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- (CORRECTION)(IBM)(BOS)(00001)
-
- Correction - CardGrabber Business Card Scanning System 09/20/93
- NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- In a story
- with the above title, which ran on the Newsbytes news wire service
- on September 13, the speed of business card scanning on Pacific
- Crest Technologies' new scanning system was in error.
-
- The company's new CardGrabber scans and displays a business card on
- screen within eight seconds, not within eight minutes, as the story
- had reported. Newsbytes regrets the error.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930920/Reader contact: Pacific Crest Technologies, tel
- 714-261-6444; Press contact: Les Goldberg Public Relations for
- Pacific Crest, tel 714-545-3117)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00002)
-
- Logitech Announces PC Games Sound Card 09/20/93
- WINDSOR, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Logitech has
- developed what it claims is a new PC sound card aimed at newcomers
- to PC-based games software. Known as Soundman Games, the UKP 79 card
- is compatible with Soundblaster, Soundblaster Pro and Ad Lib boards,
- which Newsbytes notes have become the de facto industry "standard"
- in recent times.
-
- The stereo sound card has a sampling frequency of 44,000 cycles per
- second and is equipped with a Yamaha synthesizer, the 20 track OPL-
- 3, and a six watt amplifier.
-
- A built-in CD-ROM (compact disc read only memory) interface allows
- the card to be used with CD-ROM-based games. The company claims that
- PC users can also employ joysticks that adhere to IBM or MIDI
- standards with the card.
-
- According to Martin Pickering, Logi UK's general manager, Soundman
- Games comes with two utilities for DOS and Windows. The volume on
- the card is controlled using keyboard short cuts. Also supplied with
- the card is an MCS Music Rack program that allows MIDI and Wave
- files to be recorded and played back.
-
- "We have developed Soundman Games in direct response to the demands
- of the games market-place. It will meet the specific needs of people
- taking up PC-based games for the first time, while providing high
- quality sound effects," he explained.
-
- The new card, which has a two year warranty, will ship in November
- in the UK. Logi UK is offering free telephone-based support for the
- card to all customers.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930920/Press & Public Contact: Logi UK - Tel: 0344-
- 891313)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LAX)(00003)
-
- Woman Who Started $400 Mln Business From Home Resigns 09/20/93
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Sandra
- Kurtzig, the woman who founded the $426 million ASK Group in 1972
- with $2,000 in start-up money and a spare bedroom in her home, has
- announced her resignation from the company.
-
- The ASK Group started as a supplier of manufacturing system software
- but expanded to business software with its acquisition of Alameda,
- California-based Ingres Corporation.
-
- Kurtzig discovered she wasn't happy just being a homemaker and
- raising children, although she cared about both, and wanted
- something she could do part-time that interested her.
-
- "I never intended ASK to become the eighth largest software company.
- I was just looking for something I could do to occupy my mind in the
- second bedroom of my apartment while the children were sleeping,"
- she told Newsbytes.
-
- Kurtzig said that the success of ASK is based on two things: the
- realization that computers had to be user friendly; and the concept
- that instead of customizing computer software packages for
- individual companies, one standard product could be developed that
- any manufacturing company could use. That product was MANMAN.
-
- MANMAN was almost called MAMA, for Manufacturing Management. But
- Kurtzig said her customers objected, saying hard-nosed executives
- wouldn't buy a MAMA system. So she used the first three letters of
- the two words Manufacturing Management and came up with MANMAN.
-
- "I don't believe women, or men for that matter, have to sacrifice
- having children in order to achieve a level of success. I also don't
- believe you should wait until you're old and grey to have children.
- I think there can be a balance -- homelife and children with work,"
- Kurtzig added.
-
- Along the way she got divorced, but said the divorce wasn't because
- of her business, but because she and her husband simply grew apart.
- At the time of the divorce, Kurtzig's husband set a new record for
- the largest settlement a man ever received -- $20 million.
-
- Kurtzig has been moving out of the limelight in her company since
- last year when she announced her resignation from her post as chief
- executive officer (CEO) of ASK but remained as chairman of the
- board.
-
- Now, at age 46, she is resigning altogether. "My plan is not to have
- a plan. My youngest son is graduating from high school this year and
- I'm feeling the empty nest syndrome. This year is his year," Kurtzig
- said. Sandra's oldest son is a junior at Berkeley and has already
- started a couple of businesses, according to his proud mother.
-
- Kurtzig holds a bachelor of science degree in mathematics from the
- University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and a master's in
- aeronautical engineering from Stanford. She is a member of the
- boards of the Harvard Business School, UCLA's School of Management,
- the Hoover Institution, and Stanford's School of Engineering. Her
- autobiographical book, "CEO: Building a $400 Million Company from
- the Ground Up," is coming out in an updated paperback edition next
- May from the Harvard Business School Press.
-
- When asked if success had changed her, Kurtzig said: "I don't think
- so. I'm still the same person everyone said wouldn't make it." Her
- advice to other small companies struggling to make it is: "Sell
- yourself first, your product second. Companies buy from people and
- if you have a product that is compelling and you do a good job
- serving your customers, you can sell to big companies."
-
- "We competed against IBM and Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC)
- when we started out. If you make a good impression, they'll forget
- you're a small company," she added.
-
- Mountain View, California-based ASK has 2,300 employees in 23
- offices world-wide. Pier Carlo Faloti, former president of the
- European operation of Digital Equipment Corporation, is currently
- serving as CEO of ASK. A new chairman has not been named, the
- company said.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/1990920/Press Contact: Renate' Steiner, The
- ASK Group, tel 415-969-4442, fax 415-968-1354)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00004)
-
- ****SPC Says Windows, Price Erosion Forced Layoffs 09/20/93
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Software
- Publishing Corporation (SPC), makers of the Harvard Graphics
- software product line, has announced it will lay off 21 percent of
- its workforce as part of a restructuring program.
-
- The reduction of 140 employees in both full-time and contract labor
- positions will leave the company with 510 employees world-wide.
- Total cost of the restructuring is estimated at $18 and $20 million,
- but the company expects to save $16 million of the expense back in
- cost savings and cash impact between now and the end of its fiscal
- 1994 year. The company will said it will report its fiscal 1993 year
- results on October 28 of this year.
-
- Fred Gibbons, chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) said: "This
- restructuring and cost reduction program has been implemented across
- the company in response to the fundamental changes in the software
- industry, including a faster than anticipated migration to the
- Windows platform creating intense competitive pressures and
- continued price erosion."
-
- Gibbons said SPC's goals are to streamline product development
- cycles and expense management, as well as a focus on developing and
- implementing sales and marketing programs that are cost- effective.
-
- Santa Clara, California-based SPC had 1992 revenues of $144
- million.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/1990920/Press Contact: Len Filppu, Software
- Publishing Corporation, tel 408-450-7129, fax 408-450-7915)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SYD)(00005)
-
- MicroAge Seeking International Dealer Partners 09/20/93
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- US computer dealer chain
- MicroAge has been sending an interesting fax to a number of dealers
- around the world.
-
- The company said it is looking for partners who can supply local
- branches of multinational companies with the products and services
- they are used to getting from MicroAge in the US.
-
- This is the text of the fax ...
-
- MicroAge, one of the oldest and most successful master resellers in
- the computer industry achieved over $1 billion sales during 1992.
- MicroAge is currently expanding its international presence. Since
- MicroAge sells mostly brand names, we are often restricted by
- existing distribution agreements with major vendors to export
- directly to the countries in which our clients request service.
-
- Our clients, especially the Fortune 1000-type multinational clients,
- expect the same "one-stop-shopping" that we offer them nationwide in
- the US. Therefore, we have developed a new program: International
- MicroAge InfoSystems Services (IMIS). This means that we are in the
- process of building a world-wide network of affiliated dealers, to
- be able to refer business to them so that we can together fulfil our
- multinational client's needs.
-
- Dagmar Dolatschko
- International Marketing Manager
- MicroAge
-
- P +1-602-968-3168 ext 2321 F +1-602-929-2412 and 2405 .......
-
- The fax goes on to list the expected abilities of a suitable IMIS
- Dealer. They include the following requirements:
-
- [] Locally owned and not affiliated with any group competitive with
- MicroAge. (ICG/InaCom, JWP, ComputerLand, Intelligent Electronics)
-
- [] Authorisations with at least two of these companies: IBM, Compaq,
- HP, Apple.
-
- [] Advanced networking such as Novell, Banyan, UNIX.
-
- [] Business sales infrastructure, technical support and repair
- facilities.
-
- [] Commitment to IMIS opportunities at competitive prices with local
- product, pricing and support.
-
- [] Respond by fax to MicroAge RFQ within three business days.
-
- [] Financial soundness. Full details to be provided but will be kept secure.
