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- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TOR)(00001)
-
- IBM Launches Complete New RISC-Based System/88 Line 07/29/92
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- IBM has taken
- its fault-tolerant System/88 hardware line all the way into reduced
- instruction set computing (RISC). Following up on the introduction
- of a single RISC-based model last fall, IBM has now unveiled a
- complete line of RISC-based System/88 machines.
-
- The new machines, built for IBM by Stratus Computer, use Intel i860
- RISC chips, company spokesman Jeff Cross said. They can run either
- the proprietary System/88 operating system or FTX, a fault-tolerant
- version of Unix developed by Stratus. FTX is compatible with IBM's
- AIX variant of Unix, Cross added.
-
- IBM said the new RISC systems have up to 2.5 times the performance
- of similarly priced, current complex instruction set computers.
-
- System/88 machines provide continuous availability for
- mission-critical operations such as telephone communications,
- credit card authorizations, and emergency 911 systems. IBM said
- they are widely used in government, communications, finance,
- manufacturing, distribution, retailing, and other industries.
-
- The new machines are available with 32 to 512 megabytes of duplexed
- memory and support up to 105 gigabytes of duplexed direct access
- storage. They range from the entry-level 4596 with 30 models,
- incorporating DASD and optional 1/4-inch tape drive in the system
- cabinet, through the midrange 4597 with seven models to the
- high-end 4598 with a total of 16 models.
-
- The first models, mostly lower-powered units, are due to be
- available in late August. Others will become available in October,
- while the largest configurations will reach the market just before
- Christmas, Cross said.
-
- IBM also announced a new 1.46-gigabyte disk drive for the System/88
- Direct Access Storage Device (DASD) Subsystem. This new drive
- offers more than an 80 percent increase in data storage capability
- at less cost per megabyte, IBM officials said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920728/Press Contact: Jeff Cross of IBM,
- 914-642-5358)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00002)
-
- PenMagic Ships Numero, Hopes For Pen Boom In '93 07/29/92
- VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- PenMagic
- Software has begun shipping Numero, its financial software for
- pen-based computers using the Go PenPoint operating system. Norm
- Francis, president of PenMagic, admitted the pen-computing market
- is still in its infancy, but told Newsbytes he hopes for big things
- next year.
-
- This is "kind of an education and a market development year,"
- Francis said. A number of new pen-computing products will appear at
- Comdex/Fall in Las Vegas this November, he forecast, and the
- pen-computing market will start to pick up speed early in 1993.
-
- Canadian microcomputer managers see pen computing as interesting
- but not, in most cases, immediately applicable to their companies'
- needs. For instance, Toronto book publishers McClelland & Stewart
- has tried out Grid Systems' pen-based machine, but sees no
- compelling applications, said George Goodwin, vice-president of
- corporate development. And Prudential Assurance Co. of America has
- no pen-based machines nor plans to use them in Canada at least,
- according to Paul Saxton, supervisor of local-area network support
- at the company's Canadian operations in Toronto.
-
- Francis said pen computing has been a bit quicker to catch on in
- the United States, where PenMagic is working with a number of
- companies on pilot projects using the technology. But he agreed
- that the market is just beginning to develop.
-
- Numero, which will work on pen computers from IBM, NCR, Grid,
- Samsung, and NEC, has a suggested retail price of $399. PenMagic
- has signed Ingram Micro to distribute the software in the United
- States and is working on other distribution deals, Francis said.
- The software is currently shipping in the United States and Canada,
- and to a limited extent in the United Kingdom, he said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920728/Press Contact: Norm Francis, PenMagic,
- 604-988-9982, fax 604-988-0035; Public Contact: PenMagic,
- 604-988-9982)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00003)
-
- MediaVision Sound In New PCs, Drops Prices 07/29/92
- FREMONT, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- In the wars
- between companies offering sound capability to IBM and
- compatible personal computers (PCs), Media Vision says it has
- gotten original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to include its
- sound hardware and it is lowering prices on its multimedia
- products.
-
- The company says AT&T/NCR, Olivetti, Acer, Siemens/Nixdorf,
- ALR, Leading Edge Products, and Dolch computer systems are
- building products with either the company's Pro Audiospectrum
- add-in sound board or one of its chipsets.
-
- Creative Labs, producers of the Sound Blaster card, and whose drivers
- are included in Microsoft Windows 3.1, filed suit against Media
- Vision in May charging the company reverse engineered its
- product in order to produce the Media Vision Thunderboard
- product. The Thunderboard is advertised by Media Vision as
- being 100 percent Sound Blaster-compatible, and therefore can
- use the Sound Blaster drivers offered in Microsoft Windows 3.1.
-
- Since the suit was announced, Media Vision announced it is
- offering its technology as an open architecture.
-
- The company has also just announced lower prices for the Pro
- Audiospectrum 16, the Pro Audiospectrum Plus, and its
- Multimedia Upgrade Kit. The Pro Audiospectrum Plus has been
- lowered from $279 retail to $199. The Pro Audiospectrum 16,
- with 16-bit sound, has been lowered from $349 to $299 retail.
- Media Vision's Multimedia Upgrade Kit has been reduced from
- $995 to $895 retail.
-
- The Multimedia Upgrade Kit includes a Sony compact disc read-
- only memory (CD-ROM) drive, the Pro Audiospectrum Plus sound
- card, and Windows 3.1.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920728/Press Contact: Abigail Johnson,
- Roeder Johnson for Media Vision, tel 415-579-3600, fax 415-347-
- 5238)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00004)
-
- New Database Software For Windows Outsells Paradox 07/29/92
- REDWOOD CITY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- New
- start-up company Approach Software appears to be breaking all
- the rules in the software business. The company released its
- first product on March 31 of this year, Approach database
- software for Windows, which has since climbed over Borland's
- Paradox database product to the number two spot on Ingram
- Micro's bestseller list of database software.
