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- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00001)
-
- ****PenDOS 2.0 Unveiled Today 07/10/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A. 1992 JUL 10 (NB) -- Today,
- Communications Intelligence Corp., will announce the release of
- new version of its PenDOS operating system to the US, European
- and Japanese markets.
-
- Jeff Dao, director of applications engineering and product
- management, told Newsbytes that PenDOS 2.0 will be unveiled at
- Technologic Partners' Mobile '92 Conference. The action will
- represent the first time a pen operating environment has been
- released simultaneously to all three major pen markets, he
- emphasized.
-
- In announcing PenDOS 2.0, CIC will emphasize the product's
- localization to Japan, Dao indicated. As previously reported in
- Newsbytes, CIC is targeting the Japanese market, due to the market
- growth expected to emerge out of the difficulties involved in
- entering the Japanese language onto computer keyboards.
-
- Dao added that the latest version of PenDOS will be bundled with
- new and upgraded versions of two other CIC products: the
- Handwriter Recognition System and Handwriter Dynamic Verification
- system.
-
- PenDOS 2.0 will be available in a Japanese language edition, as
- well as in French, Spanish, German, and two styles of English:
- US and UK. The UK version will incorporate signs and symbols
- used in other European languages, whereas the US version will
- not, he explained. These will include the "double S" used in
- German and the accents used in French and Spanish.
-
- Among the other enhancements, the most noticeable will apply mainly
- to the Japanese version, which will incorporate new handwriting
- recognizers, as well a new front-end processor (FEP), a piece of
- software Dao said is as essential to a Japanese system as a
- spell checker is to a Western-style word processor.
-
- In Japanese versions of earlier CIC products, the user had to
- specify the use of either Roman characters, traditional Kanji
- Japanese characters, or Kana, a set of phonetic equivalents for
- Kanji, said Dao. But in the Japanese version of PenDOS 2.0, these
- three character sets are intermixed, enabling the user to move
- quickly from one to the other.
-
- The new FEP, developed by the Japanese software giant Just Systems,
- allows the user to write in Kanji, but employ Kana to find Kanji
- translations for any traditional characters that may have been
- forgotten, Dao told Newsbytes.
-
- NCR has already begun marketing PenDOS on the NCR 3125 NotePad
- computer in Japan, and CIC recently completed a licensing agreement
- granting software technology rights to NEC, another major pen
- hardware vendor based in Japan.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh 091092; Press Contact: Germaine Giola, CIC, tel
- 415-802-7888)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LAX)(00002)
-
- Prodigy To Offer Baby-sitters Club For Pre-Teens 07/13/92
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- The first "The
- Baby-sitters Club" was published by Scholastic in 1986 and a series
- of Babysitters Club books which grew out of that first book have
- become enormously popular with pre-teenage girls. Now Prodigy is
- offering the Baby-sitters Club as a Custom Choice feature with
- interactive games and activities based on the characters created in
- the series.
-
- The series is based on the adventures of a group of 11 to 13-year-
- old girls who together start a babysitting service in their
- neighborhood. In the story the girls publish the
- time and meet at the home of a girl who has her own telephone line
- so those looking for a babysitter can call one number and be assured
- of getting a babysitter.
-
- The Baby-sitters Club Custom Choice on Prodigy is also set up to
- facilitate electronic communication between fans of the series, play
- games, and send mail to the series author Ann M. Marin.
-
- Prodigy charges $5.95 a month extra, in addition to the $12.95
- monthly membership fee for access to the Baby-sitters Club. Prodigy
- says Baby-sitters Club merchandise will be sold on the forum and
- portion of the proceeds from the special merchandise sold will be
- donated to the Ann M. Martin Foundation, which is exclusively
- dedicated to benefiting children, education and literacy programs,
- and the homeless.
-
- Prodigy claims its members number more than 1.5 million now. The
- service already offers many family-oriented options such as access
- to encyclopedias and popular computer games such Broderbund's as
- "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?"
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920710/Press Contact: Steve Hein, Prodigy, tel
- 914-993-8789, fax 914-684-0278)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00003)
-
- UK Telecoms Trade Show Opens Up To The Public 07/13/92
- BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- After five years of
- being trade-only, the Telecoms Industry Association (TIA) has
- turned its September TIA Show into an end user business event.
-
- Armed with a UKP 100,000 promotional budget and the backing of
- Mercury Communications, the telecoms trade group plans to turn
- the Birmingham show into a rival for Networks, which is widely
- regarded as the premier telecoms show in the UK. Like Networks,
- the TIA Show, which is in its third year, is held at the
- Birmingham National Exhibition Centre.
-
- Frank Smith, head of The Edge Partnership, which is promoting the
- show, told Newsbytes that last year's 2,000-odd trade visitors to
- the three-day event spread thinly over the NEC's show floor. "By
- opening the show up to end users, we will turn the show into a
- positive event for the industry," he said.
-
- Smith added that floor space at the event is priced at UKP 145
- per square metre, which he claims is lower than the industry
- average.
-
- Smith reckons that, while the TIA event will be a rival to
- Networks '92, he does not view it as a competitor to Comms '92.
- "That show lacks any real focus," he said.
-
- Carol Carvalho, events organizer with the TIA, told Newsbytes
- that a decision to change the emphasis of the show was taken a
- couple of months ago. She rejected suggestions that flagging
- sales of exhibitor stand space had prompted the change, claiming
- that show bookings are well up, with the exhibitors list
- including major names such as Intel, Miracom, Panasonic, Philips,
- Plantronics and Rockwell.
-
- "We plan to have 5,000 people attend the show, which we are
- concentrating down to a two day event from its previous three
- days," she said.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920710/Press & Public Contact: The Edge Partnership
- - Tel: 0625-511966: Fax: 0625-614202)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(SFO)(00004)
-
- Database World: EDA/SQL Links With Mac Tools, Unix Servers 07/13/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Information
- Builders Inc. (IBI), has extended the reach of its EDA/SQL
- multivendor database access system to embrace three more Mac-based
- front-end SQL tools plus two more servers for Unix, as a result of
- agreements reached with Tactics International, Andyne Computing,
- Blyth Holding, and Pyramid Technology.
-
- The agreements with Tactics, Andyne and Blyth mean that EDA/SQL
- (Enterprise Data Access/Standard Query Language) now interfaces to
- 80% of all Mac-based SQL tools, according to John Senor, vice
- president of IBI's Enterprise Access Division. The Pyramid pact
- calls for EDA/SQL connectivity on Pyramid's MiServer T Series and
- MiServer S Series servers, in addition to stating that IBI and
- Pyramid will work jointly on systems integration for customers of
- either company, said Carl Rosenberg, director and general manager
- of IBI's Unix Division.
-
- Counting the software covered by the new arrangements, a total of
- 28 applications now have access to EDA/SQL, IBI officials reported.
- Launched last fall in support of IBM's Information Warehouse
- framework -- a strategy for providing multivendor database
- management systems, interfaces, tools and facilities throughout the
- enterprise -- EDA/SQL has since grown to enable access to some 60
- proprietary databases, residing in about 35 different operating
- environments.
-
- The latest agreements, announced last week at Database World,
- affect Andyne's GQL (Graphical Query Language) ad hoc query and
- reporting software, Tactics' Tactician GIS (geographic information
- system) front end, and Blyth's Omnis 7 applications development
- software, along with Pyramid's two series of Unix servers. GQL
- runs on Windows as well as the Mac, and will be able to access
- EDA/SQL from both platforms. Tactician and Omnis 7 operate on the
- Mac only.
-
- An IBI spokesperson told Newsbytes that the Andyne, Tactics, Blyth
- and Pyramid packages will all incorporate interfaces linked at the
- call level to the IBI system's API (applications programming
- interface)/SQL, one of two ways a tool can be connected. The other
- way consists of a Dynamic Extender, a separate module that forms a
- "bridge" between EDA/SQL and the application. Examples of the
- Dynamic Extender include DataLens for Lotus 1-2-3 and a recently
- announced extender to the OS/2 RDBMS (relational database
- management system), he said.
