home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1992-08-07 | 64.7 KB | 1,489 lines |
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00001)
-
- Australia: Telecom Ombudsman Job In Doubt 08/07/92
- CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- The appointment of an
- ombudsman to oversee the telecommunications market in Australia is
- to go one step closer with the "sketching" of guidelines of
- operation. Despite this, the structure favored by the minister
- responsible (based on the banking industry's ombudsman) is in
- doubt, with the banking ombudsman position being undermined by his
- "paymasters," the banks themselves.
-
- The plan to appoint an ombudsman for the telecommunications industry
- was first put forward by the Minister for Transport and
- Communications, Senator Michael Collins. Senator Collins expressed a
- preference for a structure modelled on the banking ombudsman, but
- since then, that ombudsman has had his position attacked by the
- banks, who want to limit his powers in respect to commercial
- customers.
-
- Under this model, the telecommunications ombudsman would be paid
- by and, as in the banking industry, constrained by, the
- institutions that person has been set up to monitor. It is because
- of this control that this model may no longer be used for the new
- position. The alternative now being put forward is that the
- ombudsman be a part of, but operationally independent of, Austel,
- the Australian telecommunications industry standards watchdog.
- Within this model, the ombudsman would deal with day-to-day
- complaints, while Austel would investigate wider trends and
- breaches. An announcement on details of the ombudsman's position is
- expected by the end of the month.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920807/Press & Public Contact: Department of
- Transport and Communications, phone in Australia +61-2-218 7666)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SYD)(00002)
-
- Australia: Qantas LAN To Link Operations 08/07/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Australia's international
- airline, Qantas, is planning to establish a local area network (LAN)
- to link three buildings in the inner-city and airport with its
- disaster recovery center 20 km away. The Qantas LAN Internetwork
- will be installed and operated by Qantek, Qantas' information
- technology subsidiary.
-
- The network will service approximately 1500 users, making it one of
- the largest in the country. The new system will be used by Qantas
- staff not only for normal office functions, but also to access
- several new computer systems. These systems will deliver such
- functions as accounting software, decision support, and air crew
- scheduling software (currently being developed by Qantek).
-
- The LAN Internetwork will actually connect LANs in two new buildings
- at Sydney Airport with an existing one there, as well as the
- disaster center at Homebush. Fiber optic cabling will be used
- extensively in the network, and the system has been designed to be
- "future proof," according to Robert Farquhar, a Qantas LAN analyst.
-
- "We designed the system so that it will take a number of years of
- growth before the data stream from the computer overwhelms the LANs.
- Even when it does, it will be a fairly straightforward process to
- segment a LAN. All you have to do is plug a new card into the hub,"
- Farquhar said. Qantas has not released details of the cost of the
- network.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920807/Press Contact: Robert Farquhar, phone in
- Australia +61-2-236 4226)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(DEL)(00003)
-
- India: Cellular Sizzle Is On 08/07/92
- NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- The Department of
- Telecommunications (DoT) has at last come out with the shortlist
- of bidders for cellular mobile phones by asking 14 of the 30 bidders
- to submit the financial bids by August 17.
-
- According to an official announcement, the 14 companies shortlisted
- are: Skycell Communications Pvt. Ltd., Adino Telecom Ltd., Hutchision
- Max Telecom Pvt. Ltd., TCIL Vanguard Ltd., India Tele-comp Ltd.,
- Usha Martin Telecom Ltd., Bharati Cellular Pvt. Ltd., Tata
- Cellular Pvt. Ltd., Modi Telecommunication, Sterling Cellular Ltd.,
- BPL Systems and Projects Ltd., Mobile Telecom Services Ltd.,
- Mobile Communications India Pvt. Ltd., and Indian Telecom Pvt. Ltd.
-
- The tendering has been a competition between foreign companies which
- have teamed up with the Indian companies for service franchising
- in the four Indian metros: Bombay, Delhi, Calcutta and Madras.
- No Indian company has bid on its own. But the consortium companies
- represent the top Indian industrial groups. Among the foreign
- collaborators are such companies as Vodophone, Hutchinsons,
- Bell-South, Nynex, Cable and Wireless, Siemens, Datacon,
- Bell-Canada, Australian Telecom, France Telecom, Malaysian
- Telecom and Singapore Telecom.
-
- Nearly, all the bids are based on three technologies: either
- of Motorola, or Ericsson or Alcatel. DoT had earlier decided
- on going in for GSM (Groupe Speciale Mobile) system.
-
- Among the notable omissions in the current shortlist are Cable
- and Wireless which is in collaboration with the Hindujas, the
- richest non-resident Indian business family. Siemens and Datacon
- are among the other rejections.
-
- According to DoT sources, two operating companies will be chosen
- for each of the metros, finally.
-
- (C.T. Mahabharat/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(SYD)(00004)
-
- ERG Australia To Share In AUS$26M Contract In UK 08/07/92
- MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Australian company ERG
- Australia is to share an AUS$26M contract in Manchester, England,
- for the supply of a computerized ticketing system for the Greater
- Manchester Passenger Transport Executive (GMPTE) Metrolink tram,
- rail and bus transport system.
-
- The system supplied will be based on a design by British company GEC
- Card Technology. It is based on the use of smartcards -- credit-card
- like cards with microchips which store information needed by the
- system. The microchips store account information, and can be "topped
- up" at more than 800 outlets throughout Manchester. A pilot scheme
- involving 300 of the 2700 buses in the network will be installed
- first, followed by complete coverage of the bus, rail and tram
- network.
-
- The ERG company involved in the system will be AES Scanpoint (UK),
- which will be responsible for the equipment at the "top up" outlets
- (which are expected to number 3000 by the time the system is fully
- installed). AES Scanpoint is a joint-venture company formed between
- ERG's ticketing division and its Danish rival, Scanpoint. AES
- Scanpoint will be responsible for the installation of the equipment,
- as well as maintenance of the system for seven years. Peter Fogarty,
- ERG chief executive, said of the contract, "This is our most
- significant such agreement awarded in the world to date. Our success
- proves that our technology and competitiveness are world class."
-
- (Sean McNamara/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00005)
-
- Midwestern Phone Deregulation Under Attack 08/07/92
- LANSING, MICHIGAN, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- In Michigan and
- Ohio, phone deregulation which seemed to favor local Bell
- operating companies has come under attack.
-
- MCI asked the Michigan Public Service Commission to order "equal
- access" for long distance service within five of seven
- Michigan Local Access and Transport Areas, known as LATAs. A LATA
- covers a major city and its suburbs, and while some calls within
- LATAs are charged as long distance calls, local Bell companies
- often have a monopoly on that service. A recent study indicated
- that the Bells are using this monopoly to gouge the public. The
- MCI petition, if granted, would allow Michigan consumers to use
- the long distance carrier of their choice on a 1+ basis for these
- short long distance calls. Right now, callers must dial a 5-digit
- access code to reach the long distance company of their choice --
- otherwise the call is carried by a local company.
-
- In Ohio, meanwhile, a state representative from Columbus was
- forced to defend his deregulation bill before state regulators.