-
- Approach Software was founded in 1990 by Kevin Harvey, now 27,
- who founded Houston, Texas-based Styleware when he was 20.
- Styleware offered a word processor and integrated package on
- the Apple II and Apple II GS and was purchased by Claris
- Corporation in 1988. Harvey worked at Claris as director of the
- company's information management product group.
-
- The company describes the Approach database software product as
- geared toward manipulation of existing information. However, it
- can also be used as a stand-alone database, the company said.
-
- The product has no proprietary data format but uses technology
- Approach calls Powerkey which allows users to open, manipulate,
- update, and report on data regardless of its format. In fact,
- the company claims users can join information from databases in
- different file formats, such as taking employee information
- from a database on an Oracle SQL server while also accessing
- information from database in dBASE format to create a report
- containing both. Up to 10 data files can be joined, the company
- said.
-
- The product is also based on client server technology, so the
- storage and processing power of a server can be utilized,
- Approach said. Record locking is also offered to maintain data
- integrity on a network, the company maintains.
-
- The software is designed for the creation of forms, reports,
- and mailing labels. Avery label support is built in. Tools for
- report or form building include rulers, dimensions, multiple
- pen widths, object alignment, grouping, and distribution are
- included. Other options include columns, headers, footers, and
- title pages for reports, Approach said.
-
- Form designers can use the product to set up data entry with
- check boxes, radio buttons, programmable buttons, pull-down
- lists, field validation, and auto fill.
-
- The product will store graphics as data and use the graphics to
- enhance documents or reports, the company added. Object Linking
- and Embedding (OLE), query by example, and sorting on an
- unlimited number of keys is also supported, Approach maintains.
- Macro buttons on screen can be customized to automate
- repetitive tasks, the company added.
-
- Approach is retail priced at $399 and is available through
- distributors Ingram Micro and at Egghead Software stores, the
- company said.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920728/Press Contact: Jane Smith, Approach
- Software, tel 415-306-0649, fax 415-368-5182)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(MOW)(00005)
-
- Moscow: Stock Trading System To Be Created 07/29/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- The Space Control Center,
- Merchant Marine Ministry, and other former military groups have
- teamed up to build a national Russian trading system, which they
- hope will be launched shortly.
-
- The network set-up and necessary software has already been designed
- and tested on the Tekos network, which was used in commodities
- trading for the last four months.
-
- According to Sergei Petrov, the chief executive of the Military-
- Industrial Investment Company (VPIK in Russian), major databases on
- issuers, securities, and current legislation, a monitoring system
- and a tailor-made information service are being created by the
- Space Control Center, located in Kaliningrad near Moscow, and the
- Computing Center of the (formerly Soviet) Merchant Marine Ministry.
-
- Moscow Business Week adds that a stock market boom is expected in
- Russia in October. Fifteen thousand applications for companies
- seeking to go public have already been filed with the State Property
- Management Committee.
-
- VPIK was registered in 1991 with the authorized capital of one
- billion rubles (approximately US$8 million).
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920728/Press Contact: Sergey Petrov, VPIK, phone
- +7 095 581-3810)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00006)
-
- Latvia: Metal Shortage Affects Telecom 07/29/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- The Latvian government has
- recently decided to ban any further export of metals. This results
- from a massive campaign by businesses to sell to the West all the copper
- and aluminum available in the country, which badly affected
- Latvia's ability to maintain railroad communications lines.
-
- Moscow-based newspapers have reported that other land communications,
- in which copper wires are used, are also affected. It is said that
- the wires are being stolen and sold by the population. There are
- many reports of businesses desperate for metals who are paying in
- hard currency to anyone, no matter who, wishing to sell it.
-
- Komsomolskaya Pravda reports that the final straw in this crisis
- came when someone seized a big bronze wallplate with "Latvian
- Republic Supreme Soviet" on it, right out of the parliament
- building.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920728)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00007)
-
- Moscow: Another Secure Bank Network Announced 07/29/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Sirena, the large Soviet airline
- ticket reservation system, has announced it will offer secure
- communications services to local banks.
-
- The new system, called Sirena-Sirius, will be built alongside
- the 25 existing Sirena network hosts, which are based in all C.I.S.
- countries. Banks will be, through those computers, directly
- interconnected to the Russian Central Bank computer, which is the
- only one allowed to do interbank transactions by law.
-
- According to Alexey Fedotov, the general manager of Sirena-Sirius, a
- certified "electronic signature" will be used for security purposes,
- allowing fast and cheap electronic funds transfers.
-
- The network connection will cost a moderate fee affordable to most of
- banks, and the traffic charges are expected to be low, according to
- the company.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920728/Press & Public Contact: Sirena-Sirius,
- phone +7 095 334-8971)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00008)
-
- Lower-Cost HDTV From Hitachi 07/29/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Hitachi has developed a consumer-use
- high definition television (HDTV) which it plans to release
- for less than 2 million yen ($16,000) by the end of the year. This
- is less than half the cost of a current HDTV set, which goes for
- four million yen ($32,000). Other Japanese electronics firms
- are expected to follow suit.
-
- Hitachi's high definition television set is expected to have a
- screen size of 40 inches or more. It is equipped with a color
- liquid crystal display with over 300,000 pixels. This results in
- a screen image that is extremely clear and crisp.
-
- Hitachi is currently selling a high definition television at 2.35
- million yen ($18,800).
