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- (CORRECTION)(IBM)(LAX)(00001)
-
- CORRECTION: New For PC: NatSemi's Fax-Modem-Voice-Sound Card 10/30/92
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Newsbytes wishes
- to correct an error in the title of the story "New For PC: Intel's
- Fax-Modem-Voice-Sound Card" which ran in some Newsbytes editions
- on October 29. The title should have been the one above, on this
- story. The product was introduced not by Intel, but by National
- Semiconductor, as the story reported. Newsbytes apologizes for the
- error.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19921030)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00002)
-
- Lasermaster Intros 1200 DPI For Laserjet 4 10/30/92
- MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Lasermaster
- Technologies has announced Winjet 1200, an upgrade kit for Hewlett-
- Packard's new HP LaserJet 4 that the company says provides faster
- printing speeds, PostScript language compatibility, and up to 1200
- dots-per-inch (dpi) print resolution.
-
- Lasermaster says Winjet 1200 will be shipped next month and will
- have a suggested retail price of $995. Hewlett-Packard markets its
- own PostScript upgrade, but it does not include the higher
- resolution.
-
- Resolution of 1200 dpi is considered sufficiently high that it can
- frequently be used to prepare camera-ready copy, saving the extra
- costs of typesetting.
-
- Newsbytes reported in June that Lasermaster had introduced LPV, a
- hardware-software combination that speeds up printing by allowing the
- printer and PC to communicate with the PC via its parallel port. A
- board in installed in the input/output slot of the HP printer, and
- eliminates the need for costly printer memory upgrades and the
- purchase of a Postscript printer language cartridge for the printer.
-
- Lasermaster CEO Mel Masters says the combination of the Laserjet 4
- and Winjet 1200 is ideally suited for Windows. "We expect the new HP
- Laserjet 4 to be a resounding success, creating an immediate market
- opportunity for our new enhancement product," says Masters.
-
- In September Lasermaster introduced the second of its plain paper
- typesetter products, a 1200 dots-per-inch device which can handle
- paper sizes of up to 11 by 17 inches. The Unity 1200 xl can be
- used with Macintosh or IBM-compatible computers.
-
- Hewlett-Packard announced the HP4 and the companion HP4M, the
- Macintosh version, earlier this month. The network-ready HP4 can
- produce printed pages with resolutions up to 600 dpi, and uses a
- toner with a smaller particle size than current toners. HP says
- that allows printing that has the appearance of 800-900 dpi. The HP4
- family also has Windows TrueType fonts built in, eliminating the
- need to download fonts before printing.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19921029/Press contact: Karen Neset, Lasermaster
- Technologies, 612-941-8687, fax 612-941-8652)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00003)
-
- Kelly Offers Computer Training For Temps 10/30/92
- TROY, MICHIGAN, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Kelly Temporary
- Services says it has developed an enhanced data entry testing and
- training system to assure that the temporary employee you hire is
- qualified.
-
- Called Kelly Customized Data Entry System II, the program can be
- customized to simulate the data entry screens used on the job site.
- Kelly says the system allows them to dispatch only the best
- qualified employees to an assignment.
-
- Anita Mergener, senior director of Kelly's product design department,
- says the system can simulate single or multiple entry screens. The
- system includes tests for speed and accuracy prior to training,
- utilizes four different keyboard styles, tracks productivity
- that's identified on the customer's data entry screens after
- training, and includes specific data entry job descriptions.
-
- Kelly Temporary Services is a division of Kelly Services, and
- provides temporary employees nationwide in the fields of office work,
- marketing, light industrial and technical.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19921029/Press contact: Jane Riesterer, Kelly Services,
- 313-244-4305)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00004)
-
- New For Macintosh: IRMA Upgrades 10/30/92
- ALPHARETTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- DCA has
- announced major upgrades to two of its products at the InterOp
- show in San Francisco. The two products are IRMA Workstation for
- Macintosh (IWM) and IRMALAN Client for Macintosh (ICM).
-
- Both IWM and ICM have been upgraded to version 3.0 with the addition
- of five new features. DCA spokespeople told Newsbytes that they
- consider the addition of A/UX support to be the most important of
- the five enhancements. (A/UX is Apple's version of Unix.) With this
- new features, ICM and IWM can now run on A/UX-equipped Macintoshes.
-
- Another major feature is the first implementation of DCA's support
- for Netware for SAA. This was promised by DCA back in August and is
- expected to be available for all DCA connectivity products that need
- it by the end of the year.
-
- The final set of three features are intended to help users migrate
- from one DCA product to another. QuickHit, QuickPoint, and QuickPad
- are all user interface elements that DCA has defined as their own
- standards. The company's philosophy is to have a common set of
- user interface standards implemented across the whole product
- line, thereby forcing users to spend less time learning how to use the
- products.
-
- QuickHit enables the mouse to be used to point and click on
- any key that is displayed in the mainframe text and have that key
- executed. QuickPoint allows for the changing of the font and window
- sizes from a button on the screen rather than a pull-down menu.
- QuickPad is a utility that allows the users to place frequently
- used keys and macros on a customized pad for later use.
-
- IWM 3.0 retails for $425. Current users of previous versions can
- upgrade for $95. ICM 3.0 retails for $3995 and current users can
- upgrade for $395. Both new versions are shipping at this time.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19921029/Press Contact: Kerry Stanfield, DCA, 404-
- 442-4519/Public Contact: DCA, 404-442-4364, 800-348-3221)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(LON)(00005)
-
- New For Unix: Unipalm's First Unix/E-Mail Package 10/30/92
- CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND, 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Unipalm has unveiled
- Mail-it, which it claims is the first dedicated Microsoft Windows
- to Unix electronic mail (e-mail) package.
-
- According to the PC to Unix connectivity specialist, the package
- conforms fully to open systems industry standards. In use, it
- allows Microsoft Windows users to send and reply to messages
- anywhere on a PC and Unix network.
-
- Before Mail-it appeared, the company claims, a network manager
- wanting to integrate a PC network e-mail system into a Unix network
- had to rely on "expensive and inefficient" gatewaying technology.
- This technology, the company further claims, would link the local
- area network (LAN) e-mail system's proprietary messaging
- protocols to the Unix open standard.
-
- So what is Mail-it? The package is a actually a Windows
- applications that uses SMTP (simple mail transfer protocol) and
- POP-2 mail transfer protocols to move data between the Windows
- and Unix operating system/user interface environments.
- These two protocols are widely supported within the Unix arena.
-
- In use, Mail-it allows users to read, send, forward reply, print
- and save e-mail items. The package also includes an alert
- facility that tells a user when a mail item has arrived and needs
- to be read.
-
- Announcing the package, Clive Prout, head of Unipalm's marketing
- operations, said that Mail-it is a functional and robust
- application that was developed to fulfill a definite need in the
- marketplace.
-
- "Before Mail-it, PC users has to use e-mail packages based on
- proprietary protocols and hence could only e-mail other LAN users
- or use fairly rudimentary links through protocol gateways," he said.
-
- "The trend towards enterprise networking and integration demands
- packages such as this one that don't work in isolation," he
- added.
-
- Mail-it requires Microsoft Windows 3.0; Sunselect's PC-NFS-4.0a,
- FTP's PC/TCP 2.1 or Novell LAN Workplace for DOS 4. Also required
- are at least 1.5 megabyte (MB) of hard disk space and a mail
- server that offers SMTP and/or POP-2 protocols.
-
- The package costs UKP 450 for a five-user licence.
-
- (Steve Gold/19921029/Press & Public Contact: Unipalm - Tel: 0223-
- 420002)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00006)
-
- Canon's New Printers, PCs Geared Toward Home/Office 10/30/92
- COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- On the
- heels of Hewlett-Packard's (HP) announcement of its new 600
- dots-per-inch Laserjet 4 Series printers, Canon has announced
- its new line of printers and computer products.
-
- Canon is boasting the most about its new Bubble Jet, the BJ-200
- printer, which offers increased print speeds, a lower
- noise level, a small footprint, the ability to handle different
- types of paper and envelopes, and print quality the company
- claims rivals the HP Deskjet 500.