- Dean Conley disputed claims the plan would be a gift to the local
- phone companies, especially Ohio Bell. Conley's plan, like a plan
- recently passed in Michigan and Illinois, would let the local
- phone companies charge more for local services if they made
- investments in the local network. Perhaps for the first time, the
- cable television industry also got involved in this issue,
- arguing against Conley's plan. Ohio Bell argues it is not a
- monopoly.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920807/Press Contact: Kate Fralin, MCI, 703-
- 415-6941)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SYD)(00006)
-
- Speculation That DEC And HP May Merge 08/07/92
- MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- The lead story in
- Pacific Computer Weekly this week reports on current talk that
- Hewlett-Packard will take over Digital Equipment within the next
- nine months. The Australian computer newspaper quotes a
- number of analysts who comment on the possibility.
-
- DEC has slipped from position two to four in the Datamation top
- 100 computer companies, while HP has moved up from seven to
- five. HP is performing strongly while DEC has had numerous
- rounds of layoffs and bad performance reports. HP revenues are
- around 40 percent less than DEC's, it has been making a profit, and
- has a much higher market capitalization.
-
- Analysts disagree about DEC's moves to revamp its high-end
- hardware while shedding staff. Some feel this will place the
- company in a good position for the HP takeover as it will be lean
- and ready to blend into the HP style. Others feel it is bleeding the
- life from what has been a great in the industry.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SYD)(00007)
-
- Australia: Revenues Up, Profits Down 08/07/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Australian computer companies
- are boosting revenues, but finding profits harder to come by in
- the current recession. This already apparent trend was confirmed
- yesterday when Ferntree and Sun Microsystems reported revenue
- growth, but profits down - 70 percent down for Ferntree, and
- unstated for Sun.
-
- Systems supplier Ferntree increased sales from $168 to $172M,
- but profits dropped from $4.2 to just $1.3M. Managing Director
- Norman McCann said the results were nothing to be ashamed of,
- especially considering that long term liabilities had been reduced
- by $7M during the year. He said that business turned the corner in
- December and since then figures had been up on last year.
-
- Sun Australia grew its revenue by 10 percent over the last year.
- Demand for Sun's Unix workstations and servers contributed to
- the growth, and the 600MP multiprocessor SPARC servers were
- particularly successful with 150 installed in the eight months
- since release.
-
- New Sun Managing Director Les Haylen said, "Despite a recessionary
- economy, more businesses are moving to open systems because of the
- price/performance benefit. The 600MP series has proved particularly
- successful in the commercial environments as it allows companies
- to move into the open client-server computing models which so many
- users are demanding today."
-
- (Paul Zucker and Kester Cranswick/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(DEL)(00008)
-
- India To Privatize Radio Paging, Other Services 08/07/92
- NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- The recently floated Department
- of Telecommunications (DOT) tender for allotting licenses for
- radio paging services in 27 cities of India has received an
- overwhelming response from the electronics community.
-
- As many as 83 bids have been submitted to the DOT, which had
- advanced the closing date for receiving the tenders from the
- 31st to the 15th of July.
-
- The bidders for the paging license include almost all of the 30
- consortia which had put forward stakes for the cellular phone
- service tenders. Nearly 30 bidders have offered to provide for
- all the 27 centers, while the remaining have bid for a few chosen
- centers. The long list of aspirants includes heavyweights such
- as Hinditron in collaboration with Mtel International of the US,
- Ashok Leyland in tandem with Cables & Wireless of UK, Skytel
- Communications with Star Paging of Hong Kong, Eider Electronics
- also with Star Paging, and Medco Electronics in partnership with
- the US multinational Motorola.
-
- As in the cellular bid, some tenderers have formed alliances
- with more than one party to make separate bids. For example,
- the Eider Electronics, Samsung and Star Paging consortium has
- made four bids in all. The coming days are expected to see
- intense lobbying by the bidders for the share of the cake,
- that, in the long run, may turn out to be bigger than the
- cellular one.
-
- When profits are counted relative to megahertz, paging is thought
- to be the most profitable communications business one can find.
-
- With this tender, the total number of tenders under evaluation
- at DOT has reached three. The other two consist of one for digital
- exchanges and the other for cellular service operators' license
- for four metros.
-
- Meanwhile, DOT has decided to throw open five more value-added
- services to the private sector. These are electronic mail, videotex,
- video conferencing, voice mail and morning alarm service. Proposals
- have been invited from Indian companies for setting up facilities to
- offer services under license on a non-exclusive basis. Companies
- with foreign collaboration are also eligible to submit proposals.
-
- The companies are free to decide tariff rates, including rentals
- of machines at the subscriber's end, but all such rates will
- have to be approved by DOT. The period of license will be five
- years which can be extended by another two years at a time, by
- mutual consent.
-
- (C.T. Mahabharat/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(ATL)(00009)
-
- Credit Card Activated Cellphones In Rental Cars 08/07/92
- HOUSTON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Dollar Rent A Car has
- begun rolling out credit card activated cellular telephones in
- its Chicago fleet.
-
- The GTE Credit Card Phone is activated by passing a major credit
- card through a compact card reader on the phone. The GTE Credit
- Card Phone accepts the AT&T Calling Card, MasterCard, VISA,
- American Express and Diner's Club.
-
- By installing the credit card phones, Dollar's rental car customers
- can now request a car with a phone and pay only for the calls they
- make or receive. In addition to placing calls, the phone allows
- customers to transmit data via portable fax machines and laptop
- computers.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920806/Press Contact: Susan Asher, GTE, 404-
- 804-3800)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00010)
-
- Sprint Offers New 900 Number 08/07/92
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Having lost millions
- of dollars when the caller-paid 900 number industry was forced to
- shut down sex lines, chat lines, sports tout lines and credit
- card fraud lines, the industry is now fighting hard to reestablish
- some credibility for the services by linking with charitable
- causes having a high, positive public profile.
-
- And what could be more friendly than a dog?
-
- Sprint and the American Humane Association jointly announced a
- new caller-paid 900 service through which people can check for
- their missing dog. They also announced a toll-free 800 number
- through which people can report they have found missing
- strays.
-
- The numbers use a menu-driven program keyed by a touchtone
- keypad, that lets callers file their zip code and a description
- of the animal. A database is then searched, and reports back
- instantly. Searches can be made for cats as well as dogs.
- Reports stay in the system for two weeks.
-
- To report that you have found a stray, call 800-755-8111. If you
- have lost your dog, call 900-535-1515 and be prepared to pay
- $1.95 per minute, with the fee collected from your next phone
- bill. The typical call lasts about four minutes on the 900 line,
- Sprint said, but the company noted that a two-line ad in a daily
- newspaper may cost much more than the $8 it is charging. Sprint
- said revenues from the 900 number will offset the cost of the 800
- number. A portion of the proceeds will also benefit the AHA.
-
- To publicize the service, both Sprint and the AHA will distribute
- posters to over 20,000 vets, and they hope to print the numbers,
- along with actual pictures of missing pets, on milk cartons,
- grocery bags, pet food packaging and refrigerator magnets.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19920806)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00011)
-
- Hongkong: Bank Installs Hitachi Summit Mainframe 08/07/92
- CENTRAL, HONG KONG, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Standard Chartered Bank
- recently became the first computer user in the territory to run a
- "Summit-class" mainframe. The Hitachi Data Systems (HDS) EX310
- processor which was installed in June, is now hosting Standard
- Chartered's major banking applications after successful migration
- from the IBM 3090/400J system which it replaces.