-
- Outside of the API/SQL and Dynamic Extender, other components of
- EDA/SQL are the EDA/SQL Server, which processes SQL requests
- against relational and nonrelational data, and EDA/Link, a modular
- system of communication interfaces.
-
- Andyne's GQL, one of the packages impacted by the IDI's new
- agreements, is an application that lets users query databases and
- create custom reports -- including logos, clip art and other
- graphics -- out of accessed information. The Windows and Mac
- versions of GQL each integrate seamlessly with popular spreadsheet
- and word processing programs, and third-party applications
- developed for the Mac can be run "as is" inside the Windows
- version.
-
- Cameron Thompson, president of Andyne, noted that the new EDA/SQL
- interface will let users import data from the system's 60 databases
- into other desktop applications, in addition to employing the data
- directly within GQL. Andyne will include support for EDA/SQL in
- upcoming editions of the Mac and Windows versions, slated for
- shipment later this year.
-
- Another of the programs, Tactician, is a GIS for marketing,
- executive information, and decision support applications, already
- in use by Sears Roebuck, Procter & Gamble, Du Pont, and several
- other Fortune 500 firms as well as by smaller businesses.
-
- Tony Buxton, president and CEO of Tactics International, told
- Newsbytes that an interface will be included in a version of
- Tactician the company is planning to release during the fourth
- quarter of 1992 or in early 1993.
-
- Michael Minor, president and CEO of Blyth Software, suggested that
- the link between Omnis 7 and EDA/SQL will allow companies to
- leverage their existing investments in Macintosh hardware and
- network products. "With Omnis and EDA/SQL, the CIO can make a
- decision without worrying about long-term implications or hardware
- or network purchases," he added.
-
- The IBI spokesperson told Newsbytes that other Mac-based products
- with direct EDA/SQL interfaces include the Data Access Manager for
- the Mac operating system, the Mac version of Microsoft's Open ODBC,
- and three third-party applications development programs:
- Spinaker's Hypercard Plus, Info Advantage's AXSYS, and XDB's XDB
- Link. The Windows version of Open ODBC also contains an interface
- to the system, he said.
-
- On the Unix side, EDA/SQL for the Pyramid MiServer T Series is
- already shipping, and availability for the Pyramid MiServer S
- Series is scheduled for the third quarter. Carl Rosenberg,
- director and general manager of IBI's Unix Division, explained
- that, through the API/SQL, users of multivendor EDA/SQL-enabled
- clients will be able to access the Pyramid servers as though the
- data were residing locally.
-
- In addition, he said, users of Pyramid servers will be able to
- access data on other Unix and non-Unix EDA/SQL-enabled servers, via
- an intelligent routing capability embodied in EDA/SQL. Pricing on
- the EDA/SQL Server for Pyramid is user based, ranging from $24,000
- to $118,500.
-
- Under the terms of Pyramid's agreement with IDI, systems
- integration for Pyramid and IDI customers will be supported by
- joint marketing activities and cooperation in supplying technical
- resources.
-
- All four of the product lines to be newly enabled with EDA/SQL come
- with pre-existing access to databases, adding to the pool of
- available information, the IBI spokesperson told Newsbytes. In the
- case of Omni, for example, these databases include Oracle, Sybase,
- Ingres, Informix, Teredata, Netware SQL, Rdb, DB2, SQL/DS,
- Microsoft SQL Server, and Tandem NonStop SQL.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920710/Press Contacts: William Madaras, IBI,
- tel 212-967-6406; Scott Rankine, Andyne, tel 613-548-4355; Paul
- Sedor, Tactics, tel 508-475-4475; Jeanne Bayless, Blyth Holdings,
- tel 415-312-7100; Beth Johnson, Pyramid, tel 408-428-8460)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00005)
-
- RISC-based PC Planned By NEC 07/13/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Japan's major PC
- maker NEC will release a RISC (reduced instruction set
- computing)-based PC, according to the Asahi newspaper. The
- reports says the new personal computer will also be equipped
- with Intel's super-fast 32-bit processor.
-
- The new RISC-based personal computer is expected to excel at
- processing graphic and scientific calculations. The RISC chip
- is expected to make the PC as powerful as a workstation.
-
- According to an NEC board director, the firm is currently doing
- market research on the demand for this type of hybrid computer,
- which is a combination of a personal computer and a workstation.
- NEC has made no other comment on the report.
-
- Currently, NEC is selling RISC-based workstations based on a
- license from MIPS Computer Systems in the US. Responding to the
- downsizing trend in computing, NEC will reportedly release
- this RISC-based personal computer. NEC still maintains 60%
- of the Japanese PC market with its PC-9801.
-
- In order to maintain compatibility with the existing PC-9801
- family, NEC will install Intel's "80586" 32-bit chip on its
- new RISC PC, according to the report. The Intel chip will
- also allow the PC to run the 13,000 existing applications
- for the PC.
-
- The biggest question mark may be the price. With two state-of-the-
- art processors, it's not expected to be cheap. Consequently, the
- PC will most likely to aimed at high-end users technical and
- scientific users.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920713/Press Contact: NEC, +81-3-3451-2974)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00006)
-
- Shin-Nittetsu May Enter Deal With Intel & TI 07/13/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Shin-Nittetsu, a major steel
- manufacturer, has been hammering out an agreement on semiconductor
- production with Intel and Texas Instruments. Shin-Nittetsu
- wants to produce a 16-megabit dynamic random access memory (DRAM)
- in an agreement with either Intel or TI.
-
- Shin-Nittetsu used to produce steel products but, due to the
- slump in the industry, has begun to shift its business toward
- semiconductors.
-
- Shin-Nittetsu has already created a silicon wafer production
- firm "Nittetsu Electronics" and a semiconductor research
- and development center in Sagamihara, Kanagawa Prefecture.
- Shin-Nittetsu needs the additional technological edge from
- either Intel or TI. If the deal is concluded with one of them,
- a 16-megabit DRAM will be produced at the semiconductor
- center. The firm will install a production line and hopes to
- manufacture 200,000 to 300,000 units of the chip per month '
- under the Shin-Nittetsu brand name.
-
- Japan's other steel makers have also entered the semiconductor
- and the personal computer markets. Kawasaki Steel is
- producing application specific ICs. Kobe Steel has created a
- joint venture with Texas Instruments and will ship chips
- under TI's brand name this fall. NKK will also ship static
- random access memory (SRAM) early next year.
-
- Actual production of the chip borne of a TI or Intel agreement
- is expected by next spring. Competition in the 16-megabit
- DRAM market is expected to be severe in the near future.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920713/Press Contact: Shin-Nittetsu, +81-
- 3-3242-4111)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00007)
-
- Kobe Steel Develops Japanese Option Tools For LAN Manager 07/13/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Kobe Steel is preparing
- to release optional products for Microsoft's Japanese
- LAN Manager 2.1. Kobe Steel is the software distributor of
- Microsoft.
-
- A Japanese version of LAN Manager will be released in
- August. Kobe Steel will develop the tools to connect
- Apple's Macintosh with remote access service (RAS). Also, the
- firm is developing Sony's Quarter L version of Japanese LAN
- Manager and will supply it to Sony on an OEM (original equipment
- manufacturer) basis. The Quarter L is an AX machine, which is
- a Japanese version of the IBM PC and can be used as a network
- server.
-
- Other Japanese personal computer firms including Mitsubishi
- Electric are also selling AX machines in Japan. Kobe Steel
- may sell other AX versions of Japanese LAN Manager in the near
- future.
-
- Kobe Steel is planning to release more peripheral software, mainly
- gateway products, for LAN Manager. Concerning the development
- of emulator programs, Kobe Steel has been jointly developing
- the products with Icon Technology in the US. Kobe Steel
- will release the Windows version this September and IBM's
- AS400 version in December.
-
- Kobe Steel will create software support and maintenance centers
- in Tokyo and Osaka. At these centers, the firm will provide
- consultation and service 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
-
- Kobe Steel expects to gross 10 billion yen ($80 million) in
- sales for fiscal 1995 for its computer and information business.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920713/Press Contact: Kobe Steel, +81-78-251-
- 1551)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00008)
-
- ****Agrippa - Unique Computer Novel From William Gibson 07/13/102
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Cyberpunk
- author William Gibson has been writing about future technology,
- but until now, his books were physically conventional paper and
- binding. Now, to borrow a phrase from Buckminster Fuller, his
- medium is also his message.
