Doug Michels, co-founder of The Santa Cruz Operation
- (SCO); Stephen S. Roach, principal and senior economist, Morgan
- Stanley & Company; and Roger J. Sippl, founder and chairman of
- Informix Software, Inc.
-
- Sippl, speaking first, said that we do need a policy but that it
- should be limited to financial incentives for development -- tax
- credits for research and development, and lower capital gains tax --
- and, other than that, "the government should get out of the way of
- the entrepreneurs."
-
- Roach said, that while he agrees with those that say there is a
- crisis, it is our use of technology is the heart of the problem. He
- said "It is not that there are problems with our technology; it is
- rather that our information society has not reaped the benefits of
- its enormous investment in the technology. There has been very
- little growth in clerical productivity due to the technology. We
- have just gone through our first white-collar recession and there
- would not have been the great loss in white collar jobs if these
- positions had been productive."
-
- Roach added that it is in the area of productively using our
- technology that should be addressed by any policy group.
-
- Gordon Bell said that there should be a policy which would get the
- government out of control of technology and standards but would
- put such things in the hands of industry self-organized groups with
- government partners. He also called for getting the control of
- government policy away from the military and advocated the
- privatization of government research labs.
-
- Bell also said that he favor subsidization of technology
- manufacturing, saying: "We subsidize farming, why not
- manufacturing? We should be rewarding IBM for doing its own
- manufacturing instead of simply watching Apple get out of
- domestic manufacturing."
-
- Bingaman called for government investment in high risk
- development areas as a way to stimulate innovation. He called for
- the broadening of DARPA's (Defense Advanced Research Projects
- Agency) role to encompass non-military related development as
- well as projects of military significance.
-
- Michels said that it is ironic that it has been government policy
- that, to date, has been responsible for the trend toward open
- systems. He said: "DARPA and NIST (National Institute of Standards
- and Technology) have been prime players in this development. so
- we really have had some national policy."
-
- Michels then addressed the question -- "How can government help
- without getting in the way?" and said: "Just find what is broken
- and fix it. Our educational system is broken - fix it! We have a short
- term mindset and do not plan for long term development. Our legal
- system is totally ambiguous when it comes to patent and copyright
- law. We must invest in education, structure a tax system that
- rewards long term investment and rewrite the intellectual property
- laws. That's how government can help."
-
- Branscomb said: "We have some fundamental competitive problems.
- Japan invests more and trains more. It was embarrassing for us to
- lose dominance in the machine tool and robotics industries -- these
- were invented at MIT. We spend more on R&D than Japan, Germany,
- and France combined yet do not show a proper return on the
- investment. That is because it is a top-down approach that gives
- us such products as SDI -- I call it a socialist policy."
-
- Branscomb continued: "The government should work with industry
- to identify those breakthrough areas where government investment
- is called for."
-
- At the close of the panelist statements, Kalb opened the floor to
- questions and then, in closing asked each speaker to identify the
- presidential candidate who he feels will be the best one to advance
- technology. He also asked for recommendations that the panelist
- would make to this new president-elect. The panelist's choices
- follow: Lewis Branscomb -- Clinton; Doug Michels -- "I'm not sure
- it makes a difference;" Senator Bingaman -- Clinton; Gordon Bell --
- Perot; Stephen Roach -- Perot; Roger Sippl -- Bush.
-
- (Barbara E. McMullen & John F. McMullen//19920624/Press
- Contacts: Lloyd D. Benson, Cudaback Strategic Communications,
- 617-661-6330; Bob Gordon, Computer Associates, 516-342-2391)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00008)
-
- Artisoft Bundles StationWare With Central Station 06/24/92
- TUCSON, ARIZONA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Starting early in June,
- Artisoft has begun bundling all three of its Stationware products
- to purchasers of its Central Station connectivity processor. Central
- Station is a hardware device that contains a PC connection port,
- one parallel port, two serial ports, an optional SCSI (Small Computer
- Systems Interface) port, and an Ethernet connection. It could be
- used for any number of things and Artisoft is marketing three
- software packages that tailor it for these purposes.
-
- When you buy a Central Station you always got the laptop
- connectivity Stationware product with it. This allowed you to dock
- your laptop to the unit and use the Central Station as the laptop's
- network interface card. Artisoft has developed two other programs
- that fall into the Stationware line. Printer Server Stationware is
- used to turn the Central Station into a printer server by the use
- of the parallel or serial ports. Dial-Up Connection Stationware used
- the Central Station as a modem connection to the network. Both
- applications sold separately for $99 each.
-
- There are two versions of each of these applications and of Central
- Station itself. One of the versions supports LANtastic networks
- while the other supported Novell Netware based networks. Artisoft
- has been developing Stationware applications for each of these two
- platforms. However, the Netware version of the Dial Up Connection
- Stationware is not released at this time. Purchasers of the Novell
- version of Central Station will receive the Printer Server
- Stationware that is appropriate for their use as well as a coupon
- that lets them add the Dial Up Connection Stationware for free
- when it becomes available later in the summer.
-
- This promotion is billed as a limited time offer. However, the
- company has not set a date at which time the promotion will have
- ended. In addition, people who have purchased Central Station after
- May 1 or those who have purchased Stationware products after that
- date should contact Artisoft customer support for details on how
- they can either get the products for free or receive a
- reimbursement of their purchase price.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920623, Press Contact: Joe Stunkard, Artisoft,
- 602-690-3231)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00009)
-
- Claris Ships MacDraw Pro 1.5 06/24/92
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- As reported
- by Newsbytes recently, Claris has prepared a significant upgrade to
- their drawing program MacDraw Pro.
-
- The new version is called MacDraw Pro 1.5 and it offers significant
- speed enhancements over the previous versions. Claris is claiming
- 25 to 75 percent faster performance in most areas where speed is
- measured including text entry, image displays, and printing.
-
- In addition to the speed enhancements, Claris is saying this new
- version is full "System 7 savvy," which means that is supports all
- of the operating system's features including QuickTime, publish &
- subscribe, Apple events, add Balloon Help.
-
- MacDraw Pro 1.5 is shipping now. It is available for purchase for
- a retail price of $399. Current users of MacDraw II or any of the
- competing drawing packages like Corel Draw or Canvas can upgrade
- to MacDraw Pro 1.5 for $99. Those who are currently using MacDraw
- Pro1.0 can upgrade for $15.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920623/Press Contact: Kevin Mallon, Claris,
- 408-987-7227)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00010)
-
- Cabletron And Crescendo Agree On Single FDDI Spec 06/24/92
- ROCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Cabletron
- and Crescendo have come to an agreement on the way to encode
- digital data in an FDDI (fiber data distribution interface) network
- that is using unshielded twisted pair wiring. This agreement paves
- the way for this method to become the standard that will be
- adopted by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI).
