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- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00001)
-
- Windows Software Turns A PC Into An Answering Machine, Fax 10/07/93
- FREMONT, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Bit Software
- announced Bitfax Professional for Windows, a product that can
- turn a personal computer (PC) into a data communications
- terminal, a fax machine, and an answering machine that can also
- automatically deliver messages to a pager. The product is
- designed to work with the new modem cards that include data
- communications, fax, and voice mail capability.
-
- Installation of the product is easy, according to Bit Software
- representatives who said the product is smart enough to
- identify the port where the modem is located and the type of
- modem down to the baud rate at which it can transfer data. An
- animation of a man identified as the "snooper" accompanies the
- software's intelligent investigation of the hardware to give
- the user feedback on what is happening.
-
- The fax capability has a "green" feature that reduces the blank
- scan lines in faxes to save paper and reduce fax transmission
- time.
-
- As an answering machine, Bitfax Professional's Voice Manager
- feature allows users to receive, log, record, play, and store
- personal messages. Users can create multiple mailboxes, each
- with a personal greeting, and password protection of individual
- mailboxes is also available. In addition, an Auto Pager feature
- can have the computer call a pager after receiving a voice
- message or fax. Additional features include the ability to
- retrieve a fax from a touch-tone phone and a toll-saver mode.
-
- The fax engine in the new product offers enhancements to the
- company's former fax product. Users can now drag and drop faxes
- onto a "Transmit Fax" icon for quick sending, onto a "View Fax"
- icon for viewing, and onto a "Print Fax" icon for quick
- printing.
-
- A new fax management module allows users to create and assign a
- folder to each individual or group of faxes. Compression of
- received faxes and the ability to automatically delete faxes
- after a specified time period has also been added. Optical
- character recognition (OCR), for turning faxed documents into
- text is also included and over 10 languages are supported, the
- company said. Text and drawing tools offer the ability to add
- text, images, lines, circles, boxes, and graphics onto faxes.
-
- The data communications portion of the product, Bitcom, stores
- data in a dBASE-compatible phonebook which is also directly
- compatible with Bitfax Professional. Bitcom offers remote
- access, automatic redialing, and support for Xmodem, Ymodem,
- Zmodem, and Kermit data transfer protocols. Users can also
- create buttons for access to popular online services, such as
- Compuserve.
-
- Bitfax Professional will work with both flatbed and handheld
- scanners that support the Twain specifications. The product
- will offer voice mail features with any voice modem that uses
- the Rockwell or Sierra voice chip set. Company officials were
- reluctant to list specific modems that meet those criteria, but
- said most modems with voice support use one of those two
- chipsets. Bit Software has mentioned a hardware/software
- bundle, which is the original way the company started
- distribution of its data communications products, but no
- specific information was forthcoming on which modem would be
- used or when the bundle might be available.
-
- The product will work with any 386-based or higher IBM
- compatible personal computer (PC) running Microsoft Windows
- with at least four megabytes of random access memory (RAM). Bitfax
- Professional's retail pricing has been set at $129 and the
- product will be available in October from Bit Software or
- through the company's retail distribution channels.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931006/Press Contact: Misha St. Lorant, Bit
- Software, tel 510-490-2928, fax 510-490-9490; Public contact,
- 510-490-2928)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00002)
-
- LCD Panels To "Co-Star" With Stallone In "Demolition Man" 10/07/93
- NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA, U.S.A, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- A line of LCD
- projection panels from nView will share "star billing" with
- swashbuckling actor Sylvester Stallone in a Warner Brothers movie
- that will open in theaters throughout the US on Friday, October 8.
-
- In one sequence of "Demolition Man," a character played by Stallone
- shoots and destroys one of nView's MediaPro panels. But William M.
- Donaldson, president of nView, is less than heartbroken over the
- MediaPro's demise.
-
- "I think this is the first time this technology has been used in
- such a major production, and we're very proud that our products
- were chosen," Donaldson said.
-
- In real life today, LCD projection panels project computer and
- video data onto a wall or large screen for group viewing. In the
- futuristic "Demolition Man," the panels serve as "proxy people" --
- "talking heads" meeting around a conference room table.
-
- The images that appear on the panels turn toward one another as if
- in actual conversation, nView officials explained. Upset with a
- comment made by one of the images, Stallone silences the offending
- unit with a gun blast.
-
- The movie, which also stars Wesley Snipes, takes place in the year
- 2032, when criminals are sentenced to sub-zero "rehabilitation" as
- frozen inmates of the California CryoPenitentiary. The "talking
- heads" oversee the inert inmates.
-
- The LCD panels also appear in the movie as part of a medical "crash
- cart" that monitors thawing prisoners, and as wall-mounted security
- panels used for identification in the cryoprison's control room.
-
- All Effects Company, Sun Valley, CA, built the video robots,
- constructed chrome housings for the MediaPro panels, and then
- designing a computerized motion control system to precisely
- position the units as they moved about.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19931006/Press contact: Cassie Hagan, nView, tel
- 804-873-1354; Reader contact: nView, tel 800-736-8439)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00003)
-
- Hong Kong - IBM Veteran Defects To Digital Malaysia 10/07/93
- TAI KOO SHING, HONG KONG, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Digital Equipment Asia
- has appointed Jamaludin Ibrahim as the new general manager
- of Digital Equipment Malaysia Sdn Bhd.
-
- His most recent IBM position was divisional manager for the
- Public Sector, Commercial, and Banking and Finance departments,
- reporting to the director of operations. Previous assignments included
- systems engineer, marketing representative (banking), marketing manager
- (public sector), as well as staff assignments in customer financial
- packaging and sales compensation programs.
-
- Jamaludin holds a Bachelor of Business degree from California
- State University and a MBA from Portland State University.
- The new general manager takes over from Dave Buckingham, who will
- continue to serve Digital Malaysia as a consultant for a three-month
- transition period.
-
- (Keith Cameron/19931006)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(HKG)(00004)
-
- China - Pyramid Offers Oracle7 Parallel Server 10/07/93
- CENTRAL, HONG KONG, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Pyramid Technology Corporation
- has become the first company to demonstrate support for the Oracle7
- Database with Parallel Server option in China. Pyramid also used the
- first China Computerworld Expo and conference in Beijing as a showcase
- for the Valence Cluster -- a loosely coupled configuration of
- its Unix-based, mainframe-class MIServers.
-
- This configuration plus the Oracle7 Database and Parallel Server
- option is designed to provide continuous database availability
- for business-critical applications.
-
- Oracle claims the Valence Cluster protects users from single points of
- failure. Whether the failure is hardware, software or network related,
- the Oracle database remains accessible as long as one node in the
- Valence Cluster remains operational. The configurations of servers
- are designed so that all MIServer nodes within the cluster dynamically
- share the Oracle database.
-
- "Valence Cluster ensures continuous database availability by combining
- the computing resources of each MIServer node without compromising
- the capacity and throughput demands of the data center," said
- Edward Norton, Asia-Pacific vice president for Pyramid Technology.
-
- Supporting up to four MIServer nodes, Valence Cluster also provides
- scalability for data centers running very large databases or
- supporting very large user communities. It also is designed to
- simplify system and database administration by consolidating
- computing and database resources into a single resource.
-
- Pyramid's current implementation of SMP offers near-linear
- scalability of up to 24 processors for each MIServer, but
- the scalability of the clustered nodes is greater and can support
- larger user communities and expanded the database capacity. For
- example, a fully configured Pyramid Valence Cluster of four nodes
- can support four gigabytes of random access memory and 96
- CPUs. Disk storage is in excess of 250 gigabytes.
-
- John Morell, Unix Service analyst at International Data Corporation,
- says, "The Valence Cluster solution is unique in its implementation
- of Virtual Ethernet, Fault-Tolerant Distributed Lock Manager, and
- centralized system management. It provides a real added-value
- customer solution, giving Pyramid a competitive edge, we believe."
-
- (Keith Cameron/19931006/Press Contact: Ed Norton, Pyramid,
- 852-827 0211)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00005)
-
- ****Clinton Health Care Plan To Focus On Computer Support 10/07/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Simplified,
- standardized, computerized billing is one of the main ways that
- the Health Care Task Force sees to save money that would be used
- to pay for coverage of the 30-million-plus people without medical
- insurance. Some estimates indicate that there are more people
- shuffling paper in the US health care system than directly
- serving patients in any capacity.