-
- "Agrippa: A Book of the Dead" by William Gibson and Dennis Ashbaugh,
- illustrates the intangible nature of memory as air exposure
- cause Agrippa's chemically treated etchings to change and a
- Macintosh disk with a story on it to hopelessly encrypt, once read.
-
- On the subject of memory and how it mutates and changes, the focal
- point is the story on the disk is William Gibson's father, who
- died when he was six. The title of the work is not from King
- Agrippa, a figure from Roman history, but instead is the label on
- the 1919 family photo album containing photos of Gibson's father.
-
- Agrippa comes in a case that resembles a laptop computer, with book
- inside surrounded by copper honey comb-shaped forms and cut-outs in
- the inside pages to contain a 3.5-inch floppy disk. The disk
- contains Gibson's story which is encrypted a scheme based on an RSA
- data encryption. The story can be read by a program which unencrypts
- the text on the fly and then self-destructs after one reading,
- leaving only the encrypted text on the disk. Once the reading of the
- text on the disk is started the story cannot be stopped, copied, or
- printed.
-
- A representative for the artists, Kevin Begos, told Newsbytes Gibson
- expects people to attempt to unencrypt the data or try to capture
- the story. Some people have already started on the task of breaking
- the encryption scheme and Begos said some are reportedly using the
- Touchstone Delta supercomputer at Cal Tech to do so. Others are not
- using high tech means to save the story. One poet whom Begos
- described as computer illiterate, said he would simply read
- the story aloud into a tape recorder.
-
- Agrippa costs $450 for a copy with reproductions of the etchings,
- $1,500 for the real etchings by Ashbaugh himself, and a $7,500
- edition offers velum binding, drawings by Ashbaugh, a custom box,
- and real etchings, Begos said. Only 10 copies of the $7,500 version
- are available, Begos added.
-
- No paper form of Agrippa will be available. However, a fiber optic
- transmission of the Gibson story is planned for September of this
- year to sites worldwide, Begos said. While an IBM and compatible
- personal computer (PC) version of Agrippa was planned, Begos said
- the preponderance of orders have been for the Macintosh version. "We
- just haven't gotten to the PC version yet," Begos added.
-
- Gibson is credited for coining the term "cyberspace" in his trilogy:
- "Neuromancer," "Count Zero," and "Mona Lisa Overdrive," published by
- Ace and Bantam Doubleday. "The Difference Engine," co-written with
- Bruce Sterling, was released in paperback in January of this year.
- Ashbaugh has been a Guggenheim Fellowship recipient and is known for
- his computer virus and DNA portrait paintings which have been
- acquired for the permanent collections of the Los Angeles County
- Museum, the Hirschorn Museum, and the Houston Museum of Fine Arts,
- and the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920713/Press Contact: Kevin Begos, tel/fax 212-
- 650-9324)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(HKG)(00009)
-
- New PCs: TI TravelMate Notebooks 07/13/92
- KOWLOON, HONG KONG, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Texas Instruments introduced
- the most powerful members of its TravelMate notebook computer
- family: the 486 based TravelMate 4000 WinSX and the TravelMate
- 4000 WinDX.
-
- Based on the latest Intel processors, the new TravelMates
- are optimized for Microsoft Windows and include both Windows 3.1
- and MS-DOS 5.0 pre-installed on the hard disk drive.
-
- The TravelMate 4000 series comprises three models: the TM4000
- WinSX/16, the TM4000 WinSX/25 and the TM4000 WinDX/25. Suggested
- list prices are HK$29,380 (US$3,767) for the TM4000 WinSX/16,
- HK$33,380 (US$4,280) for the TM4000 WinSX/25 and $37,380
- (US$4,792) for the TM4000 WinDX/25.
-
- Weighing less than 5.6 lb and measuring 8.5 in x 11 in x 1.8 in,
- the TravelMate 4000 notebooks are the lightest, smallest 486
- notebooks available. TI's new AC adapter makes it easy for users
- to pack AC power without being weighed down. Total travel weight
- including the battery, TravelPoint pointing device, and AC
- adapter, is under 6.6 lb.
-
- Benchmark tests show that the entry-level TM4000 WinSX/16 MHz
- processor is twice as fast as a 25 MHz 386SL processor.
-
- The TravelMate 4000 notebook computers have a new, higher
- contrast VGA display with a faster refresh rate to support an
- active Windows environment. The high resolution 640 x 480,
- 10-inch VGA display supports a 64-gray scale. All models
- support an external 640 x 480 color monitor, displaying
- simultaneously with the monochrome LCD.
-
- For graphics applications where higher resolution is required,
- a Super VGA monitor can be connected. The 25 MHz TM4000 models
- are the only 486 notebooks that can directly support
- resolutions of 1024 x 768 on external monitors.
-
- The TM4000 notebooks have been specifically engineered, in
- terms of both hardware and software, to make Windows applications
- run fast and smoothly, the company says. A TravelPoint pointing
- device is included. This unique, portable pointing device can
- be hand-held or attached to the notebook.
-
- The TM4000 notebooks solve the disappearing cursor problem
- found on most portables. Seven extra large, industry standard
- Windows cursors are provided to help users keep their place.
- Users can design their own cursors using a Change Cursor software
- utility.
-
- The BIOS has been optimized so users can power up into Windows in
- less than 30 seconds straight out of the box. Both quick entry
- and quick exit into and out of Windows are provided. When in
- Windows, users can begin their applications faster by using
- TI's new Drop 'N Go software utility, which saves time and
- battery life, TI claims.
-
- TI's Battery Pro software provides 4-5 hours of battery life.
- This fifth-generation battery conservation utility is compatible
- with Microsoft's Advanced Power Management. A new, high capacity
- Nicad battery also helps to extend battery life. In addition,
- the TM4000 Battery Gauge utility indicates remaining battery
- time at a glance.
-
- The TravelMate 4000 WinSX and WinDX are available this month.
-
- (Brett Cameron/1990712/Press Contact: Sharon Hampton, Texas
- Instruments, tel: +852-737 0338;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(HKG)(00010)
-
- Sunsoft Delivers Solaris 2.0 For SPARC 07/13/92
- WANCHAI, HONG KONG, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- SunSoft, a business
- unit of Sun Microsystems Inc., has announced the on-schedule
- shipment of the Solaris 2.0 software environment.
-
- Requiring more than 1,000 man years of development time, Solaris,
- according to Sun, is the first system software product to combine
- the features of high-performance computing - such as
- multitasking, multiprocessing, multithreading and network
- security - with the ease of use of a personal computer.
-
- Complying with major industry standards, Solaris, Sun contends,
- is the only software available today that provides a compatible
- path to next-generation object-based computing. Solaris 2.0
- will ship to customers worldwide in a special limited edition
- compact disc (CD) package - the Bill Joy Golden Edition.
- Signed by Unix pioneer and Sun co-founder Bill Joy, the gold
- CD encapsulates 32-bit power, industry-standard networking,
- a developer environment and a 3-D multimedia desktop.
-
- The Bill Joy Golden Edition will be shortly shipped to
- customers, including Toshiba, CompuAdd, Solbourne, and Tatung.
- These companies design computers based on the world's most
- widely used RISC microprocessor, SPARC.
-
- SunSoft also announced the shipment of the Solaris 2.0 OEM
- Multiprocessing Kit, a CD that allows system manufacturers to
- take advantage of the symmetric multiprocessing features offered
- in the Solaris kernel.
-
- The kit allows manufacturers to tune and verify the symmetric
- multiprocessing (SMP) features of Solaris for their specific
- hardware implementations. In addition, the Solaris 2.0
- Multiprocessing Kit brings symmetric multiprocessing to the
- volume commercial market, giving users the benefits of parallel
- processing at the desktop, Sun maintains.
