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- (NEWS)(UNIX)(SFO)(00001)
-
- ****Keynote By Intel's Grove Envisions Computer Industry Trends 08/19/92
- SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Andrew Grove,
- president of Intel Corp., and perhaps the man with the most power
- to affect the course of the personal computer industry, defined
- his vision of that industry during the keynote address at SCO
- Forum, the annual conference held by the leading PC Unix developer,
- the Santa Cruz Operation.
-
- Grove spoke in the quarry amphitheatre at the University of California
- at Santa Cruz to software developers, executives and marketing partners
- of SCO. Intel is particularly supportive of SCO, since for some time
- it has been the leader in the production of operating systems that
- took advantage of the true power of Intel's lead offerings, such as
- the 80386. Only recently have other 386-based systems, such as
- MS Windows, reached any market dominance.
-
- Grove pointed out three key "megatrends" in his address. The first
- was a continuance of the tremendous improvement in price/performance
- ratios for personal computers that we have seen over the last decade.
-
- Grove opened his remarks by commenting on the bankruptcy of Wang, which
- he hinted was the first of the old-style computer manufacturers to lose
- to the realities of the new computer industry. The old days of
- vertical integration, where a company designed computers from chips
- to systems, wrote its own software and sold its computers directly
- are gone, says Grove.
-
- He predicted the decline in personal computer prices that has
- taken place over the past year will continue. The level of PC
- prices today is "absolutely unbelievable even by the standards of
- six months ago and it will probably be looked at with nostalgia
- by all of us six months from now," Grove said.
-
- He said PC power will continue to increase thanks to new
- processors and to innovations such as moving graphics processing
- from the system bus to a local bus that will allow faster
- communication with the CPU. And he added a prediction that
- "by the end of this year, video will come free with every PC."
-
- This will be thanks to software for video decompression which
- Grove said will be widely available by year-end. But in response
- to a question, he denied that this software would be an Intel
- product.
-
- Another trend, he said, is the appearance of what he called "shrink
- wrapped servers" -- networking servers to support not just e-mail
- but other specific corporate needs delivered in prepackaged form.
- He sees a LAN world where applications are sold as servers to be
- put up on the network.
-
- Grove said distributed computing -- in which networks of
- processors work together in place of single central systems -- has
- reached the point where it is ready to move from the talk phase
- to action. "Host-based computing is highly ineffective," he said,
- and traditional mainframe systems will soon cease to be used for
- new applications development, though they will continue to have
- a role running existing applications.
-
- For this to be attractive to the mass market, though, standard
- "shrink-wrapped" server software will be needed. As this appears,
- Grove forecast, application-specific servers dedicated to certain
- functions will become more common.
-
- His final call was to warn developers that they must design future
- products not just to work in a connected world but an "occasionally
- connected" world, where mobile computer users will work remotely
- and connect in from time to time with their host network.
-
- Grove said the trend toward mobile computing, or field computing as it
- has been called, means more and more people are relying on smaller and
- smaller portable computers to let them do their work outside the office,
- and in the future everyone will need to be connected to networks
- occasionally.
-
- This will present a number of challenges not only for network
- design but for the design of various applications that will have
- to be able to deal with users who are connected to the network
- intermittently, he said.
-
- Grove concluded his talk with questions from the audience. When asked
- what the market name for the next Intel chip, know as the "P5," would be,
- Grove declined. He did not want to ruin "the only secret that Intel has
- ever kept."
-
- SCO Forum continues through Friday, August 21.
-
- (Brad Templeton & Grant Buckler/19920819)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TOR)(00002)
-
- Corollary Server Boasts 10 486DX2s 08/19/92
- SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) --
- Corollary, an Irvine, California, maker of multiprocessor systems,
- has joined the rush to put Intel's new top-of-the-line
- microprocessor into computer systems. Corollary's contribution is
- no power-user's desktop, though: it's a multiprocessor machine
- that can combine as many as 10 of Intel's new 66-megahertz
- 486-DX2 chips in a machine designed to compete with
- mainframes and minicomputers.
-
- Corollary's 486/smp XM is a dual-bus, multiprocessor system
- with an Extended Industry Standard Architecture (EISA) bus. It
- also uses an extended version of Corollary's C-Bus architecture.
-
- The new machine goes beyond the company's previous
- multiprocessor systems by supporting the new DX2 chip, by
- increasing the memory cache size from 256K bytes to one
- megabyte, and by increasing the amount of addressable memory
- from 64 megabytes to 256 megabytes.
-
- Corollary claimed the new machine can provide nearly a 50-
- percent performance advantage over its 486/smp machine using
- 33-megahertz 486DX processors.
-
- Judi Uttal, vice-president of strategic marketing for Corollary,
- said the new machine and the company's earlier multiprocessing
- systems are aimed partly at the trend to downsizing, or moving
- applications from larger machines to microprocessor-based
- systems. The company also sees it as a base for new applications
- of various types, including accounting, point-of-sale, and other
- things. Corollary is aiming at buyers who want an open systems
- environment, she said. The multiprocessor machines run Santa
- Cruz Operation's SCO Unix operating system.
-
- A base configuration of the new 486/smp XM, with a 13-slot
- EISA backplane, has a price of $12,500.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920818/Press Contact: Chris Wildermuth, Miller
- Communications, 310-822-4669; Public Contact: Corollary, 714-
- 250-4040, fax 714-250-4043)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TOR)(00003)
-
- SCO Reaches Out To NetWare, Windows 08/19/92
- SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Acknowledging
- that Unix will not rule the world any time soon, Santa Cruz
- Organization announced products that will help tie its
- Open Desktop and SCO Unix systems to Novell's NetWare local-
- area networking system and to Microsoft's Windows operating
- systems on DOS PCs.
-
- SCO said it has begun shipping a version of Novell's IPX/SPX
- transport protocol to Open Desktop Release 2.0 and SCO Unix
- System V/386 Release 3.2. This, SCO said, will let DOS users
- running on Novell networks have terminal-mode access to
- applications running on either Unix variant.
-
- SCO also demonstrated support for Windows 3.1 under SCO
- Unix and Open Desktop. Based on Merge technology licensed
- from Inglewood, California-based Locus Computing, SCO Merge
- and Open Desktop DOS services will let Windows applications
- run in protected and standard mode under either Unix system.
-
- In a press release, SCO officials painted this option as providing
- a migration path so that Windows users moving to Unix can keep
- existing Windows applications. In a press conference, though, the
- company acknowledged that Windows, which far outweighs Unix
- in desktop installations, is not likely to lose its lead in the
- foreseeable future.
-
- "I don't think our goal is to pass Microsoft Windows in volume
- on the desktop," said David Hancock, vice-president of marketing
- at SCO. "I don't think that's achievable right now." However,
- Hancock added that Unix does have a place on the desktop,
- whether in Unix-based workstations or by way of terminals to
- multi-user Unix systems.
-
- "Corporate information systems will be composed of networks of
- heterogenous, multi-vendor computers," observed Doug Michels,
- executive vice-president and co-founder of SCO.
-
- SCO also announced a trade-up program for users of its SCO
- Xenix and SCO Unix systems. They can move to SCO Open
- Desktop Release 2.0 personal system for $695, to the server
- system for $1,595, or to the development system for $795. Users
- of the SCO Open Desktop Personal System can also upgrade to
- the server version for $1,495.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19920818/Press Contact: Zee Zaballos, SCO, 408-
- 425-7222, fax 408-427-5448; SCO, 408-425-7222)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00004)
-
- Packard Bell To Offer MPCs, TV/Video Cards 08/19/92
- CHATSWORTH, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Packard
- Bell has announced a family of multimedia IBM compatible
- personal computers (MPCs) based on Intel's 486SX microprocessor
- chip, one of which comes equipped with hardware to capture and
- display television broadcasts.
-
- The company says its MPC, the 486SX/25 Multimedia Computer
- System comes with an internal stereo compact disc read-only
- memory (CD-ROM) drive, a three speaker amplified micro stereo
- system, the Sound Blaster Pro II integrated digital audio mixer
- module, 4 megabytes (MB) of random access memory (RAM)
- expandable to 20 MB, a 210 MB hard drive with a 15 millisecond
- (ms) access time, dual high-density floppy disk drives, an
- extended video graphics array (VGA) display with 1,024 x 768
- resolution, and a video controller with 512 kilobytes (K) of
- video memory, expandable to 1 MB.
