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- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00001)
-
- UK - Mercury Looks To Bypass BT Lines 11/22/93
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- After seeing its UK telecom
- market share grow from zero to around 10 percent in ten
- years, Mercury Communications has announced plans to shed its need
- for links with British Telecom to support its indirect customers.
-
- As in the US with non-local long distance companies, Mercury relies
- on BT lines into subscriber's houses and offices to route calls to
- its nearest network node. The area of inter-network connection fees
- has been the subject of intense wrangling between the two companies,
- with Oftel, the British government-appointed telecom regulator,
- having to step in and set a rate.
-
- The success of Mercury in the UK telecom market has meant, however,
- that Oftel has eased off from its role in internetwork charge rates,
- meaning that Mercury has begun to pay the "market rate" for such
- interconnections. Industry experts have suggested that this increase
- in inter-network connection fees payable by Mercury may be behind
- Mercury's decision to hike some long distance rates a few months
- ago.
-
- Mercury officials have made a formal statement this week of the
- company's intention to adopt a similar system to Ionica for the
- delivery of its network direct into subscriber's premises. Ionica, a
- fully licensed telecom service provider which plans to commence
- operations some time next year, will bypass BT lines entirely by
- routing its cable head end links into the subscriber's home or
- office using a radio link.
-
- This avoids the need, Newsbytes notes, to have to tear up the roads
- for the final few yards of line into a subscriber's premises. It's
- this local loop provision that has proven to be the stumbling block
- for free market competition in the telecom arena, owing to the high
- cost of such installations.
-
- Now Mercury says it wants to do the same. According to Mike Harris,
- Mercury's chief executive, Mercury has the license to be able to
- offer a radio link into the home or office for the last section of
- its cabling. He said that a decision on which technology to be used
- had yet to be taken.
-
- Lord Young, Cable & Wireless' chairman (C&W is Mercury's parent
- company), was equally enthusiastic. "The great prize for us in doing
- it the last mile is that we save the interconnect charges," he said,
- adding that, by using a radio link, the high cost of the interconnect
- link could be avoided.
-
- (Steve Gold/19931119/Press & Public Contact: Mercury Communications
- - Tel: 44-71-528-2000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00002)
-
- Mitsubishi To Ship 64M DRAM Chip 11/22/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Mitsubishi Electric has plans
- to release samples of a 64-megabit dynamic random access memory (DRAM)
- by the end of this year, and plans to produce the chip in quantity
- at a future date.
-
- Mitsubishi will be the second firm to release a 64-megabit DRAM
- following NEC.
-
- Mitsubishi Electric's 64-megabit DRAM is based on a 0.35-
- micron CMOS process technology. The chip has 140 million
- transistors on its surface and consumes very little
- electricity -- 3.3 volts. The access time is also fast at
- 32 nanoseconds.
-
- Mitsubishi Electric will sell this state-of-the-art chip
- to makers of personal computers, workstations and digital television
- sets, considered a lucrative future market.
-
- Meanwhile, Mitsubishi Electric is trying to restructure
- its memory chip production units. The firm will concentrate
- manufacturing of 4-megabit and 16-megabit chips at its
- plants in Kochi and Saijyo, respectively. In this way, it
- hopes to reduce production costs.
-
- Mitsubishi also plans to increase production of 16-megabit DRAM in
- the middle of 1994. Currently, Mitsubishi is shipping 400,000 to
- 500,000 units of the chip per month and will raise this amount to
- over one million units monthly next year.
-
- In other news, many Japanese electronics makers including Mitsubishi
- are suffering from slow sales of home electronics products.
- As a result, they plan to reduce their winter "bonus" payment to
- their employees.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931116/Press Contact: Mitsubishi
- Electric, +81-3-3218-2332, Fax, +81-3-3218-2431)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00003)
-
- Comdex - "Imaginaria" Screen Saver Package From Claris 11/22/93
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- A highly
- imaginative collection of animated screen savers for Windows,
- appropriately entitled "Imaginaria," has been unveiled by Claris
- Clear Choice at Comdex.
-
- "Imaginaria" is not only artistically impressive, but technically
- pragmatic, said John Socha, one of three creators of the
- package, and Bruce Chizen, VP and general manager of Claris Clear
- Choice, in a meeting with Newsbytes at the show.
-
- The 15 surrealistic story modules and 11 transition screens in
- the package -- ranging from soothing nature scenes to uproarious
- cartoons -- are the work of award-winning multimedia artists John
- Mason and James Marsh of Carmel, CA.
-
- Socha, an extensively published author and recognized expert on
- DOS and Windows, gave technical guidance to the project to
- prevent the difficulties with compatibility and disk space
- requirements that have plagued PC screen savers of the past.
-
- "Imaginaria" implements a proprietary compression scheme that
- stores more than 10 megabytes (MB) of sound, graphics, and
- animation in only 3 MB, Socha told Newsbytes.
-
- The package also incorporates an adjustable "animation priority"
- for sharing computer resources, to ward off potential system
- conflicts and make room for background operation of processes
- such as printing and data communications.
-
- Also provided are password protection for assuring security when
- the system is unattended, and a hot key for instantly concealing
- the screen from curious passers-by.
-
- Socha's authoring credits include "PC World DOS 6 Complete
- Handbook," "DOS 6 Power Tools," and three other books about the
- PC operating environment.
-
- In a demonstration, Socha and Chizen entertained Newsbytes with
- several story modules and transition screens from "Imaginaria."
- One module brings the user along on a tranquil journey through
- Yosemite Falls, complete with lush greenery, grazing deer,
- twittering birds, and a flowing waterfall.
-
- Another, "Midnight Sonata," follows the full moon as it arcs
- across the night sky, to the accompaniment of Beethoven's
- "Midnight Sonata."
-
- Other modules will give you a close-up look at prehistoric
- dinosaurs, a present day rain forest, exotic fish swimming along
- through a coral reef, or the stars and planets of the galaxy.
-
- If you want to have your funnybone tickled, you can view the
- antics of Kitty Katz, a pair of table tennis-playing iguanas, and
- other members of an offbeat crew of cartoon characters called
- "The Associates."