-
- "With the new processor up and running at Standard Chartered, two
- of Hong Kong's three top banks now rely on Hitachi Data System
- mainframe computers to process their daily business
- transactions," said Geoff Kennedy, Hong Kong manager at HDS.
-
- According to Graham Glover, area head of Standard Chartered
- Bank's Information Technology Division, the new machine went in a
- week ahead of schedule, having been delivered the day after the
- order was confirmed.
-
- "The mainframe powered up at first try and passed all our tests
- without a glitch," said Mr Glover. "The cut-over itself went very
- smoothly with total system downtime well within the four-hour
- target."
-
- Standard Chartered first installed Hitachi Data Systems equipment
- in March this year, when it replaced its entire disk storage
- "farm" with 20 HDS 7390 DASD (Direct Access Storage Device)
- units, totalling more than 360 gigabytes of data storage
- capacity.
-
- Taken together with the new EX310, Standard Chartered has
- installed HDS equipment worth US$16 million so far this year.
-
- "The IT budget is a significant part of the bank's operating
- expenses," explained Mr Glover. "We estimate that through our HDS
- upgrades we will realize savings of between 20 and 25 percent on
- operating costs over the next two or three years in lower
- maintenance cost and improved productivity."
-
- In order to save money on the operating system licence fee,
- Standard Chartered currently has the three-processor EX310
- configured as a dual-processor EX210 system, delivering a 12 percent
- performance boost over the system it replaced.
-
- As Standard Chartered's workload increases, it will be able to
- switch on the third processor, boosting processor performance to
- a peak of 135 MIPS (million instructions per second), an increase
- of 60 percent over the previous system.
-
- The extra processing power will be needed to cope with both
- Standard Chartered's growing transaction volumes resulting from
- increased business, and from the addition of more application
- programs.
-
- "Since 1987 we have been following a strategy of replacing our
- Unisys-based applications with commercial software packages
- running on IBM mainframe architecture," said Mr Glover. "This
- process is now almost complete in Hong Kong and we hope to have
- migrated from the last Unisys-based applications by about the end
- of March next year."
-
- The processing load has grown substantially in the last 18 months
- with the successful roll-out of the Hogan Retail Banking system
- into Standard Chartered's Hong Kong branch network. The summer
- months also see a peak of activity on the bank's mainframe-based
- IMEX trade finance system.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920805/Press Contact: Geoff Kennedy, HDS
- tel:+852-521 6275;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(HKG)(00012)
-
- Hongkong: DEC Intros Upgradable PCs To Asia 08/07/92
- TAIKOO SHING, HONG KONG, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Digital Equipment Asia
- has launched five new upgradable personal computers designed
- to provide video capabilities at very competitive prices.
-
- The new systems, which are equipped with GUI (graphical user
- interface) accelerators that speed up performance of Windows
- programs by 40 percent, are the latest additions to the family of
- Digital-built PCs initiated in April.
-
- The PCs feature a choice of industry-standard processors, the
- 386sx, 386dx, 486sx, 486dx and 486dx2. All of the 386dx and 486
- systems are field-upgradable via a simple board swap to provide
- maximum flexibility and investment protection.
-
- "Digital is committed to taking a leadership position in the PC
- market, and the best way to do that is to design and produce
- products that carry Digital quality but are priced at what the
- industry considers aggressive," said Alan McMillan, PC business
- manager for Digital Asia. "Customers that are interested in
- running Windows-based applications will be awed by the power
- designed into the video bus."
-
- The new Digital PCs are configured to serve a wide range of
- applications and users. The models announced are:
-
- DECpc 333sx LP - featuring a 33 MHz 386sx processor and 2MB or
- 8 MB of memory expandable to 14 MB, the DECpc 333sx LP provides
- room for growth or customization;
-
- DECpc 340dx LP - featuring a 40 MHz 386 processor and the
- capacity for upgrading to a 486 processor;
-
- DECpc 425sx LP - featuring a 25 MHz 486sx processor, this unit
- is designed for graphics-intensive business and/or desktop
- publishing applications;
-
- DECpc 433dx LP - featuring a powerful 33 MHz 486dx processor to
- handle intensive, business-critical applications, computer-aided
- design (CAD), professional desktop publishing or other demanding
- applications;
-
- DECpc 450dx2 LP - featuring a 50 MHz 486dx2 processor and a
- 21.1 MIPs performance rating, the DECpc 450dx2 LP is ideal for
- professional technical, scientific, desktop publishing or
- multimedia applications.
-
- "These PCs are especially attractive to users, from small
- businesses to large organizations with enterprise-wide
- applications," said Mr McMillan.
-
- The PCs are built in Digital's advanced Taiwan plant, which
- has achieved MRP II (Manufacturing Resource Planning) Class
- A status and ISO 9000 certification, for worldwide
- distribution.
-
- Pricing for the new units start at $1,499, including, keyboard,
- mouse, VGA monochrome monitor, 2 MB using 70 nanosecond SIMM
- technology, 52 MB hard disk drive, 3.5-inch 1.44 MB diskette drive
- and pre-installed MS-DOS 5.0 with Microsoft Windows 3.1.
-
- They have been adapted to suit local language requirements
- in Asia including traditional Chinese, simplified Chinese,
- Korean and Thai. They are also certified for Digital Pathworks
- and Novell NetWare networking operations.
-
- The PCs include three full-sized ISA expansion slots for each
- model. Each system includes built in high-performance super
- VGA color graphics capability, 512 KB VRAM for video frame
- buffer expandable to 1MB and ultra fast local bus for fast
- video performance.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920805/Press contact: Walter Cheung, Digital,
- tel: +852-805 3533;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TOR)(00013)
-
- Canada Remote Tops Boardwatch 100 08/07/92
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Canada Remote Systems,
- North America's largest bulletin board system, has taken the top
- spot in Boardwatch magazine's Boardwatch 100 Readers' Choice BBS
- Contest.
-
- Second place went to Pleasuredome, a board based in Norfolk,
- Virginia, and third place to Odyssey, a Monrovia, California, BBS,
- a Boardwatch employee told Newsbytes.
-
- A total of 1,215 bulletin board systems in the United States and
- Canada received votes from Boardwatch readers in the six-month
- contest. Boardwatch estimates there are some 40,000 bulletin boards
- in the United States alone.
-
- The awards will be given out at the ONE BBSCON conference in Denver
- August 13-16.
-
- As the winning BBS, Canada Remote is to get a free full-page
- advertisement in Boardwatch for six issues, a trip for two to ONE
- BBSCON, and other prizes. The top ten runners-up will also
- receive free advertising and each will feature in a full-length
- article in Boardwatch.
-
- Canada Remote Systems has more than 85,000 subscribers, who have
- access to a software library of more than 500,000 programs and
- files and to more than 3,500 public forums and discussion areas.
- Canada Remote also provides a number of news and information
- services, including the United Press International and Reuters news
- wires, North American stock exchange results, the twice-weekly edition
- of Newsbytes, and other publications.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920806/Press Contact: Neil Fleming, Canada Remote
- Systems, 416-620-1439, 800-465-6443 in Canada, 800-465-7562 in
- U.S., fax 416-629-0771; Boardwatch Magazine, 303-973-6038, fax 303-
- 986-8754; Public Contact: Canada Remote Systems, 416-620-1439,
- 800-465-6443 in Canada, 800-465-7562 in U.S.)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(BOS)(00014)
-
- ****MacWorld: QuickTime to Incorporate 25:1 Compression 08/07/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- SuperMac's
- Compact Video Codec technology will be incorporated into Apple's
- QuickTime, yielding better full-motion video and less disk space
- consumption, the companies announced in a press conference at
- MacWorld Boston.