-
- Also included is an internal fax modem and a bundle of software
- pre-loaded on the hard disk drive, Packard Bell added.
-
- The fax modem can send faxes at 9,600 baud, receive faxes at
- 4,800 baud, and send/receive data at 2,400 baud, Packard Bell
- said.
-
- The software bundle pre-loaded on the hard disk drive includes:
- MS-DOS 5.0; Microsoft Windows 3.1; Microsoft Works for Windows
- (Multimedia Edition); and an integrated software package with a
- word processor, spell check, thesaurus, spreadsheet and
- charting, database, drawing module, and telecommunications;
- Packard Bell's own tutorial software with a tutorial and
- technical support information; a Prodigy start-up kit, the
- Sound Blaster Pro II software; Mathematica's Tempra GIF and
- Show; and Winfax Lite.
-
- The CDs included are: Microsoft Windows 3.1 CD edition with
- hypertext; Microsoft Bookshelf; Sherlock Holmes, an interactive
- game; Creative Sounds with Prosonus, with 29 original music
- compositions and 111 sound effects; Mavis Beacon Teaches
- Typing; Macromind's Action! and Star; The Concise Columbia
- Encyclopedia; Roget's II Electronic Thesaurus; Bartlett's
- Familiar Quotations; The Concise Columbia Dictionary of
- Quotations; The American Heritage Dictionary; The World Almanac
- and Book of Facts; and the Hammond Atlas.
-
- In the new multimedia computer family, a model is equipped with
- the PBTV3, an add-in TV/video board which receives and displays
- television broadcasts. The board can also be used to capture,
- store, and retrieve television, video cassette recorders
- (VCRs), laserdisc players, and camcorder input, the company
- said.
-
- The PBTV3 card has a tuner module for reception of VHF, UHF and
- cable channels in NTSC (National Television Systems Committee)
- format, the standard television format in the United States,
- Canada, Mexico, and many Latin American and Asian countries. It
- also can accept PAL signals (common in Europe and other areas)
- from a VCR, laserdisc player, or camcorder, Packard Bell said.
- It cannot, however, "print to tape" or send video from the
- computer out to the VCR or video source for playback or
- recording.
-
- Like most TV/video boards, the video display can be sized to a
- moveable window on the computer screen that allows the user to
- work on word processing or other tasks simultaneously.
-
- An on-screen remote control unit allows the user to control
- channel selection, audio volume, bass, treble, balance, mute,
- picture, contrast, brightness, tint, and color using the
- keyboard or a mouse. Color correction can also extend to red,
- green, and blue gain as well, Packard Bell said.
-
- The card has an audio amplifier which can drive a pair of
- optional external speakers or headphones, the company added.
-
- The software for the PBTV3 offers the ability to schedule up to
- 16 events which are programmed in a manner similar to
- programming a VCR. The user specifies a channel, day, time,
- broadcast type, and length of time for each event. Every time
- an event occurs PBTV3 will appear in the screen display showing
- the chosen program for the specified time, and then return to a
- dormant state. If PBTV3 already is on the screen at the event
- time it will switch to the specified program, Packard Bell
- added.
-
- On-line help is available and captured images can be saved in
- TGA, BMP, MMP, TIFF, and PCX file formats for printing or
- manipulation in other software programs.
-
- Packard Bell says it will also sell the PBTV3 card separately,
- for under $500. The company says it will supply all the
- necessary cables for connecting PBTV3 to a computer, including a
- 26-pin ribbon cable, to connect PBTV3 to a feature connector on
- either the computer VGA card or on the motherboard; an 'F-to-RCA'
- pin adapter, for easy cable connection to the on-card tuner
- module; and an auxiliary seven-pin mini-DIN connector for signal
- input from an external VCR, laserdisc player or camcorder.
-
- The PBTV3's video output is sent to a standard DE-15 VGA
- connector, while the audio output is on a mini-headphone jack
- and that can drive headphones or external, unpowered eight ohm
- speakers, Packard Bell said. Input to PBTV3 is through a
- standard 75 ohm cable 'F' connector located on the side of the
- card.
-
- PBTV3 requires an AT-class IBM compatible computer in 640 x 480
- 16-color or 26-color VGA mode with a VESA/Feature Connector, a
- VGA monitor, and Windows 3.X.
-
- Packard Bell has announced the card will be available in the
- third quarter of this year, while the computer with it
- integrated isn't expected until the fourth quarter of this
- year. The price on the whole system, including the PBTV3 card
- is expected to be less than $2,999. Packard Bell's MPC without
- the PBTV3 card is expected to be priced below $2,599, the
- company said.
-
- The company plans to offer the multimedia computers through the
- same retail outlets and mass merchandising channels it has been
- using, which include warehouse buying stores and retail stores
- like Sears.
-
- Interestingly enough, Packard Bell offers a "restore" CD with all
- the preloaded software from the hard disk, which can be used as
- a back-up. While Packard Bell representatives said the company
- started offering the disk because over-zealous computer
- salesman were selling Packard Bell customers software already
- included with the computer. Once users attempted to load
- another copy of the software on the hard disk, the process
- created problems with the original, pre-installed software.
- Packard Bell has started bundling the CD so users can restore
- everything back to its original condition after such a blunder,
- company representatives said.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920818/Press Contact: Bob Harris, The Bohle
- Company for Packard Bell, tel 310-785-0515, fax 310-785-0459)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00005)
-
- GeoCon: Expert Edge Intros New Tools For Experience 08/19/92
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- At the
- GeoCon show this week, Expert Edge embarked on a worldwide
- rollout of Applications Bridge and SQL Module, new tools that let
- programmers develop for mainframe and multiple client-server
- environments from inside the company's Experience for Windows
- software.
-
- Donal Daly, managing director of the Dublin, Ireland-based
- company, told Newsbytes that Application Bridge allows
- interactive, Windows-based front ends to be added to IBM host
- applications. Programs supplied with these GUIs (graphical user
- interfaces) can offer full access to the mainframe world, while
- shielding the end user from the need to log on, enter commands, and
- carry out other functions demanded by the mainframe.
-
- SQL Module, on the other hand, provides the programmer with
- connectivity to a range of SQL database servers and other
- database file formats, permitting creation of applications that
- can be ported across more than a dozen different database
- back ends.
-
- Both tools require Experience for Windows, and Application Bridge
- requires a 3270 software-based emulator as well. Introduced by
- Expert Edge six months ago, and since upgraded to accommodate
- Windows 3.1, Experience for Windows combines events-driven
- procedural programming with object-oriented tools for screen and
- menu design. A database manager for dBASE files is also
- included.
-
- The company's new SQL Module uses DLL (Dynamic Link Library)
- functions to extend connectivity to a variety of files, which can
- be housed on PCs, LANs, minicomputers or mainframes. DB2,
- Ingres, Oracle, Microsoft SQL Server, NetWare SQL, Sybase,
- SQLBase, XDB, OS/2 EE DBM, Btrieve, Paradox, dBase, Excel and
- ASCII are among the file formats supported.
-
- All of the accessed files are managed on a common GUI that uses a
- "select" statement for records retrieval, "insert," "update" and
- "delete" for records modification, and "create table" for
- generating new database tables and files.
-
- Expert Edge emphasizes that portability across different back-ends
- lets the programmer develop an application for one database
- system, and then operate that application on the others. In
- addition, the programmer can access several databases at the same
- time.
-
- The other new tool from Expert Edge, Application Bridge, is
- designed for updating existing mainframe applications without
- making changes to the original source code. According to the
- company, the tool goes beyond simple 3270 terminal mapping by
- allowing terminal input to be intercepted and manipulated.
-
- Interfaces created with Application Bridge can perform keystroke
- filtering, intercepting the end user's keystrokes and
- substituting other, more complex strings or commands. The GUIs
- can also offer such features as unattended operation, composite
- view of multiple hosts, and data extraction, or the ability to
- transfer data between different applications residing on the same
- or different hosts.