-
- Up until now, Cabletron and Crescendo represented the two different
- proposals that were in front of ANSI and were backed by other
- companies like AT&T, British Telecom, Fibronics, Hewlett-Packard,
- Ungermann-Bass, and National Semiconductor. The two proposals
- were either Crescendo's Multi-Level Transmission - 3 (MLT-3) or
- Cabletron's digitally equalized Non Return to Zero Inverted (NRZI).
-
- Under this agreement, Cabletron and Crescendo will be proposing a
- single modified MLT-3 proposal to the ANSI committee that is
- meeting this week. Both companies expect that their agreement will
- smooth the path for this standard and that the actual standard may
- get released as early as January 1993. The companies engineers have
- been working together on the modifications to the original proposal
- and expect to continue to work together to firm up several areas
- that are still relatively undefined or technically ambiguous.
-
- Sources within Cabletron told Newsbytes that although none of the
- other companies involved in the standardization effort have stood
- up to support this new proposal, that they are just "straddling
- the fence and waiting to see what will happen."
-
- Should this proposal be adopted as the standard, one would expect
- to see implementations in silicon of this technology soon after the
- standard is published. This means that by this time next year there
- may be some products out that allow for the use of the FDDI
- specifications and data rates to operate across unshielded twisted
- pair wiring. This will have to be Type 5 cabling so most offices
- will still need to worry about pulling new wire through their walls
- should they decide to adopt FDDI.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920623, Press Contact: Darren Orzechowski,
- Cabletron, 603-332-9400 extension 1282)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00011)
-
- Chipcom Signs Reseller Agreement With Ascom Timeplex 06/24/92
- SOUTHBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- To
- date, Chipcom has been overly reliant on sales that come in from
- Digital Equipment Corporation. That is the message that many
- financial analysts have given to Chipcom over the past few months.
- Consequently, Chipcom decided to do something about it and they
- are on a push to increase their market share and distribution
- arrangements.
-
- At this time, Chipcom is announcing a worldwide reseller agreement
- with Ascom Timeplex. This agreement is very similar to the one that
- Chipcom currently has in place with DEC. It is also going to be the
- model that will be used with other such agreements that Chipcom is
- expected to make public within the next few weeks.
-
- Basically, Ascom Timeplex gets the rights to sell Chipcom
- equipment anywhere in the world they choose to do so. To help
- Ascom Timeplex in their task, Chipcom has trained all of the
- appropriate people within Ascom Timeplex and plans to continue
- to offer such training as new products are developed and introduced.
- Ascom Timeplex for its part, will sell, install, service, and
- maintain the whole of the Chipcom line wherever it is sold by them.
-
- James Babcock, vice president of marketing for Ascom Timeplex
- has stated that: "Ascom Timeplex customers expect high quality,
- redundancy, resiliency, and fault tolerance in the products we
- offer. Chipcom, an acknowledged technological leader in the
- switching hub market, has raised the standards of excellence for
- these qualities and has integrated them into their intelligent hub."
-
- According to David Fowler, Chipcom's vice president of marketing:
- "Our distribution strategy continues to be focused on working with
- superior resellers and systems integrators. This relationship with
- Ascom Timeplex greatly expands our third-party channel, and gives
- users a worldwide source for a broad range of product solutions."
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920623/Press Contact: Christine LeCompte,
- Beaupre & Co. for Chipcom, 603-436-6690)
-
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00012)
-
- French War For Mobile Datacoms Hots Up 06/24/92
- PARIS, FRANCE, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- In parallel with the battle
- for supremacy in the mobile voice telecoms arena, the French
- government is preparing the ground for a similar war on the
- mobile data front.
-
- Unlike the mobile voice telecoms battle, however, the Ministry of
- Posts and Telecommunications in France wants to control the
- competition. The government agency says that it is allowing just
- four companies -- Bouygues, the French manufacturing concern;
- Cofira, the mobile telecoms division of Generale des Eaux; France
- Telecom, the state telecoms company, and Hutchinson, the UK
- mobile telecoms company -- to bid for a license.
-
- All four companies are keeping their plans for a network quiet
- until licenses are awarded by the French government at the end of
- this year, just as the so-called "free European market" opens for
- business, and customs plus trading barriers between European
- Community (EC) countries come down. Sources in the industry
- suggest, however, that two mobile data licenses will be awarded.
-
- All four companies are "dark horses" when it comes to the
- technology they plan to use in France for their respective mobile
- data networks. Logic suggests that they will use a derivative of
- the VHF/FM packet radio networks as seen in the UK. This will
- enable the successful licensees to use existing technology to get
- the French mobile data networks operational as quickly as
- possible.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920624)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00013)
-
- Deutsche Bundespost Would Welcome Open Telecoms Market 06/24/92
- BONN, WESTERN GERMANY, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) - Deutsche Bundespost
- Telekom (DBT) and the German government would welcome a totally
- open telecoms market in Germany, Christian Schwarz-Schilling, the
- country's postal minister, has said.
-
- Speaking at the international postal and telecoms conference in
- Bonn this week, Schwarz-Schilling, said that the only proviso the
- government had for a totally free market would be that DBT be
- transformed into a private company. This, he said, would allow
- DBT to compete on equal terms with any new company as they
- entered the German telecoms marketplace.
-
- Schwarz-Schilling added that no major company with a proven
- track record, as well as experience in the field of telecoms,
- should be denied a place in the German telecoms marketplace.
-
- The minister's comments come as a something of a surprise, even
- in the light of the recent acceleration in liberalization of the
- German telecoms marketplace, since DBT and the German
- government were renowned for their liking for the near-
- monopoly that DBT enjoys in the German telecoms market.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920624)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00014)
-
- Ericsson Secures Major UK Mobile Telecoms Contract 06/24/92
- STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Vodafone has awarded
- Ericsson, the Swedish telecoms company, with a UKP 30 million
- contract for electronic mobile exchange (EMX) hardware. The
- equipment will be used in Vodafone's next-generation digital
- mobile telephone network, known as Groupe Speciale Mobline
- (GSM).