-
- As the Clintons blitz Capitol Hill and special interest groups,
- from the American Medical Association on one side to the American
- Association of Retired People and the labor unions on the other,
- little attention has been paid to the real core of the plan's
- money-saving potential that is essentially a top-to-bottom
- overhauling of the way physicians, hospitals, and insurance
- companies handle billing.
-
- Physicians and hospitals can essentially charge whatever they
- want because virtually no individuals pay their own medical
- bills. They are either paid by insurance companies or passed on
- to them indirectly through over-charging to compensate for those
- who do not pay, and insurers can just raise rates and drop sick
- users so they always make a profit.
-
- This has led to a situation where the insurance companies make it
- as difficult as possible to file claims as a simple way of
- reducing "valid" claims while health care providers just add more
- clerical staff to deal with the thousands of different forms
- mandated by the government and private insurers.
-
- Because there is little or no economic incentive on either side
- to simplify this paperwork deluge, both groups have resisted any
- computer software or integrator vendor efforts to integrate
- computer systems beyond a single hospital, physician's office, or
- insurance company.
-
- This means that it cost so much to collect payments that
- physicians and hospitals must continually raise prices, and
- it also leads to the situation where every hospital,
- physician's office, pharmacy, and insurance company with which an
- individual deals must maintain its own set of duplicate records.
-
- The Clinton Administration proposal would put smart cards in the
- hands of every US citizen and some legal aliens that would
- provide billing reference identification as well as carry up to
- about 30 pages of medical data about the individual.
-
- That change, along with a simplification of medical billing
- forms, would literally save billions of dollars that could be
- used to treat patients, and it looks as if there is growing
- pressure from the public to actually force the health care
- industry to take advantage of computer technology that has been
- available for at least 10 years.
-
- If health care reform really does take off, industry insiders say
- that computer sales, and especially integration services, will
- really explode, with health care taking on the same sort of high-
- profile, high-profit role that was, until recently, the sole
- purview of the military.
-
- (John McCormick/19931006/)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEL)(00006)
-
- India - Silicon Graphics Sets Up Subsidiary 10/07/93
- NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Silicon Graphics of the US has
- relocated its SAARC headquarters from Singapore to India, and has
- decided to manufacture its low-end workstations in India. (The member
- countries of SAARC, the South Asian Association for Regional
- Cooperation, are India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Bangladesh
- and the Maldives.)
-
- The fully-owned subsidiary, Silicon Graphics Systems (India) Pvt. Ltd.
- (SGSPL), will set up the manufacturing facility in Gurgaon (near Delhi)
- with an annual capacity of 2,000 systems per year.
-
- "In the first three years, we'll invest more than Rs 30 crore (around
- $10 million) in the facility. The total production in three years of
- operation is expected to be more than Rs 50 crore (around $16 million).
- Exports are expected to account for Rs 10 crore (around $3.5 million),"
- according to Ashok Desai, managing director, SAARC region, Silicon
- Graphics Systems.
-
- SGSPL is the 25th Silicon Graphics subsidiary in the world, and the
- eighth in Asia.
-
- As for manufacturing, sales and support, the Indian subsidiary will
- concentrate on the "Indy" workstations. Robert Bishop, president of
- Silicon Graphics World Trade Corp., recently unveiled in the capital
- this Rs 3.59-lakh (around $12,000) workstation that boasts 16 MB RAM,
- a digital color video camera, a 15-inch color monitor, virtual 24-bit
- color graphics, keyboard and mouse, in a diskless configuration
- powered by a 100 MHz MIPS R4000 processor.
-
- "Indy is our tribute to the new manufacturing facility in India.
- The system was unveiled about a month ago in the US. Bishop said the
- machine will be a boon for CAD applications, architects,
- manufacturing, engineering, space research, chemical, and the
- fashion industry. "Like in the US, Indy will also bring a new
- revolution to the entertainment industry in India," he added.
-
- Apart from manufacturing and selling computers, the Indian subsidiary
- will also be a center for board repair and benchmarking services for the
- SAARC region. Its earlier alliance with Tata Elxsi Ltd., and OMC
- Computers Ltd., will continue, the former marketing the high-end
- servers and the latter the low-end workstations of Silicon Graphics.
-
- (C. T. Mahabharat/19931007)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00007)
-
- Leading Edge Adds New Winpro Multimedia And Desktop PCs 10/07/93
- WESTBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Leading Edge
- has expanded its series of Winpro 496 PCs, offering additional
- multimedia configurations, along with the first desktop models in
- the economical line.
-
- All of the new Winpro 486 models are based on a 486SLC/33
- microprocessor from Cyrix, a company spokesperson told Newsbytes.
- Pricing starts at $899 for the new desktop systems and $1,249 for
- the multimedia systems.
-
- The new multimedia models are the first to bundle "Yearn 2 Learn -
- Peanuts," a new educational interactive multimedia package from
- Image Smith, she added. The multimedia PCs also ship with such CD-
- ROM titles as Time Almanac, The Animals, ChessMaster, and Microsoft
- Bookshelf.
-
- The multimedia and desktop PCs all ship with MS-DOS 6.0, Microsoft
- Windows 3.1, MS Money, MS Works for Windows, MS Productivity Pack,
- MS Entertainment Pack 4, and the Leading Edge Utilities Control
- Center, she told Newsbytes.
-
- The Winpro 486 base desktop model comes standard with 2 megabytes
- (MB ) or 4 MB of system memory, a 120 MB hard drive, 1 kilobyte
- (KB) cache memory, a 3.5-inch floppy drive, and Super VGA graphics
- with 512 KB video memory. The hard drive is upgradable to 213 MB.
- System memory is expandable to 16 MB, video memory to 1 MB, and
- cache memory to 64 KB external cache. A 5.25-inch floppy drive is
- optionally available.
-
- Also included are one parallel port, two serial ports, four drive
- bays, one 8-bit and five ISA 16-bit expansion slots, a 150-watt
- power supply, a 101-key keyboard, and a mouse.
-
- The multimedia models come with 4 MB of system memory (expandable
- to 16 MB), a 170 MB hard drive, an internal Photo CD-ready Sony CD-
- ROM drive, and a Sound Blaster Pro audio board from Creative Labs.
- A 2400 bits-per-second (bps) modem, two stereo speakers, and
- headphones are optionally available. Other features are identical
- to those of the desktop models.
-
- The WinPro 486 desktop and multimedia systems are available
- immediately from all Leading Edge authorized resellers. Systems
- are supported by the Leading Edge AdvantEDGE Support Program, which
- offers customers the option of a one-year onsite or two-year carry-
- in warranty, in addition to unlimited toll-free telephone support
- and online bulletin board support.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19931006/Reader contact: Leading Edge, tel 508-
- 836-4800; Press contacts: Susan Zephir, Leading Edge Products
- Inc., tel 508-836-4800, ext 1219; Amelie Gardella or Mel Webster,
- Copithorne & Bellows for Leading Edge, tel 617-252-0606)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00008)
-
- SBT In Japanese Deal With Hitachi 10/07/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Hitachi has inked an agreement
- with Sausalito, California-based accounting software maker SBT
- in which Hitachi will produce Japanese versions of SBT's
- programs for its personal computer-based LAN systems. With
- these programs, Hitachi expects to beef up sales of its
- PC LAN systems.
-
- Hitachi will localize SBT's APCO Business Series 7 programs,
- which consist of seven modules including system
- management, sales management, purchase order management,
- and salary management. Each module will cost between
- 100,000 yen ($1,000) and 300,000 ($3,000).
-
- Three of the modules will be released in November, and the
- rest will be released by the end of next year.
-
- The original English language programs are popular outside
- Japan. The companies claim 150,000 units have been sold
- in the US and Europe.
-
- Actual development of the Japanese programs will be done by
- Hitachi's 100 percent-owned subsidiary, Hitachi Application
- Systems in Tokyo. These Japanese programs will operate on
- Hitachi's Flora family personal computers. The programs run
- with the help of various applications such as dBASE IV and
- Netware, and can easily be customized.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931004/Press Contact: Hitachi, +81-3-
- 3258-2057, Fax, +81-3-3768-9507)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TYO)(00009)
-
- Japan Has Two Million Telecom Users 10/07/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- The number of personal computer-
- based telecommunication network users has reached two million
- in Japan, according to the New-media Development Association
- in Tokyo. Their numbers have increased rapidly over the past
- two years, and continue to escalate.