-
- The Compact Codec will compress QuickTime movies at ratios of more
- than 25:1, allowing users to experience high quality, full-motion,
- true-color video, stated Doug Camplejohn, Apple's product manager
- for QuickTime. In contrast, current video compressors for
- QuickTime compress at ratios of only 6:1, causing compression
- artifacts and low frame rates that result in jagged edges and
- blockiness, he emphasized.
-
- The higher compression will also encourage multimedia content
- producers to come out with full-length feature films in QuickTime,
- predicted Cathy Galvin, SuperMac's digital video product manager.
-
- Each frame will take up a smaller amount of disk space, so that
- movies of two hours or more can now fit comfortably on a CD-ROM.
- "This is a major step in the development of multimedia as a mass
- market," she maintained.
-
- Officials also noted that, unlike the DVI used with IBM-compatible
- PCs, SuperMac's codec lets all developers and users carry out
- compression without outside assistance. "The incorporation of the
- Compact Video Code with Apple's QuickTime means that Apple has
- taken an immense leap over Windows-based video solutions,"
- commented Michael McConnell, CEO of SuperMac.
-
- After the press conference, Jim Center, SuperMac's digital video
- product manager, told Newsbytes that the hardware necessary for DVI
- compression is unavailable to most developers and users, forcing
- them to rely on the services of a third-party vendor.
-
- According to Apple and SuperMac, the Compact Codec will support 30
- frame-per-second playback of compressed QuickTime from a standard
- CD in a video window up to 320 x 240 in size.
-
- The officials stressed that the Compact Codec also provides faster
- decompression, even on low-end machines like the Macintosh LC. The
- enhanced decompression gives a further boost to ultimate picture
- quality, they suggested.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920806; Press Contacts: Stephanie Bryant,
- SuperMac, tel 408 773-4446; Laurie McLean, McLean PR for SuperMac,
- tel 415-358-8535; Tricia Chan, Apple, tel 408-974-3886)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(BOS)(00015)
-
- MacWorld: Atlas Pro 1.5 and Maps Unveiled 08/07/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- At MacWorld
- Boston, Strategic Mapping Inc., has announced a major upgrade to its
- Atlas Pro geographic information manager, plus a suite of digitized
- maps for Western Europe and Canada.
-
- Version 1.5 brings more database connectivity, new presentation
- tools, and improved address matching to Atlas Pro, a product aimed
- at helping business and database users analyze and present
- geographic information.
-
- Atlas Pro can be applied to demographics, sales figures, crime
- statistics, and many other geographic variables, a public relations
- spokesperson told Newsbytes. Changes in the variables are depicted
- in changes on shaded area color maps. Product uses include retail
- site selection, sales territory design, distribution planning,
- mailing list selection, and land-use planning.
-
- Version 1.5 supports interactive querying of Sybase, Oracle,
- Informix, Rdb, DB2, and many other SQL database systems, the
- spokesperson said.
-
- A new gradient fill option is designed for use in adjusting the
- color scheme that represents the variables. With the gradient
- fill, all the user must do is pick one color for the highest data
- level to be shown on the map, and another color for the lowest.
- All colors in between are automatically calculated. In contrast,
- the previous version of Atlas Pro required the user to select all
- colors in the range.
-
- In addition, said the spokesperson, new street rendering tools
- supply better looking streets, and newly added style sheets afford
- easier control over street colors, line styles, and labeling.
-
- Version 1.5 also incorporates new tools that speed up the zoom
- function. Now the user can zoom out of a view by clicking on a
- single icon, or zoom in by clicking on another. Previously, each
- type of zoom was a two-step process.
-
- A new address matching capability lets the user map out any street
- in the US, match any address with its latitude/longitude
- coordinates, and attach data to those points on the map.
-
- In addition, the product comes with a new page preview option, and
- new support for multipage and E-size printing. The price of
- Version 1.5 is $795.
-
- The new maps of Western Europe and Canada are sold separately from
- Atlas Pro, and range in price from $100 to several thousand
- dollars. At the top of the range are maps of Europe that were
- difficult for Strategic Mapping to acquire, the spokesperson told
- Newsbytes.
-
- "In the US, many maps are already in the public domain. But in
- some sections of Europe, maps are generated by the government, and
- guarded jealously," he remarked.
-
- Yet many of these European maps are based on postal codes and
- therefore furnish excellent data, he pointed out. European postal
- codes are only about the size of a city block, meaning that
- detailed information can be represented, he explained.
-
- The spokesperson added that Strategic Mapping will change its own
- address on August 15, moving from San Jose, CA to a larger, 34,000-
- square-foot facility in Santa Clara to accommodate company growth.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920806; Press and Public Contact: David
- Radoff, Strategic Mapping, tel 408-985-7400 before August 15, 408-
- 970-9600 after August 15)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(BOS)(00016)
-
- MacWorld: Peachtree Brings Out New Accounting Packages 08/07/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Peachtree has
- announced new names for its Mac-based accounting software, together
- with product enhancements and lower prices.
-
- Introduced at MacWorld this week, the new packages are Peachtree
- Accounting, an entry-level program previously known as At Once, and
- the more advanced Peachtree Insight Accounting, previously dubbed
- Insight Accounting.
-
- Susan Howard Wells, director of sales, told Newsbytes that the new
- monikers come two years after Peachtree's purchase of Apple's
- Macintosh accounting software line.
-
- Research conducted since then has shown the company that end users
- haven't been associating the Macintosh software with Peachtree, a
- label highly regarded in the accounting world, and that prices have
- been set too high for the current market, stated Wells.
-
- The upgraded products are enjoying great success at retail, with
- more stores opting to carry the line, she emphasized.
-
- Peachtree Accounting, priced at just $99, adds System 7
- compatibility to the entry-level product, previously sold for $249.
- The new program carries forward the easy-to-use tools for general
- ledger, accounts receivable, billing, accounts payable, payroll,
- budgeting, and custom forms design that were offered in At Once.
-
- Peachtree Insight Accounting adds System 7 compatibility, along
- with batch processing and data import and export utilities. The
- batch processing enables accounting work to be reviewed and edited
- before being posted.
-
- The six modules in the more advanced package were formerly priced
- at $695 apiece. Now, in Peachtree Insight Accounting, all six are
- available for $395. The modules cover the same accounting
- functions as those in Peachtree Accounting, but at higher levels of
- capability.
-
- For example, the reports that can be generated in Peachtree
- Accounting consist of journal listings, check register, general
- ledger, chart of accounts, balance sheet, income statement, and
- trial balance. But Peachtree Insight Accounting goes further,
- creating such sophisticated reports as liquidity ratios,
- profitability ratios, asset management ratios, historical journal,
- and source and use of funds statement.
-
- Compatibility with System 7 lets users take advantage of system
- features like Balloon Help, TrueType fonts, Core Apple Events, and
- Voice Annotation.