-
- Or if you're in another mood altogether, you can venture into
- the dark and spooky "Chem Lab," where a human skull laughs out
- loud, skeleton dances toward a coffin, a ghost plays the piano,
- and a world of other eerie surprises await.
-
- The transition scenes in the package are just as innovative,
- featuring personalities like Paw Verity, an opera-singing
- bulldog; T. Rexx, a tuxedo-wearing dinosaur; and Strumm'n
- Cowpoke, a singing cowboy.
-
- Chizen told Newsbytes that, like other titles in the Claris Clear
- Choice series, "Imaginaria" represents the mission of the
- consumer-oriented software unit to use the resources of a large
- company in bringing the creative efforts of small,
- entrepreneurial software shops successfully to market.
-
- The Clear Choice unit was established by Claris in November,
- 1992. Claris also produces a separate series of business
- software. During 1994, the Clear Choice unit intends to
- aggressively expand its product line, according to Chizen.
-
- In addition to "Imaginaria," the Clear Choice lineup
- currently includes "Retrieve It!," "Brushstrokes," "Power To Go,"
- and "From Alice to Ocean," a photojournalistic essay of a woman's
- solo eight-month-long trek across the Australian outback.
-
- Also at Comdex, Claris has introduced a Windows version of "From
- Alice to Ocean," a package previously available for Macintosh
- only.
-
- "From Alice to Ocean" and "Imaginaria" each fall into the
- "edutainment" heading under "personal enhancement," one of the
- four product categories that Clear Choice plans to support,
- Chizen said. Additional headings under "personal enhancement"
- include games, home education, and content-based.
-
- The other three categories on the Clear Choice agenda are
- "primary productivity" (integrated, database, graphics and word
- processing), "utilities" (desktop utilities, mobile utilities,
- and desktop enhancement), and "personal productivity"
- (organization tools, color painting).
-
- "Imaginaria" and the new Windows version of "From Alice to Ocean"
- are both being shipped. "Imaginaria" is priced at $49, and
- "From Alice to Ocean" is $69.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19931119/Reader contact: Claris, tel 800-
- 3CLARIS; Press contact: Natalie Lingo, Claris Clear Choice, tel
- 408-987-7487)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(ATL)(00004)
-
- Comdex - Adult Titles Appear 11/22/93
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Adult movies have
- long been a feature of the Consumer Electronics Show, where they
- have their own separate showcase at the Sahara Hotel. This was
- the first time such publishers visited Comdex offering CD-ROM
- products, and they were mixed in with the general run of
- publishers in the South Annex, which was dedicated to multimedia
- this year.
-
- Their wares ranged from simple reproductions of movies, to an
- adult interactive version of the kids' game "rock, paper, scissors."
- Some, like Laurence Miller of Dream Machine, said they were
- looking for a way to enter the CD-ROM market and found they
- could add something new to erotica, like the ability for players
- to paste themselves into scenes. Others, like Zachary
- Holland of Vivid, among the largest adult video players at CES,
- merely said they liked the sales potential in the new medium,
- calling it "the same as video."
-
- The last may have been the key marketing point, although The
- Interface Group was reportedly embarrassed by the porn presence
- at its computer show. Adult titles were the first big sellers
- among videotapes, and dominated the sales charts early-on.
- Adult services also were the first into pay-per-call services,
- and still represent the largest presence in that technology.
-
- Many vendors, like Ali Joene of Digital Playground, said they were
- anxious to tap into existing markets, noting that Blockbuster
- Entertainment has begun renting CD-ROMs and they are thus getting
- a lot of interest from video stores. Others, like distributor
- Thomas Gaida, said they were opening new sales channels with the
- discs like computer swap meets, while their traditional video
- channels were ignoring the discs.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/199931119)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SYD)(00005)
-
- Hewlett-Packard Australia Sets Financial Records 11/22/93
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Hewlett-Packard has carved
- a juicy net profit from a flat Australian economy, hauling in
- AUS$28.6M (US$18.9M) for financial year 92/93, a 160 percent
- improvement on the prior year's net profit of AUS$11M.
- Revenue for the year was AUS$496M (US$327M), a 34 percent increase
- over the prior year.
-
- "We've substantially improved our productivity," said HP Australia
- MD Bill Hilliard, adding that the profit and revenue increases came
- with the same staffing level as 1992. Despite the booming performance,
- HP won't be putting on extra people in the coming year either,
- though staff lost to normal attrition would be replaced.
-
- This year's revenues had a touch of 'puff' due to orders written in
- 1992 not being delivered until 1993 financial year. Hilliard said
- product delivery delay was a problem area which had been improved
- this year. Exports constituted ten percent of revenues, with 85
- percent of this coming from HP's Australian Telecommunication
- Operation (ATO) which makes testing equipment for digital
- communications lines - a worldwide boom business at the moment.
- ATO grew more than 120 percent in the year.
-
- Hilliard estimates that the Australian subsidiary will have less
- spectacular growth in revenues and profit during the coming year,
- predicting increases of around 25 percent for both. Computer products,
- which includes HP's highly successful laser and inkjet printer
- lines was the big money spinner this year. The medical division grew
- 73 percent. Hilliard said HP was heading toward open systems and
- client/server computing.
-
- (Stuart Kennedy and Computer Daily News/19931119)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(SYD)(00006)
-
- Australia - Big Changes In Toll-Free Phoning 11/22/93
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- There's no doubt about it -
- introducing the second carrier to Australia has meant new and better
- services for phone users. The latest change is to the toll-free
- number system.
-
- The regulatory body Austel has decreed that the existing 008 prefix
- for toll-free numbers will change to 1-800 over the next two years.
- The reason given is that it will "make us fall in line with
- international standards." Some speculated that this could lead to
- difficulties when people viewing an overseas television
- program or reading an overseas magazine respond to it, only to
- get a plumbing supply house in Melbourne, for instance, which just
- happened to have the same 1-800 number, but in different countries.
-
- Optus (the second carrier) hasn't introduced toll-free services
- yet, but expects to do so with a huge advertising campaign at the
- end of this year.