-
- The association's survey shows 1,957,000 users were online
- this past June, and this number has apparently topped two
- million by now.
-
- The association also took the survey in 1991. At that time, there
- were 1,150,000 users, indicating the number has nearly doubled
- over the past two years.
-
- Commercial PC networks with over 10,000 members each have a total
- of about 1,422,000 users, or 72 percent of all network
- users in Japan. NEC's PC-VAN holds the top position with
- 578,000 members. Second is Fujitsu's Nifty-Serve, which has about
- 500,000 members. They are followed by JALNET, ASCII Net,
- Nikkei Mix and TeleStar.
-
- PC-VAN and Nifty-Serve continue to expand and have added
- new databases and forums, and have linked with other
- major networks. For example, Fujitsu has a link with CompuServe.
- PC-VAN has a link with GEnie and JALNET.
-
- These networks are currently seeking ways to interconnect
- through the Message Handling System standard, which is
- advocated by the Japanese Ministry of Posts and
- Telecommunication.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931005/Press Contact: New-media
- Development Association, +81-422-22-2111, PC-VAN, +81-3-3798-6511,
- Fax, +81-3-3798-9170)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(WAS)(00010)
-
- Cirrus Subsidiary Intros Single-IC Audio Decompression 10/07/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Austin, Texas-based
- Crystal Semiconductor, a division of Cirrus Logic, has introduced
- the CS4920, the first semiconductor to include all audio
- decompression and digital-to-audio conversion operations on a
- single chip. This chip replaces a set of ASIC or application
- specific integrated circuit and support chips previously used to
- produce audio boards.
-
- The CS4920 is based on a fully programmable 24-bit digital signal
- processor running at about 16 MIPS or million instructions per
- second and features a 16-bit stereo digital-to-analog converter,
- programmable clock manager, compressed audio input, digital audio
- output generator, and a serial control port all in a single 44-
- pin package.
-
- Since this chip uses easily reprogrammable algorithms, it can
- process many different audio formats such as MPEG and Dolby AC-2
- compression by simply having new drivers uploaded on-the-fly.
-
- The signal-to-noise ratio for the new Crystal Semiconductor audio
- chip is a good 90 dB and total harmonic distortion is claimed to
- be less than 0.01-percent.
-
- The new PLCC (plastic leaded chip carrier) package chip will be
- available in sample quantities by the end of this month, and
- volume production is expected by the first quarter of 1994 with
- quantity prices set at $38 each.
-
- This consumer-quality (as opposed to professional production
- studio) audio chip should allow audio board makers or PC builders
- to include good quality audio at an even lower price because
- assembly costs for a single chip are less than that of discrete
- component chip sets which are now used. Because the chip is
- easily reprogrammable from the computer's memory, it can not only
- support existing compression schemes, but also newly developed
- standards as they gain market presence.
-
- (John McCormick/19931005/Press Contact: Daryl Sartain, Crystal
- Semiconductor, 512-445-7222)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00011)
-
- Cognos Has New Client/Server Software, Business Unit 10/07/93
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Cognos Inc., has
- unveiled a new set of client/server development software that it
- claims is an example of "second-generation" client/server
- technology, and set up a separate business unit to sell
- client/server software.
-
- Cognos said its Axiant tool set introduces features needed to
- develop serious business applications using client/server
- architecture. The company said existing tools do not address such
- needs at complex application logic, portability across many
- operating systems, hardware platforms, and graphical user
- interfaces (GUIs), scalability from small to large systems,
- concurrent access to multiple data sources, and version control.
-
- Independent observers agree that current client/server tools are
- lacking some features needed for building serious business
- applications. "Client/server tools are not capable yet of
- delivering mission-critical applications, strictly speaking,"
- said Pieter Minno, president of Marblehead, Massachusetts-based
- Technology Insight, Inc., at a recent industry conference, "but
- organizations are doing it anyway because they're desperate."
-
- According to Cognos, the Axiant software has four main features
- aimed at filling this gap. An application engine automates
- development and lets developers add extensions with
- repository-based business rules. A three-tiered application
- architecture is said to make for flexible deployment.
- Applications can also be scaled to few or many users. Finally, an
- integrated desktop provides ad-hoc query, reporting, and
- multi-dimensional data analysis.
-
- Hans Galldin, marketing director for client/server tools at
- Cognos, said Axiant addresses a common concern about security
- features in client/server tools by providing a way to assign
- different privileges to different users. This is built into the
- repository, he said, so users don't have to enter multiple
- passwords to get at different resources.
-
- He said the software also allows data definitions from common
- computer-aided software engineering (CASE) software to be
- imported into its repository and then used in creating source
- code.
-
- Axiant supports Microsoft Corp.'s Object Linking and Embedding
- (OLE) rules for linking applications under Windows, and provides
- for Rapid Iterative Development (RID) and Rapid Application
- Development (RAD) software development techniques using a
- multi-user, object-oriented repository, the company said.
-
- Cognos said it will provide Axiant first for Microsoft Windows
- client PCs and servers running Unix, DOS, and Digital Equipment
- Corp.'s VMS operating system. This software is to be available by
- the end of this year. Software for IBM AS/400 and Hewlett-Packard
- MPE iX servers is planned later, the company said. Software
- development tools for resellers and third-party developers are to
- be available in the second quarter of 1994.
-
- The Windows-based development environment will cost from $3,000
- to $5,000, Cognos said, and full deployment of Axiant will cost
- about $1,000 per user.
-
- Cognos said it is setting up a client/server business unit that
- will be responsible for the Axiant products. Peter Klante, a
- vice-president of Cognos, will head the unit. Cognos has three
- other business units, which handle its PowerHouse application
- development software, its AS/400 software, and its desktop
- reporting products.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931006/Press Contact: Roberta J. Carlton,
- Cognos, 617-229-6600 ext. 2446; Mary Campbell ext. 166 or Sally
- Ann Barton ext. 167, Leonard Monahan Lubars & Kelly for Cognos,
- 401-277-9020)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TOR)(00012)
-
- ****Canadian Firm Says Robots See, Understand Surroundings 10/07/93
- ORILLIA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- A small company
- based in a town north of Toronto claims its robotics
- technology offers something no other industrial robots have
- today: the ability to see and understand the robot's
- surroundings.
-
- Vivek Burhanpurkar, founder and president of Cyberworks Inc.,
- told Newsbytes ultrasonic vision systems in his company's
- products allow robots to see what is around them and understand
- the "basic geometry" without having to be programmed to deal with
- specific surroundings.
-
- That means, for instance, that Cyberworks' CyberVac Industrial
- Cleaning Robot can vacuum a room without having to be set up for
- the specific room first. It will see where the walls and
- furniture are, and using built-in expert-system software, will
- work out an efficient way of cleaning the space, Burhanpurkar
- said.
-
- Cyberworks has just launched that robot and another designed for
- security and inspection, as well as a set of components that the
- company plans to sell to others who want to build their own
- special-purpose robots, he said.
-
- The security and inspection robot can spot changes or movements
- in its environment, Burhanpurkar said, but can also relay video
- signals to a security guard at one central location.
-
- Cyberworks is a 10-employee company that concentrates on research
- and development and subcontracts much of its manufacturing work,
- Burhanpurkar said. He said the firm plans to sell its technology
- to other vendors to build into their own products rather than
- try to build a wide range of robots itself.
-
- The company has been developing its technology for about eight
- years, Burhanpurkar said. It has sold prototypes of its products,
- he added, and in the past year has done about C$1 million worth
- of business in Japan. Cyberworks is just beginning to market its
- products in North America, Burhanpurkar said. The company
- recently held a series of demonstrations for potential customers
- across the United States.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931007/Press Contact: Vivek Burhanpurkar,
- Cyberworks, 705-325-6110)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00013)
-
- Canada - Initial Public Offering For Eicon 10/07/93
- MONTREAL, QUEBEC, CANADA, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Eicon Technologies
- Inc., a maker of internetworking hardware and software, has
- announced an initial public offering and listed its stock on the
- two largest Canadian stock exchanges.