-
- In fact, the company says a survey done by an independent
- market research organization revealed 80 percent of those asked
- thought the BJ-200's output was better than the Deskjet 500.
- Canon is also touting the price, $549 and a two-year warranty,
- which the company says will make the printer attractive to home
- and small business markets.
-
- New laser printers, the LBP-4sx and the LBP-8sx, were also
- introduced and the company says they talk PCL5, the page
- description language used by HP. The printers offer dot matrix
- emulation and can automatically switch to different emulation
- modes. The 4sx prints four pages per minute, the 8sx prints 8
- pages per minute and both printers offer the familiar 300 dot-
- per-inch resolution.
-
- Innova is the company's new line of desktop and notebook
- personal computers come with a one-year warranty, and on-site
- service for the desktop models. Canon says the computers offer
- step-by-step documentation and the desktop models come with 14-
- inch color monitors.
-
- Canon says the new laser printers and new desktop computers are
- shipping now, the new Bubble Jet printers will ship the first
- week of November, and the notebook computers will be available
- at the end of November.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19921029/Press Contact: Karen Lippe, Canon,
- tel 714-438-3075, fax 741-438-3088)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(SYD)(00007)
-
- Australia: Network Research Center Abandoned 10/30/92
- CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA, 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- The Research Data Network
- (RDN) Cooperative Research Center (CRC) has been abandoned after
- the project was entangled in a web of industry and interest group
- politicking. The RDN CRC was originally intended to be responsible
- for the upgrade of the Australian Academic Research Network
- (AARNet), with AUS$13M earmarked to fund the CRC to be
- re-allocated to other CRCs, both existing and planned.
-
- The RDN CRC was allocated the funds just last August in the Australian
- federal government's budget. The decision was made after it appeared to
- the Australian Vice-Chancellors Committee (AVCC) that AARNet, which it
- formed, would be overtaken by Telecom's Fastpac technology. By
- citing the lack of firm agreements on how the CRCs would work,
- Professor Ralph Slatyer, formerly the government's chief scientist,
- was able to end the single-CRC approach and gain approval for the
- re-allocation of the funds to multiple existing and proposed CRCs
- which would be undertaking research data network projects.
-
- "Each of these centers would continue to be headed by its existing
- director. The only change in their operations would be that they
- would develop a new research data network component of their centers
- (or supplement an existing activity) and, in the process, add
- additional appropriate core participants and modify their
- administrative and management structures," Slatyer said.
-
- The abandoning of the RDN CRC will not see the abandonment of the
- AARNet upgrade, as the Department for Science and Technology has
- re-affirmed that the funds will be made available for the upgrade.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19921030)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00008)
-
- AT&T Installs 5ESS Switch In Kazakhstan 10/30/92
- ALMA-ATA, KAZAKHSTAN, 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- AT&T has put yet another
- of its 5ESS phone switches in use in another part of the former
- Soviet Union.
-
- Both Kazakh communications ministry official Aldar Tugushbaev, and
- AT&T vice president, Aukie Gerbens, praised the breakthrough in the
- communications infrastructure of the Cental Asian country. The
- installation comes 6 months after the country selected AT&T as
- a Kazakhstan phone equipment supplier.
-
- The 5ESS phone station will be used for direct dial phone
- communications both domestically and overseas, allowing Kazakhs to
- bypass Moscow operators while placing international calls.
-
- The agreement between the Kazakhstan government and AT&T calls for the
- installation of one million digital phone lines across the republic
- over the next 10 years.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19921029)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(DEL)(00009)
-
- Computer Network To Study Sun 10/30/92
- NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Though some 93 million miles
- away, the sun is still the nearest star to the earth, and reveals
- its stunning power as an enormous ball of light, serving as the main
- energy source to all living creatures on earth. Yet very little is
- known about what happens inside the sun. Seismic waves produced
- produced by the sun cannot be monitored, except in the form of
- oscillating gases on the surface that can be measured by
- scientists on earth.
-
- In order to probe deeper and unravel the mystery behind these waves a
- Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG) has been formed by the
- National Solar Observatory in Arizona, USA. For a continuous
- observation of the sun, the group has chosen Udaipur, in Rajasthan
- as one of the six sites around the world -- the others located
- in the Canary Islands, Chile, California, Hawaii, and Western
- Australia. The sites have been selected on desired longitudes.
-
- All the six observatories would be equipped with similar solar
- telescopes and linked in a chain by next year for computer storage
- of images and to perform other computer-intensive operations to
- derive, for example, spectrum of oscillations.
-
- In India, the Department of Space is monitoring the project.
- Sophisticated equipment including a solar telescope costing Rs 50
- million will soon be installed on a small island in the middle of
- a lake within the picturesque lake-city of Udaipur. Udaipur, meaning
- City of the Rising Sun, is known for centuries-old observatories.
-
- Altogether 150 researchers from 20 countries will be participating
- in the GONG project. They will largely depend upon what are
- called Fourier Tachometers capable of making velocity checks at
- individual points on the sun round the clock. By simultaneously
- processing light from all parts of the solar disc, the tachometer
- produces line-of-sight velocities at over 65,000 points on the
- sun's surface. Every minute, a computer stores a "velocity image"
- on magnetic tape together with a conventional "intensity image"
- just like a radar tracking an aeroplane.
-
- Each station would produce at least 200 megabytes of data every
- day. Since at any point of time at least three GONG stations will
- be observing the sun, their data would have to be merged into a
- single stream by automatically selecting the best frames
- available at each moment. Once these exercises are through, the
- raw and reduced data, plus information obtained at several
- intermediate stages, would be collated into a computer-readable
- form by using a combination of optical discs and magnetic tapes
- for analysis.
-
- The project is scheduled to last for three years, but if the
- results indicate a need, data gathering may be continued for
- a longer period.
-
- (C.T. Mahabharat/19921029)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SYD)(00010)
-
- Merisel Seeks New Zealand Base 10/30/92
- WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- International PC
- distributor Merisel is seeking an established distributor to use
- as a base for New Zealand distribution. While not large, the New
- Zealand market is very active.
-
- Merisel moved into Australia through an established local
- distributor, MicroAustralia. It first took equity and worked with
- the company, then bought it. Analysts believe the company will
- do a similar thing with one of the local New Zealand distributors,
- and use the Australian base to help get things going.
-
- New Zealand is reputed to have more PC brands per head of population
- than any other country, and pricing is extremely competitive. In
- Australia Merisel distributes IBM, AST, Epson, Microsoft, Lotus
- and most major vendors except Borland. It expects to have a turnover
- this year of US$55M.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19921030)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SYD)(00011)
-
- Massive Effort Underway To Make Chinese Credit Cards 10/30/92
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Through its Hong Kong
- distributor, Australian company National Business Machines (NBS)
- has sold more than $2M worth of credit card embossing machines to
- four major banks in China. It expects more sales in the coming months.
-
- 110 Advantage Series II desktop embossing machines comprised the
- first sale -- enough to produce 60 million cards a year. The cards
- are needed as automatic teller machines (ATMs) rapidly spread
- through China. The banks involved are the Bank of China, Construction
- Bank of China, Agriculture Bank of China and the Commercial and
- Industrial Bank of China.
-
- Until now cards have only been issued from head offices in Beijing,
- Shanghai and Hong Kong, but China is freeing its business and
- tourism policies, and in keeping with this will need card producing
- and ATM facilities throughout the country.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19921030/Contact National Business Systems +61-2-4384011
- fax +61-2-4364443)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00012)
-
- GM's Woes Mask Strong Growth in Technology 10/30/92
- DETROIT, MICHIGAN, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- General Motors'
- directors have let Chairman Robert Stempel quit and are said to
- be gunning for former chairman Roger Smith's board seat. The
- reason is a falling market share and continued high costs involved
- in the production of automobiles. With this week's earnings release,
- however, one must wonder where the company would be without its
- electronics divisions.
-
- The company announced it lost $752 million for the quarter ending
- in September, although it's earning about $500 million a quarter
- in Europe, according to analysts. But the real news is the
- continuing strong results in high-tech. GM Hughes Electronics,
- which makes satellite systems and, now, cellular equipment, is
- making a strong move away from defense electronics with earnings
- of $155.2 million for the quarter.