-
- [] Must submit reports to MicroAge relating to each transaction.
-
- [] English must be spoken
-
- (Paul Zucker/1990920)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00006)
-
- Canadian Product Launch Update 09/20/93
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- This regular feature,
- appearing every Monday or Tuesday, provides further details for the
- Canadian market on announcements by international companies that
- Newsbytes has already covered. This week: Compaq's Concerto notebook
- and Microsoft's new technical support plans.
-
- Compaq Canada announced the Concerto notebook (Newsbytes, September
- 14), the company's first notebook computer able to accept pen input.
- In Canada, the Concerto starts at C$3,489. The FlexConnect
- Convenience base is priced at C$309. The machines are due to be
- available by the end of September.
-
- Compaq Canada also cut prices on existing LTE Lite 4/25 notebooks.
- The 4/25 Model 120/w was cut from C$3,799 to C$3,199, the 2/25 Model
- 209/w from C$4,239 to C$3,639, the 4/25e 120/w from C$4,619 to
- C$4,329, and the 4/25e 209/w from C$5,029 to C$4,759.
-
- Microsoft Canada announced new technical support plans under which
- users of MS-DOS and Windows will be asked to pay for support after
- the first 90 days (Newsbytes, September 13). As in the US, users of
- Microsoft applications packages will continue to get free support on
- weekdays, but support for operating systems (in which category
- Microsoft includes Windows), development tools and advanced systems
- (Windows NT, Microsoft Mail, SQL Server, and LAN Manager) have to
- pay.
-
- In Canada, Priority Desktop service, which gives access to
- application support outside the hours of 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
- Eastern time, Monday to Friday, is C$30 per call or $250 per year. A
- support plan for developers, including support for development
- tools, applications, and operating systems, is C$125 per call or
- C$2,000 per year.
-
- For advanced systems, it's C$200 per call, C$1,300 per 10 calls, or
- C$9,750 per year. All these offerings use a toll-free phone number.
- Until the end of the year, new users of NT will get 30 days of set-
- up and installation support free, but not via a toll-free number.
-
- Premier Development Support will cost C$26,000 per year in Canada,
- Microsoft said, and Premier Comprehensive Support for major
- corporate customers will start at that same price.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930919/Press Contact: Joh Robinson, Compaq Canada,
- 416-229-8808; Ken Nickerson, Microsoft Canada, 416-568-0434 ext.
- 4246; Public Contact: Compaq Canada, 800-263-5868)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00007)
-
- ****Wang Expected To Emerge From Chapter 11 09/20/93
- LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Wang Laboratories
- is likely to emerge from 13 months of Chapter 11 protection under
- US bankruptcy law today. At a confirmation hearing in Boston, US
- Bankruptcy Court Judge William C. Hillman is expected to approve the
- company's reorganization plan, freeing Wang to resume normal
- operations as a much smaller company focused on certain software
- areas.
-
- If the plan is approved, Wang is to issue 30 million shares of new
- common stock to unsecured creditors and others. Holders of the
- company's old common stock will get warrants allowing them to buy
- the new stock within seven years and nine months.
-
- Wang would emerge from Chapter 11 with about 6,000 employees. At its
- biggest, in the late 1980s, Wang had more than 30,000 employees.
-
- Wang is turning away from its old proprietary VS minicomputer
- systems, sales of which have been declining, and pinning its future
- hopes largely on document image processing systems. "They're coming
- out as primarily a software company," said Michael Goulde, senior
- consultant with the Patricia Seybold Group in Boston.
-
- In a letter sent out in late Aufust to those who follow the company,
- Joseph M. Tucci, Wang's president and chief executive officer, said
- that the firm will have "a strategic focus on software and services for
- office departments and workgroups." He also said Wang will continue
- to support users of its VS minicomputers.
-
- Analysts are cautiously optimistic about the company's prospects.
- Goulde said Wang will be "competing in some hot and very
- competitive market-places." The company has some good products, he
- said, but will face tough competition. "Wang has in the past done
- best in the markets that it has invented," he added. "It's
- competing today in markets that are someone else's invention."
-
- In addition to imaging, Goulde said, Wang has some strength in
- application development and computer-aided software engineering
- (CASE) tools.
-
- Ajot Kapoor, an industry analyst with Information Technologies in
- Boston, praised Wang's focus on software and its emphasis on open
- systems. "They certainly do not guarantee success," he said, "but
- at least they're a good starting point."
-
- The reorganization plan calls for Wang to earn about $53 million
- on revenues of about $955 million in the 12 months from the
- beginning of October.
-
- Wang recorded an operating loss of $57.1 million in the year ended
- June 30, compared to an operating loss of $45.4 million last year.
- After restructuring and reorganization charges, Wang had an annual
- net loss of $197.2 million, compared with $356.6 million last year.
- Revenues were $1,247.0 million, down from $1,896.2 million in fiscal
- 1992.
-
- Vital elements of Wang's rebirth are financing agreements lined up
- in August, securing $60 million in equity financing from Steinhardt
- Management Co., Inc., and a financing facility of up to $30 million
- with Congress Financial Corporation.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930920/Press Contact: Frank Ryan, Wang,
- 508-967-7038; Ed Pignone, Wang, 508-967-4912)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEL)(00008)
-
- Wipro Intros Super Genius PCs In India 09/20/93
- BANGALORE, INDIA, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- In a bid to take on the
- international brands like IBM, Compaq and HP, Wipro Infotech,
- India's second ranked Information Technology (IT) company, has
- launched the Super Genius series of PCs.
-
- Newsbytes notes that, with the new machines, Wipro Infotech has
- resisted the current fad to forge R&D agreements with foreign
- computer companies. Instead, the company has carried out all its
- research and development on an in-house basis.
-
- According to the company, the new line of Intel systems is aimed at
- the upper end of the PC market. What distinguishes the new range
- from other micros on the market are their chip level upgradability
- across the x86 microprocessor families "to protect customer's
- investment from obsolescence."
-
- The models in the new range include an entry level 386DX machine
- which the company claims can be upgraded up to the Pentium
- overdrive chipset. A tower model which can also be upgraded from a
- basic 386DX chipset to the Pentium overdrive is being positioned as
- an upgradable LAN server. The other PCs in the machine series are
- based around 80386SX and 80486SX processor technology.
-
- According to Wipro, upgrading the new machines from a 386 processor
- to a Pentium overdrive is as easy as slotting in a new CPU (central
- processor unit) module. The company says that this has been made
- possible by maintaining a high degree of uniformity and
- compatibility between motherboards for the various PCs.
-
- Newsbytes notes that this approach differs markedly from chip
- upgrade options offered by other PC vendors, including Compaq and
- IBM. For these other companies, chip upgrades tend to be within a
- group of processors, rather than across processor families.
-
- Wipro claims that its new machines compete favorably with similarly-
- specified PCs from foreign manufacturers. Pricing on the machines
- ranges from Rs 55,000 (around $1,833) for an 80386SX-based system to
- Rs 1.5 lakh (around $5,000) for the 80486DX-based PC. HCL-HP, the
- leader in the computer field, prices its 386 systems at around Rs
- 58,000 (around $1,900) and charges up to 1.93 lakhs (around $6,400)
- for its 80486-based range.
-
- (C. T. Mahabharat/19930920)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00009)
-
- ****Newsbytes Volume III - Available For $24.95 09/20/93
- MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Newsbytes Volume
- III, all the news, reviews, and editorials that have been published
- on the Newsbytes News Network through July of this year, is now
- available for $24.95 on CD-ROM (compact disc - read only memory).
-
- The disc, which runs on both Apple Computer Macintoshes and PCs,
- contains the over 40,000 news stories on the world-wide computer and
- telecommunications industries written between May, 1983 and August,
- 1993 by the Newsbytes News Network staff.
-
- This rich compendium of reports, published by Wayzata Technologies,
- chronicles everything from the infancy of the microcomputer to
- today's highly diversified and complex array of technologies.
-
- Newsbytes has a staff of 19 daily reporters in the following cities:
- Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Atlanta,
- Washington, DC, Boston, Toronto, London, Tokyo, Hongkong, Sydney,
- New Delhi, and Moscow.
-
- Newsbytes reports 30 stories a day, or 600 a month. These are
- objective, first-hand new stories involving interviews with the
- people who make the news, and on-site trade show coverage. A
- Textware search engine enables the Volume III CD-ROM disc to be
- keyword searched for stories in which individual words or text
- strings appear, or Boolean searched (eg "keyword1" plus "keyword2"
- but not "keyword3"). This makes it an invaluable tool for
- researchers and libraries.
-
- According to Wendy Woods, Newsbytes' editor in chief, this is also
- the lowest-ever price for a Newsbytes disc. Previous discs were,
- according to Woods, priced in the $50 to $100 price bracket.