-
- Eicon is offering five million shares at C$10.50 per share to
- raise a total of C$52.5 million, said Harold Mueller,
- vice-president of operations. He said C$2 million of the proceeds
- will be spent on additional research and development work over
- the next several years.
-
- A second purpose of the offering is to raise the company's
- profile and enhance its image with customers as an established
- firm, Mueller added. Most of Eicon's competitors are public
- companies, he said.
-
- Eicon's stock began trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange and the
- Montreal Exchange on October 5. Mueller stressed that the stock
- offering is registered only for sale in Canada initially.
-
- Eicon's product line includes network gateways, routers, Systems
- Network Architecture (SNA) emulations, and wide-area networking
- (WAN) products. The company said it sells its products in more
- than 50 countries.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931007/Press Contact: Harold Mueller, Eicon
- Technologies, 514-631-2592, fax 514-631-3092)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00014)
-
- Control Data Systems Canada Buys Antares Electronics 10/07/93
- MISSISSAUGA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Control Data
- Systems Canada, Ltd., has purchased Antares Electronics Inc., a
- systems integration firm based in Ottawa. The takeover roughly
- triples Control Data Systems' Canadian operations.
-
- Control Data Systems is a systems integration firm born out of
- Control Data Corp., once a major mainframe computer maker. It has
- operated on its own for about a year and has been profitable,
- said Tom Ray, manager of the Canadian operation.
-
- The acquisition of Antares, a systems integrator whose strength
- lies in the personal computer field, will complement Control
- Data's historic strength in larger systems and help the company
- build its business in client/server computing, which requires a
- mixture of large-system and small-system expertise, Ray told
- Newsbytes.
-
- The deal also roughly triples the payroll of Control Data Systems
- Canada, which had about 75 employees before taking over
- 145-employee Antares.
-
- Control Data acquired Antares for C$6.9 million from the Hong
- Kong Bank of Canada after the Ottawa firm ran into financial
- trouble.
-
- Jan Kaminski, former president and chief executive of Antares, is
- to continue managing the operation, which will keep the Antares
- name and be run as a division of Control Data Systems Canada.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931007/Press Contact: Tom Ray, Control Data
- Systems Canada, 905-629-5122, fax 905-629-5169; Jan Kaminski,
- Antares, 613-228-5216; Charlotte Fransen, Control Data Systems,
- 612-482-4857)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00015)
-
- Xerox Enters Personal Computer Printer Market 10/07/93
- ROCHESTER, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Xerox Corp., has
- entered the personal computer printer market with the newly
- announced Xerox Personal Printer 4004.
-
- Expected to sell for under $299, the new "second generation"
- inkjet model is the least expensive printer in the company's
- history, and also the first to be sold in retail stores, a
- company spokesperson told Newsbytes.
-
- Targeted at home and small office users of IBM-compatible PCs, the
- 4004 is now available at The Wiz and Office America, two regional
- retail chains, with national distribution to follow soon,
- according to the company.
-
- "Xerox has never before sold a printer of this quality, at this
- price, in this channel," the spokesperson remarked. Xerox
- classifies the 4004 as a "second iteration" inkjet printer, he
- said. In comparison, competing inkjet printers are still in their
- "first iteration," he explained.
-
- The 4004 is smaller than other inkjet printers, but operates twice
- as fast, runs more reliably, and produces higher quality output, he
- asserted. The superiority of the printer is corroborated by
- independent test results, Xerox claims.
-
- The 4004 features a 128-nozzle print head that allows production of
- two lines of text or graphics in a single pass, yielding three
- pages of text per minute, according to the spokesperson. In
- comparison, competing printers use 50- or 64-print heads,
- Newsbytes was told.
-
- In addition, Xerox has placed the printer logic in the print head,
- instead of on a board within the printer where printer logic
- usually resides. When the user replaces the 4004's print head, the
- circuitry will also be replaced, preventing the circuitry from
- wearing down.
-
- By locating the logic in the print head, Xerox has also allowed the
- body of the 300-by-300 dot-per-inch (dpi) printer to be smaller, he
- added. Further, the 4004's print head shoots ink sideways from the
- edge ("edge shooting") instead of downward from the top ("roof
- shooting"), for higher quality text and graphics output.
-
- "The 4004's print head is attached to an ink reservoir that is
- about twice as large as a typical reservoir," the spokesperson
- emphasized. The ink reservoir lasts through about 1400 pages of
- printing in letter quality mode, and even longer in draft mode, or
- twice as long as the ink reservoirs of competing printers, he
- reported.
-
- In the mid-1980s, Xerox produced a series of dot matrix, daisy
- wheel, and color laser jet printers for the PC market under the
- Diablo brand name. However, the color printers were very
- expensive, and none of the Diablo products were ever sold in retail
- stores.
-
- The retail chains where the 4004 is currently being sold cover
- sections of the Eastern US. The Wiz covers metropolitan New York,
- Long Island, New Jersey, and lower Connecticut. Office America's
- stores are in Ohio, Virginia and North Carolina.
-
- "Xerox is close to announcing a third retailer, which we can't
- disclose yet. We also expect that the printers will soon become
- nationally available in retail stores," he told Newsbytes.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19931007/Reader contact: tel 800-ASK-XEROX, ext
- 4004; Press contact: Daniel C. Michen, Xerox Corp., tel 716-423-
- 3539)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00016)
-
- Geoworks Awarded Patent For User Interface 10/07/93
- BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Developers
- interested in writing applications for the new crop of consumer
- computing devices using the Geos interface will get their first
- look at the product when Geoworks hosts a developer's conference
- in Burlingame, California beginning October 25, 1993.
-
- Geoworks is the company that brought a Windows-like user
- interface (UI) to MS-DOS based systems and offers a suite of
- software products called Geoworks Ensemble that includes word
- processing, communications, and drawing applications along with
- several utilities, but without the need for the additional memory
- overhead required by Windows. It also includes a DOS program
- launcher.
-
- Now the company has received a brand new patent on its process of
- designing a user interface for mobile devices, office
- products, smart phones and interactive televisions that make up
- the category called consumer computing devices (CCDs). The GEOS
- interface isolates the application from the specific hardware
- platform on which it runs. That lets software developers move
- their programs to other GEOS-based CCD's without rewriting and
- recompiling the code. Compiling allows computer code to run
- faster than uncompiled programs.
-
- The company says the UI provides for application scalability,
- allowing the developer to modify the amount of visible UI
- components to fit the screen sizes of different devices or the
- needs of the people using the application. Data input can be by
- pen, mouse, keyboard, voice or touchscreen, although Geoworks
- spokesperson Karl Fields told Newsbytes the voice and touch
- interfaces probably wouldn't be available until at least 1996.
-
- Fields said the hardware scalability, new approaches to ways of
- inputting data, and the scalability of the user interface to fit
- the user's level of expertise were the basis for issuance of the
- patent and also what makes the GEOS interface unique.
-
- Geoworks says three companies, Tandy, Casio, and Sharp, are
- already taking advantage of the flexible UI technology. Tandy and
- Casio have teamed with Geoworks to create Zoomer, a personal
- digital assistant which has a small screen UI. The Sharp PT-9000
- Personal Information Assistant uses the larger Motif-like UI. On
- both products the interface is customized to meet the needs of
- the specific device without changing the underlying system
- software. Geoworks Chairman and CEO Brian Dougherty says that
- provides software developers with a much larger market
- opportunity than previously available when the application had to
- be written or modified for the specific hardware platform for
- which it was destined.
-
- Zoomer was first announced, and a prototype shown, at the Las
- Vegas Consumer Electronics Show in January 1993. Showgoers at the
- Chicago edition of the CES held in June of this year also got to
- see the product, which is expected to sell for $699 from Tandy
- and $895 from Casio. The two machines are compatible and the
- companies said the one inch by 4.2 inch by 6.8 inch, one pound
- product would ship in late September of early October. Sharp's
- two pound version is expected to ship in the fourth quarter.
- Pricing for Sharp's device has not been announced.
-
- Motorola says it is developing a version of its Electronic Mail
- Broadcast To A Roaming Computer (EMBARC) technology that is
- compatible with the GEOS operating system. When available that
- would give Zoomer users the ability to send and receive wireless
- faxes and electronic mail.