-
- Daly noted to Newsbytes that all three software packages are
- expressly designed for Windows. "In contrast, our main
- competitors are having to make the transition from other
- applications development environments," he commented.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19920819; Press and Public Contact: Expert
- Edge, 353-1-7674333 or 44-81-9417047)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SYD)(00006)
-
- ****Microsoft NT On Track For Late 92 Shipment 08/19/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Paul Maritz,
- Microsoft's senior vice president of the company's systems division,
- says Windows NT is about to go into final beta, and is on track for
- shipment at the end of this year. Keynoting the second day at
- Sydney's Windows World 92 conference, he demonstrated the
- new operating system, as well as a number of upcoming Microsoft
- products.
-
- Maritz said Microsoft it has shipped more than 3 million copies of
- Windows 3.1 to date, and it will be expanded with two new
- products. Windows for Workgroups 3.1 is a superset of Windows
- 3.1, and includes integrated networking (compatible with Novell
- and LAN Manager), electronic mail, and workgroup scheduling
- software. The official line is that it will ship in six to nine months,
- but Maritz used estimates as short as 3 months in comments to
- press.
-
- Windows 3.1 NT is expected to ship in the same timeframe, and
- Maritz said that in September the final beta test products will go
- out to the toughest users of all - real corporate users. In July,
- 10,000 developers received their beta versions, so much of the
- fine tuning has already been done. NT is again a superset of
- Windows for Workgroups, and looks just like Windows 3.1 but
- adds many features. Maritz said that as a full 32-bit operating
- system, it doesn't run on top of DOS, and in fact it's possible to
- install it on a machine that DOS can't even boot. It will require at
- least 8MB of RAM, and a 386, 486 or P5 machine.
-
- NT is built on an executive, or base layer, with subsystems for
- running Win32, Win16, DOS, OS/2 (text only at the moment) and
- Posix applications. Maritz expects that the two higher products will
- sell far fewer copies (around 10-20 percent) than Windows 3.1.
- All three will happily co-exist on a network.
-
- The fact that both new products will take the '3.1' version number
- appears to show that Microsoft wants us to think of NT as a
- logical part of the Windows family, and not a separate product.
-
- Maritz also demonstrated the brand new Microsoft Golf program
- and Cinemania movie guide on a CD. He showed the usefulness
- of Cinemania with what he said had occurred as he tried to pass
- the conference security guard this morning without his pass. He
- played a sound bite from "Sierra Madre" where the Mexican says
- "Badge. I got no badge. I don't need no stinkin badge!"
-
- (Paul Zucker/19920819)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SYD)(00007)
-
- ****Are We About To See Sound-Card Wars? 08/19/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- The buzz around Windows World
- '92 in Sydney this week is the imminent release by Microsoft of an
- add-on multimedia sound card. Until now Microsoft has steered clear
- of hardware with the notable exception of its mice.
-
- The first that Sydney journalists heard of the card was when
- Creative Labs (makers of the best-known Sound Blaster card) said
- that Microsoft was known to be developing a sub-US$100 sound
- card for strictly business use. They expected the card to be used
- for network voice-mail and voice annotation application, much as
- the foreshadowed Business Audio chip will provide.
-
- However, when questioned about the new board today, Microsoft
- admitted that it was coming this year (and perhaps within two
- months), and far from being a low-end board, would be a high-end
- board fulfilling the needs of all Windows users. They said that the
- board had been developed because the Microsoft view was that no
- single sound board fully adhered to the Windows multimedia
- standard. Projected price is around $400.
-
- This will no doubt come as a shock to Creative Labs, as not only
- does it chair the multimedia standards group, but Microsoft ships
- Sound Blaster drivers with Windows 3.1.
-
- Meanwhile, Lotus is ramping up its Lotus Sound package which
- consists of software to add and edit sound in Lotus Windows.
- This US$300 package comes with a third-party sound adaptor that
- plugs into the PC's parallel port.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19920819)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(TYO)(00008)
-
- Japan: 4th Dimension Project Buys American Computers 08/19/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Japan's 4th dimension computer
- developer's group, called New Information Processing Developer's
- Group, has decided to install large scale parallel computers of
- Intel and Thinking Machines. The group's goal is to develop a
- next-generation, or "fourth dimension" computer using these parallel
- computers as well as a prototype 5th generation processor, which was
- developed during the 10-year 5th generation computer project.
-
- The 4th dimension computer project, just started in Japan
- jointly with universities and research institutes in seven
- countries, aims to expand the 5th Generation Computer Project,
- which ended in this past June.
-
- The 4th dimension computer development group will install Intel's
- Paragon XP/S and Thinking Machine's CM-5. Both of these computers
- were announced in the fall of 1991, and have 1,000 processors
- to parallel-process at a speed of more than 1 billion
- calculations per second. The prices of these parallel computers
- are 100 million yen ($0.8 million) to 500 million yen
- ($4 million).
-
- Some eight parallel computer makers, including Fujitsu and NEC,
- participated in the tender-bid meeting. However, no Japanese
- makers participated in the actual bid, according to the
- Nikkei newspaper, in an effort to ease US friction regarding sales
- of high-end computers.
-
- The fourth dimension computer is envisioned as able to process
- ambiguous data at unprecedented speeds. Its possible applications could
- be in the area of security - where it might identify the faces of people,
- or in automatic language translation systems, car navigation systems,
- and weather analysis systems.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19920819/Press Contact: New
- Information Processing Developer's Group, +81-3-5820-8681)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00009)
-
- Japan: ASCII Seeks Help From Banks 08/19/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Japan's major computer venture
- business ASCII is talking with Japanese banks to get financial
- assistance. ASCII is also seeking support from Canon. Apparently,
- the computer venture is in financial trouble.
-
- ASCII was once a partner of Microsoft, and was regarded
- as the major computer-related publisher in Japan. ASCII's sales are
- still respectable at 35.8 billion yen ($285 million) and 1.3
- billion yen ($10 million) profit for fiscal 1993. But a major
- problems seems to be the firm's unconverted convertible bond, which
- amounts to 12 billion yen ($95 million). ASCII was planning to
- sell this bond in Swiss Francs, but the firm abandoned that idea after
- a sharp drop in the price of the bond.
-
- Apparently, Japan's so-called "bubble" economy has also hit ASCII hard.
- ASCII listed its stocks on the over-the-counter market at the Tokyo
- Stock Exchange in 1989. At that time, the stock price soared to
- 21,000 yen ($170), but now the price has dropped to 689 yen ($5.50).
-
- A business partnership with Canon may give ASCII the help that it
- needs, analysts suggest. Canon would, in turn, get an entry into
- the personal computer software market as well as semiconductor
- businesses because ASCII is involved in both.
-
- Currently, Canon is a dealer for Next and Apple Computers. Hand
- in hand with ASCII, Canon could potentially rise to higher prominence
- in the Japanese computer industry.
-
- However, this scenario may not work if the agreement between both
- firms is delayed. Already, ASCII's executives -- Chairman Shiro Gunji
- and Vice President Keiichiro Tsukamoto -- have left the firm.
- Also, over 100 employees have left the firm within the past
- year, according to the Nikkan Kogyo newspaper. So, more talented
- people might leave ASCII in the future if the firm's financial
- situation does not improve.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19920819/Press Contact: ASCII, +81-3-
- 3797-6506)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LAX)(00010)
-
- Archive Files Suit Against Iomega 08/19/92
- COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Archive, a
- supplier of tape back-up products, says it has filed a patent
- infringement suit against Iomega, known for its Bernoulli
- drive, and its subsidiary Iotape of San Diego, California.
- Iomega says the suit is over its recently introduced Tape250, a
- tape back-up drive that works off the floppy drive controller
- card.
-
- The suit, filed in the Federal District Court in the Southern
- District of California, charges Iomega infringement of the
- patent titled "Recording System For Recording Data On Tape In A
- Disk Recording Format" granted in 1982, Archive said.
-
- Roy, Utah-based Iomega only responded by saying it believes the
- allegations in the suit are unfounded and plans to defend
- vigorously against it.
-
- Archive has been through this before. Company representatives
- told Newsbytes Archive filed and won a $9.5 million settlement
- out of court in a patent suit against Simi Valley, California-
- based Rexon and its subsidiaries Wangtek, Techmar, and Sytron.