-
- While Optus wasn't able to say what services it will be offering,
- Telecom has introduced one called HomeLink. The service
- allows domestic phone users to have their own "mini toll-free"
- service for friends and family members. The cost is a flat
- Australian 10c above the call cost. Better than that,
- it costs nothing to have the service. Of course, the number
- issued to you is your responsibility to police, so Telecom
- calls part of it a PIN (Personal Identification Number) to
- emphasize the security aspect.
-
- The HomeLink number takes the form 1-800-90-NNNN-PPPP where
- NNNN is the last four digits of your existing number and PPPP
- is the PIN. In some cases the 90 might be 91.
-
- One might ask why a HomeLink 1-800 number can't be used for business
- instead of paying the startup and monthly fees for a full 1-800 service.
- The answer is that Telecom won't stop you, but a full 1-800 service
- has shorter numbers and the calls cost significantly less than toll
- calls (though more for local calls).
-
- Telecom's business 1-800 service normally costs AUS$160.00 to set up,
- but this fee is being waived until the end of November. For
- intra-state calls only, the monthly fee is AUS$10 and for national
- service, $20.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19931119/Contact: Austel on phone +61-3-828 7300)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(WAS)(00007)
-
- Maryland Game Maker Microprose Reports Net 2Q Loss 11/22/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Hunt Valley,
- Maryland-based Microprose, the simulation-oriented game maker
- which is expected to merge with Spectrum Holobyte, has reported a
- second quarter 1994 fiscal loss of $12.7 million or just over
- $1.90 per share, down drastically from a $1.19 million or 18-cent
- per share profit for the comparable period in 1993.
-
- The company experienced a significant operating loss, but it also
- had some extraordinary losses due to downsizing efforts including
- a one-time $4.9 million loss relating to the company's decision
- of a purchase agreement for German-based United Software GmbH.
- Because of some irregularities in the purchase agreement
- Microprose is now exploring other distribution options in the
- German market which by itself accounted for about five percent of
- Microprose's 1992 holiday sales.
-
- Gross for the quarter were a substantial $9.48 million, but this
- was down by 30 percent compared to the same period last year. The
- firm attributed this to the fact that the comparable 1992 period
- saw a large number of new product releases.
-
- Another $2 million of the second quarter loss was due to
- professional fees and expenses directly related to the pending
- merger with Spectrum Holobyte or ongoing financial needs or
- business activities.
-
- (John McCormick/19931118/Press Contact: Ronald J. Bueche, chief
- executive officer Microprose, 410-771-6722, or fax, 410-785-8963)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(WAS)(00008)
-
- Second Quarter Egghead Results Down 25 Percent 11/22/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Computer software
- retailer Egghead has reported second quarter 1994 financial
- results show a 25 percent drop in earnings to $500 thousand,
- or three cents per share, down from $700 thousand or four cents
- per share for the comparable period in fiscal 1993. This drop in
- earnings was on a 12 percent increase in sales to $156.7 million.
-
- Direct sales to corporate, government, and education users
- accounted for $87.2 million for the quarter, up $7 million or
- eight percent from the previous year, while retail store sales
- jumped 12 percent for a total retail sale gross of $62.4 million,
- up a full 19 percent from the earlier period. Egghead
- operates 194 retail stores and also sells through mail order.
-
- The company says that lowered earnings on increased sales were
- due to lowered profit margins that were the result of lowered prices
- across the board to improve its competitive stance. Egghead
- management sees a continuation of lowered margins for the second
- half of the fiscal year. But a look at the balance sheet shows
- that selling, general and administrative expense also increased
- by 10 percent for the first half of fiscal year 1994.
-
- Despite earning three cents per share for the quarter ending
- October 16, 1993, Egghead actually lost 9 cents per share or
- $1.558 million for the 28-week fiscal half ending on the same
- date. That compares to a profit of $2.4 million or 14 cents per
- share for the comparable period in 1992.
-
- (John McCormick/19931118/Press Contact: Carolyn Tobias, Egghead
- Software, 206-391-6191)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00009)
-
- Fulcrum Technologies Launches Public Offering 11/22/93
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Fulcrum Technologies
- Inc., a maker of document indexing and retrieval software, has
- announced a public offering and the beginning of trading of its
- shares on the National Association of Securities Dealers NASDAQ
- trading system in the United States.
-
- Fulcrum's sole shareholder, Datamat Ingegneria dei Sistemi S.p.A.
- of Rome, is selling 1.75 million shares of Fulcrum, leaving
- Datamat with about 74 percent of Fulcrum, a spokeswoman for the
- company said. The underwriters have a 30-day option to buy
- another 262,500 shares to cover over-allotments.
-
- The initial share price is US$11 per share, making the expected
- proceeds from the offering in the neighborhood of US$19.25
- million. Fulcrum officials said they plan to use some of the
- money to repay outstanding long-term debts to Datamat and
- short-term bank debt, and to complete the company's purchase of a
- minority interest in Exoterica Corp., an Ottawa-based maker of
- desktop publishing, design, and testing software with annual
- revenues of about $3 million.
-
- The balance of the proceeds are to be used for working capital
- and to finance product development and expansion of Fulcrum's
- sales and marketing operations.
-
- Fulcrum was founded in 1983, and was acquired by Datamat in March
- of 1990. The company has slightly more than 100 employees and
- annual revenues of about $150 million.
-
- Underwriters for the offering are Pacific Growth Equities in San
- Francisco and SoundView Financial Group in Stamford, Connecticut.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931120/Press Contact: Barbara Johnson, Fulcrum,
- 613-238-1761; Wendy Rajala, for Fulcrum, 905-338-8532; Public
- Contact: Pacific Growth Equities, 415-274-6800; SoundView
- Financial, 203-462-7292)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00010)
-
- Lotus Adds Multimedia Features To 1-2-3 11/22/93
- CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Lotus
- Development has introduced a multimedia edition of its
- 1-2-3 for Windows spreadsheet software, and a utility that can
- make "movies," with sound, of operations performed on the PC.
-
- 1-2-3 Release 4 for Windows: Multimedia Edition has several
- features that support its claim to multimedia capability. The
- first is Multimedia SmartHelp, a set of learning tools that Lotus
- has offered for some time. These tools include an animated and
- narrated guided tour of the software, animated clips that
- describe the way the program works, an audible proofreader, and
- on-line documentation.