-
- The conference will have its two-day run at the Hyatt Regency in
- Burlingame, California on October 25 and 26. Attendees will have
- an opportunity to learn more about the UI and will receive a free
- copy of the new GEOS software development kit (SDK). Geoworks
- says the conference will focus on markets which have the most
- potential ad well as specific opportunities for developing
- vertical market applications. Geoworks has a toll-free number for
- conference registration. Conference cost is $595.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931007/Press contact: Deborah Dawson, Geoworks,
- 510-204-8550; Conference registration and info: Geoworks, 800-
- 524-1857, ext 1214)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(DEN)(00017)
-
- Wordperfect Settles Lawsuit Against BBS Operator 10/07/93
- OREM, UTAH, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Wordperfect Corporation
- says it has settled lawsuits against a bulletin board operator
- and beta tester who it said had illegally copied and
- distributed beta versions of its new word processor software
- Wordperfect 6.0.
-
- Wordperfect says it saw the software on a Toronto, Canada-based
- electronic bulletin board, then traced it to a beta tester in Texas.
- Company representatives teamed up with US Marshals and royal
- Canadian Mounted Police to confiscate computer equipment and
- unauthorized copies of the program from the two individuals.
-
- Beta testers are individuals and corporations who are provided
- advance copies of new software. They are asked to use the
- software and report any problems, or "bugs" they encounter so
- those problems can be corrected before the production version of
- the software ships. Beta testers sign agreements not to disclose
- what they learn about the software or provide copies to others.
-
- Wordperfect says it is serious about protecting the
- confidentiality of its beta level software "and will prosecute
- beta testers who violate our trust and bulletin board operators
- who pirate our software," according to Wordperfect Corporation
- Senior VP and General Counsel R. Duff Thompson. He says beta
- testing is crucial to the company's ability to produce high
- quality software products, and the company is determined to
- protect the integrity of the program.
-
- This is Wordperfect's first direct action against a beta tester,
- but the company has previously taken actions against pirate
- bulletin boards through the Business Software Alliance (BSA) of
- which it is a founding member. The company said it took this
- action directly because of its contractual agreement with the
- beta tester.
-
- The BSA has estimated loss of software sales in the US in 1992
- due to piracy reached nearly $2 million, and placed the worldwide
- loss at over $5 billion. "Software piracy continues to pose the
- single largest threat to the ongoing success of the legitimate
- software market in the United States and abroad," says BSA
- President Robert Hollyman. The organization encourages reports of
- software piracy to their piracy hotline.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931007/Press contact: Wordperfect Corporation, Ken
- Merritt, Wordperfect Corporation, 801-228-5059; Reader contact:
- Wordperfect Corp, 801-225-5000, fax 801-225-5077; BSA Piracy
- Hotline: 202-688-2721)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(DEN)(00018)
-
- Wordperfect Office 4.0a To Ship Late October 10/07/93
- OREM, UTAH, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Wordperfect Corporation
- has announced it will ship version 4.0a of its Wordperfect Office
- software suite for Macintosh, Windows, DOS, and Unix by the end
- of October. This is a major upgrade for the Unix version, since
- Wordperfect had not previously shipped a release 4.0 for that
- platform.
-
- Wordperfect Office is an integrated set of software that includes
- electronic mail, calendar, scheduler, and task management
- capabilities. The company says the release has improved
- performance and speed of about 10 percent overall, with a 30 to
- 50 percent increase in the areas of sending, reading, and deleting
- messages. The Windows version will also include native Windows
- printing for the Windows client that will eliminate the need for
- users to launch Wordperfect to print calendars, messages, or
- attachments.
-
- DOS and Windows users will be able to view most message
- attachments through Systems Compatibility Corporation's Outside
- In Viewing technology, including more than 160 Windows, Macintosh
- and DOS file formats. DOS users will be able to view more than 90
- DOS, Windows, and Macintosh file formats.
-
- The administration program of Wordperfect Office 4.0a will be
- sold with the client pack, and the server will be sold
- separately. That will allow users to install and maintain a
- single post office without having to purchase the server pack.
- The client/admin pack includes the program disks and
- documentation for a specific operating system and provides
- installation, setup and maintenance programs. The message server
- pack includes a message server for inter-post office
- communication and gateway support.
-
- The company says the database format used in version 4.0a is
- incompatible with the one used in Office 4.0 so they are offering
- a free upgrade to 4.0 users. Call Wordperfect's toll-free number
- for upgrade information.
-
- Wordperfect spokesperson Scott Robinson told Newsbytes the
- client/admin pack will sell for $495, while the server pack is
- priced at $295.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931007/Press contact: Brian Chapman, Wordperfect
- Corp, 801-228-5037; Upgrade info: Wordperfect Corp, 800-451-5151)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00019)
-
- Microsoft, 30 Others Support Apple's System 7 Pro 10/07/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Over 30
- companies have announced support for Powertalk, Apple Computer's newly
- announced mail and document management services portion of the System
- 7 Pro operating system for Macintosh. System 7 Pro will also include
- the latest release of the multimedia extensions, Quicktime version
- 1.6.1, and the company's automation and customization technology
- Applescript.
-
- Apple says System 7 Pro will not displace System 7.1, but
- claims the two operating systems are aimed at different
- markets. System 7 is aimed at the consumer market and the
- educational market grades K-12. System 7 Pro is targeted at
- business, higher education, and government, Apple said.
-
- Released in May of 1991, System 7, Apple claims, had an installed
- base of 8 million as of August of this year. Apple estimates
- that 30 percent of those users have stand-alone systems while
- the remaining 70 percent are connected with other computers and
- communications devices via networks or modems. System 7 Pro is
- aimed at that 70 percent.
-
- Apple suggests users will benefit from third party applications
- that take advantage of Powertalk, the new technology introduced
- by Apple for System 7 Pro. Powertalk will enable vendors to
- provide applications that will automatically sort and forward
- electronic mail, archive e-mail after reading, monitor
- databases and information sources, and create personalized
- newspapers by delivering preselected types of information
- directly to the user's desktop mailbox.
-
- Microsoft announced specific ways System 7 Pro users will be
- able to use Microsoft products with the new operating system.
- The company said the Apple Open Collaborative Environment
- (AOCE) integration in its products will facilitate workgroup
- communications by offering Send Mail functionality and other
- messaging features from within Microsoft applications.
-
- For example, if a user with a Powertalk mail-capable application,
- such as Microsoft Word, creates a document and needs to send it
- to colleagues, Word will send the file to the recipient's
- Powertalk mailbox. If the document is sensitive, AOCE server
- technology, known as Powershare, can ensure the document will
- only be seen by the appointed recipient, using message
- encryption and authentication technology. Powershare was also
- announced at the launch of System 7 Pro, but won't be available
- until early 1994, Apple said.
-
- "A Powertalk-savvy Word and Microsoft Excel in the future will
- streamline our current method of sending documents, and
- incorporating AOCE's digital signature feature in our word
- processing and spreadsheet documents is critical to raising the
- integrity of our future communications process," said Dave
- Reese, manager, CSU Network Technical Services, California
- State University Chancellor's Office.
-
- Microsoft's development team on its Microsoft Mail product is
- working together with Apple to provide both messaging and
- directory integration so companies can share information across
- platforms. The collaboration includes development of software
- to assure that MAPI-compliant applications in Windows can
- access Powershare servers and Macintosh applications that
- support AOCE can access current and future Microsoft servers.
- Microsoft said it will announce details of the agreement within
- 60 days.
-
- For the present, Starnine Technologies and Microsoft announced
- three connectivity products for users to share information
- between Microsoft Mail and AOCE technology, including Powertalk
- and Powershare messaging software. They are: Mail Link for
- Powershare/MS is a server-to-server gateway allowing Powershare
- users and Microsoft Mail for Appletalk network users seamless
- communication; Mail Link for Powertalk/MS, a personal gateway
- that allows transparent use of a Microsoft Mail account via the
- Powertalk interface; and Mail Link Directory Services for
- Powertalk for user access to Microsoft Mail, Quickmail, Unix,
- and MHS electronic mail addresses.