-
- What's interesting about the deal is that Ericsson has made the
- announcement about the contract rather than Vodafone. To date,
- after a surge of activity a few years ago, culminating in the
- opening of a pilot GSM network in the London area last year,
- Vodafone's activity on the GSM front has been noticeably quiet.
-
- The reason for this has been widely interpreted as due to a
- slackening of demand for mobile telephony in the UK, as the
- existing analog networks -- operated by Cellnet and Vodafone -
- have reached saturation levels in terms of market penetration.
- The GSM technology, Newsbytes notes, was designed before the
- current recession hit Europe.
-
- Although Vodafone has yet to confirm the contract, Ericsson
- officials have said that the contract calls for them to supply
- Vodafone with switching equipment and associated telecoms
- hardware for use on the GSM network. Ericsson has confirmed
- that some of its technology will also be supplied for use on the
- micro-cellular networks, a city-based mobile phone technology
- that Vodafone has yet to reveal its plans for.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920624)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00015)
-
- Bull, Olivetti & Siemens Form Joint Venture Company 06/24/92
- PARIS, FRANCE, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Bull of France, Olivetti of
- Italy, and Siemens of Germany have announced plans to form a
- new company -- Trans European Information Systems (TIES) -- a
- joint venture company involved in the field of wide area networks
- within Europe.
-
- Plans call for TIES to be based in Brussels, although offices
- may be located throughout Europe, company officials said.
- Specifically, the new company will supply distributed network
- technology for companies and governments wanting to link
- different computer systems around Europe.
-
- Andre Chuffart, a senior manager with Bull, will become the
- managing director of TEIS, when it becomes operational at the
- end of this year. Plans call for the three companies, each of
- which will have an equal stake in TEIS, to pool their existing
- contracts for the provision of European networking. According
- to Bull, TEIS will aim to secure 50 percent of the European data
- and voice networking market within a short space of time.
-
- Newsbytes notes that all three companies are at the planning
- stages only with TEIS, so precise financial arrangements have
- yet to be agreed. Full company details will be announced later
- this year, officials with Bull told Newsbytes.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920624)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00016)
-
- Russia: On-line Service Launched In St Petersbourg 06/24/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Another information
- system is available for business users in St Petersbourg, Russia.
-
- The commercial information service has "on sale" and "wanted"
- classified ads, business offers, a fully searchable database,
- a local and national press digest, and local trade news.
-
- The database is being offered on-line by the PIRS company. The
- company said the service gives real opportunity in the market
- because there are so few on-line services available. The service
- has a "very reasonable" pricing structure. It carries nothing
- related to leisure activities.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920623/Press contact: PIRS, Andrey
- Swetashow, phone +7 812 272-37-77)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00017)
-
- Russia: Overview Of Local Financial Telecom Projects 06/24/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Several companies have
- formed the local Data Security Business Network (KABIT) and have
- released the research on local developments in the financial
- telecommunications market.
-
- Igor Pasynkov, one of KABIT strong supporters, said that the
- major problems of having a locally-developed electronic banking
- system, a highly secure electronic signature, data communication
- systems, and an electronics securities market, are all being
- actively addressed by the number of local companies.
-
- ExNet and SET Blits, which comprise of a number of exchanges and
- trading houses have already had their own electronic trading
- systems up and running for months.
-
- Business information is now available via newly-born information
- services. It is also planned for some, not yet developed, media
- such as teletext and satellite TV back channel data transmission.
-
- Rinako (a Russian Investment Shareholders Company) is fighting
- to build the communications and organizational infrastructure
- for the primary and secondary securities market, and has already
- established the "electronic shares depositarium" -- a distributed
- computer-based register of shareholders.
-
- The Russian telecommunications market has already solved the
- problem of having electronic mail gates with telex, fax, and
- paper mail, which does not require complicated tech systems.
-
- The Russian Central Bank is organizing, without any official
- statements, an international tender to build a financial
- communications network in the country. Up to eight companies
- and consortiums are competing for the big business to be offered
- by the bank. According to Newsbytes sources, the bank is close
- to a final selection.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920623/Press Contact: Kabit, Igor
- Pasynkov, e-mail igph@igp.msk.su; phone +7 095 196-53-62)
-
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00018)
-
- ****Saudi Arabian Group Wins UPI 06/24/92
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Middle East
- Broadcasting Centre Ltd., a London-based group owned by
- Saudi Arabian investors, is the new owner of United Press
- International. The group submitted a bid of $3.95 million cash
- for the wire service, edging out New York lawyer Leon Charney's
- $3.75 million bid, plus 10 percent of the new company's equity.
- The Saudis are expected to put another $10-12 million into the
- company in an attempt to return it to profitability.
-
- Charney had won a supposed stand-still agreement from UPI
- creditors to examine the company's books, and spent about
- $360,000 on payroll costs while doing so. He worked with a
- charity backed by Dutch lottery proceeds, and a number of
- investment bankers, in preparing his bid. He said after the
- hearing UPI had violated that agreement, but the court disagreed.
- Charney also wondered aloud whether Saudis would retain UPI's
- reputation for fairness. Representatives of the group said they
- would, and insisted they're not affiliated with the government
- there.
-
- Bankruptcy court judge Francis Conrad, whose open auction for
- the service last month in Rutland, Vermont, was won by Pat
- Robertson, conducted the tense negotiations leading to MEB's
- win in his New York courtroom. The deal is due to close June 27.
- The company has already put up $200,000, and on that date will
- add another $3.93 million in the form of a letter of credit. Since
- UPI creditors were owed about $60 million in unpaid bills,
- however, and the company listed total assets of $22 million in
- its bankruptcy filing,. the creditors are expected to get just
- pennies on the dollar.
-
- Sandra Reimer, an attorney for Middle East Broadcasting, said
- representatives of the company would soon fly to the United
- States from London to meet with UPI management. Both Executive
- Editor Steve Geimann and Wire Service Guild President Kevin Keane
- said they accepted the result. Conrad expressed his sympathy for
- the employees, who have taken a series of pay cuts over the last
- 17 months to keep the company operating, saying: "They must be
- living in Dante's hell,"
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920624)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00019)
-
- Consolidation Continues In US Phone Service Business 06/24/92
- TAMPA, FLORIDA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Consolidation
- continues to be the rule in the US phone services business.
-
- The alternative operator business, which emerged in the mid-
- 1980s as firms took control of pay phones and re-sold services
- through them, is a classic example.