- While the suit was similar, Archive representatives told
- Newsbytes it included not only the tape drive patent, but other
- issues as well.
-
- Costa Mesa, California-based Archive was founded in 1980 and
- describes itself as a manufacturer and supplier of removable
- data storage products to original equipment manufacturers
- (OEMs) and distributors.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920819/Press Contact: Tom Gavin, Archive,
- tel: 714-641-4483, fax: 714-641-2582; Paul Slack, Iomega,
- 801-778-1000, fax 801-778-3190)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00011)
-
- Alacrity Adds OCR Capability To Document Imaging 08/19/92
- HACKETTSTOWN, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Alacrity has
- added optical character recognition (OCR) capabilities to its
- electronic document imaging system known as Desktop Document
- Manager (DDM). This new feature adds to the complete set of
- features that can be found in Alacrity's system and brings it to a
- higher state of technology.
-
- Alacrity has integrated the Calera OCR engine into its software. The
- reasons it chose Calera rather than competing OCR vendors, included
- Calera's reputation, Calera's range of products at different levels
- of the OCR gamut, and Calera's toolset which supported this
- integration effort, the company reports.
-
- Calera's engine performs skew detection which corrects an image when
- a page is placed in a scanner crooked.
-
- By using the OCR feature it is now possible for Alacrity customers
- to select a portion of the text on the image as an entry into the
- index field of the document's database. The customer need not type
- the entry in by himself. It will also be possible to specify a
- portion of a document as a region of interest and have all
- subsequent documents scanned and that specific region converted
- to text.
-
- The output of the OCR process can be placed in the Microsoft Windows
- Clipboard from which it will be exportable to different word
- processors and other programs. Alacrity's Clipboard is an
- improvement over the standard clipboard in that it allows for
- editing of the text inscribed in it.
-
- Alacrity will begin shipping the OCR capability in September of this
- year. The company is not changing the prices of the four models to
- which this feature has been added. Models affected include the DDM
- Private Station, the DDM Groupserver, DDM Softaccess, and the DDM
- Satellite Station. Customers who have purchased any of these DDM
- models after June 30 will receive a free upgrade that will include
- the OCR feature. Customers who purchased DDMs before that date will
- pay a small upgrade fee although exact figures have not been decided.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920819, Press Contact:Gary Baker, Technology Solutions
- for Alacrity, 212-505-9900/Public Contact: Alacrity, 908-813-2400)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(MOW)(00012)
-
- Russia: DEC's Second Coming 08/19/92
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- In the late 70s a research
- center in Moscow received a brief message from DEC Finland:
- "Copying our hardware is contemptible business ... please stop
- your attempts to sell LSI-compatible units in Scandinavia."
- Business ethics were also mentioned but no legal suits followed.
- Today, DEC has opened an office in Russia and is enjoying a booming
- business.
-
- Digital Equipment Corp. was discovered by Soviet engineers in the
- early 70s when minicomputers (not yet desktops) entered the
- laboratories of their American colleagues. Several years later,
- the venerable DECSystem 10 started crunching big numbers in Russia
- in a secluded technopolis where local researchers used it to process
- huge amounts of digitized subatomic particle tracks: mesons,
- positrons and neutrons. The machine was used in conjunction with
- the largest accelerator in Europe.
-
- Power users in Soviet research centers were never happy about the batch-
- oriented mentality of the IBM 360/370 Series mainframes and the awkward
- features of "Big Blue" systems software. They transformed their very
- own BESM6 computers into multiterminal time sharing systems. DECSystem
- 10 offered a similar environment with enhanced disk capacity and higher
- reliability. The teams of programmers in a small technopolis Protvino
- near Moscow and several other high-tech centers became the core of a
- community of DEC addicts in the country. More followed the suit as
- DEC hardware was laboriously copied by many design bureaus in the
- USSR and Eastern Europe.
-
- 360/370 clones were in fact boycotted by the scientific community in the
- USSR, and the last 15 years have witnessed the explosive growth of DEC
- users in the country. With export control barriers in effect,
- minicomputers remained in the grey area of Soviet foreign trade. While
- DEC PDP-11 look-alikes were manufactured in quantities in Soviet plants,
- VAXes stayed a pie-in-the-sky dream of the scientists, CAD experts, and
- telecommunications gurus in the USSR.
-
- Some dreams come true if you just agree to pay extra -- in the
- early 90s DEC started to register formerly illegal customers of
- VAX superminis that were smuggled "beyond the wall." These users
- came in hordes to exhibition booths of their favorite computer
- company. The DEC Users Society (DECUS) gained access to one more
- national community of true believers -- counted in tens of thousands.
-
- Micro PDP-11s and Micro VAXes still help to fill the void for DEC-hungry
- users; in fact, their clones are manufactured in Russia and Ukraine.
- Though limited in capacity as compared to AT or 386 clones. These
- indigenous platforms help many application systems to keep afloat.
-
- Thus entry-level systems are available from local suppliers while DEC's
- second coming (Moscow office opened this year) will hopefully bring
- systems for power users to Russia and other CIS countries.
-
- (Alexander Giglavyi & Kirill Tchashchin/19920817)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00013)
-
- Japan: Multiple-Feature Phone For Banking Debuts 08/19/92
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Former telecom monopoly NTT and
- five major Japanese banks have jointly developed a telephone
- for bank transactions. It is equipped with multiple functions
- including a large LCD (liquid crystal display) and a fax machine.
-
- Called the "Teleassist," it has a proprietary memory IC card and
- a touch-sensitive panel. The device will connect with each bank's host
- computer via the electronic banking center of NTT Data Communication.
- The user will be able to wire-transfer money and check the balance
- in a bank account. The money can be wire-transferred to 20 different
- customers.
-
- Use of this phone is said to be as easy as just looking at the
- instructions on its display panel.
-
- The hardware and the telecom software of Teleassist were
- developed by NTT, and the applications were developed
- by the banks including Daiichi, Sanwa, Mitsubishi, Kyowa-saitama,
- and Tokai bank. Just by replacing the IC card, securities
- transactions can also be made with this telephone, making it useful,
- the firm says, for individual as well as corporate users.
-
- The only problem is the price -- it costs 120,000 yen ($960) a unit,
- plus a basic monthly charge for each bank (around $15) will be
- required. For some people, however, the device is a bargain because
- it has a fax machine. The device will be released from each bank
- in September.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19920819)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SYD)(00014)
-
- ****Borland's Kahn Promises Rival To Lotus Notes 08/19/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Borland International plans to
- launch new workgroup computing software in the first half of next
- year which will challenge the hegemony of its rival Lotus Development's
- Notes.
-
- Philippe Kahn, Borland chairman, president and chief executive officer,
- yesterday lifted the veil on the new product, tentatively titled Obex
- (a shortening of Object Exchange), in a lunchtime presentation to the
- Australian computer press.
-
- Earlier in the day he had given a keynote address at IBM's OS/2
- Developers Seminar at Sydney's Randwick Racecourse, and joined a
- question-and-answer session for the press with other seminar stars
- Lucy Baney, IBM programming systems director, and Dr. Mike Kogan,
- an independent consultant and chief architect for 32-bit OS/2.
-
- Workgroup software allows numbers of workers to collaborate on
- the same documents. In the case of Notes, this can be extended
- right across enterprises.
-
- Kahn said Obex would take a significantly different route from Notes,
- which he described as a limited five-year-old implementation of DEC
- Notes. Where Notes works from a central database and requires a
- heavy investment in customized software, Obex was designed as a
- peer-to-peer system which empowered individual users' existing
- desktops and software, he said.
-
- Based on object-oriented technology, it would use a "publish and
- subscribe" model, rather like Apple's Macintosh System 7, permitting
- users to decide which documents they wished to share. Obex would
- automatically establish links not only across local area networks, but
- via other communications devices, including private and public
- electronic mail services, fax, and pagers.
-
- The object-oriented technology would hide the program's complexity
- from users, Kahn said.
-
- The Borland CEO declined to quantify the likely cost, but said
- Obex would be significantly cheaper and easier to implement than
- Notes. Users would simply need to buy one copy for each linked
- machine: there would be no need for additional hardware or
- custom-written applications.