-
- Both accounting products are being supplied in new and more
- streamlined packages, Sherry D. Junker, product manager, told
- Newsbytes. "The packages are designed to give us a cleaner, more
- professional look," she commented. The packages are shipping.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920806; Press and Public Contacts: Susan
- Howard Wells, Peachtree, tel 404-564-5747; Sherry D. Junker,
- Peachtree, tel 404-564-5777)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00017)
-
- Greek Mobile Phone Licences Awarded 08/07/92
- ATHENS, GREECE, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Two companies -- Stet of Italy
- and Panafon, a Pan-European consortium -- have each won a licence
- to install digital cellular phone networks in Greece. The
- licences have not come cheaply, however, as each network operator
- will have to pay $160 million to the Greek government, although
- the licences are good for the next 20 years.
-
- Announcing the licences in Athens this week, Tzannis Tzannetakis,
- the government premier, said that both companies have committed
- to paying up to $850 million for their networks which will
- rapidly cover the mainland of the country.
-
- According to Tzannetakis, the groupe speciale mobile (GSM)
- networks should be live in the Athens area within the next 18
- months, with the steady rollout to the rest of Greece over the
- next six years creating up to 7,000 new jobs.
-
- Stet is the Italian state telecom company. Panafon, meanwhile,
- is a consortium of Vodafone in the UK and France Telecom, as
- well as Intrakom and Data Bank, which are both Greek telecom
- companies.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920806)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00018)
-
- British Telecom Preparing New Price Cap Strategy 08/07/92
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- British Telecom (BT) has
- announced it is preparing a formal basket of proposals in response
- to Oftel, the British Government-appointed telecom watchdog's
- decision to impose price caps on the company's phone charges.
-
- BT is responding to press reports that it and Oftel have failed
- to reach an agreement on a set of proposals on price increases.
- Oftel, which has imposed price capping on BT's charges for
- several years, recently announced harsh price caps, below the
- rate of inflation, as BT continued to report healthy profits.
-
- Although BT is known to be unhappy with the price capping
- proposals, the fact that Oftel is not referring them to the
- Monopolies and Mergers Committee, which would almost certainly
- impose a new set of Draconian price limits on the telecom giant,
- means that they will eventually be accepted.
-
- Oftel's price capping measures moved the price increase limit
- from the current inflation less 6.25 percent to inflation less
- 7.5 percent. The measures, which kick in on August 1, 1993, will
- also reduce the maximum connection charge that BT can charge its
- subscribers from UKP 152.75 to UKP 99.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920806)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00019)
-
- Wordperfect Teams With Sunsoft 08/07/92
- ADDLESTONE, SURREY, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Wordperfect has
- announced a technology sharing agreement with Sunsoft. The
- partnership between the two companies will allow Wordperfect
- products to use technology drawn from Sunsoft's Solaris system
- software for distributed computing.
-
- According to Wordperfect, the current strategy calls for
- cooperation on software development between the two companies. By
- pooling resources, both companies claim that their respective
- users will benefit from shorter development time on new
- technologies.
-
- "The joint efforts of our two companies and the sharing of
- technology allows Wordperfect to effectively utilize Sunsoft's
- development resources," explained David Godwin, Wordperfect's
- general manager of sales and marketing.
-
- According to Godwin, the people who will benefit most from the
- company's working together will be their customers. "They can
- look forward to WP products such as Wordperfect and WP Office
- taking advantage of Sunsoft's technologies such as the Open Look
- graphical user interface, Tooltalk and QNC/NFS," he added.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920806/Press Contact: Wordperfect Contact: 0932-
- 850500)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00020)
-
- Low-Cost Direct Host Access To Internet 08/07/92
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Demon Systems, a London-based
- technology firm, has set up a low-cost method for serious users
- of the Internet to obtain their own host name on the network.
-
- Direct access to the Internet gets users a lot more than their
- own host name, according to Grahame Davis, marketing director
- with Demon Systems.
-
- "Because we have a 64,000 bits kilostream into Pipex in
- Cambridge, we have a full link into the Internet. That allows our
- subscribers to call into our system and telnet (link) to other
- host systems on the Internet free of charge, as well as ftp (file
- transfer protocol) files from those hosts at high speed," he
- explained.
-
- Currently, Demon Internet Services (DIS) has a rack of 16 Miracom
- dual standard high-speed modems, with 13 available for
- subscribers. Despite being operational for just a month, the
- service already has 250 subscribers and more are signing up
- daily.
-
- Sign-up to DIS costs UKP 12-50, with monthly flat-rate
- subscriptions costing UKP 10-00 a month. "That's it - there are
- no other charges other than cost of the phone call," Davies told
- Newsbytes, adding that a dial-out facility is also available.
-
- Dial-out allows a subscriber to register his own system, typically
- a PC with an auto-answer modem, and phone number with DIS. This
- allows, for example, a caller on a US Internet host system to
- open a link (Telnet) to DIS, which then dials out at local
- calling rates to the subscriber's "home" system.
-
- Another key feature of DIS is the ability to gain direct access
- to the full Usenet news/feed, a vast selection of conferences and
- messaging systems that are identified by conferences and topics.
- The feed is interactive, meaning that DIS subscribers can reply
- to Usenet conference messages in real time.
-
- According to Davies, subscribers can link via DIS' London access
- ports at very high speed using V32Bis (14,400 bits per second)
- modems with V.42Bis error correction and data compression. Plans
- call for an integrated services digital network (ISDN) link to be
- installed, although Davies said that the company is experiencing
- some problems in achieving full ISDN throughput of 64,000 bps
- owing to hardware unreliability. Once this problem has been
- solved, then ISDN access at 64,000 bps will be possible.
-
- ISDN subscriptions will cost UKP 50 to sign up, with a monthly
- charge of UKP 35. The dial out facility also costs UKP 50 to
- register and UKP 15 a month plus call charges. Commercial
- link/subscriptions are available from UKP 250 sign-up and UKP 150
- a month ongoing rental.
-
- (Steve Gold/19920807/Tel: 081-349-0063; Fax: 081-349-0309; email
- on internet@demon.co.uk)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00021)
-
- ROUNDUP: Stories Carried By Other Media This Week 08/07/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Roundup is a brief
- look at some computer stories carried in other publications
- received here this past week.
-
- September's Macworld has the following on the cover: "America's
- Shame - the creation of the technological underclass in America's
- public schools - how we abandoned our children's future." Inside
- are a number of articles related to the theme.
-
- The August issue of Lotus emphasizes printing 1-2-3 charts.
-
- Windows magazine for August looks at Compaq's business audio.
-
- The August 3 issue of Federal Computer Week says that Compaq and
- other companies are scrambling to offer federal computer buyers
- cut-rate prices on the GSA Microcomputer schedule.
-
- June's MIS Quarterly contains papers on "Threats to Information
- Systems," "Managing Telecommunications by Steering Committee,"
- and "Microcomputer Playfulness: Development of a Measure With
- Workplace Implications" (how game playing can improve work
- performance).
-
- (John McCormick/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LAX)(00022)
-
- Chipsoft Says Competitor Returned Computer Code Copy 08/07/92
- SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Chipsoft,
- known for its tax preparation software product Turbotax,
- announced a competitor has delivered back to it a copy of the
- company's computer code. The company says a strict interpretation
- of the disclosure laws for public companies led to the announcement
- and it is taking steps to find the culprit.