-
- Once there were hundreds of such companies. Many were accused
- of doubling or tripling rates paid at pay phones or in hotels, hiding
- the charges in victims' charge card bills. Today, you must be given
- access to the long-distance service of your choice, major phone
- companies like AT&T have educated the public on their options, and
- the pickings are slimmer. Hence, rapid consolidation.
-
- The latest move in that area comes from Southnet, a Tampa
- company best known for its international calling card. After
- some skirmish with its own board, the company closed on Telecom
- America, more than doubling its business in one move. Now it has
- bought the assets of Fone America, another alternative operator
- service or AOS company, out of bankruptcy. The transaction was
- valued at $7.5 million, and Fone America had sales of $15 million
- per year. Southnet now estimates it does business in 33 states
- and projects annual revenues of $24-26 million.
-
- Also, LDDS Communications of Jackson, Mississippi, which has a
- pending merger with Advanced Telecommunications of Atlanta
- which will create the country's new fourth largest long-distance
- company, said it has bought TFN Group Communications, a long
- distance reseller, as well as Telemarketing Investments, a long
- distance provider, for an undisclosed amount of cash.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920624/Press Contact: Robert J. Zradicka,
- Southnet, 813-287-2880)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00020)
-
- Bert Roberts Takes Over MCI 06/24/92
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- As expected, Bert
- Roberts was named chairman of the board of MCI Communications,
- replacing the late William McGowan.
-
- Roberts was already chief executive officer. Daniel F. Akerson,
- chief operating officer, was named to the additional post of
- president, formerly held by Roberts. The board also named
- Akerson and Richard T. Liebhaber, chief strategy and technology
- officer, to serve on the company's board of directors.
-
- Roberts, 49, joined MCI in 1972. He is a native of Kansas City,
- Missouri, and a graduate of Johns Hopkins University in
- Baltimore. Akerson, 43, has been with MCI since 1983. Liebhaber,
- 56, joined MCI in 1985, after holding various executive positions
- with IBM Corporation.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920624/Press Contact: MCI Corporate News
- Bureau, or 202-887-3000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00021)
-
- ****AT&T Licenses Key PCMCIA Technology 06/24/92
- APTOS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- AT&T has licensed
- some key Personal Computer Memory Card International Association,
- or PCMCIA, technology from Dr. Neuhaus, a leading European
- manufacturer of advanced semiconductor technologies based in
- Hamburg, Germany. Specifically, AT&T will use Dr. Neuhaus'
- PCMCIA-compliant bus interface chip design in its newest chipset
- for PCMCIA-compatible V.32bis modems.
-
- The DNE 5001 design is an application-specific integrated
- circuit, or ASIC, and is fully compliant with the PCMCIA
- standard release 2.0, which allows for input and output. PCMCIA
- represents over 200 major manufacturers and OEMs (original
- equipment manufacturers) worldwide.
-
- According to Intel, virtually all new mobile computers released
- in 1993 will have at least one PCMCIA slot. These IC (integrated
- circuit) slots will accept function cards like modems which are
- just 5 millimeters thick, and the size of a credit card.
-
- Because the DNE 5001 complies with PCMCIA release 2.0, it allows
- the operation system and application software resident on a smart
- card to execute in place from the ROM or "flash memory" on the
- card, rather than first having to be loaded into the host
- computer's random access memory. This reduces the need for large
- amounts of RAM on palm-tops and handheld computers, giving OEM
- manufacturers the opportunity to minimize overall system size and
- cost.
-
- Dr. Gottfried Newhaus, president and founder of the firm. said
- in a press statement that: "When a company like AT&T
- standardizes on a specific PCMCIA interface solution, it gives
- other manufacturers the confidence they need to produce many
- more products for this brand-new technology. Ultimately, that
- means more affordable products for consumers."
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920624/Press Contact: Dr. Neuhaus,
- 408/685-0928)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00022)
-
- Correction: Tandy Mobile Phones 06/24/92
- FORT WORTH, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- In a recent
- story on an agreement between Nokia and Tandy to produce
- mobile phones in the US, Newsbytes indicated that Tandy would
- make phones for Nokia. In fact, the new joint venture, called TNC,
- will produce the phones, to be distributed under the Tandy, Nokia,
- and Technophone brand names -- the latter is wholly-owned by
- Nokia.
-
- Also, Newsbytes called Nokia "a money losing maker of cellular
- phones." The statement may be considered misleading. In fact,
- Nokia is the second-leading provider of cellular phones worldwide,
- behind only Motorola, and makes money in its cellular phone
- business. Based on an interim financial statement from the
- company dated June 18, Nokia mobile phone sales are up 18
- percent over the same period a year ago, making the operation
- the "star" of the Nokia Group. The group as a whole, which is
- engaged in other businesses, has lost money in recent years,
- however.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920624/Press Contact: Paul McKeon, for
- Newsbytes, 404-698-8650)
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TOR)(00023)
-
- ****Open Software Foundation Updates OSF/1 06/24/92
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) --
- Compatibility and compactness are highlights of OSF/1 Release 1.1,
- the latest version of the Open Software Foundation's Unix operating
- system. Due to begin shipping June 26, OSF/1 Release 1.1 updates
- one of the two major Unix versions, introduced in October, 1990.
-
- Scalability enhancements in the new version enable OSF/1 Release
- 1.1 to run on systems with as little as four megabytes (MB) of
- memory. Joe Maloney, technology manager for OSF/1, told Newsbytes
- the new release uses dynamic configuration capabilities to load and
- unload major subsystems, such as networking components or a
- System V file system, as needed. The previous release of OSF/1
- needed about eight MB of memory, Maloney said.
-
- OSF/1's ability to run in less memory comes close on the heels of
- the announcement that Unix System V Release 4.2, the chief rival
- to OSF/1, has also been slimmed down to fit in about four MB of
- memory. Unix System Laboratories made that announcement only
- days before OSF's unveiling.
-
- OSF/1 Release 1.1 also offers compatibility with the System V
- Interface Definition, SVID 3. Maloney said this means applications
- written for System V Release 4 will run on OSF/1 with a simple
- recompile, and vice versa. Release 1.1 provides SVID 3
- compatibility for base and kernel extensions, including a SVID 3
- compatible STREAMS implementation.
-
- OSF/1 is also fully compliant with POSIX 1003.1-1990, ANSI C, XPG3,
- and other international standards. Maloney said OSF/1 1.1 also
- complies to POSIX draft standards wherever they are "stable enough
- to implement to."