-
- "Obex will be delivered in the first half of 1993," said Kahn,
- pressed on a delivery date.
-
- (David Frith/19920819)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(DEN)(00015)
-
- New For Macintosh: 2 NuBus Expansion Chassis For Quadra 950 08/19/92
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Second Wave says it is
- now shipping two NuBus expansion chassis for the Macintosh Quadra
- 950.
-
- The 950, a floor standing unit which uses Motorola's 68040-33
- megahertz (MHz) microprocessor, was introduced in May. Apple says
- the 950 is faster than 486-based 33 and 50 MHz powered systems. The
- Quadra 950 comes with on-board 24-bit color, high speed Ethernet
- networking, and sound input and output.
-
- Second Wave's Expanse NB4 and NB8 are external expansion chassis
- that house four or eight additional NuBus slots for Quadra 950,
- connecting to the Quadra via a NuBus interface card and cable.
-
- Second Wave believes that additional slot capability will be
- necessary as applications such as multimedia, data acquisition, image
- processing, and digital signal processing become more common.
-
- Both expansion chassis contain their own power supplies, a 50-watt
- and 130 watt units respectively. The NB4 is smaller than a Macintosh
- IIsi, measuring 9.5 by 14 by 4 inches. The NB8 is about the size of
- a IIci, 14.3 by 14 by 5.5 inches. The NB4 carries a suggested
- retail price of $1,295, while the larger unit retails for $2,295.
-
- The NuBus expansion chassis systems increase the number of available
- expansion slots for Quadra, IIsi, IIci, and the older SE/30, IIcx,
- II, and IIx Macintosh personal computers.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920819/Press contact: Lark Doley, Second Wave,
- 512-343-9661; Reader contact: 512-343-9661, fax 512-343-9663)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00016)
-
- 10 Companies Form RAID Standardization Board 08/19/92
- MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Ten high
- technology companies have formed the RAID Advisory Board, saying
- their purpose is to promote redundant array of independent disk
- (RAID) technology and coordinate disk array standardization.
-
- Participating in the organization are Array Technology; Ciprico,
- Inc; Core International; Data General Corporation; ENDL; Hi-Data
- Arrays Limited; IBM; NCR; Seagate Technology; and Technology Forums.
- Technology Forums President Joe Molina will serve as chairman of the
- group.
-
- RAID technology, while not popular on stand-alone PCs, is common on
- PC networks, Molina told Newsbytes. Redundant array refers to the
- practice of storing data in multiple locations on an array of disk
- drives in order to avoid data loss in the event the computer system
- fails. Several companies already offer RAID technology, and IBM is
- expected to announce a RAID device in early September.
-
- Molina says he tends to look way in the future, because of the type
- work he does. He predicts that in ten years multiple sub two-inch
- drives with the capacity for 500 MB will be mounted on a circuit
- board and can be inserted into an expansion slot like a video or
- printer board is at present.
-
- "Shadowing, or the mirror approach (to storing data) has been around
- for ages," says Molina. The problem, he told Newsbytes, is that
- some RAID systems, designed to improve transaction rate, quickly
- point out limitations in the software, lowering the performance
- from what the user expected. "Not because of the RAID system, but
- because of the software," he said. Pricing for RAID systems in
- some instances is quite high, said Molina.
-
- The organization says it hopes to promote RAID technology as the
- data storage solution of choice; stimulate and coordinate RAID
- standards; influence disk drive suppliers; share resources developed
- or acquired by the new organization; and identify target markets for
- rapid acceptance of RAID technology.
-
- According to Chairman Molina, "Membership status is still available
- to other companies who wish to make a positive contribution to the
- further development of RAID technology as one of the major data
- storage choices of the 90s."
-
- The group also says it hopes to develop a standard glossary and
- terminology; develop common RAID requirements for both host and disk
- drives for use in RAID products; and acquire test suites for
- standardized RAID performance evaluation and testing. Upcoming
- RAID-related conferences include the Disk Array Forum in Frankfurt,
- Germany September 18th and the Disk Array Conference in San Jose,
- California October 609. The Advisory Board will meet September 17th
- in Frankfurt, and again October 7 in San Jose.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920819/Press contact: Dan Chmielewski, Data General,
- 508-898-4056; Reader contact: Joe Molina, 612-784-2379)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00017)
-
- New Product: Multipurpose Floptical Drive 08/19/92
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Second wave has announced
- the availability of a new SCSI storage device, called ViperDrive.
-
- The company says ViperDrive is a multi-purpose floppy disk drive
- system capable of reading and writing standard high density 3.5-inch
- 1.44 megabyte (MB) Macintosh or DOS disks, 720 kilobyte (KB) DOS
- diskettes, and very high density (VHD) 20MB floptical diskettes.
- ViperDrive automatically senses what type diskette is being used in
- the drive, the company says.
-
- Seven models of the ViperDrive are available for the Macintosh II,
- LC, LC II, the Quadra family, SE and SE/30. One model is designed
- for use with IBM-compatible PCs. The company ships the Mac-based
- ViperDrives with a media adapter that allows the Floptical drive to
- be mounted internally in any Mac that has an internal SCSI (small
- computer system interface) port. ViperDrive replaces the
- factory-installed Macintosh floppy drive. ViperDrive is shipped
- with all necessary cables, driver software, and a preformatted
- floptical diskette.
-
- Second Wave says typical applications for which ViperDrive were
- designed are for back-up of hard drives, transportation of large
- files, file archiving, file security, software distribution, file
- and data distribution, and functioning as a second HD floppy disk
- drive.
-
- Flopticals by other companies are starting to come to market for use
- with notebook computers, and with their 20MB capacity could replace
- the need for an installed hard drive in a notebook system.
-
- Second Wave's Lark Doley told Newsbytes that ViperDrive's Macintosh
- version carries a $495 or $525 price tag, depending on the model of
- Mac being modified. The DOS version is $595. Second Wave says you
- can buy three floptical diskettes for $99, or $295 for 10.
-
- Second Wave's Lark Doley told Newsbytes that the drives are
- available in both internal and external models, with the external
- model connecting through the SCSI port.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920819/Press contact: Lark Doley, Second Wave,
- 512-343-9661)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00018)
-
- New Product: SCSI Device Caching Adaptor 08/19/92
- CHANDLER, ARIZONA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Tentime, a division
- of Vancouver, BC-based Laura Technologies, has announced its new
- range of ISA-based (Industry Standard Architecture) SCSI (small
- computer system interface) caching host bus adaptors which it says
- can improve SCSI device input/output performance by as much as
- thirtyfold.
-
- Tentime CEO Dugald Allen told Newsbytes that the average access time
- to a SCSI hard disk drive can be dropped from a typical 17
- milliseconds (ms) to less than .5 ms, and less than 1 ms for most
- other slow SCSI devices, such as CD-ROM, WORM (write once, read many
- times) and magneto-optical drives which are becoming popular
- accessories to PCs for tasks such as multimedia.
-
- The Powercache SC series, based on the Motorola Mc68340 processor,
- is a caching SCSI host adaptor which uses Tentime's proprietary
- multilevel algorithm (MICA) and a 32-bit processor to achieve the
- access time improvement.
-
- Tentime says Powercache is available with or without cache RAM
- factory installed, and uses industry standard SIMM (single inline
- memory module) technology to provide up to 16 megabytes (MB) of
- cache RAM without having to use daughterboards. The company does
- have an optional daughterboard for users who want to increase RAM
- (random access memory) cache capability to 80MB. The daughterboard
- price hasn't been set exactly yet, but Allen told Newsbytes it would
- be under $500.
-
- The Powercache series is expected to ship in the fourth quarter,
- Allen told Newsbytes, and will carry a list price of $1,295.
- It's available directly from Tentime or through the
- company's nationwide distribution chain.
-
- Tentime also announced that it has entered into a cooperative
- agreement with Chine Machine Building Industrial Corporation, an
- industrial manufacturer, and the North East University of
- Technology, a Chinese university.