-
- The package also comes with Lotus Sound, Lotus Media Manager, and
- Lotus Annotator. Lotus Sound lets users create, edit, save, and
- play sound as .WAV files. Lotus Media Manager is used to preview
- multimedia files, and Lotus Annotator makes it possible to create
- and embed multimedia notes in Windows applications.
-
- The final multimedia feature in 1-2-3 Release 4 for Windows:
- Multimedia Edition is ScreenCam, software which can record
- operations a user performs on the computer -- much as a macro
- recorder records actions -- add audio such as a running
- commentary on what the user is doing, and then play the "movie"
- back.
-
- ScreenCam will initially be sold as part of the multimedia
- edition of 1-2-3 for Windows, but will later be offered as a
- stand-alone project and bundled with other Lotus applications,
- the company said.
-
- A spokeswoman for the company said the stand-alone version of
- ScreenCam can be expected in the first quarter of 1994, and other
- Lotus applications will be released with ScreenCam during the
- coming year.
-
- In the meantime, customers who buy 1-2-3 for Windows: Multimedia
- Edition with ScreenCam can use the utility with other Windows
- applications as well as the spreadsheet. They can also create
- ScreenCam movies that involve more than one application, the
- spokeswoman said.
-
- ScreenCam requires a PC with at least a 386 processor and about
- one megabyte (MB) of memory beyond what the application with
- which ScreenCam is to be used requires. To use the audio
- capabilities, the PC must also have a sound card or portable
- sound device, microphone, and speakers. ScreenCam can be used
- without audio if the PC is not equipped for it, the spokeswoman
- said.
-
- ScreenCam movies take less than one megabyte of disk space per
- minute, the spokeswoman told Newsbytes.
-
- 1-2-3 Release 4 for Windows: Multimedia Edition needs at least a
- 386 processor, four MB of memory with a two MB swap file, Windows
- 3.1, a VGA 16-color graphics adapter and monitor, and a compact
- disk read-only memory (CD-ROM) drive with a transfer rate of at
- least 150K per second, the company said. Some features call for a
- sound card, speakers, or headphones, and a mouse is recommended
- but not required.
-
- The suggested retail price of the multimedia 1-2-3 for Windows is
- $495, Lotus said, and upgrades from all other releases and from
- competitive spreadsheets will cost $129.
-
- Lotus has no public plans for a multimedia edition of 1-2-3 on
- the Apple Macintosh or any other hardware, a company spokeswoman
- said, but a further announcement is likely in 1994.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931120/Press Contact: Dana Lieske or Stacey
- Breines, McGlinchey & Paul for Lotus, 617-862-4514; Public
- Contact: Lotus, 800-343-5414)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00011)
-
- Comdex - Horizons Technology LAN Management 11/22/93
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Horizons Technology
- has unveiled a new suite of LAN (local area network) management
- software. Launched at Comdex Fall '93 last week, LAN Auditor 3.0 is
- claimed to be a head above competing LAN management packages, as it
- allows network inventories across different operating systems and
- hardware platforms, specifically DOS, Windows (for Workgroups), OS/2
- and the Mac System operating system.
-
- In use, the package is designed to automate the LAN administrator's
- task of keeping a detailed record of hardware and software on a
- network, as well as stand-alone PCs linked into the network.
-
- According to Bernard Harguindeguy, Novell's Enterprise Products
- Division, v3.0 of LAN Auditor allows a greatly expanded number of PC
- (DOS and Windows) audit functions to be completed.
-
- "With LAN Auditor 3.0. Horizons Technology extends the capabilities
- of the Netware management system to the workstation, improving our
- customer's ability to centrally manage all aspects of their
- enterprise," he explained.
-
- One interesting feature of LAN Auditor is a structured query
- language (SQL)-like report generator that allows users to design
- their own customized reports. Once created, these reports can be
- accessed online, printed out or even exported to an external file or
- program on the network.
-
- According to Horizons Technology, LAN Auditor allows even novice
- network users to "interrogate" and even change the report using
- drag-and-drop menu options. Customizable features include page
- layout, font manipulation, header/footer annotation, printer set-up
- and printer preview.
-
- A 50-workstation site licence for LAN Auditor costs $495, rising to
- $1,580 for a 400-user licence. Users of version 2.1 can upgrade to
- v3.0 for between $55 and $110, while an annual support and
- maintenance contract for all users costs $95.
-
- (Steve Gold/19931122/Press & Public Contact: Horizons Technology -
- Tel: 619-277-7100; Fax: 619-292-9439)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00012)
-
- Christmas Shopping? See December's PCTV 11/22/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Victoria Smith,
- hostess of the New Hampshire-based PCTV weekly television
- program, will spend December trying to help last-minute holiday
- shoppers find hot ideas to stuff those computer user's stockings.
-
- PCTV is produced and transmitted by satellite live and delayed on
- Thursdays, then carried by a number of cable and independent
- broadcast TV stations around the country as well as the Mind
- Extension University educational channel.
-
- December 2, 1993 PCTV (93-48) "Holiday Gift Ideas: Young Adults."
- Victoria Smith looks at a number of holiday gift ideas for older
- children and adults. Among these are Spinnaker Software's
- Calendar Creations, a software package for creating and printing
- custom wall calendars, and Master Cook II, for gourmet recipes
- and nutritional analysis.
-
- December 9, 1993 PCTV (93-49) will cover "Holiday Gift Ideas:
- Edutainment." Victoria Smith shows us Inline Software's Swamp
- Gas/USA and Swamp Gas/Europe, "edutainment" software for teaching
- geography. Edmark shows us Kid Desk Family Edition, a "desktop"
- for children that gives them their own workspace while locking
- them out of parents' files, and we look at more holiday gift
- ideas for the computer user.
-
- (John McCormick/19931122/Press Contact: Wayne Mohr, Executive
- Producer PCTV and MacTV, 603-863-9322)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00013)
-
- COMDEX - One-Chip Video Processor To Be Used By 15 OEMs 11/22/93
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- At Comdex,
- AuraVision has unveiled the VxP500 Video Record and Playback
- Processor, a product that incorporates far-reaching PC video
- processing functionality in a single chip.