-
- The new release also has Extended Unix Codes (EUC) to support
- international languages, including idiographic languages such as
- Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. This means application developers
- will not have to rewrite their application code to support
- different languages, OSF officials said. The new release also
- conforms to the X/Open XPG4 draft specification for wide-character
- interfaces.
-
- The new release includes performance enhancements, especially in
- the areas of virtual memory, Network File System, and the loader,
- the OSF said.
-
- Parallel development continues in the OSF Research Institute on
- the OSF/1 Microkernel technology, now available in snapshot form
- to OSF/1 licensees.
-
- The Release 1.1 tape includes reference implementations for three
- architectures: Intel 302 (based on the 80386 processor); Digital
- DECstation 3100 (based on MIPS Computer chips); and the Encore
- Multimax (based on National Semiconductor processors).
-
- OSF/1 Release 1.1 costs $85,000 for a source license with full
- distribution rights, or $60,000 for a source license only.
- Existing source licensees may upgrade from Release 1.0 for
- $25,000. Licensees who full support contracts will receive the
- upgrade without charge as part of their support services.
- University site licenses cost $5,000.
-
- Binary royalty fees remain at $65 per copy, with volume discounts
- available. The price to upgrade non-distribution source licenses to
- full redistribution rights remains $35,000.
-
- Several computer vendors are already committed to implement the
- new release on their hardware, Maloney said. They include: Intel,
- which will put OSF/1 on its Paragon parallel supercomputer; Digital
- Equipment, which will implement it on its Alpha systems and its
- MIPS-based workstations; Apple, which will use OSF/1 in its A/UX
- 4.0 Unix variant; IBM, with its AIX/ESA mainframe Unix and its AIX
- 3.2 for RS/6000 workstations; Hewlett-Packard with its OSF/1
- Technology Release; Hitachi; workstation manufacturer Intergraph;
- Convex with its MPP system; and Kendall Square Research with its
- KSR-1 implementation.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920624/Press Contact: Diane Rezendes, OSF,
- 617-621-8772)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00024)
-
- Phoenix To Go Retail With Communications Software 06/24/92
- NORWOOD, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Phoenix
- Technologies has announced modem and facsimile communications
- software which the company will sell not only to other
- manufacturers but through retail channels, a break with Phoenix's
- history.
-
- The company that developed the first basic input-output system
- (BIOS) compatible with that of the IBM personal computer, making
- it possible for other companies to build IBM-compatible PCs, has
- built its products on that BIOS and other software for PC
- manufacturers. It has never sold its products directly to PC users.
-
- The latest products, PhoenixFax facsimile software and
- PhoenixData modem communications software, are available now
- to PC manufacturers and makers of fax cards and modems. This
- fall, Phoenix plans to begin selling PhoenixFax through retail
- channels.
-
- PhoenixFax incorporates PhoenixData, company spokesman Michael
- Deutsche said. PhoenixData is available as a separate product to PC
- and modem makers, but may or may not be offered as a retail
- product.
-
- Phoenix sees retailers as another way of reaching PC users,
- Deutsche said. If a corporate microcomputer manager buys a PC,
- modem, or fax cards that comes bundled with Phoenix software, he
- or she may want the same software for other machines in the
- organization. Making the software available through retailers will
- make that possible, Deutsche said.
-
- To bring the products to the retail market, Phoenix plans to draw
- on the retail distribution channels of Quadtel, the Costa Mesa,
- California company that it acquired in March. In addition to
- manufacturing BIOS software as Phoenix does, Quadtel has a line
- of memory management products sold through retail channels.
- However, the Phoenix products will be sold under the Phoenix
- name, not Quadtel's, Deutsche said.
-
- The company plans further communications software
- announcements in the next few months, officials said.
-
- PhoenixFax is available for DOS and for Microsoft Windows.
- PhoenixFax for Windows makes it possible to send a fax from any
- Windows application program by capturing printer output, and
- installs directly into Window's Print Manager. PhoenixFAX for DOS
- is a memory-resident program, which also offers application
- print capture and can fax files directly off the hard disk.
-
- PhoenixData uses the Hayes AT command set, and handles the
- Xmodem, Ymodem, and Zmodem protocols. PhoenixData can emulate
- ANSI, TTY, VT100, and other standard terminal protocols, the
- manufacturer said.
-
- Phoenix also announced an alliance with Calera Recognition
- Systems, a maker of optical character recognition software.
- Phoenix will offer Calera's FaxGrabber software, which
- converts incoming faxes into editable text, with PhoenixFax
- for Windows. FaxGrabber for Phoenix will be available July 15,
- the company said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920624/Press Contact: Michael Deutsche,
- Phoenix,617/551-4184; Eric Enge, Phoenix, 617-551-4287)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00025)
-
- Easel Announces Technology Partnerships 06/24/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Easel,
- maker of application development tools for client/server
- computing, has announced a string of alliances with systems
- integrators and other software developers.
-
- Easel has joined the cooperative marketing programs of two
- leading vendors of client/server database systems. The company
- joined Oracle's Independent Software Vendor Program and Sybase's
- Synergy Partners Program. These are in addition to a similar
- relationship with Microsoft, under its SQL Solutions Partners
- Program, that dates back to November, 1990. Easel also has a
- cooperative relationship with IBM.
-
- Agreements with development tool vendors Bachman Information
- Systems and Pioneer Software are aimed at ensuring that products
- from Easel and the two other companies continue to work together,
- said Douglas Clauson, an Easel spokesman.
-
- Easel is working with database connectivity vendors Information
- Builders, Micro Desisionware, TechGnosis, and TechSmith, to
- provide product links that allow Easel customers to build
- applications that draw on data from across an organization. Easel
- has also signed a cooperative marketing agreement with Micro
- Decisionware.
-
- A new EDA/SQL Option for Easel Workbench, Easel's flagship
- development system, will work with Information Builders' EDA/SQL
- Link to provide transparent access to data on almost any hardware
- platform, the company said.
-
- Two systems integrators, SHL Systemhouse and Price Waterhouse,
- will market Easel's products and use them internally, Clauson said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920624/Press Contact: Douglas Clauson, Easel,
- 617-221-3088)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00026)
-
- ****Microsoft Intros Pen-Based Windows For Desktops 06/24/92
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Microsoft
- Corporation has unveiled a pen-based version of the Windows
- operating system which will allow desktop personal computers
- to use pens and tablets.