-
- The firm has developed so-called second generation LSI chips for
- HDTV and an HDTV decoder. The chips have enabled the price of HDTVs
- to drop and HDTV to be more sophisticated and smaller in size.
-
- Sony has also developed advanced LSI chips for HDTV. The chips are
- in an HDTV priced at 1.3 million yen ($10,400). This is a
- Braun-tube model with a screen size of 32-inches.
-
- Sony and Sharp are developing the "ultimate" chips for the
- HDTVs. Their target price for HDTVs is 500,000 yen ($4,000) or
- lower. At this price range, HDTVs are expected to be widely used by
- general consumers.
-
- Currently, NHK and private TV broadcasting firms are broadcasting HDTV
- programs for eight hours per day on an experimental basis.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920728/Press Contact: Hitachi, +81-3-3258-2057)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(ATL)(00009)
-
- New For Macintosh: 14,400 BPS Modem For PowerBook 07/29/92
- CAMPBELL, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- PSI
- Integration introduced PowerModem III, a new internal fax modem
- for Apple's Powerbook portable. PSI also announced shipment of
- its PowerModem II mid-range model for PowerBook computers.
-
- The PowerModem III handles data at up to 14,400 bits per second
- under the V.32bis modulation and V.42bis error-correction
- standards. The modem also supports the earlier V.42 and V.32
- standards, as well as MNP10, an error-correction standard that
- some feel works well in a cellular environment. The same modem
- also sends faxes at the 14,400 bit/second rate, while connected
- to a fax-modem of the same speed. The fax-modem supports all
- Group III fax machines. The speed is the equivalent of six blank
- pages per minute.
-
- With data compression, the actual throughput of the PowerModem
- III can be up to 57,600 bps. The PowerModem III, which is
- scheduled to ship in September, has a suggested retail price of
- $799.
-
- PSI Integration can be reached at 851 East Hamilton Ave., Suite
- 200, Campbell, Calif., 95008; telephone, 1-800/622-1722 or
- 408/559-8544.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920729/Press Contact: Michele Kassis, PSI,
- 408/559-8544)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00010)
-
- International Telecom Update 07/29/92
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- South Korea's
- selection of three consortia to take its second cellular phone
- tender highlighted world developments in the field. Groups headed
- by Pohang Iron and Steel, the Sunkyong Group, and the Kolon Group
- were selected to compete with a unit of Korea Telecom starting at
- the end of August.
-
- Regarding overseas participation, POSCO's consortium includes
- Pacific Telesis of the US and Germany's Mannesmann group.
- Sunkyong teamed with GTE of the US, Britain's Vodafone, and
- Hutchison Telecom of Hong Kong, while Kolon is working with
- NYNEX of the US. All three groups have extensive numbers of
- Korean minority partners as well. The ministry will negotiate
- directly with the three finalists. The announcement, however,
- could become enmeshed in politics. All three winning Chaebol, or
- conglomerates, have ties to the ruling Liberal Democrats or
- President Roh Tae Woo. The former head of the Hyundai Group is a
- candidate against Roh, and any connection with Hyundai is
- currently seen as unwelcome in terms of Korean government tenders.
-
- Elsewhere, Pakistan and Afghanistan signed a telecommunications
- agreement in Islamabad. The deal gives Pakistan a link to
- Central Asia, where it can compete for influence in the former
- Soviet Republics with Turkey and Iran. For Afghanistan, still
- riven by factional strife among the fighters who won a 12-year
- long war against a Soviet-installed government, the deal
- represents badly-needed help in rebuilding the nation's
- infrastructure.
-
- Finally, Latin American bourses turned around, led by local
- telephone companies. The news should reassure governments in
- Uruguay and Brazil which are still moving toward privatizing
- their phone networks.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920729)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00011)
-
- Southwestern Bell Selling Frame Relay In Kansas 07/29/92
- KANSAS CITY, KANSAS, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Southwestern
- Bell said it is now selling frame relay data services in Kansas.
- It's the first state within the company's service region which
- has approved its application to sell frame relay, which moves
- data at up to two million bits per second without all the internal
- error-correction found on X.25 networks.
-
- The service initially will be offered in the Kansas City, Kansas
- metropolitan area. By year-end, Southwestern Bell plans to have
- frame relay service available to customers in the Topeka and
- Wichita areas. The service will be sold in increments of 56,000
- bits/second, 384,000 bits/second and 1.536 million bits/second.
- The service is being aimed at large businesses which want to link
- the local area networks in their various offices.
-
- To get the service, customers need both site links, dedicated
- lines to a local central office, and logical links, which are
- virtual connections between the two locations where data is
- being sent. A single site link unit, however, can serve a number
- of logical links. Both services are priced at a flat-rate per
- month.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920729/Press Contact: Scott Hilgeman,
- Southwestern Bell Telephone, 314-247-4613)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00012)
-
- Online Browsing For Job-Hunters 07/29/92
- COLUMBUS, OHIO, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- CompuServe, the
- largest online service in the US, has added Adnet Online to its
- list of services available on an unlimited basis for a base price
- of $7.95 per month.
-
- Adnet Online lets job-seekers browse openings advertised by
- hundreds of companies. They can select from more than two dozen
- categories and then narrow their search by geographical location.
-
- Job listings are available for specific regions of the United
- States, as well as for Canada and countries throughout the world.
- The Adnet database is updated weekly, and advertisements
- generally run for two weeks. Advertisers can be contacted either
- by regular mail or fax. Established in May 1990, Adnet Online is
- a division of Adnet of Indianapolis. CompuServe is a H&R Block
- company.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920729/Press Contact: David Kishler,
- CompuServe, 614-457-8600)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00013)
-
- Research Center Established in S. Australia 07/29/92
- ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- South Australia's (SA's) aim
- to be the technology hub of Australia is a step closer after the
- opening of the Signal Processing Research Institute (SPRI). The
- Institute was formed by Adelaide's Technology Development Corporation
- and SA's three universities to become a key resource of Australia's
- space and communications companies.