-
- SPARC system manufacturers are aggressively moving to offer
- Solaris 2.0 on their computers, so says the company. Sun
- said that Solaris 2.0 is now available for all Sun workstations
- being shipped. Solaris 2.0 support for the symmetric
- multiprocessor desktops and servers, including the SPARCstation
- 10, SPARCserver 10 and SPARCserver 600 MP series, is scheduled
- for later this year. All future SMCC workstation and server
- products will be based on Solaris 2.0 and future Solaris releases.
-
- Intel X86-based systems accounted for 79.3 percent of total PCs
- shipped in 1991 according to IDC. Solaris has a run rate of more
- than 300,000 units per year. In addition, Solaris 2.0 inherits
- more than 4,000 SPARC applications, including popular packages
- from Lotus Development Corp, WordPerfect, Borland, Autodesk,
- Informix, Frame Technology and Oracle. Currently more than
- 700 software applications are in the Solaris 2.0 migration program,
- Sunsoft says.
-
- Solaris 2.0 is offered at a manufacturers suggested retail price
- of US$795 for desktop systems in single quantity. This price
- includes the full Solaris environment with networking,
- multiprocessing, multithreading, OpenWindows and DeskSet.
- SunSoft has also established an aggressive upgrade program
- for current OEMs of Solaris 1.0 to migrate to Solaris 2.0.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920712/Press contact: Swedee Chin, Sun, tel:
- +852-802 4188;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(HKG)(00011)
-
- Solaris For X86 Demonstrated For First Time 07/13/92
- WAN CHAI, HONG KONG, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Featured on CompuAdd,
- Dell, and Zenith Data Systems 486 Systems, the Solaris 2.0
- distributed computing software operated on 80X86-based computers
- in a demonstration sponsored by Hardware Reference
- Configuration in Hongkong recently.
-
- In related announcements, five new computer manufacturers
- intend to support Solaris on their 80X86 systems. NCR Corp.,
- Everex, Zenith, Olivetti, and ICL join a number of other hardware
- vendors planning to support Solaris for X86 including Dell, AST
- Research, CompuAdd, NetFRAME and Toshiba.
-
- "The momentum for Solaris on the X86 continues with our
- technology demonstration and with the addition of our new
- partners," said Janpieter Scheerder, vice president of
- engineering for Intel products at SunSoft. "It is clear that
- Solaris will be the first environment to unleash the full power
- of 386 and 486-based systems."
-
- Demonstrated on Solaris were three personal productivity apps
- from Island Graphics Corp.: Island Write, Island Paint and Island
- Draw. SunPro also showed software compilers. Numerous other
- products will be available soon as applications written for
- Solaris on SPARC need only to be recompiled to run on 80X86
- platform. In fact, the port of the Island products to Solaris
- on X86 took only a few days, Island Graphics reports.
-
- Solaris for X86 will be made available to key partners throughout
- the summer. An early access version for software developers is
- intended to be made available by the third quarter this year.
- SunSoft also announced the hardware that will be supported by
- Solaris for X86.
-
- Historically, the PC market has been based on the 80X86
- family of processors running 8 or 16-bit system software, the
- "traffic cop" which directs a computer's basic functions. With
- the advent of 32-bit 386 and 486-based computers, traditional
- 16-bit system software has not delivered the benefits of these
- architectures to users.
-
- SunSoft announced Solaris for 80X86 computers in Sept., 1992 to
- close the "gap" between hardware and system software.
-
- With the introduction of Solaris for X86, SunSoft unites the
- world's most widely used RISC and CISC computers with a single
- environment, thereby, it contends, greatly reducing system
- administration and user training costs while increasing
- individual and workgroup productivity.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920712/Press contact: Swedee Chin, Sun, tel:
- +852-802 4188;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(HKG)(00012)
-
- Oracle Revenues Up 25% In 4Q 07/13/92
- WAN CHAI, HONG KONG, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Oracle Corporation says
- fourth quarter revenue increased 25 percent, from $287 million
- last year to a record $360 million at the end of fiscal 1992.
-
- Reflecting a strong growth in license and services revenue, net
- income for the fourth quarter which ended on 31 May, 1992,
- increased to $28.8 million. This compares to net income of
- $5.5 million for the same period last year when the company
- recorded $20 million in pre-tax charges.
-
- Revenues for fiscal 1992 were also up, reaching $1.18 billion
- compared with US$1.03 billion in fiscal 1991. Net income for
- fiscal 1992 was $61.5 million, compared to the $12.4 million
- loss recorded last year.
-
- This is the sixth consecutive quarter that the company has
- strong balance sheet improvements. Cash flow for the fourth
- quarter was $76 million, with the total for fiscal 1992 reaching
- $161 million, compared to the negative cash flow of $15 million
- in fiscal 1991.
-
- "We achieved a considerable turn-around in our balance sheet and
- earnings in fiscal 1992, while at the same time meeting our goals
- for product quality and investment in technology," said Henry
- Chan, sales director for Oracle Systems Hong Kong Ltd. "We
- enter fiscal 1993 with a healthy and growing cash position,
- solid long-term financing, no bank debt and an improving cost
- structure."
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920712/Press Contact: Karen Wan, Oracle,
- Tel:+852-824 0118;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(HKG)(00013)
-
- HK Container Terminal Installs ICL Mainframe 07/13/92
- TSIMSHATUI, HONG KONG, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- International
- Computers Hong Kong Ltd (ICL) has signed a contract with Hong Kong
- International Terminals (HIT), said to be the world's largest
- privately owned container terminal, to supply and upgrade computer
- equipment that will help handle HIT's future growth.
-
- Although the total investment has not been disclosed by HIT,
- ICL's list price for the new hardware is over HK$150 million
- ($19.23 million), which is claimed to represent the largest
- deal ever struck of its kind in Hong Kong.
-
- The relationship between ICL and HIT started in 1985 with the
- automation of HIT's container handling facilities on an ICL
- mainframe-based system. In the new agreement HIT is allowed
- to trade in their old system and upgrade to two of ICL's
- recently launched series 39 SX 580/20 mainframe systems.
- Each system consists of two main processors, and 128 MB
- of on-board storage. The balance of the order comprises
- various peripherals and high capacity disk drives.
-
- The signing occurred nine months after the planning and
- research for the on-line system went ahead. Richard Pearson,
- HIT's deputy managing director, told Newsbytes that "we wanted
- to be sure of everything before we signed the contract."
- ICL spent six months from October 1991 to March 1992
- conducting experiments and investigations.
-
- "We had to have everything ready by Chinese New Year (March),
- when the terminal took its annual three-day break," Dennis
- Haynes, president, Asia headquarters, ICL, told Newsbytes.
-
- It is standard practice in Hong Kong for terminals to run 24
- hours a day, seven days a week with only one three-day break
- per year. According to HIT's operations general manager, Mike
- Booth, "It is absolutely vital that the computer system provides
- continuous, round the clock operations."
-
- Last year HIT saw its transaction volume increase by 30 percent
- which was 10 percent higher than expected.
-
- "We handle about 15,000 container movements a day, involving many
- ships, thousands of vehicles and millions of computer transactions,"
- Mr Booth told Newsbytes. "Simply keeping track of that kind of
- traffic is a monumental job that can only be handled by a very
- powerful computer facility."
-
- Fulfilling HIT's need for a fail-safe system, the dual-processor
- systems will be housed in separate buildings to reduce any
- possibility of downtime. Each of the sites is a mirror image
- of the other and connections are via high speed fiber optics.
- In case of failure of any part of the system, another will
- immediately take over.
-
- The new system is expected to handle tremendous growth well into
- the 21st century as well as accommodate the opening of a new
- terminal in 1994.
-
- The new system also focuses on the trend towards open systems.
- HIT committed to an open systems path using Unix. ICL is
- claimed to be unique, offering open systems framework for
- all its equipment.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920712/Press contact: Garry Scarborough,
- International Computers Hong Kong Ltd. Tel: +852-586 2988;HK time is
- GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(SYD)(00014)
-
- Australia: Report Attacks IBM In Defense Contract 07/13/92
- CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- The Joint Committee
- of Public Accounts in Australia has issued a report highly
- critical of the Australian Defense Department's Desine
- contract. It says that the contract with IBM should not be
- renewed.