-
- In addition, Microsoft said all future business applications
- will include support for Quicktime. Currently, only Microsoft
- Word, Microsoft Excel, and Powerpoint offer Quicktime support,
- which includes the ability to embed Quicktime movies or
- animations into application files using Microsoft' Object
- Linking and Embedding (OLE 2.0) technology.
-
- In addition, support for Applescript is available now in
- Microsoft Excel. However, the next version of Microsoft Word
- will also include the script support so customers can automate
- tasks and customize their applications.
-
- Third party vendor CE Software of Des Moines, Iowa has also
- announced Quickmail AOCE for November release. CE claims
- Quickmail AOCE will use Powertalk to transparently send and
- receive mail from any AOCE service provider or client -
- including any existing Quickmail network.
-
- QuickMail AOCE will offer users drag & drop enclosures and the
- security of digital signatures and will also use the
- Applescript portion of System 7 Pro to drive other programs and
- respond to user-written scripts from programs such as Hypercard
- and Quickeys.
-
- Other companies announcing support for System 7 Pro include:
- Aladdin Systems, Articulate Systems, Axion, Banyan Systems,
- Beyond, Caravelle Networks, Chena Software, Claris, Crosswise,
- CTM Development, Cypress Research, Ex Machina, Full Moon
- Software, General Electric Information Services, Graphical
- Business Interfaces, Mainstream Data, Milum, Nisus Software, No
- Hands Software, Novell, Octel Communications, Pace Software,
- Quark, Radius, RSA Data Security, Shana, Snow Development
- Group, Southbeach Software, STF Technologies, Tetherless
- Access, Useful Software, and Wordperfect.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931007/Press Contact: Julie Briselden,
- Microsoft, 206-882-8080; Sue Nail, CE Software 515-221-1801;
- Janet McCauley, Apple Computer, tel 408-974-2042, fax 408-974-
- 6412)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00020)
-
- International Telecom Update 10/07/03
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Latin America made
- most of the world's telecommunications news, and most of it was
- good.
-
- In Mexico, TelMex announced its final estimates for new lines to
- be installed this year. The total, 813,847, is lower than last
- year, which the company credited to a reduction in its huge
- backlog. Partly because of that, and partly because of growing
- competition possible because Bell Atlantic may buy part of a
- competing cellular phone operation, SG Warburg downgraded the
- company's stock.
-
- MCI is also reportedly interested in an alliance to tap the
- Mexican market. It currently offers only calls to the US, but
- an agreement with new partners would have it selling long-distance
- services directly there. All these reports are important votes
- of confidence in the economy there.
-
- Banco Santander of Spain sold its 10 percent stake in Chile's
- EnTel to four Chilean companies for $55.7 million. Telefonica de
- Espana of Spain is the largest holder of EnTel shares. Generally,
- prices of telecommunications stocks rose on the nation's
- exchanges during the week.
-
- As promised, Argentina approved cuts in some international phone
- rates, ranging from a low of seven percent to a high of 53 percent.
- Earlier the country had warned businesses there they may lose
- their local service if they continue to use "dial-back" services
- in the US to bypass Telintar, which is owned by Telecom
- Argentina and Telefonica de Argentina. Volume discounts are also
- being offered as part of rate reductions, which regulators said
- were suggested by Telintar itself, and take place November 8.
-
- Brazilian investors called "dismal" Telebras' net profit from
- January-August of US$1.23 billion, nearly triple the figure of
- a year earlier, but the price of the stock stayed firm on
- hopes for political and economic reform. The government is being
- heavily criticized in the US for failing to liberalize the
- market and quickly privatize Telebras.
-
- In East Asia, the Philippines is starting to turn around,
- according to the World Bank, which estimated growth of 5.5
- percent per year is sustainable thanks to private investments in
- telecommunications, as well as transport and energy. The
- government also gave a digital cellular license to Globe Telecom,
- which is backed by Singapore Telecom and local businesses,
- rejecting another 15 applications and ruling it will limit the
- market to five firms.
-
- In New Zealand, Bell Atlantic and Ameritech of the US cut their
- stakes in Telecom New Zealand, in line with a 1990 deal with the
- government. Earlier, two major New Zealand industrialists had cut
- their stakes. Telecom is presently moving to cut staff so it can
- compete more closely with Clear Communications.
-
- Finally, Gilat Satellite Networks Ltd., of Israel, announced its
- first contracts in the Far East and Eastern Europe, saying it
- plans additional overseas expansion. Its OneWay VSATs were sold
- to China, through Hong Kong, Japan, and Poland. In the latter
- case, the buyer was GTech of the US, which will use the
- equipment to operate that nation's first lottery. GTech also
- operates lotteries in the US, including the new Georgia lottery
- in its home state.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931007)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00021)
-
- MTel To Support Microsoft At Work 10/07/03
- JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- MTel, owner of
- the SkyTel paging service and the pending Nationwide Wireless
- Network, signed agreements on both fronts.
-
- The company joined competitors in announcing support for
- a version of the Microsoft At Work operating system for use in
- hand-held computers. The company's SkyTel unit will develop
- software linking its system to the Microsoft platform's
- capability of linking to telephones, desktop computers,
- electronic mail, and other office systems. The two companies will
- also work with outside software vendors to incorporate the
- interface into applications.
-
- More importantly, perhaps, for the long term of the company, MTel
- announced strategic agreements for equipment suppliers on its
- two-way Nationwide Wireless Network, or NWN. The SkyTel network,
- despite recent improvements, remains essentially a low-speed, one
- way system, while the NWN is seen as a faster, two-way connection
- without wires.
-
- Agreements were signed with Motorola and Wireless Access
- Inc., to make personal messaging units for the NWN, and a
- separate deal was signed with Glenayre Electronics Inc., for
- infrastructure equipment. The company is also negotiating with
- Motorola for such equipment.
-
- The supply agreements were estimated to be worth $45 million, according
- to President Jai Bhagat. The total system will cost $150 million,
- with plans to have two-way wireless service available in the top 300
- markets in the US by mid-1995. MTel pioneered the technology of
- the NWN and was rewarded with a "pioneer's preference" by the
- Federal Communications Commission, giving it a head-start on licensing
- the system in 50 KHz of spectrum at about 940 MHz.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931007/Press Contact: David Allan, for MTel,
- 212/614-4239; Karen Andring, for Microsoft, 206/637-9097)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00022)
-
- Correction - Motorola EMBARC Deal With Reuters Non-Exclusive 10/07/93
- BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- In an October
- 5 story on Motorola's EMBARC, we reported the company had signed
- an exclusive deal with Reuters America Inc., covering Reuters'
- headlines on a wireless paging-type platform.
-
- According to EMBARC spokesman Mike Keating, who apologized for
- Newsbytes' receipt of inaccurate information, "Reuters did not sign
- an exclusive contract with EMBARC to provide wireless financial
- information services," he wrote. "The EMBARC/Reuters Financial News
- Service is an unique wireless financial service in content, scope, and
- frequency of delivery."
-
- Mr. Keating says Reuters can legally contract with other paging
- networks and wireless services, including MobileComm and SkyTel,
- for its headlines and wire.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931007/Press Contact: Mike Keating, for
- EMBARC, 312/988-2918)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00023)
-
- California Cancels Local Phone Call Competition Order 10/07/03
- SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) --The State of
- California's Public Utilities Commission rescinded its decision
- to allow local phone call competition and change rates, blaming
- its own decision to allow utility employees onto the "proprietary
- team" which created the new rules.
-
- The commission had ruled September 17 that short-haul long
- distance calls, called "local toll calls," could be made through
- long distance or local companies as of January 1, and hiked local
- rates to make up for potential lost revenue. Now any decision on
- local toll competition won't be effective until several months
- into 1994, the commission said.
-
- The commission said it's not changing its mind on the basic
- framework of the original order, however. That framework "is to
- allow local toll and other competition and realign rates." That
- framework, it said, was determined outside the tainted procedures
- of the proprietary team. Parties to the case are allowed public
- comment, but any communications between parties and
- decisionmakers, either in writing or verbally, cannot be made
- without formally notifying all other parties of what's being said
- or written. The commission promised an internal examination of
- the proceeding, and findings will be made public. That review
- will include another look at the "proprietary team" concept,
- which includes use of outside technical experts.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931007/Press Contact: CPUC, Dianne Dienstein,
- 415-703-2423)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LAX)(00024)
-
- Nomai Wins Round Against Syquest With Iomega's Help 10/07/93
- AVRANCHES, FRANCE, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Nomai claims it has won a
- victory in its ongoing battle with Syquest over whether or not
- it can make Syquest-compatible cartridges. The French company,
- together with support from its new US distributor Iomega, was
- able to post a bond large enough to prevent Syquest's gain of a
- temporary injunction from a UK judge against the compatible
- cartridges.