-
- The SPRI building is around 75 percent occupied, with the main
- tenants being the Australian Space Center for Signal Processing, the
- Mobile Communications Research Center, the Institute of Computer
- Systems Engineering and Assurance, and the Cooperative Research
- Center for Sensor Signal and Information Processing.
-
- The remaining space is only open to private companies. The SPRI and
- Technology Park are major components of the SA Government's plans for
- a multifunction polis (MFP). The MFP is planned to be a high
- technology city which will host research, design and manufacture of
- high-technology equipment. SA Premier John Bannon sees the
- information technology and telecommunications industries as the basis
- on which planning for the MFP will be made. Bannon said there was "a
- particular emphasis on establishing Adelaide as a major pilot site for
- testing new (telecommunications) systems."
-
- In addition to this, Bannon said, "We've got a base here in this state
- which will ensure that business investment, the commercial application
- and everything else that is needed to keep the infrastructure in a
- thriving and healthy condition will be there."
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920707)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SYD)(00014)
-
- Australia: Technology Used To Track Wombat's Future 07/29/92
- BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- High-tech
- is being used to establish whether the northern hairy-nosed wombat
- of Australia will escape extinction, and may help ensure they will.
-
- The wombats are being tracked in the Epping Forest National Park in
- Central Queensland by the Queensland Environment and Heritage
- Department. Of the three types of wombats in Australia (the northern
- hairy nosed, the southern hairy nosed and the common wombat), the
- northern hairy nosed is the least common, and is thought to have been
- so at the time of European settlement.
-
- Current estimates place the Epping Forest population at about 70.
- These creatures occupy approximately 300 hectares of the National
- Park's 3300 hectares. In a bid to observe the animals with as little
- interference as possible, the Department is using thermal imaging
- cameras, GPS mapping and computer models. The Department is being
- helped by the 6th Batallion and 1st Division Intelligence Unit of the
- Australian Army, and by Dynamic Satellite Surveys (DSS), a private
- mapping company.
-
- Eight soldiers were involved in a week-long expedition to film the
- animals and record information about their environment. The thermal
- image camera pictures will allow researchers to see how the wombats
- act in their own environment, while as detailed a computer model of
- the wombats' future as possible is created using the retrieved and
- available data.
-
- Despite all this work, the wombats may be doomed to extinction, as it
- is suspected that their numbers were declining before European
- settlement. However, the introduction of grazing animals has
- accelerated any decline there may have been, and researchers are
- hoping to reverse this trend.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920707)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00015)
-
- Australia: 3rd Mobile Licence Competition Heats Up 07/29/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Singapore Telecom and
- local firm Stanilite Pacific have formed a consortium and entered the
- race for Australia's third mobile telecommunications network licence.
-
- The consortium, announced by Singapore Telecom International (STI),
- has joined the two already with bids in place, one led by Hong Kong-
- based Hutchinson and the other led by British-based Vodephone Group,
- also known as Arena GSM. The bid is a low-key one, with the consortium
- only releasing cursory details and not commenting until the decision
- on the third licence is announced in December.
-
- At first, STI did not reveal its partner in the bid, only stating that
- it had joined up with a "leading locally listed systems integration
- company." However, it was later confirmed that Stanilite was the
- company involved. Despite the lack of detailed information from STI,
- the company has revealed that approximately AUS$1.6B will be spent
- over the next ten years on its GSM (Groupe Speciale Mobile) digital
- mobile phone network.
-
- Stanilite would hold the controlling interest in the network, but this
- interest is expected to be held by Australian interests within ten
- years. Stanilite was formed in 1977 by brothers Robert and John
- Harris, who hold a 22 percent share in the company. It has won
- several large defense contracts, including an AUS$130M contract to
- design and install communications systems on 10 Anzac frigates.
-
- If successful, the Stanilite/STI consortium will join AOTC (Australian
- and Overseas Telecommunications Corporation) and Optus Communications
- in providing mobile telecommunications networks to Australia.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920723/Press Contact: Stanilite Pacific, phone in
- Australia +61-2-646 4011)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00016)
-
- Omron Man Assumes Presidency Of Data General Japan 07/29/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Omron says it will promote
- Data General Japan's vice president, Tatsuro Ichihara, to the
- presidency of Data General Japan. Omron holds major equity position
- in Data General Japan.
-
- Tatsuro Ichihara is also on the board of directors at Omron.
- Data General's current president, Arihiro Okada, will resign
- from the presidency but is expected to remain as a director of
- Data General.
-
- The change of the presidency of Data General will be made this
- October 1. Omron has been trying to increase the company's sales
- since it acquired Data General Japan for 6.5 billion
- yen ($50 million) in March 1991. However, Data General's
- business has not picked up yet. Data General Japan has
- closed its accounts in the red for two years in a row. This is a
- big burden to Omron in the midst of a slump in the industry.
-
- Data General Japan, which has been selling minicomputers in the past,
- has been caught in the "downsizing" trend in the industry.
- It consequently has shifted its sales to workstations but still,
- sales haven't improved. This is one reason why Omron executives
- decided to replace the president of Data General Japan.
-
- Omron is expected to make other major changes including a
- restructuring of Data General Japan's computer divisions. Also,
- a name change is in the works, from Data General Japan to
- "Omron Data General" as of this October 1. Omron Data General will
- have additional business ties to Omron's Engineering Workstation
- System Division at that time.