-
- Debra Kelley of public relations for Chipsoft said the
- company's attorneys advised it to make the announcement, but
- Chipsoft is unwilling to release the identity of the competitor
- who returned the code or any details regarding its
- investigation of the action. Kelley did add the company has
- tightened security since the discovery.
-
- Chipsoft announced last month the purchase of Speed>s
- (pronounced "speed s") Corporation for the purpose of
- integrating electronic filing for users into its own tax
- software. Chipsoft says the addition of Speed>s resources will
- allow it to have its own Electronic Services Group. Users will
- be able to submit their tax returns to the company directly for
- electronic filing instead of contracting with a third-party
- electronic filing firms as it has done in the past.
-
- When asked by Newsbytes whether or not the security breach with
- the computer code would mean users might have to worry about a
- privacy concerning electronic filing of tax return information,
- Kelley said the personnel in the divisions of the company that
- handle the coding are separate from the people in the division
- that will handle the tax returns, though the computers might be
- integrated.
-
- Kelley also pointed out it has an agreement with the IRS which
- safeguards the privacy of filers. If the company is found in
- violation of that agreement, it would mean Chipsoft could no
- longer operate electronic filing with the IRS.
-
- When asked why a competitor would return the computer code to
- Chipsoft, code that probably wouldn't do the competitor much
- good since programs are written differently by each company,
- Kelley said she was surprised as well. "It was an extremely
- responsible move on the part of our competitors. I know we
- would have acted just as responsibly had the situation been
- reversed."
-
- Chipsoft's Turbotax product is the number-one, best-selling
- personal and small business tax software in the US. The
- company markets more than 230 tax reparation and related
- software products for both IBM sold under the brand names
- Turbotax, Macintax, and Taxview. The products range from those
- intended for use by accountants to programs for home use.
-
- Also, Chipsoft just went public this year with an initial
- public offering of 3.3 million common shares at $12.50 per
- share.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920807/Press Contact: Debra Kelley,
- Chipsoft, tel 619-453-4446, ext. 482, fax 619-535-0737; Public
- Contact: 619-453-8722)
-
-
- (EDITORIAL)(TRENDS)(WAS)(00023)
-
- Editorial: America's Shame 08/07/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- By John McCormick.
- In a scathing indictment of US educators and politicians, the
- September Macworld magazine has exposed pervasive underfunding and
- underutilization of computer resources, which is leaving most of
- the next generation fit only for fast-disappearing menial jobs.
-
- In one section called Separate Realities, author Charles Piller
- shows that little has been done to bring the poorest schools up
- to the level of the richest.
-
- School bureaucracies are often so ossified that many computers
- aren't used for anything worthwhile. One school uses a $200,000
- IBM 9370 to teach COBOL programming.
-
- Has the teacher never heard of "C" or another language which is
- actually being used for creative work? A glance at the job
- listings show that those kids have as much chance of landing a
- high-paying job as if they were taught keypunching.
-
- In an East Palo Alto, California, school (near Silicon Valley)
- computers sit stacked in an unused jumble in the computer lab
- that serves as the school detention hall. At a nearby affluent
- school there are computers everywhere. Would it surprise you to
- learn that some first graders at the well-equipped Escondido
- School write at the same level as many 11th graders in poorer
- schools?
-
- What's the problem? As usual these days, it is mostly the
- politicians - those in government and those in the schools.
-
- In Washington they play partisan politics while a massive
- technological underclass is created, secure in the knowledge that
- their own kids are attending the best schools.
-
- In local schools politicians with teaching credentials percolate
- into top management and are often either too lazy to learn the
- new technology or are afraid of computers.
-
- Of course there are exceptions, but I have met very few of them.
-
- I myself have encountered both total indifference and active
- hostility from teachers. Some even ignore their own children's
- futures, but until reading this Macworld report I had fooled
- myself into thinking that other schools were doing well and I had
- just encountered the exceptions.
-
- Permit me to elucidate.
-
- Most of the local kids who graduate from high school here are
- barely qualified to sell burgers, yet it took me four months to
- contact the person in charge when I wanted to donate about 200
- computer books. He didn't want them.
-
- I don't think the delay was due to the fact that I was an unknown
- stranger in the area; I went to school with that official for 12
- years. I saw him read a book - once.
-
- Another old schoolmate learned that I worked with computers and
- wanted to bring his wife over to see just what they could do for
- their daughter. I have seen him dozens of times since but he has
- never mentioned computers again. I am not surprised; after all,
- his wife is a teacher - she obviously dismissed me as a mere
- amateur.
-
- Most teachers are educated to believe that only another teacher
- could know anything useful about education. They spend four years
- learning about child psychology, administration, grade curves,
- and how to deal with parents. In many schools the math or
- chemistry teacher is far more qualified to teach test grading
- than a technical subject.
-
- Many of them realize how poorly prepared they really are and are
- understandably reluctant to expose this ignorance to people who
- actually work in the real world.
-
- There are many dedicated teachers who work hard at what they do,
- but those aren't the sort who become part of the ever-growing
- percentage of managers and are soon ground down by the
- bureaucracy.
-
- But the problem isn't just inside the schools.
-
- The kids I went to school with are now empowered. Besides the
- many teachers I know, one old acquaintance is the head of the
- school board while another is head of the PTA.
-
- They know of my willingness to contribute my specialized
- knowledge to help modernize the school but none has ever asked
- for my input.
-
- Should I force my ideas on them? Why bother? I have my own life
- to live and while I am willing to help if asked I also realize
- that trying to push the school into preparing kids for the 21st
- century would be as Quixotic as trying to push a stalled car with
- a strand of limp spaghetti.
-
- And it isn't just the administrators or citizen politicians -
- many parents are afraid of computers and the majority have never
- come to grips with the fact that factory jobs are disappearing.
-
- Believe me, if I had children I would, as my friends in rural
- Maine have, swear that my kids would never see the inside of a
- public school. She was a short-term investment manager and he
- holds Ph.D.s from both Yale and Boston U.
-
- Perhaps I am making too much of this. After all, I don't have
- children myself and I am already technologically educated (very
- much despite the school system, not because of it), so why should
- I care?
-
- We even have a sideline business which is surging in popularity
- as more high school graduates get diplomas that fully qualify
- them to pick up trash after Guns 'n' Roses concerts.
-
- What is the growth business we recently started? We raise and
- train guard and personal protection dogs - with a growing
- underclass of pathetically undereducated job applicants, gun
- sales, burglar alarms, and guard dogs are growth businesses.
- Anyone visited LA recently? There is a connection.
-
- If you think I am making all this up, pick up a copy of the
- September Macworld. The reporting will impress you even as the
- implications sicken.
-
- (John McCormick/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(DEN)(00024)
-
- ****3M Announces 21MB Floppy Disk 08/07/92
- ST PAUL, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- 3M Corporation says
- it will begin shipping floppy disks that can hold 21 MB of data
- later this month.
-
- Called floptical diskettes, the new diskettes will fill the gap that
- presently exists between 1.44 MB disks and removable data storage
- medium such as those manufactured by Iomega. In effect, a user can
- put the equivalent of a hard drive in their shirt pocket or purse.
-
- The company says that a drive that will read and write the
- super-high density disks is downward compatible, able to read
- existing 3.5-inch disks. The disks will be ideal for storing large
- size files such as graphics images on a single disk, which could
- then be inserted in another computer to transfer the data.