-
- Electronic Data Systems, the GM computer systems subsidiary founded
- by Presidential candidate Ross Perot, earned $167.3 million for
- the quarter, and continues to take big chunks of business outside
- GM, with new accounts ranging from Montgomery Ward to California's
- health department to the European Parliament. The company's
- finance division, meanwhile, earned $301 million.
-
- Generally, GM has left its subsidiaries alone; Hughes and
- EDS actually have their own special classes of stock.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19921030)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(ATL)(00013)
-
- Quotron Responds To Dow Jones With New PC Software 10/30/92
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Citicorp's
- Quotron unit responded to major announcements of new products
- from Dow Jones with a new version of its Advantage financial
- information system for stockbrokers and financial analysts.
-
- Throughout the 80s Quotron dominated the market for terminals and
- computer systems used by brokers and traders. But, following the
- company's purchase by Citicorp, the product line grew stale. The
- company has moved to revitalize its product lines through an
- alliance with IBM, but faces increasing pressure from Reuters,
- Knight-Ridder, and Dow Jones, all of whom have gained market share
- at its expense in recent years.
-
- Version 2.0 of Quotron Advantage AE works on PCs under Microsoft
- Windows, on IBM PS/2 hardware, on standard Ethernet or Token Ring
- LANs, and on IBM RS/6000 servers. This reduces hardware costs and
- total costs for the system. Enhancements in the new version of
- the software include a new charting application called
- UltraChart, a Global Input window tied to various other windows,
- improved navigation through reams of data, an enhanced Quote
- window, support of low-cost serial terminals, and support of
- remote offices.
-
- UltraChart lets brokers graph historical price movements of a
- security or index in a daily, weekly or monthly format, setting
- their own starting dates, ending dates or number of data points
- to be graphed. Graphs can be updated minute-by-minute as trades
- occur. It features nine technical studies, including Moving
- Average Convergence - Divergence, momentum charts, Welles Wilder
- Relative Strength Index, Granville On-Balance Volume, and Volume
- Accumulation charts, and fast and slow stochastics, all of which
- are used by some traders to justify their actions.
-
- The Global input window lets traders enter symbols to request data
- for the News, Quote, and Chart windows, so they can follow specific
- securities closely and in real-time. The new system also supports
- the IBM 3151 serial terminal, a low-cost alternative for the
- display of quotes in the standard Quotron A-Page format. One
- more enhancement is called The RemoteAdvantage -- it supports a
- firm's offices without RS/6000 servers using routers and modems.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19921030/Press Contact: Roxanne Taylor, Quotron
- Systems, 212-898-7212)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00014)
-
- ROUNDUP: Stories Carried By Other Media This Week 10/30/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Roundup is a brief
- look at some computer stories carried in other publications
- received here this past week.
-
- December's Macworld looks at the "Hot New Powerbooks."
-
- The October 20 Computer Currents reviews a new version of Quicken
- and features a beginner's guide to local area networks.
-
- November's Data Based Advisor has a preview of Paradox for
- Windows.
-
- October 26's Government Computer News carries a major buyer's
- guide listing 64 high-speed fax/modems.
-
- Computer Reseller News dated October 26 reports that IBM says AIX
- (IBM's Unix) will support Windows on the RS/6000 and PowerPC
- computers.
-
- November's PC World picks the 20 best PC upgrades and offers 75
- tips to make Windows crash-proof.
-
- Federal Computer Week dated the 26th of October says that the
- Treasury Department recently narrowly escaped a major virus
- attack when alert employees flushed the Maltese Amoeba from a
- single infected system.
-
- Computerworld for the week of the 26th reports that Lotus's
- Robert Weiler (Senior VP of North American Operations) says that
- 1-2-3 will never be as dominant in Windows as the spreadsheet has
- been in the DOS market.
-
- (John McCormick/19921030/)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00015)
-
- The Enabled Computer 10/30/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- By John McCormick.
- The Enabled Computer is a regular Newsbytes feature covering news
- and important product information relating to high technology aids
- for the disabled.
-
- This is the fourth and final part of a long column on enabling
- technology and the media (press).
-
- From a technical standpoint, it can be difficult to write about
- these enabling technologies unless you have wide experience in
- the field because, while any computer writer can quickly learn to
- run benchmark tests and evaluate computers on that basis,
- adaptive technology is a very personal thing.
-
- There is no way to benchmark most of these products so any useful
- description must include information about which users a
- particular device would benefit -- this requires a broad
- understanding of the field.
-
- I already pointed out that an unusual number of writers are
- disabled -- certainly I have met more disabled workers in this
- field than in any other line of work I have ever been in. But
- that doesn't necessarily mean that all are qualified to write
- about this topic.
-
- Having a speech impediment or poor vision doesn't necessarily
- qualify a person to evaluate and discuss devices intended for
- those with motor skill impairments (and vice versa) -- of course
- it doesn't disqualify him or her either. While the disabled writer
- probably has an edge due to an increased feel for the subject, the
- real qualification is the range of experience one has with such
- devices as they are actually used by those who need them.
- I don't feel that the field need be limited to those with
- disabilities, just those with relevant experience.
-
- But it is my firm hope that editors will be careful when selecting
- writers to write about this field of adaptive technology. No one
- can know the entire field, but if the article is of a general
- nature then the widest experience is vital if the writer and
- publication are to avoid silly mistakes.
-
- As a quick example, despite my own years of experience in the
- field, when I was acting as a national finalist judge for The
- Johns Hopkins National Search for Computing Technology to Assist
- Persons With Disabilities (held last February at The
- Smithsonian), I found several kinds of devices which I had never
- thought about before.
-
- I wasn't assigned to judge those outside my particular areas of
- expertise, but I did get to look at all the exhibits and it
- reminded me just how diverse the field really is.
-
- There has been some increase in interest among editors of major
- publications and I have recently written several pieces for
- Government Computer News (a restricted circulation trade
- publication available to federal employees), but still what is
- most needed right now is a market for enabling technology
- articles.
-
- The need is out there, and it certainly isn't confined to
- specialty publications. By August of 1993 the ADA will apply to
- hiring practices of businesses with as few as 15 employees and it
- is already in effect as far as requiring any company to provide
- equal access and equal services to all.
-
- You may have seen the TV ad where a TDD (Telecommunications
- Device for the Deaf) operator helps two hearing- and/or speech-
- impaired women order a pizza.
-
- I don't agree with their choices (anchovies AND pineapple??
- YUCK!) but I do applaud the fact that companies are now required
- to sell them a pizza even if they can't place a voice order.
-
- ALL businesses serving the public, even a mom-and-pop store, are
- now required to make a reasonable effort to serve everyone
- equally.
-
- It may seem a burden to many of them, but besides the moral
- question of whether a lack of speech or legs should make a person
- less than a full member of the community, there is a much
- stronger argument than even the law. Opening service to the
- disabled means MORE customers!
-
- And it needn't be an expensive step.
-
- There is a flood of new adaptive devices hitting the market
- because software and hardware companies have seen how the ADA
- will affect business everywhere and it is up to the computer
- press to let everyone know what is available and what is wrong
- with present products.
-
- Business will start screaming for such information after the
- first few multi-million-dollar discrimination suits are filed.
-
- Computers aren't just a way to play games or crunch words and
- numbers; they change lives. Sometimes we forget that.
-
- It's not just good business, it is the right thing to do.
-
- (John McCormick/19921030)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00016)
-
- US Defense Department Awards $2.5 Billion Contract 10/30/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Last week the
- Department of Defense quietly awarded one of the largest computer
- systems integration contracts ever when it signed a nine-year,
- $2.5 billion deal with McLean, Virginia's PRC.
-
- Under the contract, PRC and its subcontractors will configure,
- test, install, and support as many as 130,000 file servers,
- terminals, PCs, and workstations during the nine-year life of the
- Supermini or AFCAC 300 contract.
-
- The computers will be networked using more than a million local
- area network cables and 50,000 network cards.
-
- PRC edged out Control Data, its only competitor, in what Federal
- Computer Week reports was a $5- to $20-million bid and proposal
- process.