-
- Syquest has publicly made a series of accusations against
- Nomai, including an allegation that the cartridge technology was
- stolen by consultant Ravi Chari, once in the employ of Syquest,
- who now works for Nomai. Syquest has also claimed the cartridges
- actually damage Syquest drives. Syquest has also announced to its
- customers that it will not honor the warranty on the Winchester
- cartridge-based hard disk drives if Nomai cartridges have been
- used in the drive.
-
- Syquest sought a temporary injunction to halt sales of the
- Nomai cartridges based on two items: potential damage caused to
- Syquest customers by Nomai cartridges and its contention that
- Nomai was too small financially to handle potential damages
- that might accrue over the one to two years it will take the
- case to come to trial, should it lose to Syquest. Nomai
- representatives told Newsbytes they are especially pleased that
- Syquest lost on both counts.
-
- Nomai was able to prove that its cartridge return rate of four per
- thousand was well within the stringent European ISO standards
- for failure as well as US military standards. Officials at
- Nomai told Newsbytes their return rate is also lower than
- Syquest's overall product return rate, but declined to offer
- exact numbers for how much lower.
-
- Also, with the help of Roy, Utah-based Iomega, Nomai was able
- to post a bond or letter of credit equivalent to $750,000, a moved
- Nomai officials said Syquest didn't expect. Iomega became involved
- when Syquest filed suit against it as a distributor of the
- Nomai cartridges. Syquest officials were unavailable to comment
- on the bond.
-
- Marc Frouin, Nomai's president, said: "No one minds providing a
- letter of credit which he does not expect to have to pay.
- Syquest suggested that Nomai cartridges were not of high
- quality, but in the end it all came down to a question of
- money. We have no doubt we will win at trial, which we
- understand will take place within about one year. Our
- cartridges, which use IBM Diamond Like Coating (DLC) media,
- have now proved their superiority with a return rate of only a
- few per thousand. This, and the really good partnership we have
- with Iomega, creates an increasing demand for our products. The
- legal battle is a desperate action of Syquest, which objects to
- all competition."
-
- Syquest claims its technology is so specific that anyone who
- makes a compatible cartridge is in violation of its patents.
- The company began legal action against Nomai before the company
- had released its products, based on samples given to Syquest
- representatives when they were invited as guests to view the
- Nomai facility in France.
-
- Nomai claims it has sold over 100,000 Syquest-compatible
- cartridges worldwide and continues to gain market share.
- Nomai's main cartridge products are aimed at the Syquest 44 and
- 88 megabyte (MB) drive market. However, Iomega recently
- announced it would lay off 9 percent of its workforce, or about
- 100 people. The company has also announced significant price
- cuts in its product line. Iomega officials say the company is
- healthy, but management wants to keep costs down and prices
- competitive.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931006/Press Contact: Marc Frouin, Nomai,
- tel 33-33891600, fax 33-33891601; Tom Chung, Syquest, tel 510-
- 226-4000, fax 510-226-4114)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00025)
-
- TI's Own 486SX Subnotebook Microprocessors 10/07/93
- DALLAS, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Texas Instruments says it
- is introducing a new line of 486SX class microprocessors that will
- deliver clock-doubling speed for subnotebook computing.
-
- The new Potomac family of CPUs will provide up to 50 megahertz
- (MHz) of performance, and will incorporate an internal cache, 3.3 volt
- operation and extended battery life.
-
- According to research firm In-Stat, production of subcompact personal
- computers will jump from 371,000 units in 1992 to more than 4.3
- million units in 1997.
-
- "Convenience is what's driving portable computing," says Rick
- Bergman, TI personal computer systems product marketing manager. He
- says end users are becoming convinced that superportables are the
- best way to take their applications on the road. "That's why
- superportables will be the growth niche in the PC industry."
-
- The TI486SXLC2 16-bit chip is packaged in a small 100-pin quad flat
- pack (QFP), has 8 kilobytes (K) of internal cache, and occupies 47
- percent less board space than the 486SX 208-pin QFP. TI says system
- designers can place the CPU directly into existing designs, enabling
- significantly higher system performance without an increase in board
- space.
-
- The TI486SXL2 is a 168-pin 32-bit model that the company says is
- ideal for notebook systems and the energy-saving "green" PCs.
-
- Bergman says the chips predecessor, the TI486SLC, has enjoyed great
- acceptance in the subnotebook market. "Getting 486Sx performance
- into a superportable is the next design challenge facing OEMs
- [original equipment manufacturers]."
-
- TI says samples of the chips are now available in limited
- quantities, with volume production scheduled for the first quarter
- of 1994. Suggested resale pricing will range from $79 to $149 for
- volume quantities depending on microprocessor speeds.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931007/Press contact: Ted Jurnigan, Texas
- Instruments, 214-997-5467)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00026)
-
- Intelcom Third-Largest Competitive Access Phone Company 10/07/93
- DENVER, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- By buying two
- Teleport companies from Pacific Telecom, Intelcom says it's now
- the third-largest competitive access phone company, after MFS
- Communications and Teleport.
-
- Spokesman Phil Allen says the market has been rewarding an
- aggressive expansion plan by Intelcom by bidding up the price of
- its stock, making further acquisitions possible. The company was
- known as InterTel until last summer when it changed its name to
- avoid confusion with a telephone equipment maker, he noted.
-
- On the block are the Bay Area Teleport Inc., which Pacific
- Telecom itself had just bought in May, 1991, and UpSouth, which
- operates teleports in Atlanta and New Jersey and was purchased
- more recently.
-
- In addition to its satellite system, Bay Area Teleport also
- operates a 300-mile digital wireless and fiber-optic network in
- the San Francisco Bay area. Intelcom President Bill Maxwell says
- that acquisition gives his company the backbone network it needs
- to link 10 cities and put its network before 8 million potential
- customers. He also noted that the deal looks good because the
- State of California is encouraging local competition. Intelcom
- also gets Bay Area's turnkey network business and its new VSAT
- hub in Mexico city. The company said it's maintaining Bay Area's
- management.
-
- Allen noted that Intelcom already operates fiber networks in
- Denver, Cleveland, Dayton, Ohio, and Charlotte, North Carolina,
- and is in the process of building networks in Phoenix and
- Colorado Springs, Colorado. It recently announced further
- expansions in Ohio and Kentucky. "Clearly Wall Street likes the
- Competitive Access Provider story," he noted. "They also like the
- connectivity between our networks and uplink capabilities. We
- will use long haul fiber to link the satellites we have or plan
- to acquire. We also can connect to local loop customers via
- fiber, and we want to exploit the growing international market
- for voice and data, using the Teleports."
-
- The deal is due to close in early 1994 and is based on an
- average price of $14.30 per Intelcom share, plus $200,000 in
- cash. After closing Pacific Telecom will own 850,000 out of
- Intelcom's 15.6 million shares outstanding on a fully diluted
- basis.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931007/Press Contact: Brian M. Wirkkala,
- Pacific Telecom, 206-696-0983Intelcom Group, Phil Allen (303)
- 572-5984)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00027)
-
- IBM Licenses Cellular, Modem Interface 10/07/03
- MANHASSET, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Spectrum
- Information Technologies Inc., won another victory for its patents
- when IBM said it signed a marketing and licensing agreement with
- the company.
-
- At issue is the Axcell, an interface between cellular phones and
- the modems on personal computers which allows the modem to work
- on a wireless call much as it would on a wired call. The Axcell
- will now be given an IBM ThinkPad Proven tag, which signifies
- that it meets the product and service standards of IBM.
-
- Spectrum already has deals to market ThinkPad peripherals made by
- Megahertz and Apex Data, which licensed Spectrum's patents. AT&T
- also has a license for Spectrum technology, covering all its
- units, including NCR and McCaw Cellular. However, not all players
- in the market recognize Spectrum's broad patent claims. The
- company is engaged in a legal battle with Data Race over
- technology like that of the Axcell, and it's in a legal fight
- with Microcom concerning error-correction used on wireless lines.