-
- Also at the show, Creative Labs, Dolch Computers, Diamond
- Computer Systems, and a dozen other vendors have introduced the
- first PC video boards to be based on AuraVision's new integrated
- circuit (IC).
-
- Microsoft, Adobe, Asymetrix, Xing Technologies, Mathematics,
- Canyon, and Lenel have announced software support for the
- chip. SGS-Thomson, C-Cube, and Zoran have also hopped aboard the
- AuraVision bandwagon, developing reference designs for building
- complete PC compression systems with the VxP500.
-
- The new VxP500 supplies all the capabilities of a traditional
- board-level video processor and more, explained Steve Chan,
- president and founder of AuraVision, in an interview with
- Newsbytes.
-
- The chip is equipped with hardware acceleration capabilities that
- allow full-motion (30-frame-per-second) video to be displayed at
- full-screen resolution without the usual visual degradation, said
- Mark Hopper, sales director for the Fremont-CA-based startup
- company.
-
- The product also features a unique time scaling feature that
- eliminates the "jerkiness" of motion common to other systems,
- he maintained.
-
- Although separate audio hardware is still needed, the VxP500
- allows simultaneous capture of video and audio in real time,
- added Tommy Lee, senior applications manager. In contrast,
- other processors require video and audio to be captured in
- different sessions.
-
- Also unlike competing video processing systems, the VxP500 supports
- color keying as well as chroma keying, according to Lee. Color
- keying refers to overlaying graphics on top of video, while chroma
- keying refers to overlaying video on top of graphics.
-
- By integrating all video processing into a single IC, the VxP500
- supplies cost savings to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs)
- that will in turn be passed on to end users, Lee told Newsbytes.
-
- The price of the VxP500 to OEMs is less than $100, and boards
- based on the chips will sell to end users for as low as $300, he
- estimated. "In comparison, (other) boards now on the market
- cost $400 or more, and the quality of their output isn't nearly
- as high," he asserted.
-
- The VxP500 can capture video in RGB, Palettized VGA, YUV, and YUV
- compressed formats under Microsoft Video for Windows, and in RGB,
- YUV, and Palettized VGA formats under AVI. Support is provided for
- all AVI video codecs, including JPEG, MPEG, Indeo, Cinepak, and
- Captain Crunch.
-
- The VxP500 also supports VGA, NTSC, and PAL input, and VGA, NTSC,
- and Control/L (LANC) videotape output. NTSC support is available
- for both the composite video and S-Video formats. The chip
- permits display of up to 16 million colors at up to 1024-by-786
- resolution, he said.
-
- In a demo for Newsbytes, Lee blew up a full-motion video clip to
- full-screen (640-by-480) VGA resolution from half-screen
- (320-by-240) resolution using two different boards, one based on
- the VxP500, and the other based on traditional video technology.
-
- When the non-VxP500 board was used, the full-screen picture
- became grainy and ghost-ridden, and the motion uneven. With the
- VxP500-based board, though, the picture and motion remained
- smooth and even.
-
- Lee informed Newsbytes that the VxP500 achieves a high-quality
- full-screen picture through a combination of hardware
- acceleration, or "hardware zoom," and filtering. While most
- other systems use a method called "pixel duplication" for
- filtering, the VxP500 employs "vertical interpolation."
-
- AuraVision's hardware zoom technique allows the picture to be
- expanded without graininess, he explained. The use of vertical
- interpolation reduces "motion artifacts," or ghosts, and also
- promotes more realistic colors.
-
- Video for Windows software, available to OEMs for bundling with
- VxP500-based boards, makes it possible to capture audio from a
- separate sound board into a .wav file and to combine the video and
- audio in an interleaved format for synchronized playback, he
- said.
-
- The chip's time scaling feature comes into play when a system
- lacks sufficient bandwidth to store 30-frame-per-second video,
- according to Lee. Video processing systems deal with this
- situation by dropping some of the frames. Time scaling is
- designed to drop frames in a smooth and even way.
-
- In a press conference at Comdex, Orchid Technologies rolled out a
- whole family of VxP500-based boards, including the Vidiola Pro/D
- full digital video editing; the Vidiola Pro/C for "cuts only"
- video editing without hard disk video storage; and the Vidiola
- Premium, a daughter board supplying MJPEG (motion JPEG)
- compression and decompression.
-
- Aside from Orchid, Creative Labs, Dolch, and Diamond, other OEMs
- announcing VxP500-based boards at Comdex included U-Max Data
- Systems, Micro Star, Hauppauge Computer Works, CEI, GVC
- Technologies, VisionEx, Micro Star, ASCO Corp., Leadtech Research,
- Lung HWA Corp., and Resonant Research.
-
- In addition to Microsoft's Video for Windows, the following
- third-party software is available to OEMs for bundling with the
- boards: Premier for Windows and Photoshop from Adobe; Compel and
- MediaBlitz! from Asymetrix; Lenel's Multimedia Manager; Xing
- Technology's Picture Prowler and MPEG Prowler; Mathematica's
- Tempra Pro authoring package; and ICap video capture software
- from Canyon.
-
- The VxP500 is the first product to be released by AuraVision, a
- company established by Chan in July 1992. Chan had previously
- served as corporate VP and general manager at Chips &
- Technologies, VP of engineering for Headland Technology, VP of
- ASIC design for LSI Logic, and staff engineer at Ampex Corp.
-
- AuraVision was formed with the financial backing of a venture
- capitalist team led by William Tai, general partner of The Walden
- Group; John Hawkins, partner at Burr, Egan, and Deleage; and
- private investors, including Dave Jackson, founder of Altos
- Computer Systems and lead investor in both Wyse Technology and
- Informix.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19931122/Reader contact: AuraVision, tel 510-
- 440-7180; Lisa Kimura, Technology Solutions for AuraVision, tel
- 415-617-4514)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00014)
-
- Germany - Big Blue To Slash 6,000 From Payroll 11/22/93
- STUTGART, GERMANY, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- IBM has announced plans to
- shave 6,000 jobs from the company payroll in Germany over the next
- two years. The move, the company claims, is in line with IBM's plans
- to shed around 35,000 staff from the payroll by the end of next
- year. IBM currently has around 260,000 on the payroll.