-
- After testing is completed, PRC should be ready to ship
- systems both to military and civilian agencies by early 1993 if,
- and this is a big IF, there is no protest.
-
- After the deal is finalized, PRC won't be the only big winner.
- Hewlett-Packard (whose initials are often said by industry
- insiders to be an abbreviation of Highest-Priced), will supply
- more than 5,000 of its Model 800 workstations as servers for
- network systems which will support up to 256 users each.
-
- Human Designed Systems will reportedly supply up to 43,000 RISC
- workstations through PRC, while troubled Everex can look forward
- to selling more than 80,000 32-bit PCs.
-
- The PRC bid was based on an open systems Unix (SCO) platform.
-
- (John McCormick/19921030/)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(WAS)(00017)
-
- SPA Reports Reduction In Piracy Rate 10/30/92
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Software piracy, the
- illegal copying and use of commercial software without paying the
- copyright owner, is a major problem for the computer software
- industry, but the Software Publishers Association says that its
- efforts put a significant damper on losses during 1991.
-
- The SPA has released results of its piracy study which show a 41
- percent decrease for 1991 software piracy losses over 1990. That
- amounts to an $800 million decrease in piracy.
-
- But, despite the reduction in piracy, the estimated $1.2 billion
- loss in 1991 was, according to SPA executive director, Ken Wasch,
- so large that it may have cost as many as 60,000 full-time US
- jobs in every position from programmer to retail clerk.
-
- Although the SPA does believe that educational and legal actions
- taken by the association and its member publishers have had an
- effect on piracy, it also cites two other major reasons for the
- drop in illegal copies -- lower average software prices and a
- major increase in software bundling.
-
- So far in 1992 SPA employees have given more than 100 anti-piracy
- presentations to computer professionals and the association has
- begun more than 200 legal actions to stop ongoing piracy.
-
- The SPA also maintains an anti-piracy alert hot line for people
- wishing to report illegal activities and publishes anti-piracy
- audit kits to help companies stay on the right side of the law by
- only installing the same number of programs for which the company has
- paid.
-
- Accidental piracy by companies is relatively common because,
- unlike home users who naturally purchase the software with
- documentation, it is easy for a company to mistakenly install too
- many copies of software, partially because they do not
- automatically supply full documentation to each user.
-
- The Software Publishers Association, based in Washington DC,
- recently passed the 1,000 member level and has for years been the
- software industry's major trade association, representing the
- industry's interests before the US government and promoting
- both domestic and foreign anti-piracy actions on behalf of its
- members.
-
- (John McCormick/19921030/Press Contact: Terri Childs, SPA, 202-
- 452-1600)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00018)
-
- CORRECTION: X.400 Addressing Hope 10/30/92
- WALTHAM, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- On October
- 26 Newsbytes wrote of MaxCom USA and Vector Directory Services,
- which have teamed to offer help to businesses which want to
- create directories of clients, customers, and contacts under the
- X.400 standard. As part of that story, we printed an address that
- can be used to get help from Vector.
-
- However, Newsbytes has learned that the address given was incomplete.
- MaxCom President James Astle, whose firm is providing X.400 connectivity
- through Infonet Services Corporation's worldwide system, corrected
- the address. That address, which would work only within MaxCom's
- own mail system, should be @x400;c=us;a=infonet;p=vector;s=direquery
- -- no period at the end of the address.
-
- The X.400 system is designed to be very flexible, Astle
- explained. Addresses are not required to have of all the fields
- used in X.400 addressing. All X.400 addresses use the C or
- country field, as well as the ADMD or administrative mail domain
- field. But many mail systems, like MaxCom's own, are not
- administering the system, and must link their X.400 addresses to
- a larger systems. These primary mail domains, or PRMDs, go by the
- initial P in an X.400 address.
-
- To subdivide further, past the P field, one could have an ORG or
- organization field, designated by o and referring to the
- department within a mail system. A large company like Aetna
- Life and Casualty, for instance, which has its own P or Primary
- Mail system address, would have departments with this system and
- each department would have its own ORG or organization address.
- An example might be something like aoc. Next come the s or
- surname fields, the g or given name fields, and the d or mail
- address field.
-
- For example, the author's X.400 address on GEnie would be
- this -- C=US;A=GE;D=nb.atl -- fields which are not relevant or
- unnecessary to finding someone in an X.400 address are simply left
- blank. If this reporter worked in the aoc department at Aetna, which
- somehow had its mail system linked directly to GEnie and magically
- used the same addressing scheme -- this example shows how involved
- all this can become. The address would be as follows:
-
- C=US;A=GE;P=Aetna;O=AOC;S=Blankenhorn;G=Dana;DDA=nb.atl
-
- Given the complexity, you can see why help might be needed to
- get everyone you know into a look-up table from which you can
- address e-mail to "Bob" even if Bob is in another country, on a
- completely different system. From any system with an X.400 link,
- reach that link and write a note to
- c=us;a=infonet;p=vector;s=direquery for more help.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19921026/Press Contact:James C. Astle, MaxCom
- USA, 617-890-8822)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00019)
-
- Exabyte Names New Execs 10/30/92
- BOULDER, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Tape storage device
- maker Exabyte has named several new executives this week.
-
- David Riegel has been named to the newly created position of senior
- vice president of 8mm operations. Riegel will be responsible for all
- 8mm engineering, manufacturing, materials, program management and
- facilities. He will report to Frank LaHue, senior VP of worldwide
- operations. The company's 4mm operations are managed by Ian Turner,
- who also reports to LaHue. Turner is general manager of R-Byte, Inc
- which was acquired by Exabyte recently.
-
- Prior to his appointment to the new position, Riegel was president
- and chief executive officer of Boulder Battery, and held various
- management and executive positions with IBM during the 26 years he
- was with that company. He was with Prairie Tek from 1990-91. "We're
- particularly pleased with his wealth of high-volume, low-cost
- engineering and manufacturing expertise," said LaHue.
-
- Riegel holds a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from
- Purdue University.
-
- Exabyte spokesperson Susan Merriman told Newsbytes the company
- employs more than 1,000 and is expanding its management team to meet
- the challenges ahead.
-
- The company also announced the promotion of Steve Orcutt to director
- of US Western Area sales. He will be responsible for sales activity
- in California, the Rocky Mountain States, the Southwest, the
- Northwest, Alaska and Hawaii. Orcutt joined Exabyte in April 1991 as
- a sales representative and was promoted to Northern California
- district sales manager in January.
-
- Prior to joining Exabyte Orcutt held sales and sales management
- positions with Counterpoint and Convergent Technologies, and will
- work out of the company's western area sales office in Campbell,
- California.
-
- Exabyte's new director of European sales is Joop Van der Knaap, who
- came to Exabyte in April 1990 as manager of Northern European sales,
- and became manager of all European sales in January 1991. Van der
- Knaap has more than 20 years experience in computer sales, sales
- management and engineering with companies such as Burroughs and
- Storage Technology. He will be based in Houten, The Netherlands.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19921030/Press contact: Susan Merriman, Exabyte Corp,
- 303-447-7434
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00020)
-
- Zeos International Loses $8.1 Million In 3Q 10/30/92
- ST PAUL, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Zeos International
- announced today that it lost $8.1 million, or $0.94 per share on net
- sales of $51.4 million in the third quarter, which ended September
- 30.
-
- For the same period last year the company earned $2.4 million, or
- $0.30 per share on sales of $47.4 million.
-
- While dismal, the third quarter was an improvement over the second,
- when the company reported a net loss of $11.1 million, or $1.29 per
- share on net sales of $48.8 million.
-
- The company attributed the relative increase to increased sales in
- the mass merchant channel, which accounted for 28 percent of sales,
- but those gains were partially offset by lower sales through the
- company's direct marketing channel. Direct marketing produced 72
- percent of the quarter's sales. Intense competition and industry
- price cuts also contributed to the results, according to the
- company.
-
- "Our financial results, like those of most of our competitors,
- continue to be severely impacted by conditions in our operating
- environment," said Zeos Chairman and CEO Gregory Herrick.