-
- "We want to make sure everyone has access to our reports, and that
- price is not a barrier. Our rich history of the computer industry is
- the most extensive available on CD-ROM," she said.
-
- Newsbytes, a pioneering electronic publication, has provided daily
- coverage of the dynamic and complex computer and telecommunications
- industries to online services, magazines, newspapers, newsletters,
- and fax and e-mail news delivery services world-wide since 1983.
-
- Newsbytes coverage has won Best Online Publication awards four times
- from the Computer Press Association, the largest organization of
- professional computer journalists world-wide. Newsbytes is an
- independent, privately held news organization.
-
- The disc is $24.95 plus $2.50 shipping and handling to US addresses,
- $4.50 shipping and handling to all other countries. Those interested
- in ordering the CD-ROM should send a check or money order, or their
- Visa or Mastercard number, with expiration date (no American
- Express please) to: CD-ROM Offer, Newsbytes News Network, Carriage
- House, 406 West Olive St., Stillwater, MN 55082 or fax to 612-430-
- 0441. Please include shipping address.
-
- (Newsbytes Staff/19930920)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00010)
-
- ****AT&T Announces Substantial Eo Price Cuts 09/20/93
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- AT&T and EO
- announced price cuts for the new EO 440 model personal communicator.
- Any customer that has purchased an EO model in the last 45 days is
- being offered a free 2.5 megabyte (MB) Sundisk Flashdisk with Aha!'s
- Inkwriter and Penmagic's Letterexpress software products.
-
- The price cuts are substantial. For example, the EO 440 model with 8
- megabytes (MB) of memory and a modem is now $1,999 compared to
- $2,799. The low-end EO 440 with 4MB of memory has been dropped to
- $1,599 from $1,999, and the high-end EO 880 with 8MB of memory, a
- modem, and an internal 20MB hard disk drive is $2,999, down from
- $3,999. The company has also dropped the price of its cellular
- module addition to the EO for remote communications from $799 to
- $499.
-
- For users that have already taken the EO plunge, the Flashdisk
- offers two pen-based software products for a total giveaway valued
- at $850. Inkwriter allows the user to quickly write in their
- handwriting and either translate those notes later or not at all.
-
- Letterexpress automates the person-to-person written communications
- process by automating the most commonly used portions of the
- document creation process, from Penmagic Software. In addition,
- those who have purchased the cellular module in the last 45 days
- will receive free Notable Technologies' Mobile Access, which allows
- for access to applications and data on host computing systems and a
- wide variety of information services.
-
- A form is available from the reseller where the EO or cellular
- module was purchased which must be completed and submitted to EO in
- order to receive the products involved, the company said.
-
- The price cuts and gifts to current users are not in anticipation of
- new or competing products being introduced at Mobile World, which
- takes place this week in San Jose, California, but are instead a
- result of EO's merger with pen-based developer GO Corporation,
- company representatives said. AT&T, who owns a majority interest in
- EO, announced the merger just last month.
-
- While the initial investment in the EO is higher than for other
- handheld, pen-based systems, analysts point out the unit offers
- more. A Newton Messagepad Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) with the
- added bells and whistles in the EO, such as the built-in fax, comes
- very close to the same total price.
-
- "The AT&T EO Personal Communicators have more communications
- capabilities than other mobile devices currently in the market...
- The new pricing is the natural progression for AT&T and EO to
- broaden the marketability of their products," said J. Gerry Purdy,
- chief analyst of Mobile Computing at Dataquest.
-
- In addition, the EO is facing some immediate competition, as Casio
- and Tandy are nearing the release of the DOS-compatible Zoomer, a
- PDA competitor.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930920/Press Contact: Kevin Compton, AT&T,
- tel 408-452-3966; Celeste Alleyne, Access Public Relations for
- AT&T, tel 415-904-7070 ext 282, fax 415-904-7055)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00011)
-
- Apple Media Kit: Build Mac, Windows Multimedia Apps 09/20/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Apple Computer's
- Personal Interactive Electronic (PIE) division has announced a
- software developer toolkit the company claims will allow developers
- to build multimedia applications that will run in both the Macintosh
- environment and the Microsoft Windows environment for Intel-based
- personal computers (PCs).
-
- Duncan Kennedy, product line manager for Apple's Digital Publishing
- Tools said: "Multimedia developers are frustrated with steep
- learning curves, poor playback performance and unpredictable
- results. Developers are demanding a new generation of tools that
- allow production teams to work together seamlessly; we are
- addressing this demand with the Apple Media Kit."
-
- The Apple Media Tool Kit comprises two components -- the Apple Media
- Tool for designers, and the Apple Media Tool Programming Environment
- for programmers. The Media Tool is aimed at non-programmers and
- offers assembly of media elements and the addition of interactive
- multimedia features with object-based authoring.
-
- The company says that prototypes can be generated easily using
- rough-draft media elements and interactivity between different media
- elements can be preserved, even when work-in-progress is substituted
- for finished content.
-
- Apple held up Los Angeles Times Media Lab director Jude Angius, who
- used the Apple Media Kit with a team of reporters to produce a Super
- Bowl multimedia presentation. Angius said: "...We met our deadline
- in less than four weeks. Apple showed us the product, and we saw
- that it would allow us to integrate all the elements quickly and
- easily."
-
- The second component, the Apple Media Programming Environment, is
- for programmers, allowing the customization and extension of
- projects developed using the Apple Media Tool. A new programming
- language is included and a new application framework, the company
- said.
-
- While the downside is having to learn yet another development
- language and paying a royalty for distribution of finished
- applications, Apple lists the advantages as: combining an object-
- oriented program language with a scripting language; allowing for
- portable code between Macintosh computers and PCs running Microsoft
- Windows; and providing access to both Macintosh and Microsoft
- Windows' toolboxes through a C language interface.
-
- Andy Hong, technologist at the Art Technology Group in Cambridge,
- Massachusetts said the learning curve for his programmers was a
- short one. "We were building controls and special features for an
- exhibit right away. The programming language is very powerful, and
- if you really want to enhance the program, you can also write code
- in C," Hong added.
-
- A runtime player must be licensed from Apple for a fee based on the
- application and the distribution quantity. Corporate licensing is
- $5,000 per year for unlimited use or 50 cents per copy. Commercial
- publishers must pay 2 percent of the title's average wholesale price
- and 3 percent of the average price for hybrid CDs. Educational
- licensing is free.
-
- PIE says that the Apple Media Tool is $1,195, but can be obtained
- for an introductory price of $995. Also, the product is bundled with
- Videofusion 1.5, a special effects software package valued at $649.
-
- The Apple Media Kit, which includes the Apple Media Tool, the
- Programming Environment and the Videofusion bundle, is $3,995. APDA,
- Apple's source for developer tools is handling the Apple Media Kit,
- and the company says prices outside the US may vary.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/1990920/Press Contact: Jeni Johnstone, Regis
- McKenna for Apple, tel 415-354-4501, fax 415-494-8660; Apple Media
- Tool Information, 800-371-0612; APDA, US 800-282-2732, Canada 800-
- 637-0029, world-wide 716-871-6555)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SYD)(00012)
-
- November Is MacWorld Expo Month In Australia 09/20/93
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- November is MacWorld Expo
- month in Australia and MacWorld magazine is now preparing its bumper
- edition for distribution at the show. The editorial staff feel this
- may be the first real consumer show in a long time as Apple has been
- busy shipping its low-cost machines. They also point out that this
- will be the last expo without a PowerPC in it.
-
- The MacWorld Expo is being held in Sydney on November 4-6 and the
- magazine will be issued to coincide with this. Editorial features
- in the November issue include:
-
- [] New Apple releases. New models are expected between now and the
- expo.
-
- [] MacWorld Class Awards. Over 30 categories chosen in the annual
- poll of readers.
-
- [] Stocking Stuffers. A collection of fun, unusual and inexpensive
- ideas for the Mac user at Christmas.
-
- [] Personal Accounting Software. A comparison of products for home
- and small business use.
-
- [] Publish '93. The final in a series on Mac-based digital
- publishing and pre-press technologies. The Publish Expo is being
- held in conjunction with MacWorld Expo.
-
- Deadline for ads in the issue is September 24. Deadline for news is
- Friday September 29. Contact the magazine on CompuServe 75300,3672
- or fax +61-2-439 5512 or phone +61-2- 439 5133. The editor of
- Australian MacWorld Magazine (AWM) is Alan Jones. Readers of
- Newsbytes can also contact the IDG Expo division on phone +61-2-439
- 5133 or fax +61-2-906 3232
-
- (Paul Zucker/1990920)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00013)
-
- California Regulators Open In-State Toll Market 09/20/93
- SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- As expected, the
- California Public Utilities Commission opened up the entire in-state
- toll call market to competition, starting January 1. But the largest
- of the former monopolies, Pacific Bell and GTE, did not object
- because they had been given plenty of notice and were given hefty
- rate hikes to make up for lost revenue.