-
- Already ten years old, the Desine project has been far from
- smooth, with constant claims that it was too narrow in scope, and
- not conducive to Australian content, despite government
- guidelines to this effect. In particular, the contract is claimed to
- lock-in proprietary IBM equipment and exclude open systems.
-
- Both IBM and Defense Department officials have attacked the
- report saying not only has it trivialized a very complex project,
- but that it was full of factual errors. They also claim that the
- report has the feel of "marketing hype" from vendors who missed
- out on the deal.
-
- The report isn't merely critical, but strongly attacks the viability
- of the project, saying it doubts that the systems will be able to
- evolve and integrate with future technologies. It says that "the
- department's commitment to IBM and in particular IBM's Systems
- Application Architecture (SAA), unless carefully managed, will
- leave it with no easy path to open systems and other vendors'
- solutions. ..... At best IBM may prove that SAA supports open
- systems, but at worst the department has purchased a proprietary
- architecture which only directly supports IBM products."
-
- IBM counters by saying that IBM systems are "open systems" and
- that anyway, 50 percent of the contract has been placed with
- subcontractors. Last year an exception was approved and now
- Unix has been allowed into the contract.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19920713)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00015)
-
- Comsat Opens Turkish Earth Station 07/13/92
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Comsat, the US
- signatory for the Intelsat and Inmarsat consortia, opened an
- earth station in Anatolia, Turkey, giving it coverage of all four
- major ocean regions: East Atlantic, West Atlantic, Pacific and
- Indian.
-
- Comsat says that the Indian Ocean Region is the fastest growing
- region for communications traffic in the Inmarsat system, which
- handles ocean-going communications. Comsat's other earth station
- facilities are in Southbury, Connecticut and Santa Paula,
- California.
-
- For Comsat customers, the new station means "one-stop shopping"
- for global shippers in terms of telecommunications, said the
- company in a press statement. In a lease agreement with the
- Turkish PTT, Comsat added earth station equipment to an existing
- facility at Anatolia, which is then carried over dedicated fiber
- optic lines to Comsat's Southbury earth station.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920713/Press Contact: Comsat, Judith Pryor,
- 202/863-6841)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00016)
-
- LCI Offers Simpler Calling Plan 07/13/92
- CLEVELAND, OHIO, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- American Airlines
- tried recently to simplify air fares, but wound up setting-off a
- price war. Now a small long distance company, LCI International,
- is trying to simplify long distance charges, but its small size
- probably won't set off a rush for discounts.
-
- The LCI plan is called "Simple, Fair and Inexpensive" (SF&I).
- Residential customers will pay one of two domestic rates -- 12
- cents per minute daily between 6 P.M. and 6 A.M. and on weekends,
- and 17 cents per minute any other time. The rate is the same
- regardless of distance -- the cost is the same if the call is
- made from Cleveland to Columbus or from Cleveland to Los Angeles.
-
- LCI President Thomas J. Wynne noted in a press statement "AT&T,
- MCI and Sprint collectively have more than 100 long-distance
- calling plans, all with fancy names and different rates. It is
- very confusing to the consumer because they do not know what a
- particular call will cost when they pick up the phone to make
- that long distance call."
-
- Cleveland and Northern Ohio will be a test market for the SF&T
- plan, after which the company hopes to expand the offering to
- other areas. Promotions on it include heavy television, newspaper
- and radio advertising within the local market, as well as a
- sweepstakes that includes a trip next summer to celebrate the
- 150th anniversary of the Oregon Trail.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920713/Press Contact: Jim Fette, LCI
- International, 614-798-6272)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00017)
-
- SkyTel Wins Argentine License 07/13/92
- JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Mobile
- Telecommunication Technologies, operators of the SkyTel
- satellite paging network, said its Argentine subsidiary has been
- awarded a license to operate the same service in the same
- 931.9375 megahertz frequency used in the United States, Canada,
- Mexico, and in many countries in Asia.
-
- Mtel expects to operate a messaging system on this frequency with
- its potential partners in Argentina within one year, and further
- expects the Argentine system to be linked to the other countries
- participating in the company's network. The addition of
- Argentina to Mtel's network will allow travelers from the United
- States and other nations to receive instantaneous mobile messages
- when visiting or living in Argentina.
-
- SkyTel provides numeric, alphanumeric and voice messaging paging
- throughout the United States, and provides for service through
- its affiliates in Mexico and Canada, as well as in Puerto Rico,
- the Virgin Islands and Bermuda. In Asia, this service is
- now, or will soon be, available in Singapore, Malaysia and Hong
- Kong. Other nations are expected to join Mtel's network over the
- next few months, the company said.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920713/Press Contact: David Allan for Mobile
- Telecommunication Technologies, 212-614-4239)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(HKG)(00018)
-
- Oracle Says Version 7 Breaks Records 07/13/92
- WANCHAI, HONG KONG, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Oracle Corporation claims
- that Oracle 7, the latest version of its relational database, has
- set new benchmark records on every platform on which it has been
- tested.
-
- Running on a host of platforms including Sequent,
- Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems, Digital Equipment and Data
- General, Oracle 7 not only logged the highest TPC-A and TPC-B
- performance scores ever, it was also the fastest ever in terms of
- TPC-A throughput, the second fastest in TPC-B throughput and
- logged the best TPC-B cost/performance benchmark ever, according
- to Oracle.
-
- "These record breaking benchmark numbers firmly establish Oracle
- as the industry price/performance leader," proclaimed Henry Chan,
- sales director of Oracle Systems Hong Kong Ltd. "Oracle 7 has
- set certified performance records on every type of computer
- it has been tested on to date."
-
- Chan added that Oracle 7's scalable high performance, combined with
- high reliability, made a client-server configuration the first real
- alternative to mainframes for the current generation of mission
- critical applications.
-
- Running on a Sequent Symmetry 2000/750 system, Oracle 7 set a
- blistering 605.27 tpsA and established a new low cost/tpsA of
- US$10,919 for this level of performance. This represents a saving of
- 35 percent per tpsA compared to the last Oracle/Sequent cost/tpsA
- figure and is nearly triple the previous mark of 214 tpsA released in
- January (1992).
-
- The Hewlett-Packard/Oracle 7 combination scored the second
- fastest TPC-A benchmark of all time, Oracle says. Running on an HP
- 9000/890 system, Oracle 7 recorded 578 tpsA at a cost/tpsA of
- $11,894. This is compared to an HP 9000/870S/4 running the same
- TPC-A benchmark under Informix-Online V4.1, which logged 173.2
- tpsA for a cost/tpsA of US$15,868.
-
- Oracle 7 also set new records in TPC-B tests. It logged the best
- ever cost/performance TPC-B benchmark of 100.85 tpsB for a
- cost/tpsB of US$1,588, running on a DG AViiON 4625 system from
- Data General, Oracle claims.
-
- Other breakthroughs in TPC-B performance included Digital
- Equipment's VAX platforms. Oracle 7 scored 315 tpsB for a
- cost/tpsB of US$4,725 on a VMS 6000-560 and 560.87 tpsB for a
- cost/tpsB of US$2,970 running on a VMS 6000-660.
-
- "These benchmarks reflect the true flexibility and sophistication
- of the new Oracle 7 database. It can reduce resource utilization
- by as much as 30 percent and support more users with fewer
- resources on low-end platforms and hundreds or even thousands of
- users on high-end platforms," said Mr Chan. "In the future,
- Oracle 7's scalable performance, coupled with very low cost
- will allow emerging applications to access very large databases
- containing image, text, voice and other data in true multimedia
- applications."
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920712/Press Contact:Karen Wan, Oracle, tel:+852-824
- 0118; HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(MOW)(00019)
-
- Moscow: Lexicon Word Processor Promotion Begins 07/13/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Microinform software company
- has announced amnesty for all illegal users of its Lexicon
- popular word processing product. The campaign, the first one of
- its kind in Russia, comes in light of Russia's new Software
- Protection Act.
-
- The campaign, which will run until the end of the year, makes
- every user of an illegal copy of Lexicon, a very popular Russian-
- made full-function word processor, able to register for a very
- nominal fee of 100 rubles (approximately 70 cents) for individuals
- or 300 rubles ($2) for companies. The registration entitles the
- user to a 15% discount off the list price of the word processor
- for the next year, free hotline technical support, information
- materials, and user seminars.