-
- Tentime said the agreement is to develop products for the computer
- industry. While Tentime was unwilling to discuss details of the
- product lines, Allen did confirm that the first product would be a
- mass storage device. The company said it would announce further
- information about the new products in the third quarter.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19920819/Press contact: Dugald Allen, Tentime,
- 602-940-9800)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00019)
-
- Correction: Free CD-ROM Titles W/Mac Or PC CD-ROM Drives 08/19/92
- TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- This report,
- which ran yesterday, has an erroneous title. In fact, the CD-ROMs
- are not free. The title was the only error in the story. Newsbytes
- apologizes for the error.
-
- The text of the story was as follows:
-
- Get a CD-ROM drive and with it, get the CDs. That's the message that
- Chinon would like you to get with their newest promotion called Crystal
- Collection II.
-
- The way this promotion works is as follows. You go into the store
- and specify that you want to buy the Chinon 431 series of CD-ROM
- drives with the Crystal Collection II. The store clerk should charge
- you between $1350 and $1595 depending on the drive that you choose.
- In addition to the box containing the CD-ROM drive, you will walk
- out of the store carrying a coupon book. This coupon book is sent
- to the Bureaus of Electronic Publishing which will redeem the
- coupons for the six titles that are a part of the collection.
-
- The six titles that you can get vary depending on your hardware
- configuration. If you buy the Macintosh version of the drive and
- collection you will get: the Toolworks Illustrated Encyclopedia,
- the World Atlas, Nautilus, Selectware System Disc, Chinon Lens
- Cleaning Disc, and the CIA World Fact Book. If you buy the PC
- version of the drive and collection you get the same set of CDs
- with the exception of a Reference Library instead of the
- CIA World Fact Book.
-
- Chinon is continuing to offer the original Crystal Collection which
- allowed users to choose five out of 12 possible CDs for a price of
- $199. By taking advantage of both programs, users can purchase 11
- CDs at the time they purchase a drive. Without the CDs, Chinon's
- drives sell for $650 to $895.
-
- The offer is in effect now. However unconfirmed reports indicate
- that Chinon is planning to introduce a whole new series of CD-ROM
- players for both the Macintosh and the PC within a
- month. The new series is expected to be both MPC and Quick Time
- compatible and to substantially replace the 431 series.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19920818, Press Contact:Jeff Swartz, Daly-Swartz Public
- Relations for Chinon, 714-361-6888/Public Contact: Chinon, 310-353-
- 0274)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00020)
-
- SunSoft Launches Publishing Group 08/19/92
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- In an
- effort to further expand the market penetration of the company's
- Solaris operating system, SunSoft Inc., has launched SunSoft Press.
-
- The new company is slated as a publishing group formed to
- "develop, market, and distribute books on the Solaris software
- environment and associated Sun products to mainstream users."
-
- Additionally, SunSoft has also signed strategic partnerships with
- publishing houses Ziff Davis Press and Prentice Hall. According to
- a prepared press release the new partnerships are designed to
- "deliver Solaris expertise through their worldwide network of
- retail and technical bookstores."
-
- SunSoft Press will work with the two companies to develop
- books targeted at end users, software developers, and system
- administrators, and will range from porting guides to quick
- reference books and retail product manuals. The resulting books
- will be distributed through national bookstores including B.
- Dalton, Barnes & Noble, Crown Books, Software Etc., Stacey's,
- and Walden Books.
-
- The first books from SunSoft Press, set to appear sometime in
- the fall, will focus on the company's 32-bit Solaris 2.0 Unix
- operating system. According to the company, aspects of the
- software covered will include porting guides for Solaris on the
- SPARC and 80386/486 platforms, quick reference and
- implementation guides for system administration, and in-depth
- books on the Solaris user environment and the DeskSet tools.
- The company maintains that future books will cover Solaris
- multiprocessing and multithreading technologies, compilers and
- tools, graphics and SunSoft's Project DOE (distributed objects
- everywhere) technology.
-
- Book titles already set for publication include: "Solaris System
- Administrator's Guide," "Solaris Porting Guide," "Solaris x86
- Porting Guide," "All About NIS+: A Guide for Network Administrators,"
- "The ToolTalk Service: An Interoperability Solution," and "The
- Solaris International Developer's Guide." Titles are set to be
- published in both European and Asian languages.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920819/Press Contact: Laura Ramsey, SunSoft Inc.,
- 415-336-0739)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00021)
-
- Microcom Loses $6M In 1Q 08/19/92
- NORWOOD, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Microcom, maker
- of local area network products, says it lost $6,602,000 in the first
- quarter of fiscal year 1993.
-
- The quarter produced revenues of $18,934,000, up from $16,305,000 during
- this quarter last year.
-
- The firm attributes the loss to a restructuring charge of $5.8 million,
- 33 percent of which is from a write-off of assets and costs
- associated with the expected disposition of the company's Relay
- product line. Other costs came from a layoff of 15 percent of
- Microcom's worldwide workforce.
-
- The company reports that it anticipates spending approximately
- 13 percent of revenue for research and development during the
- remainder of fiscal year 1993.
-
- Microcom's product lines include Microporte and QX Protocol
- Modems, Microcom Bridge/Routers, Carbon Copy remote control
- software, and LANlord integrated network management software.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19920819/Press Contact: Peter J. Minihane, 617-551-1236)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(HKG)(00022)
-
- Northern Telecom Wins $9M China Contract 08/19/92
- WANCHAI, HONG KONG, 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- China's Ministry of Posts and
- Telecommunications (MPT) has selected Northern Telecom to supply DPN-
- 100 packet switching equipment and software for China's first
- nationwide data communications network.
-
- The $9 million contract will see Northern Telecom's DPN-100 switches
- form the backbone of the planned CHINAPAC network.
-
- The CHINAPAC 32-node network will service 28 provinces and autonomous
- regions and three municipalities. CHINAPAC will support both public
- and private networks and be available on a subscription basis to a wide
- range of businesses and industries. In its final configuration the
- network will carry millions of computer transactions each day.
-
- Installation is planned to start in the second quarter of 1993 and
- the network is expected to be in operation by the end of that year.
-
- The project marks an important step in China's plans to modernize its
- communications network. China's present data communications network
- (CNPAC) is limited to 11 locations, including Beijing, Shanghai, and
- Guangzhou.
-
- Northern Telecom's managing director for the Peoples' Republic and
- Hong Kong, Michael Lambert, said "the DPN-100 network will be central
- to the communications needs of a wide range of business and
- industries including banks, airlines, post and delivery services
- organizations, transportation companies, customs offices and energy
- bureaus."
-
- At the heart of the network is Northern Telecom's switching
- technology which supports most protocols, including CCITT X.25, X.75,
- X.3/X.28/X.29 and IBM's system Network Architecture (SNA)
- environments.
-
- As a result, CNPAC users will be able to migrate quickly and easily
- to the new national data communication network, thereby protecting their
- investments in the existing equipment.
-
- Mr Lambert said, "With a national data-comm infrastructure in place,
- the potential for communications growth is tremendous."
-
- "One of the most important requirements for new and old users alike
- will be a high level of security and fault tolerance the Northern
- Telecom equipment will provide," Mr Lambert told Newsbytes.
-
- The contract includes an extensive training program for MPT
- operations and maintenance staff from each site around the country,
- with basic training taking place in Beijing, followed by advanced
- instruction at Northern Telecom facilities in Canada.
-
- Northern Telecom's First DPN-100 contract with China was signed in
- 1988 under which a $3.5 million DPN-based system was installed in
- Guangzhou PTA (Posts and Telecommunications Administration).
-
- Currently Northern Telecom has installed over 100 major DPN-100
- networks, including the global networks of the international banking
- organization SWIFT (the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
- Telecommunications cooperative) in addition to public and private
- networks in most European countries and Asia, Australia, and North
- America.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19920819/Press contact: John Tucker, Northern Telecom
- Asia/Pacific, tel: (612) 428 8451)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00023)
-
- New For PC: Borland's 6 Programming Products 08/19/92
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- In an
- effort to consolidate its success in the programming market,
- Borland International has introduced six language products,
- including ObjectVision Pro and the Borland KnowledgeBase CDs. The
- other software packages are new versions of existing products,
- and feature ObjectVision 2.1, Brief 3.1 for DOS and OS/2, Borland
- Paradox Engine and Database Framework 3.0 and Borland C++ and
- Application Frameworks 3.1 for CD-ROM.