-
- Microsoft said the new edition of Windows for Pen Computing,
- which it unveiled at the PC Expo show running in New York City
- this week, can be used in a regular IBM-compatible computer
- equipped with a peripheral device called a tablet. The user writes
- or draws on the tablet with a special stylus, or pen. Most pen-based
- computers already introduced do not have a keyboard, and the user
- writes or draws directly on the display screen. The portable
- pen-based systems are primarily for use in applications such as
- inventory control and tasks such as filling out forms.
-
- Thirteen manufacturers of desktop peripheral devices say they will
- offer the Windows operating system for pen computing with their
- tablets, including SMART Technologies, ACECAD, Calcomp, Summa
- Graphics, Wacom, and Arthur Dent Associates.
-
- Microsoft spokesperson Kim Wolfkill told Newsbytes that the
- tablets use an extension to Windows 3.1. He said that the technology
- gives the desktop user the opportunity to experiment with Windows
- for Pen Computing without having to buy a computer make
- specifically for pen use.
-
- Wolfkill said pens for some of the digitizer tablets are cordless,
- while other connect via a cable. Prices, according to Wolfkill run
- a wide gamut, from $130 to about $2,000.
-
- In response to a question from Newsbytes, Wolfkill said products
- from competitors such as Wordperfect will be able to take advantage
- of Pen for Windows on a desktop, since the pen becomes a substitute
- for the mouse in most cases.
-
- One of the most interesting devices he described was a digitizer
- tablet from Arthur Dent Associates that clips over the existing
- display of a notebook or laptop screen, on which the user writes or
- draws with the pen. The $595 device includes the digitizer, the
- "tethered" pen, and a controller card, and the software extension to
- Windows. Called WriteAway, the digitizer allows the user to turn
- the computer 90 degrees to write in the portrait mode.
-
- Arthur Dent Associates Chief Financial Officer Jonathan Huntington
- told Newsbytes that the company is exhibiting the Zeos 386+
- version of WriteAway at PC Expo. Asked about response from
- showgoers, Huntington said "Unbelievable! The phone has been
- ringing off the hook."
-
- Huntington said the Zeos 386+ version is expected to ship by the
- end of the month, as soon as FCC certification is received. So far,
- Huntington told Newsbytes that the company said plans Compaq
- LTE Lite and Toshiba versions next, and is working with other
- companies to offer OEM (original equipment manufacturer)
- versions.
- .
- The company told Newsbytes that they plan to offer a PCMCIA
- model next year, but said that each digitizer will still have to
- be customized for the manufacturer's screen.
-
- Also unveiled by Microsoft at PC Expo was an enhanced edition of
- its word processor Word for Windows with Microsoft's CD-ROM
- Bookshelf Reference Library integrated into the program.
-
- Bookshelf includes an encyclopedia, dictionary, thesaurus,
- Bartlett's Familiar Quotations,the Concise Columbia dictionary of
- Quotations, the Hammond World Atlas, and several other desktop
- reference publications. Microsoft spokesperson Russ Dorr told
- Newsbytes that registered owners of Word for Windows 2.0 can
- upgrade to the enhanced version for $99. Owners of earlier
- versions can get the Bookshelf version for $199.
-
- To use the Bookshelf, you need Windows 3.1, a 386-based machine
- or better, a CD ROM drive, a hard disk, at least 2 megabytes of
- memory, and a VGA display. Microsoft recommends a pointing
- device, such as a mouse.
-
- Dorr told Newsbytes that shipment depends on the CD ROM
- production schedule, but is expected to start shipping in
- early July.
-
- In other Microsoft news, executive vice president Mike Maples
- confirmed that Windows NT, the "new technology" 32-bit version
- of the Windows operating system, is on schedule. Maples said the
- product would go to beta test sites in July and would be released
- by the end of the year.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920623/Press contact: Kim Wolfkill, Waggener
- Edstrom for Microsoft, 206-637-9097, Reader contact: Microsoft,
- 800-426-9400)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00027)
-
- ****HP Buy TI's Unix-based Computer Business, Jobs Lost 06/24/92
- DALLAS, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Texas Instruments has
- announced that it has signed a letter of intent which will allow
- Hewlett-Packard to buy TI's worldwide computer systems and
- services business.
-
- Terms of the deal were not disclosed, however TI said the
- transaction is not expected to have a material financial impact
- on either company.
-
- TI's Terri West told Newsbytes that the sale and support of the
- Unix-based multiuser computers employs about 1,600. West said
- about 450 of those would go to HP, with the fate of the remainder
- uncertain. West said that some would be offered jobs in other TI
- divisions, and some might be offered positions with HP.
-
- Asked about the existing network of TI value-added resellers. West
- told Newsbytes that HP hopes they will remain within the system.
- "That's (the VAR network) one of the reasons HP was interested,"
- said West.
-
- West said one plant would close in Houston, where about 500
- employees work. A second plant in Houston will remain open. West
- said that most affected employees are in the Houston and Austin,
- Texas area, as well as Europe, so job cuts for employees who do not
- find other positions within TI or with HP will be felt hardest in
- those area.
-
- The sale does not take TI out of the computer business. West
- pointed out that the company will continue to market notebook
- computers, printers and other peripherals, software,
- telecommunications systems, and process automation systems.
- TI VP John White said the company will concentrate on software
- productivity tools, as well as on hardware, "where we have a
- sustainable competitive advantage."
-
- According to HP Executive VP Lewis Platt, the purchase, "is the
- latest step in our strategy to aggressively expand our position in
- the commercial Unix market." Platt said the acquisition will
- accelerate HPs momentum in the Unix arena by providing access
- to new markets through TI's VAR network.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920624/Press contact: Terri West, TI, 214-995-
- 3481; Andrew Ould, HP, 415-857-2367)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00028)
-
- ****Digital World: Radius Announces Videovision 06/24/92
- BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Radius has
- announced a product at the Digital World show in Beverly Hills that
- company officials say could revolutionize the video production
- industry. The product is a hardware and software combination for
- the Macintosh called Videovision.
-
- Videovision is designed to be used with Quicktime, announced at
- Digital World last year by Apple, and allows flicker free 24-bit
- "printing" to a blank video tape via connection with a video cassette
- recorder (VCR) of a multimedia presentation that includes computer
- graphics, text, analog video, digital video, and sound. Radius
- President Barry James Folsom said the product could create a
- cottage industry video tape production industry the way the laser
- printer created a desktop publishing boom.
-
- John Scully was on hand for the announcement of Videovision and
- likened the introduction of the product to the crucial strides in the
- desktop publishing market that made it take off. Scully said in 1985
- they (Apple) couldn't get anyone interested in desktop publishing,
- but after they introduced the laser printer, by 1986 they couldn't
- make the hardware fast enough.