-
- The PUC estimates the "local toll call" market, which refers to long
- distance calls within calling regions, is worth $9 billion, and
- these rates on such calls should drop 40 percent, as companies like
- AT&T and MCI enter the market against GTE and Pacific Bell. The
- decision represents the final stage of deregulating the state's long
- distance market. Earlier, in-state long distance competition was
- allowed.
-
- GTE and Pacific Bell have agreed with those estimates, but expressed
- little concern. That's because their basic rates will rise about 50
- percent. The monthly charge for having a line will rise to about $13
- in Pacific Bell areas, nearly $18 in areas like Orange County served
- by GTE. Even "Lifeline" service, a special rate for the elderly and
- poor under which all calls are metered, would rise to $6.50 per
- month.
-
- GTE said in a press statement its new rates will be closer to the
- real cost of providing service. In Georgia, by contrast, local lines
- cost about $23 per month, but there's no Lifeline rate, and the
- Atlanta local calling area is the nation's largest.
-
- The only objections to to the order came from consumer groups like
- Toward Utility Rate Normalization (TURN) which complained that
- businesses and high-income individuals will save while the poor will
- pay more under the plan.
-
- Those local rates could fall, in some cases, once local competition
- comes. Some cable operators are anxious to compete against Pacific
- Bell and GTE for local phone customers in their markets. But the two
- major carriers will likely insist that any such plan subsidize their
- work in high-cost rural areas and other costs of "universal
- service."
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930920)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00014)
-
- Issues Narrowed In CDMA Digital Cellular Patent Case 09/20/93
- SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Qualcomm has
- claimed a cloud was removed from buyers of its Code Division
- Multiple Access (CDMA) digital cellular gear as rival InterDigital
- Communications agreed it will not argue that the equipment violates
- two of its patents.
-
- Qualcomm and InterDigital are engaged in a court fight over CDMA,
- which Qualcomm has brought to market but over which InterDigital
- claims some patent rights after its acquisition last year of SCS
- Mobilecom.
-
- However the decision goes, consumers are not expected to feel any
- impact, and even service providers may see only a slight change in
- pricing, depending on how the winner decides to deal with royalty
- arrangements. The patents are implemented in phones, switches and
- cell sites, and companies which produce such equipment may pay
- slightly more, or pay it to a different company, after the
- litigation and appeals are complete in a few years.
-
- In the latest move, InterDigital confirmed, according to Qualcomm,
- that it will not contend CDMA equipment under the IS-95 standard
- pushed by Qualcomm infringe two of its patents, numbered 5,081,643
- and 5,093,840. Under an agreement for both sides, InterDigital will
- not litigate on infringement of those patents for three years, and
- any litigation after that on the two patents would go to the San
- Diego courts, near Qualcomm's main offices.
-
- The agreement, however, does not affect three other patent claims
- being made against IS-95 equipment by InterDigital in a Philadelphia
- court, or Qualcomm's contention that InterDigital is infringing on
- one of its patents, being played out in San Diego. InterDigital
- spokesmen have told Newsbytes it expects the Philadelphia cases to
- come to trial early next year.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930920/Press Contact: Thomas R. Crawford,
- Qualcomm, 619-597-5146)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00015)
-
- Software Creates Checks From Blank Stock 09/20/93
- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Create-A-Check has
- announced two software packages that print checks from blank stock,
- eliminating the need to purchase pre-printed checks.
-
- Newsbytes notes that, to date, this task has been very difficult on
- anything other than commercial and specific printers, owing to the
- need for magnetic ink characters to be printed along the bottom of
- the check.
-
- The company is offering two software programs, Create-A-Check
- Professional and Create-A-Check Personal, to print checks on a laser
- printer that include digitized logos, signatures, check information,
- and the magnetic inks characters banks called Magnetic Ink character
- Recognition (MICR). Those characters allow the banks to use an
- optical character reader to read account information from the check.
-
- Donald Cantral, executive vice president of Create-A-Check, says
- that Create-A-Check software allows more flexibility and reduces the
- user's cost.
-
- "Most business and personal users still believe they must use pre-
- printed check forms; their businesses absorb the added cost,
- operational limitations and security risks because they believe they
- have no choice. Create-A-Check gives control back to the business or
- individual." CAC spokesperson Melissa Clyne told Newsbytes, adding
- that users can cut their check printing costs by as much as 70
- percent.
-
- The Create-A-Check software comes with interfaces for many popular
- accounting programs, and meets the magnetic ink standards and
- document specifications established by the American Banker's
- Association and the American National Standards Institute.
-
- Password protection keeps unauthorized users from printing checks,
- and a feature called Trace-A-Check logs information on the users,
- date, time, and serial number of the software used to create the
- check.
-
- Clyne told Newsbytes that, because of the increasing number of check
- fraud and counterfeiting cases being perpetrated using state of the
- art color copiers, CAC has formed alliances with Duplex, a security
- check forms provider and TeleCheck Services, a check acceptance
- company.
-
- In addition to the software, Create-A-Check comes with magnetic
- toner (for the MICR code) and a starter quantity of check stock. CAC
- can be used on a network, and requires only 420 kilobytes of system
- memory and 2MB of hard drive space. The program supports the use of
- a color monitor and a mouse if available. The professional package
- sells for $499.95, and the personal version has a $249.95 price tag.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930920/Press contact: Melissa Clyne, Bremer Public
- Relations for CAC Software, 801-364-2030; Reader contact: CAC
- Software, 801-322-5222 or 800-621-5720, fax 801-532-6700)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00016)
-
- Identity Shipping Notebook PC With 500MB Hard Drive 09/20/93
- RICHARDSON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Identity Systems
- Technology says it is shipping a 486SLC 33 megahertz (MHz)-based
- notebook computer equipped with a 500 megabyte (MB) Maxtor hard
- drive with an access speed of eight milliseconds.
-
- Identity earlier marketed a half-gigabyte (GB) notebook system
- powered by a 386 microprocessor, which Mobile Office Magazine
- awarded its Notebook Innovations Award this year.
-
- The new system weighs less than seven pounds and has 4MB of system
- memory, which can be upgraded to 8MB. With MS-DOS 5.0, Windows 3.1
- and Microsoft Works the unit has a suggested retail price of $2,995.
-
- Optional features include hard drives of 213MB, 245MB or 345MB with
- access speeds as low as 14 milliseconds. You can also add a math co-
- processor chip. The system is powered by an included AC adapter or a
- NiCad battery Identity says will run the system for up to two hours.
-
- A 3.5 inch 1.44MB floppy disk drive is built in, and the 8.5 inch
- backlit LCD VGA display has 640 by 480 pixel resolution. An external
- VGA video port is available for an external monitor, and the unit
- has two 9-pin serial ports and one standard parallel port. A 9600
- bps fax-2400 bps data modem and a soft carrying case are also optional.
-
- Identity Executive VP Troy Cooper says the system was introduced
- because of the increased disk space requirements of programs like
- faxes, Windows and numerous application and development tools
- software.
-
- "Special stripped-down versions of some applications are available
- for laptop users, but these limit functionality. Likewise,
- compression programs that effectively extend disk space, while
- certainly efficient for improving data file capacity, are not
- equivalent to having the real hard disk space required to run
- applications software and generate and manipulate large files," he
- said.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930920/Press contact: Alan Weinkrantz for Identity
- Systems Technology, 210-820-3070; Reader contact: Identity Systems
- Technology, 214-235-3330)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00017)
-
- ZiffNet Offers Hewlett-Packard Dashboard Deal 09/20/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Ziffnet, the online
- service attached to CompuServe and owned by the Ziff-Davis
- publishing firm, is offering a special deal to its customers to
- coincide with the release of Dashboard 2.0 from Hewlett-Packard.
-
- First, download Dashboard 1.0 on Ziffnet, using the command Go
- Dashboard from any prompt. The download is priced at regular Ziffnet
- online rates, so costs are lower at night. Then you can upgrade to
- Dashboard 2.0 for just $29, plus $5 shipping and sales tax where
- applicable, through Hewlett-Packard.
-
- Dashboard is a program under Microsoft Windows which is designed to
- make using Windows easier and faster, and is known in the trade as a
- "Windows Launcher."
-
- The "Ziffnet Edition of Dashboard runs under Windows 3.1, requires
- about 1 megabyte of disk space, and contains all the features of the
- shrink-wrapped version, including full online help and additional
- readme files. Printed documentation is not included. The offer is
- available through Saturday, October 30, 1993.