-
- Herrick said the company's cash position improved during the third
- quarter, from $6.9 million to $8 million. Zeos has no short-term or
- long-term debt, and has an income tax benefit receivable of $7.9
- million relating to the carry back of recent losses. The company
- expects to receive that benefit during the first quarter of 93.
-
- According to Herrick, cost containment programs have reduced fixed
- costs by $600,000 and selling and marketing expenses by $2.3 million
- over the second quarter. The company also took a $1 million charge
- to earnings in the third quarter due to consolidation of its
- operations into one facility. "We intend to take further, even more
- far-reaching actions in the future aimed at ensuring that Zeos
- continued forward on a sound financial and operational footing," said
- Herrick. Zeos said the majority of its sales were desktop computers.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19921030/Press contact: John Bakewell, Zeos
- International, 612-635-1419)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00021)
-
- ****DEC To Close Two Plants, Lay Off 770 10/30/92
- MAYNARD, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Digital
- Equipment has made another move in its struggle to cope with
- financial troubles, and 770 workers in Massachusetts and Vermont
- will lose their jobs as a result. The company has announced it will
- close factories in Springfield, Massachusetts and in Burlington,
- Vermont.
-
- Sales and services facilities will remain in both cities, Digital
- said.
-
- The closings will mean pink slips for most employees in the two
- plants -- there are about 320 in Springfield and 350 in Burlington
- -- over the next six months, Digital said. A few people may be
- offered transfers to other Digital facilities, company spokeswoman
- Nikki Richardson said, but "I don't want to raise hopes" as only "a
- small number" are likely to be transferred.
-
- Digital said it will offer the laid-off employees a financial
- support package based on years of service to the corporation,
- continuation of medical, dental and life insurance for a specified
- period, and professional outplacement assistance.
-
- Employees who lose their jobs in this round of cuts won't do quite
- as well as those who went earlier, though: Digital recently
- announced a new severance package that is less generous than the
- company had offered before.
-
- DEC officials said changes in the computer industry and the
- decreased demand caused by a soft worldwide economy has left
- Digital and other computer companies with excess manufacturing
- capacity. Digital is trying to cut out redundancies and get out of
- areas where it cannot clearly differentiate its products.
-
- Digital earlier announced the closing of printed circuit board
- plants in San German, Puerto Rico, and Greenville, South Carolina,
- company spokeswoman, and another factory in Puerto Rico which makes
- power supplies.
-
- These closings are somewhat different, though, because the work
- done at the Burlington and Springfield plants is not being phased
- out. Richardson said work now done at the two plants will be moved
- to other DEC facilities.
-
- Systems integration work for personal computers, now done in
- Springfield, will move to Kanata, Ontario, Canada, she said.
- Manufacturing of tape products will move from Springfield to one of
- three other Digital plants producing those same products. Repair,
- consulting, and service engineering work now done in Burlington
- will shift to three other US locations.
-
- Earlier in October, Digital reported a loss of $260.55 million in
- its first quarter, which ended September 26.
-
- Industry observers have predicted Digital will lay off another
- 15,000 to 25,000 employees in the next two to three years, and in
- a press conference October 1, incoming President and Chief
- Executive Robert Palmer said these estimates were reasonably close.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19921030/Press Contact: Nikki Richardson, DEC,
- 508-493-6369)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00022)
-
- Delrina Acquires Daily Planner Company Amaze 10/30/92
- KIRKLAND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Delrina
- Corporation has announced the acquisition of Amaze, Inc., maker of The
- Far Side Computer Calendar.
-
- Delrina said the purchase price will be satisfied by the issue to
- the Amaze stockholders of up to 2.6 million shares in Delrina
- Corporation. As part of the deal, Delrina will also be refinancing
- Amaze's debt of about $3 million, and two Amaze directors, Rowland
- Hanson and George Clute, will join Delrina's board.
-
- Delrina spokesperson Pamela Laurence told Newsbytes the sale will
- not cause the loss of any jobs, and Amaze will continue to operate
- as a wholly owned subsidiary of Delrina.
-
- Software publisher Amaze was founded in 1990 and publishes Random
- House Dictionary, Trivial Pursuit, Berlitz Language Training, Cathy
- Bloom County and BC in addition to The Far Side. Amaze reportedly is
- currently discussing promotional bundling deals with a number of
- software and hardware manufacturers in the US and Europe.
-
- Delrina markets PC forms and fax software, and employs 150 people at
- its headquarters in Toronto, Canada as well as sales offices in the
- US and Europe. The company reported record revenues of $7.6 million
- and net income of $658,000 for the quarter ending September 30.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19921030/Press contact: Pamela Laurence, Wilson McHenry
- Co for Delrina, 415-592-7600; Reader contact: 416-441-3676)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(BOS)(00023)
-
- Software Publishing Corp Revenues Up, Earnings Flat 10/30/92
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Revenues for
- Software Publishing Corp. (SPC) revenues have shot way up, yet
- earnings were flat for fiscal 1992 and down for the fourth quarter,
- according to a newly released financial statement.
-
- In the statement, officials attribute the paradoxical financial
- results to "unusual charges" associated with company restructuring,
- lease obligations, and a decline in value of investment securities.
-
- In an interview, Newsbytes that learned that these charges stem
- from leased facility space left vacant by a recent company
- reorganization, plus a drop in the value of Spinnaker stock
- acquired last year as part of SPC's sale of the PFS: software line
- to Spinnaker.
-
- According to the statement, SPC's revenues were $143.1 million for
- the fiscal 1992 and $36.9 million for the fourth quarter of the
- year, figures representing gains of 9.3% from fiscal 1991 to 1992
- and 5.1% from the third to the fourth quarter of this year.
-
- The company reports a net income of $526,000 (one cent per share)
- for fiscal 1992, in contrast to a net loss of $18.1 million ($1.46
- per share) in 1991, and a net loss of $8.3 million (70 cents per
- share), in contrast to a net income of $0.7 million (five cents per
- share) for the third quarter of 1992.
-
- Also in the statement, SPC emphasizes that the company underwent
- reorganization during the 1992 fiscal year and expanded its
- position in the PC presentation graphics and database markets,
- suggesting that these factors helped to boost revenues.
-
- Three new software releases -- Harvard Graphics for Windows and
- upgrades to Harvard Graphics for DOS and the Superbase RDBMS
- (relational database management system) for Windows -- are
- highlighted as achievements for the year.
-
- Also mentioned are the appointments of founder Fred Gibbons as the
- newest president and chief operating officer, and new vice presidents
- for sales, research and development, marketing, and international
- relations.
-
- Officials also stress that, without the unusual charges, the
- company would have shown net income of $11.8 million (93 cents per
- share) for fiscal year 1992. The unusual charges include a $13.2
- million associated with company restructuring and lease
- obligations, and another $3.6 million for decline in value of
- investment securities, the company elaborates.
-
- In an interview with Newsbytes, a company spokesperson explained
- that the charge of $13.2 million is a liability caused by space now
- vacant in a facility under long-term lease. The vacancy was
- created by a reduction in force that was part of the reorganization
- last year, she added.
-
- SPC has rented part of the facility to Strategic Mapping, and is
- now seeking additional tenants to occupy the remaining vacant
- space, she disclosed.
-
- The decline in value of investment securities was caused by a
- recent drop in the worth of Spinnaker stock, the spokesperson
- maintained. SPC acquired a combination of cash and Spinnaker
- securities in the PFS: deal, she noted.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19921030; Press contact: Kathy Bower, SPC, tel
- 408-450-7321)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00024)
-
- ****Largest Direct View TV Aimed At Home Theater Market 10/30/92
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- To take
- advantage of the growing market for "home theater," Mitsubishi
- has introduced the largest direct view television with a 40-
- inch screen or 768 inches of viewing surface.
-
- The company says the big TV, the CS-40FX1, is 66 percent larger
- in viewing area than 31-inch sets, and 119 percent larger than
- 27-inch screens, and a whopping 300 percent larger than a 20-
- inch television.
-
- For sound, the set has twin built-in speakers, an MTS stereo
- system, and a graphic equalizer that can be controlled by the
- illuminated programmable remote control that comes with the
- unit. An additional base unit offered at extra charge has the
- same "black diamond" finish, but adds four built-in speakers
- and a video cassette recorder (VCR) compartment.