-
- In Germany, 4,500 jobs are expected to disappear from a total of
- 25,000 in Germany during 1994, followed by a further 1,500 jobs
- in 1995.
-
- IBM said in a prepared statement that the cuts were not forced upon
- the company by the current difficult market in Germany. IBM claims
- that the cutbacks have been planned for some time. "This is part of
- a broad strategy of bringing down expenses. It's not a local
- economic situation," a spokesman said.
-
- Details of the cuts filtered out from IBM Germany late last week,
- when Edmund Hug, the company's country president, announced the
- plans to employees and then to the press. He said that the cuts
- formed part of plans for IBM's European operations that had been
- worked out since Louis Gerstner, the company's president, joined Big
- Blue in April of this year.
-
- (Sylvia Dennis/19931122/Press & Public Contact: IBM Deutschland -
- Tel: +49-7-111-333; Fax: +49-711-785-0)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00015)
-
- Microsoft To Centralize European Distribution In Ireland 11/22/93
- MUNICH, GERMANY, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Following the well-trodden
- path of many other technology companies, Microsoft has announced
- plans to centralize its European distribution operations to Ireland.
-
- The move, according to the software giant, will take advantage of
- the pool of available employees in Ireland, as well as the tax
- breaks that the Irish government is reknowned for offering to
- companies willing to relocate operations to the country.
-
- According to Microsoft, the new distrubution center will be located
- in Dublin, in one of the industrial parks of the city. Plans call
- for the distribution center to be operational by the middle of next
- year, with full-scale distribution transferred from individual
- country operations in Europe by the end of the year.
-
- The move is strategic for Microsoft, Newsbytes notes. Microsoft
- recently centralized its European manufacturing operations into
- Ireland and, at the time, promised that it would centralize its
- distribution from individual country operations once the
- manufacturing facility had stabilized its output.
-
- (Sylvia Dennis/11931122/Press & Public Contact: Microsoft UK - Tel:
- +44-0734-270001)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00016)
-
- UK - Cellnet's Success With Consumer Cellular Tariffs 11/22/93
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- After just over a year of
- operations in the consumer marketplace, Cellnet, one of the two
- cellular networks operational in the UK, is claiming that its
- strategy has been a tremendous success.
-
- To date, Cellnet claims, more than 200,000 people have signed up to
- the consumer tariff, known as Cellnet Lifetime. This pushes
- Cellnet's subscriber levels, as at the middle of November this year,
- to 818,500.
-
- "When we launched Lifetime in November last year, a lot of observers
- considered our target of 200,000 by the end of 1993 to be very
- ambitious," explained Robert Warner, Cellnet's newly installed
- managing director, who added that the company had hit its target a
- clear six weeks ahead of schedule.
-
- While Vodafone is claiming that it has around 55 to 60 percent of
- the overall cellular market in the UK, Cellnet has been extremely
- aggressive in the consumer (as distinct from the business)
- marketplace, Newsbytes notes. As a result of the company's strategy
- of offering cellular dealers (and their customers) the best deals,
- the company now claims it has more than 60 percent of the consumer
- tariff marketplace.
-
- (Steve Gold/19931122/Press & Public Contact: Cellnet - Tel:+44-71-
- Tel 0753-504814)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00017)
-
- Grants Aid Developers, Computing Companies 11/22/93
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Recently announced
- grants and fellowships will aid software developers and give
- marketing boosts to some workgroup computing companies.
-
- Aldus Corporation has announced it will award three Additions
- software developers more than $100,000 in grants to help fund the
- design, implementation, and marketing of Additions for Aldus
- Pagemaker. The company says the grants will average from $30,000
- to $50,000.
-
- Additions technology provides a specialized language of commands
- and queries that enables developers to tailor Pagemaker for special
- publishing needs. The developers can write complex code modules
- and then communicate with Pagemaker via commands that can
- perform any action that a user can do manually. Additions could be
- considered mega versions of macros.
-
- The companies selected for the grants are Integrated Software,
- Zephyr Design, and Group Logic Inc. Aldus says factors such as a
- proven record in developing add-on products and a keen
- understanding of customer requirements in the advertising and
- workgroup publishing markets, rated highly in the selection process.
- Each recipient will receive half of their award in advance, with the
- balance due when the Addition is completed.
-
- Karen Howe, Aldus senior product marketing manager, says the
- company hopes the program will stimulate the creation of third-party
- Additions that would have taken Aldus too long to develop or would
- not have ever been developed at all.
-
- The grants program is still open to interested parties.
-
- The Groupware 94 Boston conference has announced its Emerging
- Technologies Fellowship Program designed to provide a glimpse
- into the future of workgroup computing, stimulate market
- growth, and give a marketing boost to about 30 young
- workgroup computing companies.
-
- The fellowships provide the opportunity for promising young
- workgroup companies to exhibit alongside major vendors and
- provide them with access to venture capitalists, potential investors,
- corporate partners, and users looking for new and innovative
- approaches to business problems.
-
- The group is offering full and partial fellowships. A full fellowship
- covers $2,250 of the exhibition fee for a 10 ft by 10 ft booth at
- Groupware Boston as well as one complimentary admission to the
- Groupware 94 Boston conference. The group says the admission is a
- $995 value. The booth will be in a designated emerging
- Technologies aisle.
-
- Fellowships are still available to companies who product is not
- commercially available or was released after September 1, 1993.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931122/Press contact: Barbara Burke, Aldus Corp,
- 206-628-6594, Bob Bierman, The Conference Group, 602-661-1261;
- Reader contact: Lisa Wise, Aldus Corp, 206-343-7692 (for grant info),
- The Conference Group, 602-661-1260, fax 602-661-0449 (fellowship
- info)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(DEN)(00018)
-
- Cellular Phone Thieves May Have Your Number 11/22/93
- DENVER, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Authorities say
- the cellular phone industry spends $5 million annually to stop
- sophisticated cellular phone fraud, and your phone might be the
- culprint's next target.