-
- The program appears as a narrow bar at the bottom of a screen, and
- provides a faster way to work with Windows programs. It can be
- customized to offer three to nine screen views, so instead of
- searching through overlapping windows, users can access active
- applications quickly, and save the applications or files from
- extended screens. The result is users who work on multiple projects
- or share their computers can quickly access customized access to
- their programs.
-
- Dashboard is sold bundled with some PC hardware and software
- including Lotus Ami Pro and Chipsoft's TurboTax. The new version of
- Dashboard, which retails for $99, requires 1.5 megabytes of free
- memory, according to Hewlett-Packard. The company says that over
- 300,000 units of the older version have been sold, and users of
- Version 1.0 can upgrade directly from Hewlett-Packard at $29 as
- well. Such users may also buy the new version from retail stores and
- receive a $15 upgrade rebate from H-P.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930920/Press Contact: Janice Brown, Ziffnet,
- 617-332-8066)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00018)
-
- ****Cyrix Intros 486 Processor Chips 09/20/93
- RICHARDSON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Cyrix Corporation
- has announced 80486DX and 80486DX2 microprocessors running at speeds
- from 33 to 50 megahertz (MHz).
-
- Cyrix claims that the new CPUs (central processor units) are the
- first alternate source for 486DX chips using original design and
- independently developed microcode. The chips include an integrated
- math coprocessor, 8 kilobytes (K) of write-back cache, clock
- doubling, and power management features for low power notebook and
- "green PC" systems.
-
- Cyrix also claims that the new chip will compete in the 486DX 33
- megahertz (Mhz) market, quoting a Computer Reseller News poll
- published in August that reported 69 percent of the 80486-based PCs
- sold through the US reseller channel are based on the 486DX/33
- chipset. Cyrix VP of Marketing Jim Chapman says the new chips meet
- all 486DX pinout and feature set requirements.
-
- The DX2 chip is a clock-doubling CPU that allows the core CPU to
- operate at twice the speed of the system bus. For example, a 33Mhz
- bus can accommodate a 66MHz CPU, providing faster performance.
-
- Cyrix says that five volt samples of all clock speeds are available
- now, with production scheduled to begin by the fourth quarter. Three
- volt samples are expected to be available by December, and the
- company says that a 66MHz 5-volt DX2 version is planned in 1994. In
- 1,000-quantity lots, the chip prices range from $289 to $349 each.
-
- Cyrix won a hard-fought battle in the press and in the courts to win
- the right to sell its Intel-compatible chips. In July 1992, a US
- District Court ruled that Cyrix did not infringe on Intel patents
- since it produces its 80486 chips through an Intel-licensed
- manufacturer.
-
- Last month Newsbytes reported that Cyrix and Intel had reached a
- tentative agreement dependent on the court dropping a Cyrix anti-
- trust suit against Intel. The case was scheduled to go to trial next
- month. However, Intel continues to appeal the 1992 decision.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930920/Press contact: Katherin Dockerill, Cyrix
- Corporation, 214-994-8491; Reader contact: Cyrix Corporation, 800-
- 848-2979 or 214-994-8357, fax 214-699-9857)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00019)
-
- Intuit To Open Support Center, Hires Staff 09/20/93
- TUCSON, ARIZONA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Some companies in the
- computer industry may be laying off, but Intuit says it will
- hire 175 people to staff its new national telephone technical support
- center.
-
- Menlo Park, California-based Intuit produces Quicken, a personal and
- small business financial record keeping program for DOS, Windows,
- and Macintosh computers.
-
- The center, to be located in Tucson, Arizona, is scheduled to open
- in early January 1994, and will begin operations with a staff of 75.
- It will provide technical support for the entire family of Intuit
- software products, and Intuit expects to have it fully staffed by
- the end of 1994. The new tech support representatives, supervisors,
- managers, training staff and support personnel will be recruited
- from the Arizona work force.
-
- Marsha Ralston, Intuit VP of customer service, says the company will
- be looking for employees with experience and knowledge in personal
- computers on the DOS, Windows, and Macintosh platforms. The company
- will train the technical support representatives. The Tucson office
- of the Arizona State Job Service office is accepting applications
- now.
-
- In July of this year Intuit introduced quicken 4 for the Macintosh
- computer that tracks investments and loan amortization, stocks,
- bonds and mutual funds, and calculates a loan's principal and
- interest. The program has a suggested retail price of $69.95. The
- latest Windows version of Quicken, introduced earlier this month
- added a calendar feature that can be used to schedule automated
- payments. It also sells for $69.95. The company also produced
- QuickBooks, a small business bookkeeping package.
-
- Earlier this month Newsbytes reported that Intuit and Chipsoft Inc
- signed a definitive agreement to merge. The deal is expected to be
- completed by the end of the year. A ChipSoft spokesperson told
- Newsbytes the merger is not expected to eliminate any products
- produced by either company, and no staff reductions are anticipated.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930920/Press contact: Sheryl Ross, Intuit Inc,
- 415-329-3569; Reader contact: Intuit Inc, 800-624-8742 or
- 415-322-0573)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(TOR)(00020)
-
- ****Macworld Canada - Apple Takes Cautious Look At Future 09/20/93
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Apple Computer Fellow
- Donald Norman was careful not to promise too much in his keynote
- speech at MacWorld Canada this morning. He said he would try to
- predict the future, but immediately added that doing so is
- impossible.
-
- As examples of how predictions about technology go wrong, Norman
- offered the classic projection by former IBM Chairman Thomas J.
- Watson that there would be a world market for about five computers,
- and the prophecy when the telephone was invented that it was such
- an important device that every city would need one.
-
- He added a warning that many who are eager to jump on new
- technology in the computer field might do well to heed: new
- technologies can take many years to reach the point where they work
- smoothly and are widely accepted.
-
- On that note, Norman went on to say that his company wants to do
- away with computers as we know them. "We have user groups that help
- you use your computer, and all that's very weird. You don't go to
- your kitchen to use your electric motor and we don't have electric
- motor user groups."
-
- Yet, Norman said, electric motors were once sold the way computers
- are today. He showed a clipping from a 1908 mail-order catalog
- advertising a "home electric motor" with attachments to turn it
- into a fan, an egg beater, and so on.
-
- In the same way, he said, computers should evolve into devices
- meant for specific tasks. He cited Apple's Newton MessagePad, the
- personal digital assistant launched earlier this year, as an
- example.
-
- Another was Apple's PowerCD, a device that can play audio compact
- disks, read compact disk read-only memory (CD-ROM) disks, and
- display pictures from Kodak's Photo CD disks. It can also connect
- to a computer to upload pictures that the computer can then
- manipulate, but Norman said the PowerCD is not meant as a computer
- peripheral but rather as a consumer device.
-
- Norman went on to demonstrate a two multimedia applications, a
- "virtual museum" and a home shopping system, that used near-full-
- motion video to walk users through a physical space -- museum
- displays in one case and a mall in the other -- and let them zoom
- in on objects. A text and graphics display at the side provided
- further information, and audio and video clips were available.
-
- these were only prototypes, he said, "I wouldn't be surprised if
- this will actually exist at some point in the not-too-distant
- future."
-
- Norman also showed an electronic book that made use of video and
- such tricks as marking points in the text so the user could return
- easily later.
-
- Perhaps to provide proof of Norman's point that new technologies
- take time to perfect, his computer crashed several times during the
- demonstration. The Metropolitan Toronto Convention Centre added its
- own illustration with a malfunctioning fire alarm that disrupted
- the first half of his talk.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930920)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TYO)(00021)
-
- Tokyo Radiopaging Firm Expects Million Users By 1994 09/20/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Tokyo Tele Message (TTM) has been
- gaining large numbers of new radiopager users. So many, in fact,
- that it expects to top the one million subscriber mark by the fall
- of next year.
-
- Tokyo Tele Message started its radiopaging service in October 1987,
- shortly after the Japanese telecoms market was deregulated. By the
- end of August of this year, the firm was logging 800,000 registered
- users, with 86,000 of these having signed up this year alone.
-
- To stimulate demand still further, TTM is planning to reduce the
- deposit on hardware that new subscribers must pay. The company
- expects that, by the end of this year, it will have 900,000
- subscribers on its books.
-
- Newsbytes notes that there are around 6.7 million radiopager users
- in Japan. While the majority of these subscribers are using NTT
- pagers, TTM hopes to persuade existing and new users that its system
- is the best with a combination of functional and fashionable paging
- units. Particularly important in this respect are the LCD message
- units and pen-style numeric radiopagers.