-
- While projection television systems can offer 50-, 60-, 70-,
- and 120-inch screens, some picture clarity is lost and the
- viewing angle makes a big difference.
-
- The company expects the set to become part of a home theater
- and so has made it compatible with audio/video (A/V) receivers,
- multiple video cassette recorders including Super VHS, external
- loudspeakers, and subwoofer systems.
-
- As expected, the set offers picture-in-picture for simultaneous
- viewing of two video sources and a "Super Quick View," for one-
- button switching between 10 favorite channels.
-
- The home theater market is growing as people do more
- "cocooning" or simply staying home. The Electronic Industries
- Association (EIA) released statistics that show a steady
- increase in the sales of larger-size direct view screens over
- the past several years and says approximately 600,000 35-inch
- televisions have been sold in the United States since 1986.
- Furthermore, the EIA says sales of 30-inch televisions and
- larger have more than doubled over the last three years.
-
- The CS-40FX1 is expected to be available in early November for
- a retail price of nearly five thousand dollars, $4,999 to be
- exact.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19921030/Press Contact: Colleen McKenna,
- Mitsubishi, tel 800-828-6372)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00025)
-
- Multimedia Computer With Built-In TV & More 10/30/92
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Megamedia has
- introduced a computer it is calling a multimedia computer with
- a built-in television tuner, a compact disc read-only memory
- (CD-ROM) drive, a sound card, speakers, a microphone, and
- headphones.
-
- The company says the Mega, model M46D2T, is based on the Intel
- 486DX2 chip which runs at 66 megahertz (MHz). The company says
- it includes software to control the audio, video, and
- television, and is built to allow video-in-a-window so users
- can watch television or video in one screen while doing
- computer-related work in another.
-
- The company says users can now play popular software training
- video tapes and work right along with the training tape on
- their computer. Like most viewing systems offered for personal
- computers (PCs) users can switch between full-screen viewing to
- a window and move or size the window on the screen. The unit
- will also automatically search and locate channels available
- and the user can add or delete channels from the channel list.
-
- Hook up to an external video source, such as a video camera,
- video cassette recorder, laserdisc, or CD-ROM is also a feature
- of the unit.
-
- The company says it has also included a set of CD-ROM titles
- for use with the built-in CD-ROM drive including Compton's
- Encyclopedia for Windows; Guinness Disc of World Records;
- Autodesk Multimedia Explorer; King's Quest V; and Power Chords,
- a music creation program. Also included is a Windows 3.1
- Advanced Video tutorial CD, the company added.
-
- The Mega also comes with a 1.2 and 1.44 megabytes (MB) floppy
- drives, a Quantum 244 MB hard drive, a Sound Galaxy Pro sound
- card, a super video graphics array (SVGA) monitor, DOS 5.0, and
- Windows 3.1. The company says the Mega retails for $3,995.
-
- Packard Bell is offering a similar system, but for a lot less.
- The Packard Bell PBTV3 multimedia computer was announced at a
- retail price of $2,999, but is based on the slower Intel 486SX
- 25 MHz microprocessor. The Packard Bell machine also has a
- smaller 210 MB hard disk drive, but offers a built-in fax/modem
- and a software bundle that includes CD-ROM titles as well as
- software for faxing and electronic access under Windows.
-
- Megamedia is offering an 18 month parts, a lifetime labor
- warranty, and says the system is MPC approved. Megamedia
- Computer Corporation is located at 1701-D Fortune Drive, San
- Jose, CA 95131.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19921030/Press Contact: Raaj Menon, Megamedia
- Computer, tel 408-428-9920, fax 408-428-9920; Public Contact
- 800-634-2633)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00026)
-
- Miniscribe Accountants Fined $95M; Biggest in US History 10/30/92
- DENVER, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- The accounting firm
- that audited the now-defunct Miniscribe Corporation has been told to
- pay what is believed to be one of the largest legal settlements ever
- levied against an accounting firm.
-
- Coopers and Lybrand have been told to pay $95 million of a $128
- million settlement approved by former officers and directors of the
- Longmont, Colorado-based disk drive maker. The agreement still has
- to be approved by a federal court judge.
-
- Miniscribe filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the US
- Bankruptcy Code on January 1, 1990 and later converted to Chapter 7
- liquidation. Its assets were sold to California-based Maxtor for
- $41.5 million.
-
- The accounting firm told Associated Press the bill will be covered
- "by various sources" including insurance, with Coopers & Lybrand's
- financial condition remaining sound. Under terms of the agreement,
- lawyers on both sides must make a good-faith effort to not discuss
- the facts surrounding the case. One Miniscribe shareholder reportedly
- objected to the confidentiality clause, saying it would impair
- its continuing legal claims against Miniscribe's directors and
- officers. However the bankruptcy judge disagreed. Miniscribe's
- court-appointed trustee called the deal "a good solid settlement
- for the bankruptcy estate."
-
- In its heyday Miniscribe employed 8,000 people worldwide, but
- collapsed in the late 80s amid charges of fraud which included
- shipping bricks as computer inventory. More than 20 lawsuits were
- filed against the officers, directors, and the accounting firm.
-
- Coopers & Lybrand was accused of not following generally accepted
- accounting practices in issuing an opinion of Miniscribe's financial
- statements. The accounting firm said it was misled by Miniscribe's
- officers, and claimed that Miniscribe employees broke into the
- auditor's locked work box to alter inventory figures. It said it
- accepted the settlement to avoid the uncertainties of possible a
- multiple jury trials.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19921030)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LAX)(00027)
-
- ****CD-I Show: CD-I Coming Into Its Own? 10/30/92
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Compared
- to the drone of last year, the CD-I 2 conference was humming
- and interest was high. The conference, held again this year at
- the Bonaventure Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, focuses on the
- compact disc interactive (CD-I) player developed by Philips.
-
- Last year, rows of kiosks with CD-I players and titles waiting
- for use were there, but people would go to a kiosk, look a
- minute, then walk away. This year lines were formed around the
- Philips booth where it seemed like the guy in front of you in
- line was never going to get off the CD-I player so you could
- try.
-
- Newsbytes got in line to see what the difference was and
- discovered it was sound. The kiosks offered headphones which
- almost every player wore. The headphones played stereo music
- or sounds closely linked to the action in the game and men and
- women in business attire were standing in front of the kiosks
- intensely involved in video games. Instead of a remote, a large
- base with two large buttons on each side of a trackball, the
- size of a softball, controlled the action. While the controls
- looked more like a baby's toy with bright colors and large
- controls, controlling the action on the screen was easy and
- didn't require even a glance at one's hands.
-
- This reporter tried the games with and without sound and found the
- theories about how sound enhances the game experience to be
- correct. Without the sound, the CD-I screen seemed to have the
- same fuzzy, slightly frustrating visual appearance as last
- year, but when one donned headphones, it became an engaging,
- enveloping experience.
-
- A variety of games were available, from action games to Tetris,
- but a large variety of games were available last year as well.
- Vendors at the show told Newsbytes the show was extremely busy
- and even on the afternoon of the last day, lines were still
- forming to get a badge to get into the exhibits.
-
- Also, of note is the fact that there were a lot fewer companies
- showing off CD-I titles and a lot more companies peddling their
- abilities to produce CD-I titles. Companies such as Interlight,
- which does animation, were at the show as well as full service CD-I
- title production companies such as Transformedia, Adaptive
- Design, Viridis, and ON/Q.
-
- Also conspicuous were the portable CD-I players from Sony and
- Philips. Demonstration units abounded, but lines weren't
- forming for the portable players. The Philips unit is larger
- than the Sony CD-I player, but the Philips unit had a larger
- color viewing screen than the Sony color player. The portable
- units are significantly more expensive than the tabletop CD-I
- players, costing nearly two and a half times or more than the
- standard CD-I players.
-
- Also of note was Goldstar which was demonstrating its CD-I
- compatible player which company representatives say will be
- available in the US in June of 1993. Newsbytes asked at what price
- Goldstar planned to sell the CD-I player and was told it would
- be simply less than whatever Philips was charging. Philips is
- currently charging around $700 for its home CD-I player.