-
- US West Cellular spokesperson Wendy Carver-Herbert says the
- criminals are starting to look at smaller cities. "As the carriers
- crack down in major metropolitan areas like Los Angeles and New York,
- the criminals begin looking at other markets where enforcement isn't
- as tough yet."
-
- Cell phone providers are reluctant to provide information about how
- many cell phones are reported stolen, and local and federal law
- enforcement agencies don't track that data, but admit that cell phone
- fraud is rampant nationwide. Authorities say it's difficult to catch the
- thieves because of the sophisticated electronic techniques used by
- the crooks that could mean you won't even know you are a victim
- until it's too late.
-
- Denver-based Secret Service agent Bill Bresnahan told Newsbytes
- the Secret Service is tasked with investigating cellular phone fraud,
- and says his agency has investigated several incidents of cell phone
- fraud in the Rocky Mountain local area. Bresnahan and Carver-
- Herbert say the crimes take various forms. The simplest form of theft
- is the actual stealing of a phone. More insidious, and less likely to
- be noticed immediately, involves gaining access to a cell phone and
- obtaining the unique Electronic Serial Number assigned to every
- phone, then leaving the phone in place. The ESN is then
- programmed into another phone, a technique known as "cloning."
- Herbert she says that is currently the biggest fraud problem
- industry-wide.
-
- Agent Bresnahan describes an even more sophisticated technique in
- which the criminals use sophisticated electronic monitoring
- equipment to capture the ESN and phone number right out of the
- airways from phones operating nearby. The numbers are then
- programmed into stolen cell phones to make expensive long
- distance calls. Bresnahan says investigative techniques include
- monitoring cell activity for an unusually high number of long
- distance calls, and the use of direction finding equipment to track
- down the illicit phones while they are in operation.
-
- Herbert and Bresnahan say there are some steps that cell phone
- users can employ to help foil phone theft or catch thieves. They
- encourage cell phone users to step up the physical security they
- provide their phones. "If you are going to leave your car with a
- parking attendant or parked on the street for several days, remove
- the handset and the antenna to avoid drawing attention," says
- Carver-Herbert. She also recommends activating the electronic lock
- when you are away from the phone.
-
- They also recommend monitoring your cell phone bill closely. If you
- see calls you are sure you didn't place, contact your service provider
- immediately, and if your phone is stolen the company can block calls
- from that number. US West Cellular has programmed its computers
- to watch for anomalies in each customer's calling pattern as another
- way to foil this high tech crime, and the company employs security
- personnel to contact customers when calls fall outside the normal
- pattern.
-
- Another problem cell service providers encounter is what they call
- "subscription fraud," in which false billing information is provided,
- then the phone is used until the billing system catches up with them.
- That can take as long as 30 days. Crooks also use a technique called
- "tumbling," or using a phone programmed with a false ESN and your
- phone number to place a long distance call in another carrier's
- service area. By the time the two computers compare information the
- calls have already been completed. The carriers are beginning to
- install computer programs that can instantaneously check with the
- home service area to determine if the number is legitimate and will
- immediately terminate the call if the ESN is bogus, but that
- technology is not yet in wide use. In the meantime some carriers
- require you to get advance permission to use your cellular phone in
- their service area when you're on the road.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931122)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00019)
-
- Court Rules Against AT&T In Tariff Filing Dispute 11/22/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- US District Court
- Judge Stanley Harris dismissed suits AT&T launched in February aimed
- at making MCI, WilTel and Sprint file the same detailed tariffs
- it must file on contracts with large customers.
-
- AT&T initiated the suit after winning a court case last year in
- which it overturned Federal Communications Commission rules that
- gave the commission authority over who should file tariffs. AT&T
- has long complained that, since it must release details on
- proposed contracts with big customers, its rivals do not have to
- release the same details and they can therefore undercut AT&T's
- prices and take business in a way AT&T cannot. All this goes back
- to the concept that AT&T is a "dominant carrier" in the long
- distance business, a concept AT&T says is no longer valid. The
- company has an estimated 60-65 percent of the US long distance
- market.
-
- "Our view is this is a procedural development in a lengthy
- process, and there's been no ruling" on the merits, AT&T
- spokesman Jim McGann told Newsbytes. "We're free to pursue this
- at the commission, and we're reviewing that option now. We would
- have to request a proceeding of some kind before them." A press
- release from Sprint, however, praised the dismissal, noting that
- Sprint tariffs are on file with the FCC -- "are and always have
- been."
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931122/Press Contact: Jim McGann, AT&T, 202/
- 457-3952)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00020)
-
- Spectrum Settles Patent Fight With Microcom 11/22/93
- NORWOOD, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- In another
- indication of the direction former Apple chairman John Sculley is
- taking at his new company, Spectrum Information Technologies
- Inc., Spectrum announced a settlement of its patent litigation
- with Microcom Inc.
-
- Spectrum had sued Microcom, charging that Microcom's MNP 10
- error-correction protocol violated a patent it held on SPCL,
- a forward error-correction protocol also used on wireless
- systems. In its suit, Spectrum had claimed that its patent
- covered all error-correction on wireless systems, while Microcom
- argued that MNP 10 was a completely separate system not covered
- by Spectrum's patents.
-
- In the settlement, jointly announced by both companies, the two
- firms formed an alliance and jointly licensed each others'
- patents in the error-correction area. This will help Spectrum
- since most technical experts consider MNP 10, which can adjust
- the speed of a connection based on line conditions, a superior
- solution to V.42, the standard used on wired modems. MNP 10 can
- increase the speed of a connection when line conditions clear,
- while V.42 can only slow a connection when it encounters noise.
-
- Microcom also said it had formally acknowledged the validity of
- Spectrum's patents, and said it would work with Spectrum to
- create reliable fast-data services for notebook computers, PDAs,
- and other mobile devices.
-
- The legal issue, namely the claims Spectrum has made regarding
- the breadth of its patent protections, remains in dispute. The
- company is engaged in ongoing litigation with Data Race Inc.