-
- Customers will also be able to choose a colored pager from the
- range, with units available in a variety of colours, including
- black, pink, blue and yellow.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19930920/Press Contact: Tokyo Tele
- Message, +81-3-3508-4514)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEL)(00022)
-
- HCL HP Spruces Up Micro Range, Launches Pentium Model 09/20/93
- NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- HCL Hewlett-Packard, India's
- largest computer company, has announced no less than 26 new machines
- based around an Intel chipset. According to senior executives with
- the company, the release of the machines represents "the successful
- transformation of its entire product range to international
- standards."
-
- The introduction of the new machines is the latest stage in HP HCL's
- "Project Infinity" which aims at total quality processes, a concept
- pioneered by the Japanese.
-
- Newsbytes notes that, despite the launch of the Vectra series of
- computers by the HP Connection operation in India, the bulk of HP's
- sales come from the Busybee range of machine which was launched by
- HCL.
-
- The upside of this market resistance to non-HP products has been
- that the company's RISC range of machines have done extremely well
- against machines from the likes of Digital, IBM and Sun.
-
- Of the 26 new machines from HP HCL, 18 are machines in the Busybee
- XL series, while eight are Pentium-based Meteor machines which
- feature a PCI bus.
-
- The Busybee range of machines start with a 25 megahertz (MHz)
- 80386SX chipset and range up to 66MHz 80486DX2 technology. According
- to Ajai Chowdhry, HCL HP's director, the machines represent state of
- the art technology.
-
- "The machines use the best of peripherals, specially designed power
- supplies, sufficient cooling systems and even small things like
- cabinet screws, the label, the users manual and packing boxes have
- been improved upon," he said.
-
- While the price of a 25 MHz 80386SX-based system is Rs 50,000
- (around $1,670), this price tag rises to Rs 2 lakh (around $6,700)
- for a 66 MHz 80486DX2-based system. The Meteor range of machines
- range from Rs 1.5 lakh (around $5,000) for a 33 MHz 80486DX system to
- Rs 7.5 lakh (around $25,000) for a Pentium-based 60MHz machine.
-
- (C. T. Mahabharat/19930920)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00023)
-
- Quantum Intros Raft Of New Drives 09/20/93
- MILPITAS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 17 (NB) -- Quantum has
- introduced the Quantum Empire 1080 3.5-inch one-inch high 1.08-
- gigabyte (GB) hard disk drive. At the same time the company has also
- introduced the new 127, 170, 270, 340, and 540 megabyte (MB)
- ProDrive LPS hard drives.
-
- According to the company, the Quantum Empire 1080 four-disk, Small
- Computer Systems Interface (SCSI)-3 drive is designed for
- workstations, servers and RAIDs (redundant arrays of inexpensive
- disks).
-
- Announcing the products, Robert K. Maeser, president of Quantum's
- High-Capacity Storage Group, said: "We expect to be the time-to-
- volume leader as we begin shipping mass production quantities of our
- low-profile, one-gigabyte drive this month. Last year, we were the
- first independent drive maker to ship a low-profile 525MB drive."
-
- Quantum says it also plans to offer a two-disk 540MB version of the
- Empire drive. The Empire products will be produced in Quantum's
- automated manufacturing facility in Milpitas, California.
-
- The company claims that the Quantum Empire 1080 is the only drive
- in its class to combine workstation-level performance with PC-level
- power consumption. The Empire drive features a 9.5 millisecond seek
- time (reading), a sustained data transfer rate of 4.1 MB-per-second
- and a rotational speed of 5,400 revolutions-per-minute (rpm).
-
- Quantum says that the Empire drives also incorporate a number of
- other features including a SCSI-3 interface (backward compatible
- with SCSI-2) that supports both Fast and Wide SCSI, Quantum's
- AutoRead and AutoWrite ASIC hardware, and DisCache and
- WriteCache firmware.
-
- The drive consumes six watts of power in idle mode and 7.5 watts
- at 30 percent seek. The company claims that this reduces heat
- dissipation which increases reliability.
-
- The Empire 1080 drive is designed for such data-intensive
- applications as networked office systems, graphics, CAD/CAM
- computer-aided design/manufacturing), large and complex
- databases, and imaging.
-
- Single unit OEM (original equipment manufacturing) evaluation
- pricing for the Quantum Empire 1080 is $995, while the Empire 540
- is priced at $695. IDE-AT (Integrated Drive Electronics) and SCSI
- versions of the ProDrive LPS 270 and 540MB products are already
- shipping to OEMs. The company says they will be available in volume
- to distributors during the fourth calendar quarter.
-
- Quantum says that the ProDrive LPS use a new high-speed
- microprocessor and are performance-matched to the full range of
- Macintosh and IBM PCs, including 486, Pentium, PowerPC and 68040-
- based platforms.
-
- Quantum claims that the ProDrive LPS drives have up to 36 percent
- fewer parts than previous-generation Quantum drives and carry a
- projected mean-time-between-failures rating of 300,000 hours.
- ProDrive LPS products carry a two-year warranty to end users who
- purchase drives from an authorized Quantum distributor or dealer.
-
- ProDrive LPS drives are designed for mid- to high-end PCs in
- multimedia and networking environments and offer seek times as
- fast as 12 milliseconds (ms).
-
- The SCSI-2 drives support Fast SCSI data transfer rates of up to
- 10MB/second. Quantum's IDE-AT drives are compatible with VL and
- PCI-BUS local bus protocol, and can achieve buffer-to-host data
- transfers of 11MB/second.
-
- The drives are available as single-unit OEM evaluation pricing:
- ProDrive LPS 127MB $260; ProDrive LPS 170MB $290; ProDrive LPS
- 270MB $380; ProDrive LPS 340MB $480; ProDrive LPS 540MB $595.
-
- Both IDE-AT and SCSI versions of the 170, 270, 340 and 540MB drives
- are currently shipping to OEMs and will be available in volume to
- distributors during the fourth calendar quarter. The ProDrive LPS
- 127MB IDE-AT and SCSI drives are set for volume availability during
- the first quarter of 1994.
-
- In August, Newsbytes reported that Quantum had posted substantially
- reduced income for its first fiscal 1994 quarter, ended July 4,
- 1993. The company reported sales for the first quarter as $479
- million, an increase of 30 percent over the $369 million reported
- for the first quarter of fiscal 1993.
-
- However, like many PC hardware manufacturers that have been
- reporting an increase in sales but a decrease in income, Quantum too
- reported a net income for the first quarter of just $3.4 million, or
- $0.08 per share fully diluted, which compared pretty unfavorably
- with $21.5 million, or $0.41 per share fully diluted reported for
- the first quarter of 1993.
-
- Also in August, Newsbytes reported that Quantum had signed an
- alliance with Silicon Storage Technology, that involved SST's
- patented "flash" memory cell structure. The deal included an equity
- investment and states that the two companies will co-operate in the
- areas of marketing, sales, product development, and manufacturing.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19930920/Press Contact: Nellie Connors, Quantum, 408-
- 894-5058)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00024)
-
- SuperMac Board Turns Fuji Xerox Copier Into Printer 09/20/93
- SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- SuperMac
- Technology and Fuji Xerox Company have announced the availability of
- a connectivity board which turns the Fuji Xerox Acolor digital color
- copier into a 400 dots-per-inch (dpi)PostScript Level 2 color
- printer.
-
- According to the companies, the board is called the SM ICS in Japan
- and can be attached to any Apple Mac-based network.
-
- Announcing the board, Michael A. McConnell, president and chief
- executive officer of SuperMac, said: "What the SM ICS from SuperMac
- does is to enable Fuji Xerox to integrate the Acolor into any size
- Macintosh-based desktop design and publishing environment."
-
- The companies maintain that the SM ICS products will be supplied to
- Fuji Xerox by SuperMac Technology for sale in Japan and the
- Asia/Pacific region under the Fuji Xerox brand.
-
- Shinichi Tsuda, general manager of Fuji Xerox's color document
- products development department, said: "We turned to SuperMac for
- development and manufacture of the SM ICS because we wanted a
- partner who understands Macintosh-based color desk top publishing
- customer requirements. Our initial feedback from customers in
- Japan is that they like the ease of use and high speed performance
- of the SM ICS."
-
- The companies maintain that the SM ICS is comprised of system-
- level software and a single NuBus card in the Macintosh, and is a
- high performance raster image processor (RIP) that fits into any
- color Macintosh computer and allow users to print from their
- desktop publishing or graphics application directly to the Fuji
- Xerox Acolor copier.
-
- The board offers Adobe's PostScript Level 2 technology through
- Adobe's Configurable PostScript Interpreter (CPSI) running on a
- 40 megahertz (MHz) R3000-family reduced instruction-set
- processor (RISC) processor with an integrated image buffer large
- enough to hold a full page image at 400 dots per inch with 24-bits
- per pixel for full color, claim the companies.