-
- Vendors at the show were excited about the response from the
- public and said the show was busy.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19921030/Press Contact: Bernie Mitchell,
- Philips, tel 615-521-3210, fax 615-521-3210, Public Contact
- 800-835-3506; Goldstar, tel 201-816-2000, fax 201-816-0636;
- Interlight, 2364 Centerville Rd, Tallahassee, FL, 32308; ON/Q,
- Paul Vinet, tel 514-842-1183, fax 514-842-1377; Lee Barnes,
- Viridis, 310-445-2055, fax 310-445-2057; Adaptive, tel 310-996-
- 5590, fax 310-996-5591; Nancy Sindelar, Transformedia, tel 708-
- 382-6890, Public Contact 800-451-1843)
-
-
- (REVIEW)(IBM)(SFO)(00028)
-
- Review of: Lotus Organizer, Version 1.0, 10/30/92
-
- Runs on: Windows 3.x, standard or enhanced. Requires 2.0 MB
- of hard disk storage, pointing device (mouse) and VGA monitor
-
- From: Lotus Development Corporation, 55 Cambridge Parkway,
- Cambridge, MA 02142. Tel: 617-577-8500
-
- Suggested List Price: $149.00 Look for a street price in the
- $98 area
-
- PUMA Rating: 3.95 (on a scale of 1=lowest to 4=highest)
-
- Reviewed for Newsbytes by: Thom Foulks, Fax: 719-528-8545,
- Internet: foulks@oldcolo.com
-
- Summary: With Lotus SmartIcons, cc:Mail support, and broad
- customization powers, Organizer sets a new standard for personal
- information managers at a bargain price.
-
- ======
-
- REVIEW
-
- ======
-
- Although we reviewers tend to lump all software like Organizer into the PIM,
- or "personal information manager" category, there is virtually infinite
- variety among PIMs. The key, of course, is the word "personal" -- what I
- like, you might NOT like; and even if you and I agree, co-worker Sue well
- may think we're both a little wacky in our "personal" tastes.
-
- That's why customization is absolutely essential to the "personality" of a
- PIM. Organizer provides the broadest customization powers I've seen in a
- Windows-based PIM, and a bunch have crossed my desk since the beginning
- of the Windows era.
-
- Organizer has six built-in sections: Address, Calendar, Planner, To-Do,
- Notepad and Anniversary. Each can be duplicated...or eliminated. As
- example, my workstyle has my to-do list on yellow Post-Its (it's a habit
- I can't break). Even though my testing reveals Organizer's To-Do list
- functions as expected, it has been eliminated from installation.
- Ditto, for Planner (which allows you to designate blocks of time for
- up to 15 events per year).
-
- On the other hand, my personal list of names and phone numbers -- at last
- count -- is 3,328. No, I don't deal with all those people on a daily
- basis. But when my memory recalls an interview with Joe Blow three
- years ago, for sure I want to be able to find his name and other info
- in my contact list. It was also essential for me to import that list
- into Organizer from an Xbase .DBF format.
-
- Now, my address list lies open on the screen in a notebook display,
- with four formats from which to choose. The list can be filtered,
- searched, even used for mail-merge.
-
- Organizer's second slickest function is the Notepad (don't confuse it
- with Windows' built-in notepad). This is a SMART notepad -- you can
- automatically generate a table-of-contents as you add pages to your
- notes. Notes themselves can contain graphics, or spreadsheet charts.
- A given note can be linked to a given meeting entered on the calendar.
-
- The calendar also provides four different viewing formats. It allows you
- to set recurring appointments, and provides an alarm capability to
- assure you're reminded of key meetings or other appointments.
-
- Organizer also has links to other Lotus products including cc:Mail.
- You can mail the contents of the Clipboard, or send a message
- with the notepad to cc:Mail, or to a Lotus Notes user.
-
- It should be noted Organizer was developed originally by UK-based Threadz
- Ltd., and acquired by Lotus in May 1992. The software credits both
- firms for its development, Lotus added SmartIcons and cc:Mail support.
-
- ===========
-
- PUMA RATING
-
- ===========
-
- PERFORMANCE: (3.8). Organizer does what it promises, with a handsome
- screen layout and drag-and-drop functionality wherever appropriate.
- Despite the customization strong points, however, one was left out --
- the ability for the user to change type fonts (or sizes) for Organizer's
- broad variety of data views. In a 1,024 x 768 VGA mode on a 14" monitor,
- text can almost disappear. (It appears to pick up the Windows default
- text for icon titles which can be changed by means not documented by
- Microsoft. Not good for the non-hacker user.)
-
- USEFULNESS: (4.0). Positioned against Polaris Packrat, Organizer leaves
- the starting gate at a little less than half the price. It makes
- little effort to emulate the freeform bells-and-whistles of Polaris'
- perennial award-winner, but its relatively low cost makes it an
- outstanding value. However, given the strong "personal" aspects of
- PIMs in general, potential buyers should examine a demo at some length.
-
- MANUAL: (4.0). Organizer's 150-page manual is a typical, attractive
- Lotus production -- good index, lots of WYSIWYG screen examples.
- Yet, the Windows maven will likely choose to get help from a VERY
- strong online help file.
-
- AVAILABILITY: (4.0). Organizer went into standard software distribution
- channels in September. Lotus provides one of the broadest user-support
- programs in the industry, including TDD support for the hearing
- impaired, a faxback service, and interactive voice support from a
- touch-tone phone. (Still, I had hoped to see a built-in Organizer
- file providing the phone numbers, so they could be drag-and-drop
- dialed from the application. Maybe in Version 2.0.)
-
- (Thom Foulks/19921010/Vic Cruz, McGlinchey & Paul, Tel: 617-852-4514, Fax:
- 617-862-7933)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00029)
-
- Tulip Forges Alliances With Facit Of Sweden 10/30/92
- CRAWLEY, SUSSEX, ENGLAND, 1992 OCT 30 (NB) -- Tulip Computers has
- announced a strategic alliance with Facit AB, the Swedish
- manufacturer of printers and display terminals. The deal calls
- for each company to market the other's products in their
- respective markets.
-
- "It's not enough just to sell systems anymore because our dealers
- need to provide a total solution that meets a range of computing
- needs," explained Steve McCall, Tulip's managing director.
-
- "This agreement with Facit is an ideal opportunity for Tulip to
- provide them with a complete computing platform, as well as
- increase our penetration into the computing market through our
- current reseller channel," he added.
-
- Commenting on the deal, John Newcombe, Facit's UK managing
- director, said that the cooperation with Tulip will allow Facit
- to concentrate on its printer business, secure in the knowledge
- that Tulip will be concentrating on its PC technology.
-
- "The cooperation enables us to strengthen the current reseller
- channel for our printers, which will reinforce our position as
- one of the leading European producers of computer peripherals,"
- he said.
-
- The deal is interesting from the perspective that Facit has
- produced a number of badged PCs for sale in selected European
- countries. Facit's problem is that, because of the price
- competitive nature of the PC business in Europe, its PCs can
- only just meet the competition.
-
- Tulip's PCs, meanwhile, are viewed as very price-competitive,
- with the Dutch company axing any machines that do not sell well.
- Tulip has already pulled out of the 80286- and 80386-based PC
- manufacturing business this year.
-
- (Steve Gold/19921030/Press & Public Contact: Tulip - Tel: 0293-
- 562323; Fax: 0293-553307)
-
-
- (REVIEW)(APPLE)(SYD)(00030)
-
- Review of: Norton Utilities for Macintosh Version 2.0 10/30/92
-
- Runs on: Apple Macintosh Plus or higher with at least 1 megabyte
- (MB) of random access memory (RAM)
-
- From: Symantec Corporation, 10201 Torre Avenue, Cupertino, CA
- 95014-2132
-
- PUMA Rating: 3.4 on a scale of 1=lowest to 4=highest
-
- Reviewed for Newsbytes by: Sean McNamara
-
- Summary: Norton Utilities for Macintosh is a suite of utilities to
- help Macintosh users maintain disks (diskettes and hard disks). It
- features an extensive range of productivity, disk repair, data
- protection, back-up and security options.