-
- ObjectVision Pro is an advanced version of the company's
- ObjectVision for Windows 2.0 visual programming product that is
- targeted at the "non-technical" end user. According to the company,
- ObjectVision Pro provides "all of the components for management
- information system professionals, corporate programmers,
- independent software vendors, and value-added resellers to create
- complete Windows applications quickly and easily."
-
- The product includes ObjectVision 2.1; Turbo C++ for Windows 3.1; SQL
- connection, a multimedia tool kit for creating applications
- with video, sound, graphics and animation; and Crystal Reports,
- a graphical report writer.
-
- ObjectVision 2.1 provides a "new, 20 percent faster" Paradox
- Engine that supports both Paradox 3.5 and Paradox 4.0 file
- compatibility. Also supported in ObjectVision 2.1 are Paradox
- MEMO fields, binary large object data types, and composite
- secondary indexes, Borland says.
-
- BRIEF 3.1 for DOS and OS/2 is a programmer's editor that the
- company claims allows programmers to add, delete and modify
- the language statements and offload repetitive, tedious, and
- complicated tasks associated with application development.
- New features in 3.1 include mouse support, extended memory
- specification (EMS) support, "Undo/Redo" capabilities, and dialog
- box support.
-
- Borland Paradox Engine and Database Framework 3.0 allows
- programmers to integrate their applications with Paradox data.
- According to the company, the product's new "object layer" provides
- an object-oriented access layer to all the engine functions from C++
- and Pascal. Other features include language support for Turbo
- Pascal for Windows and a new optimized file locking system for
- faster data locking.
-
- The programming market is an important one for Borland, which,
- until its last fiscal quarter, had been running in the red following
- its industry-shaking purchase of database company Ashton-Tate
- last year. In July Newsbytes reported that Borland had finally
- posted a profit. Revenue for the company's first fiscal quarter of
- 1993, ending June 30, 1992, was reported as $114.8 million.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19920819/Press Contact: Cathy Caplener, 408-439-
- 4825 or Susan Nicolls, 408-439-4833, both of Borland
- International Inc.)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00024)
-
- Microsoft Claims One Million Windows Sold Per Month 08/19/92
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- The rise of
- Microsoft's Windows graphical user interface as a major
- operating environment appears to continue unabated, as the
- company now claims to have shipped more than one million units
- of Windows 3.1 per month, in each of the last four months, since
- its initial release in April.
-
- Brad Silverberg, vice president of personal systems at Microsoft,
- said: "Windows is fueling the growth in the PC business today
- across the board software, hardware, peripherals and utilities.
- The move to Windows perpetuates the heritage of MS-DOS, adding
- new vitality to our competitive, customer-driven industry and
- fostering opportunities for business growth and development."
-
- According to Microsoft, recent data from the Software Publishers
- Association (SPA) shows that 1992 Windows-based application
- sales in the first quarter of this year are double those of the same
- quarter last year.
-
- Microsoft also claims that Windows has been on the Merisel "hot
- list" for 79 consecutive months, and on the Ingram Micro-D best-
- seller list for more than 110 weeks. Following its introduction
- in April, Windows 3.1 has been at the top of both lists.
-
- Microsoft maintains that PC hardware manufacturers participating
- in the Windows "Ready-to-Run" program now total 139 companies
- worldwide, and include nine out of the top 10 PC manufacturers.
- According to the company, the program makes it easier for
- customers to identify systems that are preconfigured and optimized
- for Windows by allowing hardware vendors to use a distinctive logo
- to identify their machines as having Windows preinstalled.
-
- Even before the introduction of Windows 3.1, more than 10
- million units of version 3.0 were reported to have been shipped.
- One of the most widely anticipated software products in the
- the short history of the PC industry is currently in the final
- stages of release -- the 32-bit version of the operating
- environment, called Windows New Technology (NT).
-
- (Ian Stokell/1992 0819/Press Contact: Collins Hemingway,
- 206-882-8080, Microsoft Corp.)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(LAX)(00025)
-
- SCO To Go Online 08/19/92
- SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Until now,
- The Santa Cruz Operation (SCO) has not had a online forum for
- its users, resellers, and partners. However, the company
- announced at its annual SCO Forum92 that it has made an
- agreement to start such a forum.
-
- The forum will have files for downloading, online conferencing,
- and dedicated messages for discussion of SCO products and
- services. The company says it hopes to be able to rapidly disseminate
- information, bug fixes, and advice to its estimated 5 million
- users worldwide.
-
- Compuserve representatives said the planned SCO Forum will be
- the first vendor-specific Unix System forum on the online
- service.
-
- SCO is privately held and says it has shipped 750,000 copies of
- its Unix operating system -- more copies than any other vendor of the
- Unix operating system. SCO also makes a Unix operating system for IBM
- and compatible 386- and 486-based computers.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920819/Press Contact: Zee Zaballos, The
- Santa Cruz Operation, tel 408-425-7222, fax 408-427-5448; Debra
- Young, Compuserve, 614-457-8600)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00026)
-
- New Product: Another Palmtop 08/19/92
- TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Another new
- subnotebook computer, this one with a 60-megabyte hard disk and
- a weight of 2.2 pounds, is expected to be introduced at the end
- of next month. Called the Bicom B260i, the palmtop computer is
- being produced by ABC Computer of Torrance, California.
-
- ABC says the B260i is about half the size of a standard sheet
- of paper at 6.31 x 8.75 x 1.25 inches and has a closer pitch
- full keyboard design. The unit also comes with 2 megabytes (MB)
- of random access memory (RAM), an PCMCIA card slot, a 286
- microprocessor, and operates on five AA batteries (alkaline or
- Ni-MH/Ni-Cad) or its own AC/DC adapter. The unit comes with 1
- serial, 1 parallel, and an external floppy drive port built in,
- ABC added.
-
- The display is a double scan computer graphics array (CGA) at
- 640 x 480 resolution and offers 8 grey levels, ABC maintains.
-
- A diary, calendar, calculator, notepad, and address book are
- built into the B260i, and it comes with DR DOS 6.0, company
- representatives said.
-
- The company says the unit will retail for $1,250. Gateway has
- announced a similar palmtop computer for a retail price of
- $1,295, but with fewer features.
-
- While the B260i will be on display at the Compuexpo show, Sept.
- 21 to 24 in Las Vegas, Nevada, ABC said it showed prototypes of
- the unit at Spring COMDEX.
-
- ABC Computer representative Carlos Guerrero described the
- company as a clone motherboard manufacturer which has turned to
- manufacturing computers of its own. The company has offices in
- Torrance, California and in Taiwan.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920819/Press Contact: Carlos Guerrero, ABC
- Computer, tel 310-325-4005, fax 310-325-6369)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00027)
-
- US Entertainment Software Sales Doing Nicely 08/19/92
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Proving that when the
- economy is down, the entertainment industry is up, the recreation
- software market experienced a 6% growth rate last year, according to
- a survey released by the Software Publishers Association (SPA).
-
- 1991 North American sales of recreation software reached $376
- million, or 6% higher than last year, according to a report done by
- Arthur Andersen & Co.
-
- The report says simulation software, which includes war
- games, had the largest share of the sales pie, with 40% of total
- disk-based sales. Simulation also captures 40% of international
- recreation software sales. In second place with 14% is adventure/role
- playing software which commands 29% of international recreation software
- sales.
-
- DOS is the recreation format of choice with 82% of total disk-based
- dollar sales. Macintosh in second place with 8% of sales.
- The Amiga is in third place with 5%.
-
- Although the Mac portion of the market is still small, the SPA reports
- that Mac entertainment software had the highest growth rate
- domestically, with a 39 percent increase in dollar sales and 28
- percent in shipments during 1991.
-
- Among DOS entertainment software, the family entertainment category
- achieved the highest growth in 1991, rising 37 percent in dollar sales
- and 48 percent in shipments over 1990 figures, but still remained the
- smallest of the five categories, the SPA reports.