-
- The Videovision card comes with a "Breakout Box" as Folsom describes
- it, that looks much like a power strip for electrical appliances. The
- Breakout Box has a row of connections for video and audio input,
- video and audio output, an external port that can support peripherals
- like video editing decks. Video input and output can be in the form
- of NTSC, PAL, and SECAM. The card has an R-bus connector for linking
- to other Nubus cards and allows for the attachment of third party
- add-on boards through H-bus connections.
-
- The company claims that, while other cards perform some of the
- functions of the Videovision card, no one competitor's card is
- capable of the flicker free "printing" to video tape, including the
- Video Spigot, the Nuvista card from Truevision.
-
- Folsom said Radius is expecting the market for video production to
- grow from the 1990 figure of $625 million to a $5 billion market by
- 1995. However, observers in the audience wondered when the company
- would offer the card for under $1,000, which is the price point for
- the Video Spigot and the accepted reason why the Video Spigot has
- penetrated the market. Folsom assured attendees the product's price
- will go down from its initial retail price of $2,399 in the six month
- period following its anticipated release in July of this year.
-
- However, the card also comes with Macromedia's new Action! 1.0,
- and Videoshop and The Image Bank CD from Diva. Action! is a tool
- for creation of multimedia presentations using templates to create
- animated presentations and is retail priced at $495. Videoshop is a
- software recording and editing tool for Quicktime movies retail
- priced at $595. The Image Bank CD Collection Volume 1 is a compact
- disc read-only memory (CD-ROM) with more than 300 professionally
- produced Quicktime movie clips, and over 100 music and sound
- effect files.
-
- Videovision fits into any Nubus slot of any Macintosh II, IIX, IIcx,
- IIci, or Quadra and can double as a 24-bit color frame buffer that
- can display photorealistic images from any application. The display
- capability eliminates the need for a separate display interface card.
- The display card supports any Macintosh compatible monitor in 640 x
- 480 display including the 13-inch Applecolor RGB, the Radius Color
- Pivot/LE, and the Radius Precisioncolor Display/20, the company
- added.
-
- When asked when Radius would create such a card for the IBM and
- compatible personal computer platform, company officials said
- Microsoft hasn't taken care of synchronization issues with dynamic
- media and until some standard emerges on the PC platform that
- does, Radius will wait.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920624/Press Contact: James Strohecker,
- Radius, tel 408-954-6828, fax 408-434-0770)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00029)
-
- ****Digital World: Sweet Pea, Apple's Alliance With Toshiba 06/24/92
- BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Apple has
- announced an alliance with Toshiba to create a multimedia player
- along the same lines as the personal digital assistants (PDA)
- announced last fall, but called Apple's Personal Interactive
- Electronics (PIE) and code named internally as "Sweet Pea." The
- announcement was made by Apple President John Scully at Digital
- World '92 in Beverly Hills, California.
-
- Scully said the development of the PIE "family" of products and a new
- operating system to go with them is the task of Kaleida, one of the
- newly formed joint ventures between IBM and Apple. Scully
- emphasized the new operating system will connect the PIEs to other
- computer platforms and act as a kernel on top of existing operating
- systems on multi-platforms to bring connectivity to multimedia.
- Four main products to be connected to the server were outlined by
- Scully as the Powerbook, the Newton, the multimedia player, and a
- planned electronic book form Apple is developing with Random House.
-
- The operating system, which was also referred to as Kaleida, will be
- the answer to the incompatibility problems between platforms in
- multimedia formats, Scully said. Scully talked about a server that
- would act as a connecting point between PDAs, computers, and PIEs.
-
- The server appears to be the foundation of this new interconnectivity
- and when asked by moderator Jonathan Seybold if Apple was planning
- to be both provider of the information hardware and a conduit for the
- information itself, Scully said Seybold was very perceptive. Scully
- said Kaleida is working on tools so current multimedia applications
- will play on anything. The tools Scully listed were: Script-X, a the
- single authoring language; a universal file format; runtime
- environment extensions; and its own consumer operating system that
- will support both Motorola 68000 family-based and Intel x86-based
- computers.
-
- Scully made many references to business and the corporate market
- and said the technology is aimed at the corporate and educational
- markets.
-
- Warner New Media, a division of Time Warner, in conjunction with
- the Apple announcement, announced plans to develop a variety of
- multimedia content titles for the new PIE multimedia player. Apple
- listed other companies at work on titles for the PIEs as Paramount
- and Claris.
-
- Scully responded to criticism leveled at the Apple/IBM ventures
- that nothing is happening by saying the projects the two companies
- are working on are at or ahead of schedule.
-
- In conjunction with the announcement of the PIEs, Apple and IBM
- announced the two companies have appointed Nathaniel Goldhaber
- as chief executive officer and announced a board of directors for
- Kaleida. Goldhaber, 44, is a principle in the venture capital firm
- of Cole Bilburne Goldhaber & Ariyoshi Management of Berkeley,
- California. Goldhaber sits on the boards of Shiva Corporation and On
- Technology, founded a University in his early 20s, and as part of the
- staff of the governor of the state of Pennsylvania was the first
- public official to be informed of the 3-Mile Island crisis of the
- 1970s.
-
- Equal numbers of Apple and IBM representatives form Kaleida's board
- of directors. The newly appointed members were announced as: Robert
- L. Carberry assistant general manager of Technology of IBM Personal
- Systems; Albert A. Eisenstat, secretary and executive vice president
- at Apple; Nubuo Mii vice president and general manager of Entry
- Systems Technology at IBM; and David C. Nagel senior vice president
- of the Advanced Technology Group at Apple. The Goldhaber will also
- be a member of the new board, Apple said.
-
- While Scully said no other board members are planned, additional
- announcements about executive positions are expected in the next
- 30 days. Cupertino is to be the initial location for Kaleida until
- permanent facilities in the San Francisco Bay area are found. About
- 35 people will form the initial employed group at Kaleida, Apple
- added.