-
- 3M's new disks are designed to work with drives based on San Jose,
- California-based Insite Peripherals floptical technology. The
- Insite drives are manufactured by Matsushita-Kotobuki Electronics
- in Japan. Iomega Corporation reportedly will also be producing
- floptical drives.
-
- To compare the data storage capacity, an 80 MB hard drive which
- would require 50 1.44 MB disks to back it up will now require only
- four floptical drives. Data transfer is also quicker, with the
- average time needed to back up 21 MB of data being less than 3-1/2
- minutes, according to 3M.
-
- 3M thinks flopticals will be popular in entry level computers and
- laptops, and could eliminate the need to install a hard drive in
- those class systems.
-
- 3M's Jim Milligan told Newsbytes the disks have a suggested list
- price of $31.45, but street prices are $20-$25. Milligan said the
- drives are available to OEMs (original equipment manufacturers), or
- can be added to an existing PC. The Floptical drives fit in a
- standard 3.5-inch drive bay when mounted internally, or can be
- purchased as an external drive. Milligan said drive prices to the
- end user will probably be down to around $299 by September. They
- started out at around $500, and have already dropped by about $100.
-
- The floptical disks will begin shipping August 17, according to
- Milligan.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920807/Press contact: Larry Teien, 3M, 612-736-5961)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00025)
-
- ****Classifieds By Phone Backed By Microsoft Co-founder 08/07/92
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- SureFind
- Classifieds By Telephone, backed by Microsoft co-founder Paul
- Allen, is a new computer-based interactive telephone classified
- ads service, currently offered in Puget Sound, Washington.
-
- What is unique about the service is not only can you call and
- using the keys of a touchtone phone look up listings of products
- you are interested in, but you can tell the system what you're
- looking for and have it call you when something matching that
- description comes in, Surefind said.
-
- The company says it has the largest daily classified
- advertising inventory of used cars and properties for sale or
- rent in the Puget Sound area. Callers can hear ads of interest
- over the phone or request a free fax copy, Surefind said.
-
- Calls to Surefind are free and the system is operated via a
- software program that allows callers to browse only the areas
- of interest to them. One of the unique things about the system
- is it "reads" written text to the user so once the ads are
- typed into the computer system, they require no other special
- handling. This not only speeds up the process, but eliminates
- studio time and other recording expenses. A representative of
- Surefind told Newsbytes the service receives ads every hour,
- and once those ads are entered by the data entry people, they
- are immediately available to the caller.
-
- The company said it now has the property rental listings from
- 12 of the area's property management firms, and when it added
- used cars to its inventory it became the largest classified
- marketplace for used cars in the area.
-
- The company says it gets about 5,000 calls a week and inquiries
- about the service itself are coming in from around the country.
-
- Paul Allen, known for writing the BASIC programming language in
- the late 1970s with Bill Gates (now chief executive officer of
- Microsoft) has become a major investor in Surefind, according
- to Surefind President James Lalonde. Allen left Microsoft in
- 1982 and is now owner of the Portland Trail Blazers. Another
- investor in SureFind is Samuel Stroum, a board member of Egghead
- Software.
-
- Surefind says it hopes to offer the service in other cities
- and eventually launch a classified information network for the
- entire US.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920807/Press Contact: Bob Silver, The Silver
- Company for Surefind, tel 206-624-0388, fax 206-583-8753)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TOR)(00026)
-
- ****AT&T Researchers Show Denser Optical Storage 08/07/92
- MURRAY HILL, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Following quickly
- on last month's news that Japanese Sony Corporation had developed
- the first blue semiconductor laser which promises eventual
- increases in optical storage density, AT&T's Bell Labs has announced
- that it has developed a way to store about 100 times more
- information on magneto-optical discs.
-
- That amounts to about 300 times greater density than the
- conventional magnetic disks in widespread use today, AT&T officials
- said. Put another way, the new technique -- which is experimental
- and not likely to see commercial use for several years at least --
- could store two copies of the novel War and Peace in area about the
- size of a pinhead.
-
- The near-field scanning optical microscopy technique developed at
- Bell Labs permits storage densities of 45 billion bits per square
- inch. At that density, a disk that fits in the palm of your hand
- could hold up to 17 hours of high-density television-quality video.
-
- According to AT&T, researchers think they may be able to pack from
- 200 to 500 billion bits into a square inch before reaching the
- physical limits of the technique.
-
- The system currently can put a bit of data in a space as small as
- 60 nanometers (60 billionths of a meter or about 1,000 times
- smaller than the diameter of a human hair).
-
- To date, the highest density achieved by Bell Labs researchers Eric
- Betzig, Jay Trautman, Ray Wolfe, Mike Gyorgy, and Patrick Finn
- consists of a 20 x 20 array of bits with a center-to-center
- distance between bits of 120 nanometers.
-
- The recording medium consists of thin, multilayered films of
- platinum and cobalt, being developed at the Engineering Research
- Center for Data Storage Systems at Carnegie Mellon University in
- Pittsburgh.
-
- Like other magneto-optic devices, the system uses a laser beam to
- read and write data. However, rather than using a lens to focus
- the beam on the recording material, the light is sent into a probe
- made from an aluminum-coated optical fiber, tapered to a tiny point
- at one end. The resulting light beam is about 50 nanometers wide,
- and produces a light spot much smaller than is possible with a
- lens.
-
- This probe is not hard to manufacture, AT&T spokesman Russ Glover
- said. An optical fiber is "pulled like a piece of taffy until it
- snaps," he said, leaving a tapered end that can then be coated with
- aluminum.
-
- The tough part, Glover said, lies in getting the read and write
- speed of the system, and its error rates, to acceptable levels.
-
- AT&T expects the technology to be commercial within a decade, and
- maybe sooner, Glover said. He added that it is too early to
- speculate how the cost of such systems might compare with that of
- today's storage devices.
-
- Since AT&T's development doesn't appear to use any unproven
- technology and operates at normal room temperature, it may be
- applied to actual products much sooner than the Sony blue laser.
-
- The Sony invention, which is nowhere near ready for commercial
- production because the blue light laser only operates at
- extremely low temperatures, may eventually increase storage
- density by as much as three times because blue light has a
- shorter wavelength than the usual red light beams, making it easy
- to focus the beam into a smaller area.
-
- (Grant Buckler & John McCormick/19920807/Press Contact: Russ Glover,
- AT&T, 201-564-4097; Donna Cunningham, AT&T, 802-482-3748)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(BOS)(00027)
-
- MacWorld: Star Trek Screen Saver Coming 08/07/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Berkeley Systems
- has announced at the MacWorld Expo that is has an agreement with
- Paramount Pictures to create a whole new line of Macintosh
- screen savers that will delight a Trekkie's heart. The new series
- of screen savers will feature themes, trivia, and visuals from
- the original television and movie series Star Trek.
-
- The company was demonstrating a very early version of what some of
- the screens might look like in the collection. They are still in the
- process of creating the screens and consequently could not tell
- Newsbytes how many modules will be there or what they would all be.
-
- Howeard Dyck, Berkeley's manager for this product, did tell
- Newsbytes that there may be as many as 20 modules that would
- incorporate the most memorable scenes and most famous occurrences
- during the original show's five-year mission.