-
- Interestingly, DOS and Macintosh are the only formats that have shown
- consistent growth in recent years, the survey adds. Recreation
- applications running in the Apple II, Commodore, and Atari ST
- formats have steadily declined since 1988. Sales of recreation
- software in the Amiga format declined in 1991 after growing in
- 1989 and 1990.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19920819/Press Contact: David Tremblay/Terri Childs,
- SPA 202/452-1600)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00028)
-
- Software Developers Competition Slated 08/19/92
- DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- A competition
- to create the best software application using any operating
- system or programming language of choice, will take place
- October 9 and 10 at the Durham Omni Convention Center.
-
- Software companies across the country will compete for cash and
- prizes worth over $100,000 at the 2nd annual Developers Competition.
- Top prizes to the three winning teams will be $5,000, $3,000 and
- $2,000.
-
- Two hundred developers from the area's famous Research Triangle Park
- and from around the world are expected to compete to build a
- real-world application according to specs provided that day.
- Promoters are being justifiably tight-lipped about the exact
- application to be designed. Last year, however, it was a program
- for the Duke University medical center that tracked incidents of
- child abuse among the patients.
-
- Developers will have at their disposal nearly every major development
- tool and environment available, the organizers promise, including
- DOS, Microsoft Windows, OS/2, Macintosh, and others. Also COBOL tool
- companies expect to show up with their contributions to the cause.
- They will program in a room at the convention center.
-
- Another programming competition is expected to take place online
- on Compuserve -- it will be judged separately, Newsbytes was told.
-
- The contest coincides with Software '92, a one-day business and
- technical forum sponsored by the Council for Entrepreneurial Development
- on October 9th. Confirmed speakers include representatives from SunSoft,
- SAS, and DEC.
-
- Research Triangle Park is host to two other major computer events that
- week: the 2nd International Convention on Software Quality
- (2ICSQ) and the 3rd International Symposium on Software Reliability
- Engineering (ISSRE92).
-
- The contest is being organized by Tom Droege who can be reached for
- further information at 919-383-9749. If you would like information
- mailed or faxed to you on the Developers Competition or Software
- '92, contact Cliff Allen at cliff@allen.com or by phone:
- (919) 783-9020 or fax (919) 783-9058.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19920819)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00029)
-
- Tandy Offers New Talking MPC With Optional TV 08/19/92
- FORT WORTH, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- Tandy is
- announcing a new line of personal computers (PCs) called
- Sensation! and geared toward multimedia. Tandy says the new PCs
- will be able to read to users and can be optionally equipped
- with a PC/TV board for on screen television viewing.
-
- Tandy says each model of the new line will be equipped with the
- hardware for multimedia and will have its new Winmate Windows
- organizer software.
-
- The first model in the Sensation! line is a 486-based PC with 4
- megabytes (MB) of random access memory (RAM) expandable to 32
- megabytes, a 3.5-inch high density floppy drive, a 107 MB hard
- disk drive, and a compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM) drive
- with a fast 375 millisecond (ms) average access time. The sound
- is MPC quality and built-in, as is a 2400 baud modem that
- offers voice mail capabilities and 4800 baud fax transmission.
-
- Three 16-bit industry standard architecture (ISA) slots, and a
- serial, parallel, musical instrument digital interface
- (MIDI), mouse, and dual joystick ports, and stereo line out
- jacks for the attachment of speakers are built in. The company
- says volume control, speaker, microphone, and headphone jacks
- are mounted in the front of the unit as well. A mouse and a
- 101- key keyboard are included as well.
-
- The company says a super video graphics array (SVGA) monitor
- comes with the new PC that is driven by an SVGA card with
- Tandy's Multimedia Palette Chip for a 16 million color display,
- 512 MB of memory expandable to 1 MB and a Windows accelerator.
-
- Software included is listed as MS-DOS 5.0, Windows 3.1, the
- multimedia edition of Microsoft Works for Windows, and
- Microsoft Bookshelf for Windows. The new model will also come
- with software for Prodigy, America On-line, and The Sierra
- Network -- all popular, graphical-oriented, electronic
- information and entertainment services. Clip-art images,
- digitized photographs, an AT&T 800 directory, sound effects,
- and tunes are also included.
-
- The Winmate organizer for Windows will start up on the machine
- offering eight function categories: In Touch, In the Know, In
- the Bank, In Charge, In Play, In Print, and Inside. Users can
- select one of the eight function categories, or have Winmate
- "read" to them a description of its content in a digitized
- voice.
-
- One of the categories, In Touch, offers a function Tandy calls
- Teleminder, a voice mail system with telephone answering
- capabilities that can be accessed remotely. Also under In Touch
- is Message Center, which allows the user to call the computer
- remotely and have a message left in text or voice format "read"
- to them, Tandy said.
-
- An optional PC/TV add-in board offers users the ability to
- watch television on the computer's monitor and includes 122-
- channel cable-ready tuner on-board, a two million color
- display, and software control of fine-tuning, audio, color and
- hue, contrast, and brightness.
-
- Tandy says the first Sensation! will be retail priced at $1,999
- and the optional PC/TV board is an additional $399.95. The
- Sensation! is to be available in October and will be offered
- through Tandy's 7,000 Radio Shack stores and dealers
- nationwide, the company added.
-
- Packard Bell just announced a similar system, but the Packard
- Bell system is higher priced (starting at $2,599), offers more
- hard disk space and doesn't offer the voice mail option.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920819/Press Contact: Fran McGehee,
- Tandy/Radio Shack, tel 817-390-3487, fax 817-878-6508)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00030)
-
- Sears/IBM New Information Venture -- Advantis 08/19/92
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 19 (NB) -- IBM and Sears,
- known for the Prodigy Service the two have jointly produced,
- have decided to create another joint-venture company to be
- called Advantis.
-
- The focus of the new venture is to offer companies voice and
- data networking, such as design, development, and integration
- of custom networks as well as value-added network services such
- as electronic data interchange and electronic mail, IBM said.
-
- Advantis will start with 9,000 customers, 1 million users, and
- $1 billion in assets as it will pool IBM's Integrated Systems
- Solutions and Sears Technology Services -- including Sears
- Communications, the companies said. Sears says every Discover
- Card transaction and every product order placed by IBM US
- marketing representatives will be handled by Advantis, as will
- every electronic mail note sent by US Sears and IBM employees
- to electronic mailboxes worldwide.
-
- Advantis is to support the information needs of Sears' business
- groups including Coldwell Banker, Sears Merchandise Group,
- Allstate Insurance, and Dean Witter Financial Services Group,
- the companies added.
-
- All 1500 employees of Sears' Technology Services and a matching
- number from IBM's Networking Systems Services will staff
- Advantis, which will be headquartered in Schaumburg, Ilinois, a
- northwest suburb of Chicago, IBM said.
-
- Advantis is geared to tap into the estimated $7 billion
- annually that industry analysts are predicting businesses will
- spend on annually on information networking services by 1994,
- IBM maintains.
-
- Neither Sears or IBM released financial details of the founding
- of Advantis, but IBM will hold a majority interest through its
- Integrated Systems Solutions Corporation (ISSC).
-
- The board of directors is to be named later this year. However,
- the chairman and chief executive officer is to be Syd N.
- Heaton, currently general manager of IBM's Networking Systems
- Services. President and chief operating officer has been named
- as Gary Weis, now senior vice president of Sears Technology
- Services, and chief financial officer is to be Patrick M.
- Kerin, director of financial analysis-products & services for
- IBM US.
-
- While the prospects for Advantis sound promising, both IBM and
- Sears have been struggling financially for some time now. Some
- industry analysts are saying the companies' joint venture,
- Prodigy, hasn't been profitable yet despite the millions the
- service boasts are members. Some predictions are Prodigy might
- not survive if it doesn't begin showing black ink this year
- because Sears and IBM cannot afford to pour any more money into
- it.
-
- IBM recently announced nearly 10 percent of its workforce, or
- 32,000 employees, are leaving the company this year. The exits
- were prompted as employees take advantage of big blue's offer
- for a "golden exit," and have taken the company up on
- incentives to find other jobs or simply retire early.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19920819/Press Contact: Nadia Anthony, Burson-
- Marsteller for IBM/Sears, tel 212-614-4000, fax 212-614-4105)
-
-
-