-
- Output of Japanese kanji-fonts and compatibility with Japanese
- language applications and operating systems is also supported.
-
- The companies are also planning an upgrade version of the SM ICS
- that will allow input scanning from the Acolor to the Macintosh,
- as well as higher resolution for A3 images and faster color
- correction.
-
- In July, Newsbytes reported that Supermac had again announced record
- second quarter earnings and an alliance with Rocket Science Games,
- a software company. Second quarter revenue was reported at $51.1
- million, up 79 percent from the $28.5 million in similar quarter the
- previous year.
-
- Net income rose more slowly than revenue, up 67 percent to $2.4
- million compared with $1.4 million last year. Earnings per share
- were 26 cents, on 9.1 million average shares outstanding, compared
- with 20 cents, on 7.2 million shares outstanding in the second
- quarter of 1992.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19930920/Press Contact: Deborah Doyle, 408-541-5372,
- SuperMac Technology; Laurie McLean, 415-513-8800, McLean Public
- Relations)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(LAX)(00025)
-
- ****HP's Multimedia X Stations, Faster 700 Workstations 09/20/93
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Hewlett-Packard
- (HP) has announced a new line of multimedia workstations and X
- stations, completed the purchase of British fiber-optic technology
- company BT&D, and accepted the resignation of the company's co-
- founder David Packard.
-
- The new X station, the HP Envizex, is the first multimedia X
- station offering compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM) quality
- audio, scanner, and 3.5-inch floppy disk drive.
-
- The Envizex is designed to interoperate with PCs running under DOS,
- with the floppy disk drive facilitating the transfer of DOS files
- created on other DOS machines to a Unix environment. In the past,
- users creating files on a PC at home or on a laptop from the road
- would have had to call on a systems administrator to transfer the
- files to a Unix system-based computer in the office.
-
- The Envizex stations operate at more than 165,000 Xstones -- a
- standard performance measure for X terminals that combines the
- graphics speed and rate of data transfer from memory to the screen.
-
- HP says that its X stations also deliver more performance at a lower
- cost less than those of competitors. For example, the 19-inch color
- HP Envizex station Model 19Ca almost doubles the performance of the
- 19-inch color NCD 19c X terminal, and costs $1,300 less than the NCD
- model. Prices for the new X stations start at $1,995 and go to
- $4,995
-
- HP has also announced higher clock speed workstation models in its
- Apollo 9000, 700 line as well as even faster industrial- strength
- models. The 700 line is based on the company's proprietary Precision
- Architecture Reduced Instruction Set Computing (PA-RISC) central
- processing unit (CPU).
-
- The new Models 715/75 and 725/75 workstations feature a higher 75
- MHz clock speed at the midrange of the line, which boosts the raw
- CPU performance by up to 50 percent over the current Models 715 and
- 725. The faster 715/75 and 725/75 run at 113 SPECfp92(2) floating-
- point performance, 61 SPECint92(3) integer performance and 15,975
- X11perf graphics performance, while also boasting a four-times-
- larger cache size to increase total application performance by up to
- 80 percent.
-
- HP claims that the new 75 MHz workstations offer nearly twice the
- floating-point performance and 30 percent higher solids modeling
- performance than the Indigo2 Extreme R4000 from Silicon Graphics;
- forty percent higher floating-point performance and over twice the
- solids-modeling performance of Sun Microsystems' Sparcstation 10
- Model 41 with its recently introduced ZX graphics; five times the
- solids-modeling performance and 12 percent higher floating-point
- performance than IBM's RS/6000 Model 365 GTO; and fifty-four percent
- higher solids-modeling performance than the Digital Equipment
- Corporation's (DEC's) 3000 Model 400 with its just-introduced ZLX-M2
- graphics.
-
- The Model 715/75 is priced from $15,395 for an entry-level
- configuration including 32 megabytes (MB) of memory and a 525MB
- disk, while the same configuration of the Model 725/75 is $18,395,
- HP added. Upgrades for 33 MHz and 50 MHz Models 715 and 725
- workstations can be added via a board swap to speed the units up to
- the 75 MHz speed for $6,500. The new workstations are expected to be
- available in the fourth quarter of this year.
-
- Faster still, the new Model 745I/100 and 747I/100 are industrial
- strength, according to HP who says the machines run at 100 MHz. HP
- says typical industry applications for its industrial workstations
- include process monitoring, factory- floor control, air-traffic
- control switching systems, customer service, laboratory testing, and
- patient monitoring.
-
- According to HP, the 700I systems can be configured to meet specific
- requirements, such as ease of serviceability, and are designed to
- take extremes in temperature and environment. Performance levels for
- the 745i/100 and 747i/100 are at 138 SPECfp92 and 81 SPECint92 --
- twice the performance of current models. Memory capacity on the
- machines is 256 MB and they include an increased instruction/data
- cache of 256 kilobyte (KB)/256 KB.
-
- Pricing begins at $22,890 and $26,490 for the 745i/100 and 747i/100,
- respectively. Upgrades for existing 50 MHz Models of the 745i and
- 747i can performed for $10,500. The company warrants all its new X
- stations and workstations with a limited one-year, on-site warranty
- as well as other support options.
-
- Started in 1939 with by William R. Hewlett and David Packard,
- HP had revenues of $16.4 billion in its 1992 fiscal year and
- computer revenues in excess of $12 billion. Eighty-one year old
- Packard announced last week at the company's board of directors
- meeting his resignation as chairman, joining Hewlett, also
- retired as director emeritus.
-
- Packard is being replaced by 52-year-old Lewis E. Platt as chairman.
- Platt is currently president and chief executive officer (CEO) and
- will continue to serve in those functions.
-
- The company also announced it has completed the acquisition of BT&D
- Technologies, headquartered in Ipswich, England. BT&D was a joint
- venture of BT (formerly British Telecom) and DuPont. HP says the
- purchase offers it not only BT&D's high-speed, fiber- optic
- technology and products, but a state-of-the-art opto-electronics
- manufacturing and research-and-development operation in Ipswich --
- the first of its kind for HP in Europe.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930920/Press Contact: Lynn Wehner, Hewlett-
- Packard, tel 508-436-5017, fax 508-436-5152)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00026)
-
- Videoconferencing Not "Killer App" Dataquest Says 09/20/93
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Despite the hype
- surrounding videoconferencing, a recent Dataquest survey indicates
- there may be a low demand for the new technology. Even among
- companies who have videoconferencing technology, more than half of
- those surveyed are reported to be less than interested.
-
- More than 200 businesses, 40 percent of which employ more than
- 10,000 people and 58 percent of which employ more than 3,000 people,
- were asked by market research group Dataquest as to the likelihood
- of their business purchasing videoconferencing equipment in the next
- several years. A whopping 64 percent of all respondents indicated
- they had little interest in videoconferencing, and 54 percent of
- those who have the technology also indicated a low demand for the
- equipment.
-
- Bruce Ryon, principal analyst in charge of Dataquest's Multimedia
- service, which carried out the survey, said: "There is great hope
- among many technology companies that videoconferencing will be the
- `killer application' that will accelerate the trend toward
- multimedia. The results of our survey certainly don't support these
- hopes."
-
- The survey also indicated the low demand for videoconferencing
- will remain unchanged for the next two years, with an increase
- in demand occurring in three years.
-
- Why the lack of interest? The survey suggests that it's the benefit
- versus the expense. While multinational Fortune 500-type companies
- indicated a need for the large room-sized videoconferencing systems,
- most small and medium sized companies said low-cost communication
- technologies such as facsimile, electronic mail, and network
- document sharing are adequate.
-
- "The simple addition of video or `head shots' to existing
- communications technologies doesn't provide enough benefit to
- justify the current cost of videoconferencing equipment for the
- majority of businesses," Ryon said. "Desktop videoconferencing
- technology is still fairly immature with low video quality and a
- lack of eye-to-eye contact because of camera positioning, which
- diminishes one of the strongest justifications for the technology."
-
- A majority of the businesses surveyed lack an adequate
- infrastructure for integrating videoconferencing capability with
- desktops, and less than 25 percent plan to have video capability on
- the desktop within two years, especially given the current business
- and economic climate.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930920/Press Contact: Paul Wheaton, Dataquest,
- tel 408-437-8312, fax 408-370-0292)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00027)
-
- Madge Network & Network General In OEM Deal 09/20/93
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Original equipment
- manufacturing (OEM) deals are common among networking hardware
- vendors. Now Madge Networks and Network General have announced an
- OEM agreement, under which Network General is using Madge Networks
- as the sole supplier of Token Ring adapters for Network General's
- AT portable Sniffer products and the monitor cards for its
- Distributed Sniffer Systems (DSS).