-
- One of the demos was of the falling tribbles which many Star Trek
- fans will recall fondly. Others replicate views of various bridge
- control panels and displays. There is even a segment that is based
- on Scottie's analysis of the Enterprise itself with a complete set
- of engineering drawings attached.
-
- A new version of the screen saver program will be required to
- display all of the effects and to accommodate the increased
- requirements of the sound effects. Berkeley Systems is promising
- to have the actual program available by October of this year.
-
- Company employees told Newsbytes that they are writing the program
- in such a way that all of the old modules that were written for the
- previous version of the program will still run with the new version.
- Unfortunately, there is no way that the reverse can happen so an
- upgrade will be necessary for current users.
-
- Many details of what the final release will look like have not been
- worked yet. So, for instance, pricing and upgrade costs have yet to
- be determined.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920807/Press Contact:Ann Crampton, Berkeley Systems,
- 510-540-5535/Public Contact:Berkeley Systems, 510-540-5535)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(BOS)(00028)
-
- MacWorld: Miscellaneous 08/07/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- These are a
- few more new products that appeared at Macworld.
-
- Gryphon software was showing off their Morph program. What Morph
- is and the story of the company were covered by Newsbytes when they
- made the original announcement several weeks ago. At the show,
- Newsbytes witnessed the great interest that has developed in
- the Morph product. This was especially true after Apple computer
- highlighted Morph during a keynote address.
-
- Company officials said the only quiet time was before the keynote
- address. Then, fifteen minutes after the keynote ended, the first
- busses arrived from the World Trade Center and Gryphon's booth
- was besieged with people for the remainder of the show. Gryphon
- officers brought with them a few thousand copies of the program
- hoping to sell them. After the first day, they had to call back to
- their office and order several thousand more copies to be overnight-
- shipped to the show floor.
-
- Maxis is continuing its simulation series with a new one called
- SimLife. This time you get to play with the biology of the planet
- and create new life forms. With SimLife you get to build your very
- own ecosystem and see how it might evolve and develop. You have
- control over the environment as well as over the creatures and
- other life forms that develop.
-
- Fifth Generation Systems was trumpeting the release of version 3.0
- of FastBack Plus for the Macintosh. This new version will begin
- shipping in mid-August and has a number of new features. These
- features include better tape drive support, a SnapShot feature that
- allows the user to be more specific about what to restore, a copy
- function that lets users back up files in the Finder's format, and
- a new Erase function that allows the user to erase selected files
- without backing them up.
-
- Shiva tried to demonstrate a product that allows multiple users to
- dial into a local area network through a series of new
- devices that Shiva was terming "enterprise-wide dial-in products."
- Unfortunately, the phone system at the show was proving to be
- completely uncooperative. The Shiva people had to simply point at
- the blinking lights and talk about what they should have been
- demonstrating.
-
- Communications Specialists was showing off their new Coconut. This
- little device allows for the conversion of the Macintosh video
- signal to any kind of regular television video signal. With this
- device it is possible to drive large screen TVs and standard
- videotape machines from your Macintosh. Anything that appears on
- your Macintosh's screen will appear on these other devices.
-
- Compatible Systems was demonstrating a new Ethernet-to-Ethernet
- router that they are hoping to have ready for shipment over the
- next few months. This router is RISC-based which, the company
- claims, will give it significantly better performance than the
- current crop of Routers.
-
- Interplay Productions was showing off a new color CD-ROM version
- of Battlechess for the Macintosh. They were also announcing the
- release of the Macintosh version of Lexi-Cross which is billed
- as a 21st century TV game show. This game is a cross between
- Scrabble, Wheel of Fortune, and crossword puzzles. Interplay also
- announced that they have signed an agreement with Maxis under
- which Interplay will produce and market the Sim series on CD-ROM.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00029)
-
- ****Aldus Restructures, Sheds 11% Of Workforce 08/07/92
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Aldus Corporation
- reported that it is restructuring and laying off 11 percent of its
- workforce, or approximately 100 employees in its Seattle, San Diego,
- Dallas, and other locations.
-
- President of the firm, famous for Pagemaker desktop publishing
- software, Paul Brainerd, issued this statement: "We are
- restructuring our operations in response to economic and competitive
- pressures that continue to have a negative impact on our
- business. The workforce reduction, combined with our companywide
- efforts to reduce variable costs, should better align our expenses
- with revenue expectations."
-
- Aldus suffered a poor second quarter and a stock price drop in
- June in its fourth straight earnings disappointment, prompting
- one analyst, Scott McAdams of Ragen MacKenzie to say, "It could
- be that this is the darkest hour."
-
- Aldus has had difficulty boosting sales in a sluggish market, and
- analysts doubted that the company could recover quickly.
- Aldus said its lower earnings were due primarily to a
- significant revenue shortfall and higher expenses in its
- Germany subsidiary. It also blamed, to a lesser degree, lower
- than expected sales of its Windows-based products in the US
- and Europe.
-
- Complicating matters is a suit that two Aldus stockholders filed
- against the company in June, claiming Aldus inflated its growth
- projections. The suit also contends that the company
- withheld information about the status of some key executives while
- corporate officers sold nearly $9 million in stock during an 11
- month period ending April 21.
-
- Aldus has been busy lately, however, acquiring software and
- technologies from other firms. In July, Aldus acquired RipPrep,
- a software application that performs process-color trapping on
- EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) files. RipPrep and its underlying
- software technology were developed by Graphic Edge, a New Hampshire
- firm with which Aldus joined forces in late 1991.
-
- Aldus also bought Macintosh-based technology for a multimedia
- database to sort and catalog multimedia information, even on a
- network, code named "Fetch," from Provident Software of Anaheim,
- California in July. Aldus plans to offer a retail product based
- on the technology later this year.
-
- The company is due to launch an upgrade to its flagship software
- program Pagemaker in early 1993 and in June and July introduced
- new programs: Aldus PressWise 1.0, a page imposition program for
- the Macintosh computer; Personal Press 2.0 for the Macintosh,
- a page layout program which allows the user to design
- and assemble text and graphics automatically; and IntelliDraw 1.0,
- a program the company describes as a "smart" drawing program for
- Windows and for the Macintosh.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19920807)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(BOS)(00030)
-
- MacWorld: Network Problems Sent By Pager 08/07/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 7 (NB) -- Caravelle
- is delivering a product suggested by their customers. With their
- network monitoring program, NetWorks, Caravelle was shipping a small
- module that would notify network administrators via their pager
- whenever a network problem erupted. Caravelle officers tell
- Newsbytes that they have been practically besieged with
- requests to make this module a stand-alone program that others
- could use. Caravelle has.
-
- Pager Pro is the name of the program. It has a completely
- configurable user interface that allows the user to set up not only
- the number of the pager, but also such niceties as setting up
- groups of users to whom faxes can be sent; text of the fax to be
- sent; and even standard messages that need not be entered anew
- each time. Times and dates can be set for message transmission
- so that a calendar program can use this module to page a user
- about important events or meetings.
-
- Caravelle is making this module available to what are called
- qualified, serious, developers. Actually, a developer's edition is
- what is being offered -- users can buy the stand-alone
- program and use it as they see fit. Pager Pro is already shipping.
- It retails for $99 for the single user version and $249 per copy
- for the server edition.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920807/Press Contact:Steve Traplin, Caravelle,
- 613-596-2802/Public Contact:Caravelle, 800-363-5292, 613-596-2802)
-
-
-