-
- IBM also has a number of semiconductor projects going with Toshiba,
- according to Scully and hopes are the three companies will make a
- productive triangle. Both Apple and Toshiba have said each will
- release its own PIE multimedia player, much like Apple's deal with
- Sharp on the PDAs, and target delivery of the PIEs is projected for
- mid-1993, Apple said. Each company's version will only be sold in
- the US initially, Apple added.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920624/Press Contact: Brooke Cohan, Apple,
- 408-974-3019; Ted Kadoya, Toshiba, 212-308-2040; Jennifer
- Rogers, Warner New Media, 818-955-9999)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00030)
-
- Digital World: Emphasis On Convergence, Information Network 06/24/92
- BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- From Andy
- Grove of Intel to John Scully of Apple, everyone at the Seybold
- Digital World Conference in Beverly Hills, California is talking
- about convergence. Convergence is defined at the conference as
- the intersection of various technologies and services that until
- recently seemed unrelated.
-
- Andy Grove of Intel and the first speaker at the traditionally
- Macintosh gathering said convergence is the "next big thing." Grove
- is president and chief executive officer of the company that
- supplies the microprocessor chips for the IBM and compatible
- personal computers (PCs). While each speaker tended to divide the
- technologies that are converging a little differently, basically the
- convergence includes the intersection of telecommunications,
- analog communications (like video), consumer electronics, and
- the computer industry.
-
- The driving force behind the convergence is "pure greed," with each
- company forming alliances to get into the other guy's piece of the
- pie, Grove said.
-
- Grove asserted the IBM compatible PC is the infrastructure for the
- convergence and called the PC the "universal erector set." While the
- majority of the conference attendees were Macintosh users, 70 to 80
- percent by Jonathan Seybold's estimation of the raised hands in the
- audience, Grove was undaunted and jokingly called the Apple users
- "his majesty's loyal opposition," saying "...they have a place."
-
- As part of the convergence, the discussion of the need for a National
- Information Network was emphasized by Scully of Apple; Lucie
- Fjeldstad vice president and general manager of multimedia at IBM;
- and Richard Green president and chief executive officer of Cable TV
- Laboratories. Green said the cable companies already have a
- "tributary" in place for use in a National Information Network with
- the advent of the replacement of coxial cable with optical fiber. The
- fiber systems, which are replacing the coxial cable at an increasing
- rate, are capable of two-way communication and of targeting
- individual customers, Green emphasized.
-
- IBM's Fjeldstad talked about using the cable network already in place
- with a "set-top" box or a box that sits on top of the television that
- would be capable of gigabyte speeds for data transfer. Green alluded
- to the fact that the cable companies would expect such a box to do
- decompression of the data signals as well. Fjeldstad said IBM
- already has the architecture to produce such as set-top box and
- plans to license the technology of the box to others as well.
-
- Sony President Ron Sommer stepped away from the convergence
- issue to talk about the need for standardization. However, a member
- of the audience questioned Sony's sincerity and asked why the
- company's day-to-day activities, such as starting analog high-
- definition television and offering other new systems that are
- interoperable with existing composite systems, appeared as
- though the company were trying to slow down standardization.
-
- The final speaker, Allee Willis described as a renaissance artist by
- Jonathan Seybold, took the convergence from a different angle and
- said the technology has progressed enough for artists to move in
- and really do something different and exciting with it. Willis is an
- award winning song writer, artist, writer, and set designer. Willis
- has won numerous awards, including a Grammy in 1986 for Best
- Soundtrack for "Beverly Hills Cop," the American Film Institute's
- Directing Women's Award in 1991, and in 1990 an Ace Award for
- Art Direction for her work in designing the set for Shelley Duval's
- Disney Channel production of "Mother Goose Rock and Rhyme."
-
- Willis said the current multimedia she has seen at the show is
- boring. Artists are what is needed to make it warm, human, and
- funny to draw people into the experience the way people are
- drawn into the experiences in other media, such as film, she said.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920624)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LAX)(00031)
-
- ****Apple, IBM Info Providers On A National Cable Network? 06/24/92
- BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUN 24 (NB) -- Apple, IBM,
- and the cable television industry may be embarking on a new line of
- information services, if the visions of their leaders expressed at
- the Seybold Digital World Conference in Beverly Hills are accurate.
- Richard Green, president and chief executive officer of Cable TV
- Laboratories, likened the proposed National Information Network
- to the system of inter-state highways built by the US government
- after World War II.
-
- It appears IBM and Apple see themselves as companies that can
- move in and become the basis for a National Information Network.
- IBM's Vice President of Multimedia Lucie Fjeldstad, said she sees
- IBM as a service provider, not a hardware provider. Fjeldstad said
- IBM has already developed the architecture for a unit that would rest
- on top of a television set, a "set-top" box capable of gigabit speeds
- for data transfer that could be connected to the fiber optic cable
- network. Fjeldstad placed emphasis on the company's interest in
- licensing the set-top box technology.
-
- Apple's President John Scully said Apple plans to provide information
- "Servers" by mid-1993 that will talk to the Powerbook, the Newton,
- the newly announced multimedia player personal information system
- (PIE), and planned electronic books. Scully admitted Apple sees
- itself as a hardware provider and as a key player in the information
- technology network.
-
- Richard Green, president and chief executive officer of Cable TV
- Laboratories, emphasized the cable television network as an existing
- structure for the National Information Network. Fjeldstad said
- information could be delivered in a variety of ways or "flavors" just
- as shipping can be done in a variety of ways depending on the type of
- object shipped, the needs of the shipper, and the needs of the
- recipient.
-
- Andy Grove, president of Intel placed emphasis on just-in-time
- delivery of information to business. Grove said speed is of the
- essence in the information delivery process, and Scully, Fjeldstad,
- and Green placed emphasis on real-time delivery of multimedia
- information.
-
- The National Information Network as provided by Apple and IBM
- sounded very much like it could make the companies public utilities,
- like the electric or water companies. Both companies have placed
- emphasis on the fact they have the technology and are willing to
- license it to others, but maintaining control of the technology for
- themselves.
-
- However, other information networks are already in place, i.e. the
- telephone lines, for information exchange. A session entitled "The
- Telephone Company: Public Network or Information Provider?"
- explored the topic with speakers Ken Thompson and Robert Pepper
- of the FCC, Steve Case from American Online, Brewster Kahle of
- WAIS, and David Knight of Isocor.
-
- Recent announcements of products and services make
- the use of the existing telephone lines for an information network
- more plausible. AT&T has announced its video telephone, which
- allows sound and video to be transmitted to another like-unit over
- regular telephone lines, which be available for sale to consumers
- this summer. Many businesses are installing ISDN lines for transfer
- of data and voice over the same special telephone lines. Also
- graphical information services for computer users with modems,
- such as America Online and Prodigy are enjoying wide spread
- acceptance and use.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920624)
-
-
-