-
- Data General Japan's president, Aihiro Okada, has led the firm since
- 1988. His new position in the Omron group is not yet known.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920729/Press Contact: Omron, +81-75-463-1162)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00017)
-
- TI Japan Releases 4M Video RAM 07/29/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Texas Instruments Japan has
- released in Japan its four-megabit video RAM (random access memory)
- chip, following its release in other parts of the world. TI Japan
- is shipping sample versions.
-
- The first video RAM was developed by Texas Instruments in
- 1983. The video RAM processes pictorial data with video
- signals and is in demand by computer firms which want a
- powerful video RAM for processing increasing amounts of graphic data.
-
- Due to the shift to multimedia computers as well as a downsizing
- trend in computing, the demand for powerful video RAMs has been
- growing in the computer industry. According to a major Japanese
- computer industry association, the demand for video RAM chips
- is worth 29 billion yen ($230 million) in 1992. Within three years,
- the figure is expected to more than double to 70 billion yen ($560
- million).
-
- Currently, 1 megabit and 2 megabit video RAMs are sold in the
- industry. Both versions are applied in personal computers and are
- being made by Japanese computer firms such as NEC and Toshiba.
- Unlike the slump in demand for other RAM chips, video RAMs are
- popular and demand has been high.
-
- Texas Instruments Japan expects that the 4-megabit video RAM
- will be used in workstations as well as personal computers
- in the near future. Other Japanese firms are also expected to
- ship 4-megabit versions of the video RAM soon.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920729/Press Contact: Texas Instruments Japan,
- +81-3-3498-2111)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TYO)(00018)
-
- KDD & NTT To Create "Telecom City" In Shanghai 07/29/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Japan's former telecom monopolies
- KDD and NTT say they will participate in a ten-year project
- in China to create an advanced "telecom city" in Shanghai.
-
- KDD and NTT were chosen by the Chinese government due to their
- experience in setting up telecommunications networks. KDD is
- specialized in international telecom networks and NTT is specialized
- in domestic networks. The Chinese telecom network will be based
- on NTT's ISDN (integrated services digital network).
-
- China's major telecom project officially began in 1990. It
- envisions a "digital telecom city" located east of Shanghai.
- A 350-square-kilometer area is allocated for this city, which
- will be equipped with trading facilities, commercial and financial
- areas, research and development areas, and manufacturing area. KDD
- and NTT plan to form a consortium with major Japanese
- conglomerates and electronics firms for this project. The
- participating conglomerates and electronics firms have not yet
- been selected, but they may include Ito Chu, Nissho Iwai, Marubeni,
- Fujitsu or NEC.
-
- This digital telecom city, which may become a model for China,
- will be equipped with a telecom network of 120,000 circuits.
- It will be connected with major Chinese as well as foreign cities
- via optical cables, undersea cables, and space satellites.
-
- KDD has already invited Chinese representative to Japan where it
- has displayed its own "telecom cities" in Tokyo and Yokohama.
-
- This is the first joint project for KDD and NTT which report they
- will participate in more joint ventures overseas in the future.
-
- (Masayuki Miyazawa/19920729/Press Contact: KDD, +81-3-3347-6934)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00019)
-
- Sprint Has Three Access Points In Siberia 07/29/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Sprint announced data
- communication services availability in Novosibirsk, Irkutsk, and
- Khabarovsk, all big industrial centers in Siberia.
-
- At the moment Sprint had access points in Kiev, Ukraine, Moscow,
- Perm, Samara, and St Petersburg -- all of them in Russia.
-
- Sprint is offering Russian clients its electronic mail system as
- well as its fax service known as SprintFax. Customers are
- allowed to pay in either dollars or rubles at their sole
- discretion, according to the company.
-
- Sprint still has to reach a goal it proclaimed in early 1991 -- to
- have local access in 10 cities of the former Soviet Union at
- the end of 1992.
-
- Sprint's competitor in data services, SovAm Teleport, is also trying to
- offer local call access in as many as 40 Russian cities.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19920729/Press & Public Contact: Sprint Networks
- Russia, phone +7 095 201-6890)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(ATL)(00020)
-
- GEnie Offers Apple II Software 07/29/92
- ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- As the Apple II
- slips into history, along with CP/M and other obsolete computers,
- the GEnie online service is trying to help Apple II owners
- continue to get value from their machines.
-
- The third-largest consumer online service in the US has begun a
- "Lost Classics" project, aimed at making copies of Apple II
- software available on its A2 Roundtable. The Roundtable would
- also like to preserve source code for preservation and updating.
-
- Roundtable Manager Dean Esmay says he also hopes to rerelease
- some old commercial programs as shareware, for which satisfied
- users pay, or freeware, requiring no payment at all, and arrange
- to have some titles placed in public domain.
-
- "The Apple II's effect on modern computing has changed the way an
- entire generation thinks and acts," he said in a press
- statement. "We are not about to let that pass into oblivion."
-
- The "Lost Classics" program offers to preserve old software in a
- compressed format on optical disk cartridges, provide access to
- commercial titles which would otherwise be unavailable, and
- provide a center for dated software in need of updating to remain
- compatible with modern Apple II hardware and system software,
- which could include contracting with other programmers. For
- further information, modem users may visit the A2 Roundtable on
- GEnie or send GEnie E-mail to A2.HELP.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920729/Press Contact: Timothy Tobin, GEnie
- Lost Classics Project, 310-813-5697)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(ATL)(00021)
-
- ****Sierra Sues Hayes Over Ad Claims 07/29/92
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Hayes
- Microcomputer Products, which recently signed an exclusive chip
- license with Rockwell International, now faces a lawsuit over
- the issue with a rival chip-maker.