-
- ======
-
- REVIEW
-
- ======
-
- Every computer user has heard the warning, "Back up or one day you
- will suffer the consequences." All too many, however ignore this
- advice until it is too late. It is in this situation that many
- users turn to such packages as Norton Utilities for Macintosh (NUM),
- while others use such programs as a preventative measure.
-
- NUM is well suited to both tasks, and also extends past the
- back-up/repair to incorporate features many users would want in
- day-to-day operations. Not only does it offer disk recovery and
- maintenance features, but also features, which allow the user to
- run their Macintosh more efficiently.
-
- Probably the two most important programs from the NUM suite which
- Mac users receive are the Disk/File recovery and back-up programs.
- NUM offers an extensive range of recovery options, from file
- unerasing and corrupt file recovery, through to disk recovery and
- repair. In the case of major problems, NUM comes with an emergency
- boot-up disk, which can be used to start the Mac and use the
- recovery utilities. This boot disk alone makes NUM worth buying,
- and is supplied in both 800K (kilobytes) and 1.44MB (megabytes)
- format.
-
- To help the user track existing problems, an extensive list
- of problems, symptoms and solutions is given at the start of the
- manual, which, when combined with the emergency disk, allows users
- with crashed Macs to begin the recovery process without the need to
- learn all about every one of the NUM utilities' features.
-
- The user can run Norton Disk Doctor's diagnostics to find and
- repair existing problems. There are usually small problems
- which may not be apparent to the user, but which could affect use
- of files, which NUM easily picks up. During the review, however,
- when NUM was run on an SE/30 with an external 45MB Rodime drive, a
- bad block which was known to be present was not found by Disk
- Doctor, but by Speed Disk, NUM's disk optimization and
- defragmentation utility (see more information below). Beyond this,
- there seemed to be no problems in running the program, and the user
- was constantly presented with a large amount of information about
- the progress and results of scanning and repair of problems.
-
- Volume Recover is used to recover an accidentally initialized disk,
- or a disk which has extensive problems with the record-keeping
- information. This utility only works in the case of a corrupted
- disk if FileSaver is installed. File-Saver is a utility which
- records a snap-shot of the disk's contents at every shutdown.
- Volume Recover works best with initialized disks on which FileSaver
- was installed, but could recover most information from initialized
- disks without FileSaver.
-
- Unerasing (recovering files which have been emptied from the
- Trash), handled by UnErase, worked as well as any such utility can.
- Provided that the data has not been overwritten, there is an excellent
- chance of recovery. Three options for how to look for files are
- presented to the user: Quick UnErase, which scans the disk for any
- deleted files which have not been overwritten; Scan for Specific
- File Types, which allows the user to specify a search for, say, all
- TEXT files (this specification is made by selecting the desired
- application/s); and Text Search, which allows for the searching of
- text within deleted files (this is a piece-meal approach - each
- part of the file must be found, and then UnErase can re-combine
- them into one file). Once matching files have been found, the user
- selects the desired files from a list, and recovers to the
- specified volume.
-
- Back-up is handled by (not surprisingly) a utility called Norton
- Backup. Norton Backup has an extensive list of features for back-up
- which are too numerous to completely describe here. Suffice it to
- say the user can specify which files or disks are to be backed up,
- where they are to be backed to, whether the information is to be
- compressed and/or verified during back-up, when regular back-ups are
- to be performed (either full or partial), and whether to update an
- existing back-up.
-
- These features would allow a user, for example, to schedule a full
- back-up of all files to tape drive every two weeks, with a partial
- update of changed or new documents only every other week, saved to
- another hard disk in compressed format. The possibilities are
- almost endless, and NUM provides the user with the power to develop
- a back-up strategy to suit their own needs without sacrificing the
- whole point of the back-up -- to have the data painlessly available
- in the event of a crash.
-
- If a crash does occur, the user has the option of recovering the whole
- disk or selected files and/or folders, and Norton back-up can even
- rebuild a catalog of a disk when the two copies it stores can't be
- used/found (one copy on the hard disk with NUM's back-up description
- file, the other on the last disk of the back-up).
-
- The rest of the utilities fall into three categories: data
- security, utility functions, and efficiency enhancers. The security
- functions are provided by Norton Encrypt and Wipe Info. Encrypt
- will (obviously) encrypt files and/or folders with a user defined
- password. The encryption methods provided would provide a level of
- protection that most users would not need to go beyond, even for
- non-US users who cannot have DES encryption due to US government
- policy. Wipe Info allows for a file to be completely erased. This
- not only includes the file's catalog entry, but also the
- information which is still physically present once the Trash has
- been emptied (it is this information which allows a file to be
- unerased). By physically removing all traces of the file, the data
- can never be recovered by any means.
-
- Utility functions include DiskLight (provides an indication of disk
- activity), Floppier (easily copies and formats floppy disks),
- Layout Plus (customizes the Finder's layout), Norton Disk Editor
- (views the disk at the character level, rather than the file and
- folder level), Norton Partition (divides hard disks into multiple
- "virtual" disk drives), and Speed Disk (disk optimization and
- defragmentation).
-
- Speed Disk is probably the one most users should be recommended to
- use in this category regularly, as it optimizes a disk's
- performance by defragmenting files and placing all like files
- together on the disk. Defragmenting a file puts all the sectors
- which make up the file (which can be strewn throughout the disk)
- together and in order. Once a full optimization is completed, the
- user is left with the space left on the disk as one large chunk of
- unused disk space.
-
- Speed Disk can verify the media and the data as it optimizes. It
- was at this point that the bad block on the SE/30's Rodime drive
- mentioned earlier was picked up by NUM. However, despite screen
- messages informing the reviewer that the block had been locked and
- marked as "in use" and therefore to be ignored in future
- optimizations, the bad block kept appearing for repair in
- subsequent optimizations.
-
- Efficiency enhancers give the user a set of features which the Mac
- has long needed. These utilities are: Directory Assistance II, Fast
- Find, KeyFinder.
-
- Directory Assistance allows the user to access recent used files
- and folders via a menu in the standard Open and Close dialog boxes.
- Directory Assistance will also use the last file used by a program
- as the default selected file when the Open dialog is presented, and
- will remember which folder is open on drives as the user swaps
- between drives. Worksets can be created for often used applications
- which contain the most common folders for those applications,
- folders can be created, files and folders can be copied, searched
- for, and deleted.
-
- The list of files and folders can be sorted by Name, Date, Size,
- Color (Label), and with Folders in their normal sort position,
- first, or last. The user can set the numbers of files and folders
- kept track of in the recent items menus, and no matter where the
- user is, these tracked files can be opened by selecting them from
- the appropriate menu.
-
- Fast Find and KeyFinder are desk accessories which into both
- utility and efficiency categories. Fast Find allows the fast
- finding of files on one or many disks, and suers can open the found
- files directly from Fast Finder. KeyFinder presents the user with a
- 255-character table of the Mac character set, and when a character
- is selected, the key-presses needed to type the character is
- displayed. This character can then be cut or copied for use in
- other applications. The user can also paste text into the text edit
- box, and the series of keystrokes required for those characters are
- displayed.
-
- Overall, the features delivered by NUM are well thought out, and
- should cater to almost all users' needs for disk and data
- maintenance and recovery. NUM is a highly recommended package for
- all Mac users.
-
- ===========
-
- PUMA RATING
-
- ===========
-
- PERFORMANCE: 3. Overall, the program works well, but with a few
- glitches. Some users may continue to have hard disk problems in
- certain situations.
-
- USEFULNESS: 4. A suite of utilities for repair and backing up of
- disks is essential for all Mac users, and NUM goes well beyond the
- base set of features needed from such a product.
-
- MANUAL: 2.5. The manual for NUM is set out in a half-logical way.
- Instead of providing two sections to the whole manual, one for
- initial use and one for more technical information, I think it
- would have been better to divide the chapters into such sections,
- so that all information on a particular feature is in one place.
- The information contained in the manual is extensive, and covers
- user levels from total novice to expert.
-
- AVAILABILITY: 4. NUM is available from Mac dealers, software
- sellers and mail order houses throughout the US and overseas.
-
- (Sean McNamara/19921022)
-
-
-