-
- This is the first campaign of its kind on the heels of a law
- protecting intellectual property, including software, which
- was passed by the Soviet and then Russian parliaments.
-
- Lexicon 1.0, developed by Evgeny Veselov, includes support for a
- range of matrix and laser printers, use of indexes, math and Greek
- characters, and work in three different languages -- Russian,
- English and one of the following: Armenian, Byelorussian, Georgian,
- Kazakh, Uzbek, and Ukrainian.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920713/Press Contact: Microinform, phone +7 095
- 233-0006; fax +7 095 235-1053)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(DEN)(00020)
-
- ****Computers To Aid In Electric Car Construction 07/13/92
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Scientists say that
- an electric car with a range up to 600 miles may be possible thanks
- to computers.
-
- Scientists say that the development of computers which can perform
- millions of calculations and simulate thousands of prototypes has
- exponentially decreased the time it takes for scientists to turn
- ideas into working machines.
-
- The computers have been used to help develop a new battery that
- stores energy mechanically rather than chemically. The flywheel
- battery could be the breakthrough needed to make the electric
- automobile practical.
-
- At present the best chemical battery, a giant version of the battery
- in your present auto or truck, can only drive an electric car 50 to
- 100 miles. Scientists say the flywheel battery could provide enough
- power to give an electric car a range of 300 to 600 miles.
-
- The flywheel battery technology is the product of American Flywheel
- Systems, a Seattle-based company staffed by mostly former
- Environmental Protection Agency officials and aerospace scientists
- who found themselves without work due to the end of the Cold War.
-
- The flywheel electro-mechanical battery, for which a US patent was
- issued last month, stores energy kinetically, much like the
- foot-driven potter's wheel. It uses a composite-based mass rotating
- at very high speed inside a vacuum enclosure, suspended by magnetic
- bearings and controlled by sophisticated electronics.
-
- According to Edward Furia, AFS's president and CEO, the flywheel
- battery also eliminates the problems of toxic waste, corrosion, and
- explosions associated with chemical batteries.
-
- The electromagnetic bearings increase efficiency by greatly
- reducing friction, and are available "off the shelf," according to
- Furia.
-
- Furia said his company projects that the flywheel battery pack will
- cost about the same as a lead-acid battery pack, but will last 10
- years. "There's nothing to wear out, because it's spinning in a
- vacuum," he said.
-
- Some flywheels are being used in buses and trucks in Germany, but
- are made of metal and if they get out of balance or are damaged,
- become high-speed shrapnel. Furia said AFS's battery becomes an
- innocuous mass when it falls. "It fails fiber by fiber and just
- melts," he said.
-
- AFS's project still needs acceptance by the Advanced Battery
- Consortium, a combination industry-government alliance that says it
- plans to spend $130 million on the development of a battery-powered
- car. The consortium, which so far has said it is looking for a
- better chemical battery, includes the Big Three auto makers and the
- major battery companies.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920713/Press contact: Edward Furia, American Flywheel
- Systems, 206-454-1818)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00021)
-
- New For PC: PostSaver db Mailer 07/13/92
- ROCHESTER HILLS, MICHIGAN, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Postsaver
- Systems had announced a fall release of dB_Mailer software, a
- program that works with a number of popular database programs to
- presort and barcode large quantity mailings.
-
- Postsaver said dB_Mailer works with dBASE, Foxpro, Alpha Four, PC
- file, and other database programs to select data, presort, print and
- barcode directly from the users current database. Spokesperson
- Sally Smith told Newsbytes that dB_Mailer has no special system
- requirements, working with whatever PC configuration your database
- program works with.
-
- The company said the program is designed for automation compatible
- mailings as defined in the USPS Domestic Mail Manual, and supports
- carrier route mailings, prints tray tags, and postal reports. It's
- also designed to work with Group-1 Software's Accumail Zip+4 update
- program.
-
- dB_Mailer will make its debut at the semi-annual Postal Forum, a
- traveling hardware and software show being held this fall in
- Washington, DC. Sponsored by the US Postal Service, Smith said the
- show highlights all kinds of sorters, conveyors, and other tools
- used by the mailing industry. The show opens its three-day run
- August 29.
-
- Programs such as db_Mailer are used by company's with a large volume
- of outgoing mail, such as mass mailers, in order to take advantage
- of US Postal Service discounts. The company said dB_Mailer is
- designed for users doing mailings of from 200 to 3000 pieces. The
- company said it plans to release a high performance version for
- larger-volume mailers in 1993.
-
- The program also supports regular and non-profit mail, ascending or
- descending print order, and a variety of labels or envelopes.
- Postal reports include presort level counts, rates, automation and
- destination discounts and total postage due.
-
- Postsaver said the program carries a $399 price tag, and is
- scheduled to ship in September of this year.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920713/Press contact: Ted Kruse, Postsaver Systems,
- 313-299-5050; Reader contact: Postsaver Systems, 313-299-5050, fax
- 313-299-5052)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(DEN)(00022)
-
- Learn Photography With Camera Simulation Software 07/13/92
- ROCHESTER, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Expensive college
- classes, or a lot of trial and error are how most people learn about
- photography. But Eastman Kodak has come up with a better,
- faster way.
-
- The company best known for its familiar gold film boxes has
- announced a software package for PCs that simulates a 35mm
- single-lens reflex camera to help master photographic skills.
-
- PCphotographer uses the keyboard or a mouse to select a still or
- animated scene, choose the appropriate film speed and film type,
- position the camera, and adjust camera settings including flash.
-
- Once the "shutter release" is pressed, a simulated photograph is
- exposed, developed, and displayed in an on-screen photo album.
- Lens aperture, shutter speed and film choices are also reviewed.
-
- Kodak says the software can lead users through basic photographic
- techniques, and will challenge more advanced amateurs to improve
- their skills. The user can select a basic camera or a more advanced
- model with extra capabilities. Using the software, you can practice
- metering, bracketing, controlling depth of field, and working with
- both fixed and zoom lenses. Bracketing is the practice of exposing
- one picture with several different lens openings and/or shutter
- speeds. Depth of field determines the distance from the camera to
- the farthest object in the picture that is in focus. A shallow
- depth of field is used to accentuate the main object in the picture,
- while the background is out of focus.
-
- The neat thing about software like PCphotographer is that you can
- experiment with various camera settings without having to burn up a
- lot of film. The screen image in the program shows the effects of
- over- and under-exposure, subject motion, or focus problems caused
- by improper technique. When you ask for a review of your technique,
- the program keeps the "photo" on the left side of the screen and
- displays comments about your exposure, lens and shutter speed on the
- right side.
-
- PCphotographer comes with a workbook that includes 15 exercises, or
- you can experiment on your own. The workbook includes lessons
- designed to explain shutter speeds and explain how light affects
- exposure settings. PCphotographer includes two databases. One
- provides a large amount of basic information about composition,
- lenses, and film. The other contains technical data about filters
- and, of course, Kodak film characteristics.
-
- To run PCphotographer, you need an IBM-compatible PC, 640K of system
- memory, and an EGA or VGA color graphics or Hercules monochrome
- graphics display. You'll also need a hard drive with at least 1.5
- MB (megabytes) of free space. Kodak says the program works best on
- computers based on a 286 or higher microprocessor. The program has
- a list price of $59.95, and comes on both 5.25 and 3.5 inch high
- density disks. For users with older computers, you can exchange the
- high density disks for a set of 5.25 inch 360K floppies.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920713/Press contact: Joseph Runde, Eastman Kodak,
- 716-724-2364, fax 716-724-9829)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00023)
-
- Microsoft Prices Fox Upgrades 07/13/92
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- With the
- announcement last week that the acquisition of Fox Software is
- complete, Microsoft announced significant upgrade and product
- support for users of Fox products.
-
- "The Fox installed base of users is one of the most important assets
- of Fox Software," said Microsoft's Fox product manager Tod Nielsen.
- He said the company plans low-cost upgrade offers and quality
- service and support.