-
- Sue Carrasco, product marketing manager for Network General, says
- that the company has seen an evolution in its customer base from
- four megabits per second (Mbps) to 16Mbps Token Ring in recent times.
-
- "As our Token Ring customers standardize on 16Mbps bandwidth,
- Network General is pleased to support them with a move to a high-
- performance Token Ring solution based on Madge's Smart 16/4 AT
- Ringnode adapters," she said.
-
- "Through this agreement with Madge Networks, we give users the
- ability to capture the full performance bandwidth of their 16Mbps
- Token Ring LANs (local area networks)," she added.
-
- The companies say that Sniffer products that include the Madge Smart
- 16/4 AT Ringnode adapters are now available from Network General.
- The monitor card for Network General's DSS family of products is
- scheduled for October 1993.
-
- In June, Newsbytes reported that Madge had introduced the Smart 16/4
- Bridgenodes line of network cards, designed for high performance
- source route bridging and routing with Novell's new NetWare
- Multiprotocol Router 2.1 (MPR) software. The two companies also
- announced a joint marketing program for NetWare MPR 2.1 that
- involved joint distributor and reseller promotions, direct mail, and
- a 16-city North American seminar series.
-
- In May, Newsbytes reported that Madge has opened a new subsidiary in
- Canada, called Madge Canada, Inc. The company has also introduced
- version 4.0 of its network adapter card software, Smart LAN Support
- Software, designed for use with its Smart 16/4 Ringnode adapters.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19930920/Press Contact: Teresa Camera, 408-383-
- 1418, Madge Networks; Mary Carlisle, 415-473-2763, Network General)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00028)
-
- Beyond Intros BeyondMail 2.0 Remote For DOS and Windows 09/20/93
- BURLINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Beyond has
- announced plans for an upgrade to the remote access software for its
- workflow-oriented BeyondMail network messaging system. Slated for
- release in November, BeyondMail 2.0 Remote for DOS and Windows is
- aimed at users of portable PCs as well as remote desktop machines,
- said Paula Berman, director of marketing, in an interview with
- Newsbytes.
-
- Remote users will be able to employ the software with either
- BeyondMail 2.0, a package slated to ship in October, or BeyondMail
- 1.0. When used with BeyondMail 2.0, the upgrade will be able to
- take advantage of a newly added serial routing capability.
-
- Berman told Newsbytes that the serial routing feature in BeyondMail
- 2.0 provides a new form type that lets users sequentially route
- messages on the network and assign work assignments and due dates.
-
- In addition, Novell's Remote Message Handling Service (RMHS) is
- fully integrated into BeyondMail 2.0 Remote Access Edition, allowing
- the user to exploit the NetWare Global Message Handling Service
- (MHS) and NetWare MHS 1.5 capabilities in BeyondMail 2.0 without
- having to install a separate communications package.
-
- Users can also carry out mail routines as part of direct dial-in
- local area network (LAN) sessions, noted Berman. These sessions can
- also include file transfer, printing, and other networking
- functions, she said. The direct dial-in sessions can be established
- by using either DCA's RLN or Novell's Connect software.
-
- BeyondMail 2.0 Remote Access Edition includes a utility called
- BMSync for synchronizing messages stored on remote PCs with messages
- stored on the network. According to Berman, the package incorporates
- a Novell driver for two-way wireless messaging over the RAM mobile
- data network.
-
- BeyondMail 2.0 Remote Access Edition can also be used on portable
- PCs that spend part of their time on the road and part of their
- time on a network. At log-in, the software automatically senses
- whether the machine is remote or connected to a network, and
- configures itself accordingly.
-
- Users can configure and access a variety of communications profiles
- through an icon-driven menu. The remote software can also be
- configured by network administrators, through Administration Disks
- that can be distributed either manually or by e-mail.
-
- BeyondMail 2.0 Remote Access Edition will be priced at $295.
- Registered users of BeyondMail Remote 1.1 for DOS or 1.0 for
- Windows will be able to upgrade for $100 per remote mailbox.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19930920/Reader contact: Paula Berman, Beyond
- Inc., tel 617-229-0006; Press contacts: Anne Marie Clark or Karen
- Magill, Cunningham Communications for Beyond, 617-494-8202)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00029)
-
- Random House, Broderbund Publishing Agreement 09/20/93
- NOVATO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Broderbund has
- teamed up with Random House on a joint venture, Living Books, for
- the creation, production and marketing of story-based multimedia
- software for children.
-
- Random House describes itself as is the largest general trade
- book publisher in the English-speaking world. Living Books,
- formerly a division of Broderbund, has already produced the
- popular and activity-filled "Just Grandma and Me" by Mercer
- Mayer and "Arthur's Teacher Trouble" by Marc Brown -- both
- based on the children's books.
-
- Planned multimedia titles in the new venture include "The New Kid on
- the Block" by Jack Prelutsky and Aesop's "The Tortoise and the
- Hare."
-
- Alberto Vitale, Random House chairman, president and chief executive
- officer said growth in consumer demand for children's books is
- driving the venture and both companies will have a wider
- distribution channel through both trade book and computer software
- channels than either would enjoy alone.
-
- Broderbund is probably best known for its Carmen Sandiego series of
- educational computer geography games that have been made into books,
- puzzles, and even a daily television game show for children and the
- popular Print Shop series for printing banners and greeting cards.
-
- The company also recently released Prince of Persia 2, The Shadow
- and the Flame, which it describes as a cinematic action game with a
- movie-like story and sound track.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930920/Press Contact: Jessica Switzer,
- Broderbund Software, tel 415-382-4568, fax 415-382-4582)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TYO)(00030)
-
- Internet Association To Be Created In Japan 09/20/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- After years of remote linking into
- the country, the Internet is expected to be formally set up in
- Japan. About 30 computer-related firms are currently preparing
- to create the Internet Association in Japan.
-
- The idea of the association is that it will foster a similar
- situation that exists in the US, which promotes the Internet
- network. Plans call for the Japanese Internet to be up and running
- ny the end of next year.
-
- Currently, about 30 Japanese firms including NTT and KDD have been
- preparing to create Internet Association in co-operation with the
- Internet Society in the US. Plans call for the Internet Association
- Japan to push the standardization of TCP/IP protocol in Japanese,
- and support the Internet environment.
-
- Also, the association will help firms and organization to actually
- log on to Internet, and will also help development engineers. Other
- activities will include the support of activities at Japan Network
- Center, Asia Pacific NIC, Japan Engineering Project Group and Japan
- Internet Engineering Task Force.
-
- In Japan, TCP/IP is not as popular as it is in the West. As a
- result, there is not much software available for the protocol nor
- are there the engineers. Currently, university students and the
- researchers are studying for the setting up of the Internet in
- Japan.
-
- Plans call for the Internet Association Japan to be joined by major
- firms such as NTT, KDD, IBM Japan, NEC, Hitachi, Rikei, NTT Data,
- ASCII, Nifty-Serve, Forval, Softbank, Lotus, Oracle and AT&T JENS.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19930920/Press Contact: NTT, +81-3-
- 3509-5035, Fax, +81-3-3509-3104)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00031)
-
- Sega Pushes Video Game Machine In South East Asia 09/20/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 SEP 20 (NB) -- Sega Enterprise has signed an
- agreement with Singapore-based WYWY Group as part of the firm's
- major strategy to establish the games console in the South East
- Asian market.
-
- Terms of the agreement call for the WYWY Group to sell Sega's video
- game machine in South East Asia. Sega Enterprise has already signed
- an exclusive dealership agreement with WYWY Group concerning the
- sales of Sega's video game machines the Mega CD and the Game Gear.
-
- Sega's game software will be also sold through the WYWY Group in
- Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei in this October. During the three-
- year agreement, Sega Enterprise is planning to ship a total of
- 100,000 units of the video game machines to these regions.
-
- WYWY Group has powerful retailer routes such as department stores
- and electronics shops in the regions. The group is reported to have
- a total of 30 shops in Singapore and 20 shops in Malaysia.
-
- Sega is currently exporting its video game machines to these
- regions, but the numbers involved are very limited. Thanks to the
- WYWY Group's involvement, Sega will be able to sell many more units
- in South East Asia.
-
- As part of the agreement, Sega Enterprise can get a strong base in
- the South East Asian region to vie with its rival Nintendo, which
- already has a presence in the market.
-
- Sega is reported to be considering expanding its sales operations
- into other Asian regions such as Vietnam, Thailand and India in the
- near future.
-
- Meanwhile, Sega Enterprise has started marketing arcade game
- machines and amusement game facilities in the South East Asian
- region. The firm plans to help local firms create amusement parks
- and arcade game facilities.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19930920/Press Contact: Sega Enterprise,
- +81-3-3743-7603, Fax, +81-3-3743-7830)
-
-
-