-
- Motorola has also not yet licensed Spectrum's patents. Spectrum
- also recently applied for a patent on a technology which allows
- cellular operators to distinguish between a voice and data call,
- which would let them price the two calls differently. Spectrum's
- stock, which was worth $3 per share a few months ago, has since
- doubled in price.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931007/Press Contact: Don Kessler, Spectrum,
- 516-627-8992)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00028)
-
- Longest Digital Phone Call 10/07/93
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Following on from the successful
- launch of its Groupe Speciale Mobile (GSM) digital phone service in
- Australia, and the launch of the Metrodigital subset service in the
- UK, Vodafone has used both networks to feature in what it claims is
- almost certainly the longest distance digital mobile to mobile call
- made to date.
-
- The call was made as one of the highlights of the joint network
- opening facilities, with a call being made from Sydney Harbor
- Bridge to London's Tower Bridge. The phones used in the link were
- two Motorola 5200 series "flip phones."
-
- Five winners of a national (UK) Vodafone competition were flown to
- Australia, accompanied by Terry Barwick, Vodafone's director of
- corporate affairs. All made calls back to the UK, to actress
- Michelle Collins ("Cindy" from Eastenders) and Steve Backley, the
- Olympic javelin thrower.
-
- At the opening of the Australian Vodafone network, the group's
- managing director, Chris Gent, said that the link-up was historic.
-
- "This is the first internationally made call featuring roaming
- between two mobile phone networks on different continents. Once
- again, Vodafone is delighted to be at the leading edge of mobile
- phone technology," he said.
-
- (Steve Gold/19931007/Press & Public Contact: Vodafone - Tel: 0635-
- 33251)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00029)
-
- CD-ROM Drive Doubles As Stand-Alone CD Player 10/07/93
- FREMONT, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Many of the new
- PCs today include CD-ROM drives. Increasingly though, users do not
- want to abandon their investments in existing hardware, and
- as a result, look towards CD-ROM upgrade kits to convert their
- existing PCs to multimedia machines. Hoping to address those
- potential users, Media Vision has introduced the Memphis
- multimedia upgrade system.
-
- The Memphis also doubles as a stand-alone audio compact disc
- player. According to the company, the upgrade system simplifies
- the installation process and "gives consumers an integrated unit
- for CD-ROM access." Pre-recorded CDs can also be played while
- the PC is switched off, or when the Memphis chassis is
- separated from the PC.
-
- A company source told Newsbytes that the Memphis is the
- result of a number of studies with users and user groups to find
- out what they liked and disliked about existing upgrade kits.
- The company found that around 40 percent of users were using
- the kits for audio CD playing. As a result, Memphis can be used
- as a stand-alone CD player without the need for the PC to be
- switched on.
-
- Said the source: "The speakers were designed with sound in
- mind. It sounds like a hi-fi system. You have a CD-quality
- sound card, why not have audio-quality speakers?"
-
- Another result of user feedback is the stylish packaging.
- The source told Newsbytes, "Memphis has a really striking,
- modern design. It can double as an audio system as well as
- playing computer multimedia CDs." For example, in a family
- room or a student dorm room. It is also intended to be a
- "less intimidating" unit.
-
- The system consists of a chassis with CD audio controls, two
- detachable speakers, an interface card that installs inside the PC,
- a variety of pre-recorded CD-ROM titles, and all required cables.
- Users can either install and configure the interface card
- themselves, using the company's QuickStart software, or they
- can have it installed by their local dealer.
-
- In announcing the system, Greg Reznick, Media Vision's vice
- president of marketing, said, "In the past, any multimedia
- upgrade confronted consumers with a collection of pieces that
- for many was too complicated, to difficult, and too daunting
- to face. Media Vision's Memphis system has changed this. Now it
- is easier, quicker, and more convenient to add multimedia
- capabilities to a PC."
-
- A single cable connects the system's chassis to the computer's
- back panel. Each speaker is connected via a four-foot cable.
- The company says that, when space is limited, the speakers
- can remain attached to the chassis and the entire unit can be
- placed under the computer monitor. However, better stereo
- separation is possible with the speakers detached and set
- upright up to eight feet apart.
-
- For stand-alone CD operation, the power cord of the chassis is
- plugged into any AC socket, without the device needing to be
- plugged into a PC.
-
- The Memphis features high-fidelity 16-bit 44.1 kH stereo sound;
- a double-speed CD-ROM drive, capable of transferring data at
- 300 Kb-per-second with 350 millisecond access time; a
- 20-voice FM synthesizer; a software controllable mixer; game
- port; and an industry-standard SCSI (Small Computer Systems
- Interface) CD-ROM controller interface. Built-in MIDI (musical
- instrument digital interface) support allows control of other
- MIDI music instruments via the on-board MIDI connectors, or
- the system can be controlled from an external music keyboard.
-
- Memphis comes bundled with two multimedia CD titles:
- Broderbund Software's Arthur's Teacher Trouble and Compton's
- Interactive Encyclopedia.
-
- The company says that the system is 100 percent compatible
- with existing multimedia sound standards, including AdLib,
- Sound Blaster, and Pro Audio 16. It also meets the Multimedia
- PC Council's requirements for MPC Level 2 compliance and
- supports Windows 3.1, Windows NT, OS/2 2.1, and NextStep.
-
- Memphis is priced at $999, and is expected to become available
- in the US in mid-October.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19931007/Press Contact: Elizabeth Fairchild,
- 510-623-5856, Media Vision; Barbara Holtz or Abigail Johnson,
- 415-802-1850, Roeder-Johnson Corp.)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00030)
-
- Broderbund's Print Shop Deluxe For Mac 10/07/93
- NOVATO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 OCT 7 (NB) -- Just a month
- after introducing The Print Shop Deluxe Companion for
- Windows, Broderbund Software has announced The Print
- Shop Deluxe for Macintosh.
-
- Priced at $49.95, the company claims that The Print Shop Deluxe
- allows users to create their own personalized designs or choose
- from hundreds of ready-made layouts to create a variety of
- documents, from letterheads and greeting cards to posters and
- banners.
-
- In announcing the product, Wade Person, product manager, said:
- "This program combines the best of two worlds -- the intuitive
- graphical interface of the Macintosh and the inherent design
- intelligence of The Print Shop Deluxe family. (The product) has
- something for everybody -- even a beginner can create
- sophisticated projects with the utmost ease. And more
- experienced Mac users will appreciate the wealth of features
- and options for customizing their designs."
-
- The company says that the software includes more than 300
- object-oriented graphics, hundreds of ready-to-use layouts, 30
- TrueType fonts, plus support for additional TrueType fonts
- including Type 1 (with Adobe ATM 2.0 or later).
-
- Text can be shrunk, stretched, rotated, flipped, scaled and
- customized into more than 3,500 combinations -- all without
- "jaggies," claims Broderbund.
-
- Graphics can also be customized by adding such features as colors
- and shading and users can import graphics in PICT format or use
- the Exporter to convert Print Shop Deluxe graphics to EPSP and
- PICT formats for use in other applications.
-
- Minimum system requirements are a Macintosh with 68020
- (or higher) microprocessor; System 7.0; a high density disk drive;
- a hard drive with 6 megabytes (MB) of free space for installation
- - the program occupies 4MB after installation; and 4MB of RAM.
-
- Also, The Print Shop Deluxe Sampler Collection, Business
- Collection and Comic Characters Collection of fonts are available
- for about $29.95 each. The company says that the Sampler and
- Business Collections each include more than 125 graphics and a
- dozen fonts.
-
- The Print Shop was first introduced in 1984. The company claims
- that it has worldwide sales of more than six million units.
-
- In early September, Newsbytes reported that the company had
- begun shipping The Print Shop Deluxe Companion for Windows-
- based personal computers for $39.95. The Print Shop Deluxe
- Companion can be run independently or in combination with The
- Print Shop Deluxe. The company also said that the Print Shop
- Deluxe Companion includes more than 350 color graphics and
- 25 TrueType fonts.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19931007/Press Contact: Dawn Montoya,
- 415-382-4637, Broderbund Software Inc.)
-
-
-