-
- Under Microsoft's upgrade plans, any owner of Foxbase + for DOS, or
- Foxpro version 1.X can upgrade to Foxpro for DOS for $175. If you
- bought Foxpro 2.0 for DOS after June 1, you can upgrade to Foxpro
- 2.5 for either DOS or Windows at no cost. FoxPro 2.5 for Windows
- has not yet been released, going to beta sites this week. The
- company said the upgrade will be available when the product ships.
-
- If you bought your Foxpro 2.0 prior to June 1 of this year, the
- upgrade to version 2.5 for DOS or Windows will cost $99 when the
- product ships. Upgrades are available through authorized resellers
- or direct from Microsoft. Similar upgrade deals are available for
- owners of Foxbase + for the Macintosh.
-
- Microsoft is also offering a trade to users of dBASE, Paradox,
- Clipper, Dataease, R:Base, Superbase Arago and dBFast. Owners of
- those programs can move to FoxPro 2.0 for $199, and can upgrade to
- Foxpro 2.5 for DOS or Windows at no cost when version 2.5 ships.
-
- Users of 4D, Double Helix, Omnis Seven, dBase for the Macintosh,
- Filemaker Pro, and Microsoft File can upgrade to Foxbase + for the
- Macintosh for $149.
-
- All of the upgrade offers expire at the end of the year.
-
- Microsoft is continuing existing Fox Software policies, with Foxbase
- and Foxpro users obtaining product support from Microsoft by
- calling 419-872-0043 during normal business hours (Eastern Time)
- Monday through Friday except holidays, the company said. Support is
- also available through the Foxforum on Compuserve, where Microsoft
- said it will respond to support requests within 24 hours during
- normal business hours. Compuserve is a subscription service
- requiring an initial sign up fee. You also pay for the time you are
- connected. Most Compuserve users can access the service through
- local phone numbers to eliminate long distance phone charges.
- Microsoft also has a toll free number through which they will provide
- referrals to source of information regarding Fox Software products.
-
- Microsoft said it has no plans to change the suggested retail price
- of existing Fox products, which are being repackaged to add the
- Microsoft name to the package.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920713/Press contact: Liz Sidnam, Microsoft,
- 206-882-8080, fax 206-936-7329; Reader contact: 800-992-3675)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00024)
-
- ****IBM/Toshiba/Siemens Sign Major Chip Development Deal 07/13/92
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- In a further
- indication that cross-technology alliances among major
- industry players are necessary for the development of future
- technologies, IBM, Toshiba, and Siemens have announced a
- joint semiconductor agreement. The deal calls for the
- development of advanced memory chips capable of storing
- 256 million bits of information.
-
- According to a press release from the companies, the
- "256-million-bit dynamic random access memory (DRAM)
- chip.....sophisticated submicron technology will be a basis for
- production of future generations of highly dense chips."
-
- Jon C. Iwata, spokesman for IBM, told Newsbytes that cost
- alone was not the driving force behind the alliance. He said that
- a primary concern was "accelerating the development process"
- and "getting the chip to market faster." Additionally though,
- high expense was a factor as "these investments are enormous"
- and the agreement was certainly "a way of sharing costs."
-
- According to a press release the companies claim that the
- development agreement should "accelerate availability of
- memory chips with 16 times more capacity than are available
- today, as well as other advanced computer components, such
- as microprocessors and chips for telecommunications."
-
- The companies maintain that teams of developers from IBM,
- Siemens and Toshiba will begin work immediately at IBM's
- Advanced Semiconductor Technology Center (ASTC), about 70
- miles north of New York City. The development work at the
- center, and at Siemens and Toshiba facilities, will focus on
- the process technology for fabricating features a
- quarter-micron wide, 400 times narrower than a human hair.
-
- The companies are claiming that more than 200 researchers
- from the three companies will support the effort at its peak.
- The three companies are hoping that, by teaming up, they
- will speed up the multi-year development process and be
- first with quarter-micron technology in their products.
-
- Specific terms and conditions of the agreement were not
- disclosed, although Iwata told Newsbytes that "each of
- the partners is free to license the technology," once it
- is developed, and that all three companies will be using
- it in their own future products.
-
- The largest chip capacity today is 16Mbit (million bits).
- Sixty-four Mbit DRAMs are already under development by
- many semiconductor companies. The intended 256Mbit DRAM --
- using the new quarter-micron technology -- will be able to
- hold more than 25,000 pages of double-spaced, typewritten
- text, according to the companies.
-
- The enormous expense of developing the new technology is
- a strong motivator for a development alliance though. According
- to the companies, the estimated cost of developing quarter-
- micron process technology and qualifying it for manufacturing
- is more than $1 billion.
-
- Iwata also told Newsbytes that, because the technology can
- be used in so many other products and consumer electronics,
- "leadership in this one technology, means leadership in
- many others."
-
- The three companies are not strangers to working with each
- other. As reported previously by Newsbytes, IBM and Siemens
- have been working together in 16Mbit DRAM manufacturing and
- 64Mbit DRAM development.
-
- Additionally, Newsbytes has reported that IBM and Toshiba
- have signed agreements to manufacture advanced color flat
- panel computer displays, and only last month, flash memory
- technology.
-
- Toshiba and Siemens have also been collaborating in a
- number of semiconductor areas, including 1Mbit DRAMs,
- standard cells, and gate arrays.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920713/Press Contact: Jon C. Iwata, IBM,
- 212-789-7708)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00025)
-
- AMD & Fujitsu Team On Flash Memory Manufacturing 07/13/92
- SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- In yet
- another major industry collaboration on flash memory technology,
- Advanced Micro Devices and Fujitsu Limited have signed a
- memorandum of understanding for an agreement involving joint
- development, manufacturing, and sales of semiconductor devices.
-
- John Greenagel, spokesman for Advanced Micro Devices,
- confirmed to Newsbytes that the agreement calls for the two
- companies to establish a joint venture in Japan and to cooperate
- in building and operating a $700 million wafer fabrication facility
- to produce non-volatile memory devices such as EPROMs (erasable
- programmable read-only memories) and flash memories. Both
- companies will cooperate in marketing and sales of the products
- on a worldwide basis.
-
- Greenagel also said that the two companies will take
- minority equity positions in each others firms, with both
- investments being less than five percent of the common stock
- of each company. Additionally, he said that the investments
- would "not exceed five percent" and that the investments
- would not necessarily be "equal."
-
- One of the main reasons for the joint venture, Greenagel told
- Newsbytes, is that "building memory fabrications today is
- just incredibly expensive. This will be a $700 million facility.
- Memory products....are commodity products, and therefore
- pricing is subject to a lot more margin pressure than logic
- products. So I think what you're seeing, is that everbody, even
- IBM and Siemens, are saying that investment in memory
- technology and memory manufacturing isjust so expensive that
- it requires a partner."
-
- The new facility, which is expected to be operational in 1994,
- will utilize 8-inch wafers and process technologies capable of
- producing products with dimensions of one-half (0.5) micron and
- smaller. The agreement calls for both companies to contribute
- equally toward the cost of the joint venture.
-
- In addition to providing their product designs and process and
- manufacturing technologies to the joint venture, both companies
- will collaborate in developing manufacturing processes and
- designing semiconductor devices for the joint venture.
-
- Tadashi Sekizawa, president of Fujitsu Limited, said: "Today
- the increasingly rapid advancement in technology and
- diversification of applications require ever more resources, so
- global alliances are important for success in the information
- technology industry."
-
- Speaking about alliances between companies, W.J. Sanders III,
- chairman and chief executive officer of AMD, said: "We have
- entered into an era in which global alliances are essential to
- success in the semiconductor industry."
-
- Sanders also noted that the alliance with Fujitsu will enhance
- AMD's prospects for gaining market share in Japan: "I believe
- global alliances that involve cross-equity investment are an
- optimum solution to reducing international trade friction."
-
- In February, Newsbytes reported that Intel and Sharp had
- agreed to use and produce flash memory devices for use in
- lightweight, portable computer-based electronics.
-
- Marketing research firm, Dataquest, predicts the flash memory
- market will grow from $130 million, at the beginning of 1992,
- to nearly $1.5 billion by 1995.