-
- Sierra Semiconductor has filed suit against Hayes in San Jose
- Federal Court, charging trade libel, false and misleading
- advertising and unfair competition. Sierra is complaining about
- a series of ads that began to appear July, which claims that
- its in-band escape sequence is undependable. Hayes president and
- founder, Dennis Hayes, has told Newsbytes in the past that any
- software-based escape sequence can be triggered inadvertently by
- incoming data, and therefore it's necessary to recognize only a
- keyed-in escape key, as called for in the Heatherington '302
- patent which his company has successfully defended in court.
-
- Sierra's chip sets support what's called a "Time Independent
- Escape Sequence" or TIES as well as the Hayes sequence. Sierra
- said in a press statement that Hayes charges $1 per modem for use
- of its patent, although Hayes has never confirmed the figure
- publicly.
-
- In the press statement, Sierra attorney Peter Detkin concentrated
- on the ads, calling them inflammatory and improper. He says that
- reference to Rockwell chip sets, which have the exclusive on-chip
- version of the '302 license, indicates "collusion to control the
- market." Sierra's Vice-President of Marketing Don MacLennan also
- indicated that the Rockwell deal is a problem for his company,
- noting that standards bodies have said in the past that they will
- not put patented technology into a standard unless it is licensed
- in a non-discriminatory manner, and the Rockwell agreement seems
- to violate that policy.
-
- Newsbytes contacted Hayes about the lawsuit, and was told that no
- comment could be forthcoming at this time. The company does not
- usually comment on pending litigation, and in any case its
- attorneys have not completed a review of the suit's documents.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920729/Press Contact: Sierra Semiconductor,
- Don MacLennan, 408/263-9300; Hayes, Peggy Ballard, 404-840-9200)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00022)
-
- DM 450M German Fiber Optic Contract Up For Grabs 07/29/92
- BONN, WESTERN GERMANY, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Deutsche Bundespost
- Telekom (DBT), the state-controlled telecom operation of
- Germany, has announced plans to invest DM 450 million ($300
- million) in a fiber optic network spanning Eastern Germany.
-
- DBT is currently negotiating terms of the contract with four
- telecom companies -- Siemens, Alcatel, Philips/ANT and Raynet --
- with the option to install further fiber optic links later this
- decade.
-
- According to DBT, plans call for around 200,000 East German
- households, initially in the Berlin area, to be linked up to the
- new network, with the eventual aim of linking six times that
- number into a fiber optic network by the end of 1995. The network
- will be capable of carrying TV signals as well as the expected
- phone and ISDN services.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920729)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00023)
-
- Olivetti Licences OS/2 For Use On PCs 07/29/92
- MILAN, ITALY, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Olivetti has announced it has
- licensed IBM's OS/2 operating system for use on its own range of
- PCs. The company is one of the first major PC manufacturers to
- commit to OS/2, with most of the competition going with Microsoft
- and its Windows graphical user interface to DOS.
-
- Terms of the agreement, financial details of which have not been
- revealed, call for Olivetti to bundle up to 20,000 copies of OS/2
- a year with its PCs. In addition, IBM will supply technical
- services and ancillary programs to allow OS/2 to run under a
- network operating system.
-
- The deal is a major shot in the arm for OS/2. Many people in the
- computer industry have been commenting openly that OS/2 has
- failed to counter the inroads that Microsoft has made in the
- software world with its Windows front-end software.
-
- The UK, Olivetti has a licence to bundle Microsoft Windows with
- its PCs, but is expected to offer OS/2 as an option on its
- dealer-supplied machines.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920729/Press & Public Contact: Olivetti U.K. - Tel:
- 081-780-8232)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LON)(00024)
-
- Bulgaria To Join Hungary On Cocom's "Free Export" List 07/29/92
- SOFIA, HUNGARY, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Glasnost may have been
- in Russia, and the former Eastern Bloc may be turning to
- democracy, but that doesn't mean that the West is happy with
- exporting its highest technology goods to the countries.
-
- That's the message coming out of Cocom -- the coordinating
- committee for multilateral export controls. The Paris-based
- controlling committee sits regularly to decide on blanket licences
- for exports to former Eastern Bloc countries.
-
- Cocom is slowly relaxing its rules, however, according to Robert
- Price, director of Cocom affairs with the US State Department.
- Price, on a two-day visit to Hungary, says that, by the end of
- this year, Bulgaria will join Hungary as a country that is
- relatively unhindered By Cocom rules.
-
- This will be good news for Bulgaria, according to government
- officials, since they need high technology goods to enable them
- to make investments for the future of their industries.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920729)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00025)
-
- New For Macintosh: Radius Ships VideoVision 07/29/92
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- A month after
- announcing the product at Digital World in Beverly Hills, Radius
- is now shipping its new VideoVision product in volume to
- customers. At the time of its official announcement, the company
- said that the product could revolutionize the video production
- industry.
-
- Heather Hood, spokesperson for Radius, told Newsbytes that the
- suggested retail price of the card is $2,399, but "that includes
- $1,100 worth of software, in Diva Videoshop, and Macromedia's
- Action!"
-
- According to the company, Videovision is designed to be used
- with Apple's Quicktime multimedia extension to the Macintosh
- operating system. The product allows flicker-free 24-bit "printing"
- of a multimedia presentation to a blank video tape via connection
- with a video cassette recorder. At the time of the product's
- announcement at Digital World, Radius President Barry James Folsom
- said that the product could create a cottage industry video tape
- production industry the way the laser printer created a desktop
- publishing boom.
-
- Hood told Newsbytes that Videovision is targeted toward "corporate
- in-house video departments, small shops that do multimedia
- productions and video productions, and a lot of people that have
- never used video before that are now starting to get interested."
-
- VideoVision allows Macintosh computer users to combine
- computer graphics, text, sound, analog and digital video.
- The company claims that "professional quality" videotapes
- can be created on the desktop using VideoVision.
-
- Radius says that VideoVision consists of a single digital
- interface card with built-in video input, video output and
- 24-bit graphic display capabilities, an external connector
- panel for video and audio connections, and software controls.
- The interface card fits in a NuBus slot of any Macintosh II,
- IIx, IIcx, IIci, IIfx or Quadra computer.
-
- Additionally, the company maintains that VideoVision
- doubles as a 24-bit color frame buffer that can display
- photo-realistic images from any application, eliminating
- the need and cost of a separate display interface card.
-
- The company says that, using VideoVision, a user can import
- video images from a variety of sources in virtually any video
- format, such as camcorder or CD ROM library, and manipulate
- them using a QuickTime video editing software product.
- Users can mix in background music or a voice over and add
- additional sound effects.
-
- As previously reported by Newsbytes, the Videovision card
- comes with a "Breakout Box" 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.
-
- Hood also pointed out an interesting trend to Newsbytes,
- saying: "Inside corporations...used to be doing desktop publishing
- but now because publishing is so easy for an end-user to be
- doing on their own machine, a lot of them are moving into
- video. It's all part of the migration."
-
- When asked by Newsbytes about the similarities between Videovision
- and Video Spigot, a video board enjoying considerable success in
- the market, she said that there are a many differences.
-
- All Video Spigot is, she said, "is a frame capture board
- basically. All it does is capture frames of digital video that you
- input into your system. It can't output video, you can't go to
- videotape. It has no video output capability. And Videovision
- lets you go directly to videotape. The other boards out there that
- have output capability, don't let you go to videotape without
- flicker. Basically, they just let you go to another Mac. They let you
- view it on another Mac or a large screen played off a Mac."
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920729/Press Contact: James Strohecker,
- Radius Inc., 408-954-6828)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00026)
-
- Conner To Repurchase Compaq Stock Ownership 07/29/92
- HOUSTON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Conner Peripherals is
- set to repurchase Compaq Computer's equity ownership of Conner
- common stock.
-
- The agreement calls for Conner to purchase Compaq's 11.6 million
- shares of Conner common stock for $20.75 per share, which was the
- closing price of the stock on the New York Stock Exchange on
- July 28, 1992. Compaq made an original investment of $6 million
- in Conner in June 1986 and an additional investment of $6 million
- in December 1986. Compaq will record a pre-tax gain of approximately
- $80 million from this transaction.
-
- Mike Berman, spokesman for Compaq, told Newsbytes that, "Compaq's
- relationship with Conner is one based on technology. From that
- respect.....we expect to continue that in the future. From a
- financial perspective, it's not that much of a benefit to hold.
- Based on the fact that Conner wanted to repurchase their stock,
- we thought it made sense."
-
- Compaq President and Chief Executive Officer Eckhard Pfeiffer, said:
- "We have always had a strong strategic relationship with Conner,
- and we fully expect that to continue. As a result of this
- transaction, Compaq will accelerate its stock repurchase program.
- This also complements our already strong cash position to support
- ongoing business strategies."
-
- Conner Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Finis Conner,
- stated: "We believe that this transaction makes a great deal of
- sense for both companies. Given our strong financial position,
- this represents an attractive opportunity for Conner and its
- shareholders."
-
- Berman told Newsbytes that Compaq still has some employees with
- "unexercised" stock options in Conner, but that is a "small percentage."
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920729/Press Contact: Bob Beach or Mike
- Berman, Compaq Computer Corp., 713-374-0484; or Tony
- Sapienza or Donna Ruane, Miller Communications, 617-
- 536-0470, for Compaq; or Kevin Burr, Conner Peripherals,
- 408-456-3134)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00027)
-
- HP Offers Sun/Apollo Wkstn Users Trade-Up Credit 07/29/92
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- In an effort to
- entice Sun Microsystems workstation users to switch to its own
- RISC Hewlett-Packard products, the company has extended its
- workstation trade-in program, effective immediately.
-
- The company says it is offering Sun users, as well as its
- Apollo Domain workstation users, up to a 44 percent trade-up credit
- toward new HP Apollo 9000 Series 700 PA-RISC-based workstations.
-
- According to HP, its new PowerUp Program targets Sun SPARCstation,
- Sun 3, and Apollo Domain customers who want to trade in a
- minimum of 20 of their current workstations before March 31, 1994.
- Under the program, customers may place orders up to January 1.
-
- Gary B. Eichhorn, general manager of HP's Workstation Systems
- Business Unit, said: "Solaris 1.0 and Domain/OS customers face
- an important decision. They must migrate to a different operating
- system, and HP's PowerUP Program ensures that they'll land on
- the only platform -PA-RISC - that ensures complete compatibility from
- the desktop to the data center."
-
- The company maintains that, in addition to a Series 700 workstation,
- Apollo Domain customers may select a Domain/OS-based HP Apollo
- 9000 Series 400 workstation that includes a board upgrade to a
- Series 700, which runs the HP-UX operating system. This provides an
- intermediate, compatible step with Domain/OS as well as a PA-RISC
- performance path.