-
- Newsbytes also recently reported that Toshiba and IBM
- had signed a joint development deal for flash memory
- devices.
-
- Flash memory is a relatively new type of computer memory where
- the information is retained even when the electricity is turned of.
- The technology, although currently expensive to produce, is
- seen as having great potential, especially for portable computers.
-
- Greenagel told Newsbytes that, while he could not see
- flash memory completely taking the place of conventional
- memory and storage devices, "there are applications where
- flash memory will have a big advantage, not only
- over...in some cases EPROMs,...DRAMs,...SRAMs, (but even) in
- some cases, hard disks."
-
- "Flash memory is going to be an enormous market by the
- end of the decade," he concluded.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920713/Press Contact: John Greenagel,
- Advanced Micro Devices, 408-749-3310)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00026)
-
- Ericsson Secures $39M Contract From Shell 07/13/92
- STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Ericsson has been awarded
- a major contract by Shell Oil's Nigerian operation for a digital
- mobile radio telephone and data system.
-
- Terms of the $39 million deal call for Ericsson to install a 700
- kilometer link between PoRt Harcourt and Warri, two towns in
- Nigeria where Shell has operations, as well as digital mobile
- radio network to service staff in and around the company's
- installations.
-
- According to Ericsson, the mobile digital radio network will be
- based around 20 base stations which, initially, will service
- around 200 mobile phones. The system will replace the existing
- analogue radio network, which is now becoming obsolete and
- overloaded.
-
- Plans call for Ericsson to install the complete digital network
- and radio phone network over the next two years, aiming for an
- April '94 commission hand over to Shell.
-
- The deal is a major one for Ericsson, since it involves the sale
- of Mobitex digital phone technology, rather than the groupe
- speciale mobile (GSM) digital phone service the company has been
- using. This is the first major Mobitex installation outside of
- Europe and the U.S., Newsbytes understands.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920713)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00027)
-
- Amstrad Unveils Z80-based Notebook System 07/13/92
- BRENTWOOD, MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Amstrad has
- unveiled a Z80-based, non-DOS-compatible notebook computer that
- bears an uncanny resemblance features-wise with the old Tandy
- Model 100 portable.
-
- This UKP 199 unit, however, has been updated for the 1990s, with
- a 80 character by 8 line supertwist screen and 64 kilobytes (KB)
- of memory, compared to the 40 character by 8 line and 32K memory
- of the original Tandy unit.
-
- Announcing the NC100, which comes in a sleek black casing and has
- several built-in applications, Amstrad Chairman Alan Sugar
- compared it to being driven by a rubber band, but claimed that
- this processor simplicity translates into an easy-to-use machine.
-
- Although just 64K of memory is included as standard, it can be
- greatly expanded using the PCMCIA (personal computer memory card
- industry architecture) slot on the side. The supplied software --
- word processor, database, time/scheduler, Basic and a scrolling
- ASCII terminal -- is blown into read only memory (ROM) on the
- machine, which means that most of the 64K of random access memory
- (RAM) is available for data storage.
-
- Sugar reckons that, because of the simplicity of the NC100, it
- will sell in large quantities -- possibly as high as 300,000 in
- its first year, despite the lack of DOS compatibility. In use,
- users can hot-key between applications, using function keys,
- rather than having to close down one app and open another.
-
- Plans call the NC100 to ship later this year on both sides of the
- Atlantic, a bold move, given Amstrad's previous negative
- experience in the U.S. marketplace. No specific time scale on the
- actual shipment of the NC100 has been given, though US pricing
- will probably be around the $300 mark.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920713/Press & Public Contact: Amstrad - Tel: 0277
- 228888; Fax: 0277-211350)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00028)
-
- Everex Takes Over UK Printer Maker 07/13/92
- CHALGROVE, OXFORDSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Everex
- Systems has announced plans to acquire Wenger Printers, the UK-
- based specialist printer manufacturer. Terms of the deal have
- not been announced.
-
- Wenger Printers is the UK division of the Swiss printer
- manufacturer of the same name. Set up a decade ago, the UK
- operation has developed into a high-end printer manufacturer,
- frequently supplying one-off printers to customer's requirements.
- A typical printer supplied by the company might be a high-speed
- colour unit adapted to a special paper size.
-
- Wenger also supplies printers to high resilience government
- specifications here in the UK. The government standard, known as
- Tempest, is shrouded in secrecy, but it is known that Everex
- wants to break into the government supply market, so buying
- straight into Wenger is an ideal method of gaining a rapid
- foothold in that market.
-
- Plans call for Everex to keep Wenger as a separate named
- operation in the UK, although Everex's Colindale, North London-
- based headquarters will be moved to Chalgrove over the next year.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920713/Press & Public Contact: Everex Systems -
- Tel: 081-205-0607)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00029)
-
- New For Macintosh: Hardware Accelerator For Photoshop 07/13/92
- SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Two hardware
- accelerator cards called the Thunderstorm series for the
- Macintosh, geared specifically toward speeding up Adobe Photoshop,
- were announced by Supermac Technology and Storm Technology.
-
- The companies say the Thunderstorm cards are geared toward speeding
- up pre-press work.
-
- Waiting for the computer to redraw the graphic is frustrating and
- time consuming. Pre-press work includes manipulating layouts,
- retouching photographs, preparing color proofs and color
- separations, and creating continuous-tone artwork. Photoshop,
- popular for pre-press work, offers filters for work with
- photographic images, as well as resize functions, but all those
- functions require the computer to do a series of calculations that
- make the user sit and wait.
-
- Supermac describes the Thunderstorm is simply an accelerator geared
- toward speeding up Adobe Photoshop, while the Thunderstorm Pro is a
- combination of the Thunderstorm and the Thunder/24, a graphics
- accelerator card.
-
- Supermac claims its Thunderstorm and Thunderstorm Pro accelerator
- boards offer the Macintosh assistance with the necessary
- calculations that produce transparent performance increases of up to
- 2300 percent, or 20 times faster. Danny Shapiro of Storm Technology
- told Newsbytes two AT&T DSP processors provide 60 million
- instructions per second (MIPS) of processing power. Also included
- with the board are software plug-ins (or filters) that Photoshop is
- designed to accept.
-
- In addition, Supermac says both cards offer hardware-based Joint
- Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) compression to compress and
- decompress retouched images within Adobe Photoshop program as much
- as 500 percent faster than software-only compression of comparable
- accuracy.
-
- Supermac says it plans to release both cards August 1. The
- Thunderstorm is priced at $999, the Thunderstorm Pro at $3,699.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920713/Press Contact: Danny Shapiro, Storm, tel
- 415-691-6672, fax 415-691-9825)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00030)
-
- New For Macintosh: Adobe Premiere 2.0 07/13/92
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 13 (NB) -- Adobe
- Premiere version 2.0, the enhanced version of the Adobe software
- geared toward the production of Quicktime movies on the Macintosh,
- has been announced by Adobe Systems. Adobe says the product is
- geared toward making it easy for any user to start working with
- moving images.
-
- Adobe Premiere is geared toward combining video footage, audio,
- animation, still images, and graphics to create Quicktime digital
- movies. Adobe says digital transitions can be inserted between video
- clips, still images, animation and audio including dissolves, wipes,
- page turns, funnels, and more. Premiere also offers plug-in filters
- which can be used to create tints, distortions, replications, and
- other special effects. Quicktime movies produced with Premiere may
- be viewed at variable sizes up to full screen, using any Quicktime
- compressors, Adobe added.
-
- Adobe says the new version offers users professional features such
- as software communication with high-end editing systems and video
- devices. Postscript rasterizing technology and a expanded user
- interface are other new features, Adobe added.
-
- The new version of Premiere supports Society of Motion Picture and
- Television Engineers (SMPTE) time code for professional online and
- offline editing, the company added.
-
- Adobe says Photoshop version 2.0 will smoothly import information
- created or edited with its other products, Adobe added. The new
- version offers for the first time smooth import of graphics from
- Adobe Illustrator and adds export to Adobe Photoshop of video clips
- for retouching or painting on a sequence of individual frames.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920713/Press Contact: Teri Chadbourne, Adobe, tel
- 415-961-4400, fax 415-961-3769)
-
-