-
- Additionally, the company claims that HP's migration tools help
- customers with Domain/OS-based workstations integrate Series 700s
- into their networks by allowing Domain/OS and HP-UX customers to
- use a common user interface, windowing and editing environment,
- an improved version of NFS, and to share information on an Apollo
- Token Ring LAN.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920729/Press Contact: Jim Barbagallo, Hewlett-Packard
- Co., 508-436-5049)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00028)
-
- ****Parallel Processing Systems Speed Movie Making 07/29/92
- MARINA DEL REY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- An IBM
- parallel processing system has been introduced into the Hollywood
- special effects for movies business. Boss Film, a company who
- has done visual effects for "Batman Returns," "Alien 3,"
- "Ghostbusters," and "Diehard," says the IBM Power Visualization
- System (PVS) it has just added to its visual effects studio is
- the beginning of a major change in the way filmmakers have
- produced visual effects.
-
- Boss Chief Operating Officer Alan Fetzer told Newsbytes the
- company has spent an enormous amount of time in the past
- creating visual effects on workstations because of the amount
- of information involved in moving film quality images to
- digital and then back again. A single frame of digitized film
- at 35mm or 65mm can take between 10 and 20 megabytes (MB) of
- hard disk space. Coupled with the fact that broadcast quality
- is 60 frames per second, use of a workstation for digitizing
- images and creating special effects is a slow and painful
- process.
-
- "A producer can start a single frame loading and go get a cup
- of coffee before it finishes," Fetzer said. With 2 minutes time
- to load a frame and 2 minutes to save it back to the disk, the
- average time is 10 minutes per frame. On a good day a 100
- frames can be done on a workstation, Fetzer said.
-
- However, the PVS offers performance gains in the realm of a
- supercomputer by using parallel processing. The technique of
- implementing multiple central processing units (CPUs) in a
- computer to handle the processing work is not new. However, the
- technique offers substantial performance gains when opposed to
- attempting to make a single CPU fast enough to handle all the
- work. Currently the fastest computers in the world are parallel
- processing machines.
-
- Richard Edlund, chief executive officer of Boss and four-time
- Academy Award winner, said the increased processing power of the
- AVS system will offer enhancements to the post production film
- making process, "...providing directors with digitally stored
- high-resolution images they can view and manipulate in real
- time -- an important creative as well as a positive economic
- factor."
-
- The scenes from the film "Terminator 2" in which a character
- was metamorphosized were done by the production company
- Industrial Light and Magic on a $50,000 Silicon Graphics
- workstation.
-
- While the PVS is exponentially faster than a workstation, the
- speed can cost up to ten times as much. The PVS can perform at
- up to an estimated 2.5 gigaflops or 2.5 billion instructions
- per second. However IBM representative Denis Arvay told
- Newsbytes companies can expect to pay in the neighborhood of
- half a million dollars to get such a system.
-
- The Boss PVS system has a eight Intel 860 CPUs, a 21-gigabyte disk
- array, a HIPPI channel that can offer data transfer rates of up
- to 100 megabytes per second, and two IBM RS-6000 workstations --
- one to do the input/output and one for the video.
-
- Fetzer said the company has justified the cost of the system
- because its target is to go from film back to film quality in a
- smooth way that looks real. "We don't want viewers in the
- theater saying, 'Ah, here comes a special effect,'" Fetzer
- added.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920729/Press Contact: Alan Fetzer, Boss Film
- Studios, tel 310-823-0433, fax 310-305-8576; Denis Arvay, IBM,
- 914-945-3471)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LON)(00029)
-
- US Software Firms Pushing Hard Into Europe, Says Report 07/29/92
- PARIS, FRANCE, 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- US software houses are
- staking their claim in Europe, according to an annual report just
- out from IDC, the market research company. The report identifies,
- however, the fact that the European software companies -- notably
- Cap Gemini Sogeti of France and Debis of Germany -- are also
- fighting back against the US invasion.
-
- According to IDC, compound annual growth in the European software
- market is expected to be around 10.7 percent until 1997. IDC's
- report claims that, although the recession is biting in
- Europe, sales are expected to pick up next year.
-
- During 1991, IDC reports that the European software market grew
- 10.6 percent to finish the year at $60,600 million.
-
- What's interesting about the report is who is doing what in
- Europe. While companies such as Computer Associates, Microsoft
- and Oracle are high in the list, many US software names simply
- don't figure in the report.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920729/Press & Public Contact: IDC France - Tel:
- +33-1-4443-8686)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00030)
-
- ****IBM Says 9% Of Employees Worldwide Are Leaving 07/29/92
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 29 (NB) -- Nearly 10 percent
- of the IBM workforce or 32,000 employees are expected to take the
- company up on its offer to leave. IBM initially predicted late last
- year 20,000 would take it up its Voluntary Workforce Reduction
- program.
-
- IBM announced the Voluntary Workforce Reduction program in November
- as a part of the company's efforts to tighten up and avoid layoffs
- from its worldwide workforce of about 350,000. The company reported
- a whopping $2.8-billion annual loss and its first year-over-year
- revenue drop in 45 years this January.
-
- Revenues at the world's largest computer company dropped 6.1
- percent to $64.8 billion in the year ending December 31, 1991.
-
- While the number of employees who are taking advantage of the
- workforce reduction program will cost the company an estimated
- $1.2 billion, IBM says it expects to make that up in 1.5 years
- from the money it will save on wages.
-
- William Milton, an analyst at New York investment house Brown Brothers
- Harriman, told Newsbytes that the company's infrastructure was
- designed to fit growth expectations that have turned out to be
- too optimistic. "IBM has been trying to adjust to the new reality
- here for five years," he said.
-
- IBM is also making other adjustments in the way it does business.
- The company recently announced price cuts on its PS/2 line of personal
- computers of up to 30 percent.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920729/Press Contact: David Hara, IBM, tel
- 914-765-6666, fax 914-765-5099)
-
-
-