- involving similar claims on a different patent, for a cellular-
- modem connector. In that suit, too, Spectrum claims its patents
- cover all such connectors. At the Fall Comdex show in Las Vegas,
- Data Race released its own connector, which it says does not
- infringe on Spectrum's patents.
-
- In the headline on its press release on the settlement, Spectrum
- said that US District Court Judge Buckmeyer had declared
- Spectrum's basic patent valid, but Microcom spokesman Dave Powers
- questioned that assertion. He noted that the case ended on a
- settlement, and that no decision on the validity of the breadth
- of Spectrum's claims was made in the case. The patent suit
- against Data Race continues to be pending.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931122/Press Contact: Spectrum, Dae Chang,
- 516/627-8992x136; David Powers, Microcom, 617/551-1955)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00021)
-
- Correction - Briefing On The Govt's NII Infrastructure 11/22/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- In a Comdex story
- regarding Clinton Administration official Larry Irving's
- appearance by satellite at a Byte Magazine press breakfast
- which ran on this wire on November 17, Newsbytes erred in giving
- his Internet address.
-
- Mr. Irving, in charge of the Administration's planning for the
- National Information Infrastructure, sometimes called the "data
- superhighway," had urged that his audience contact him directly,
- over the Internet, with comments and questions concerning policy
- decisions to be taken on the NII over the next six months.
-
- Newsbytes had given Mr. Irving's address as lirving@nist.doc.gov,
- and this was in error. The correct address is
- lirving@ntia.doc.gov -- our thanks to Ted Carpenter for following
- up on this. The NIST is the National Institute for Standards and
- Technology, a separate Department of Commerce agency formerly
- known as the Bureau of Standards. The NTIA is the National
- Telecommunications and Information Agency, the government's chief
- planning agency for technology and telecommunications.
-
- Newsbytes regrets the error.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931122)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00022)
-
- Apple Ships Multimedia Authoring Package 11/22/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Apple is shipping the
- Apple Media Tool, a new multimedia authoring package aimed at
- non-programmers.
-
- To create a title with Media Tool, users work within a screen metaphor,
- upon which they can lay out the various text, graphic and movie elements
- of their title, including PICT graphics, QuickTime movies, and sound
- files in AIFF, SND and WAVE formats. Screen elements are assembled as
- icon aliases in a holding area resembling a regular Finder folder.
-
- Dragging an alias from the folder onto the screen expands it to a full
- graphic, movie or sound element, and double-clicking it launches a
- user-chosen editing application, such as Photoshop for image-editing,
- Director for animation editing, etc. Media Tools is bundled with
- VideoFusion 1.5, a $649 QuickTime-editing program.
-
- Used in conjunction with the Media Kit (also new), which is aimed at
- multimedia developers and includes Media Tool, a user can port their
- title to the Windows platform.
-
- To provide interactivity in titles, Media Tool elements can be
- associated with user actions, such as a mouse click. For example,
- you can assign a movie to play whenever a button is clicked. A title
- can feature any number of screens, arranged in a Map section of
- Media Tool. The Map view shows thumbnails of each screen and any
- links between them.
-
- The Media Kit, designed for programmers, uses an object-oriented
- program language and scripting to allow translation to Windows format.
- The Apple Media Tool (including VideoFusion) lists for $1,195, but has
- an introductory price of $995. The Apple Media Kit (including Media
- Tool and VideoFusion) lists for $3,995. For Media Tool info, call
- 800/371-0612, and for Media Kit info, call 800/282-2732.
-
- (Chris Oakes & Computer Currents/19931122)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00023)
-
- New Macintosh Products 11/22/93
- SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Here is a brief
- look at some new Macintosh products on the market: File Clerk
- software, ColorScript Laser1000 printer, PowerBook 145B Plus Pack,
- Americans in Space CD-ROM, new Adobe Typefaces.
-
- Nisus Software (Solana Beach, Calif.) announced File Clerk, software
- due this fall designed to make it easier to track down information on
- data-packed Macs.
-
- To organize and retrieve files, users navigate through a hierarchy of
- keywords assigned to files, selected through pop-up menus. These
- descriptive keywords are pre-assigned to files using File Clerk.
- The file selection list shrinks as more keywords are chosen in a search.
- This list can be filtered by creator, volume and creation/modification
- date as well. Once found, the file, whether text, graphics, sound or
- video, can be previewed or launched. Suggested list will be under $100.
- For more information, call 619/481-1477.
-
- ColorScript Laser1000
-
- Is this the first "desktop" color laser printer? QMS is shipping a
- $12,499 color laser printer, and claiming a price that is half
- that of competing products. It features four-color 300dpi laser
- printing, color matching capabilities and PostScript Level 2
- emulation. It prints 24-bit-color images as halftones, instead of
- as continuous-tone color images, with a printing speed of
- two to eight pages per minute. Sixty-five resident typefaces and
- 12MB of RAM are standard. Mobile, Ala.-based QMS can be reached at
- 800/523-2696 or 215/633-4300.
-
- PowerBook 145B Plus Pack
-
- This PowerBook 145 package, distributed through such channels as
- Circuit City, Montgomery Ward, Best Buy, Staples, and Officemax,
- combines a 4/80 PowerBook 145B with an internal Global Village
- Powerport Bronze send/receive fax/modem and a software bundle.
- The software includes Touchbase Pro, Datebook Pro, Macintosh PC
- Exchange, AppleLink, and Zterm terminal emulation software. Prices
- in the retail outlets are expected to be between $1,549 and $1,699.
- For info, call Apple (Cupertino, Calif.) at 800/776-2333.
-
- Americans in Space
-
- This new CD-ROM turns your Mac into Mission Control for American
- space flights, allowing you to view crew photos, hear audio clips,
- and watch video or animation of the American space program. It
- includes over sixty minutes of video clips, including the last
- launch of the shuttle Challenger, and more than 90 minutes of
- narration. There are also nearly 600 images, including crew and
- mission photos and artists' renditions of the space station
- Freedom. Suggested retail price is $69.95. For more info, call
- 206/622-5530.
-
- New Adobe Typefaces
-
- Twenty-eight new Adobe (Mountain View, Calif.) typefaces include
- designs from type foundries such as ITC, Monotype and Berthold,
- bringing the total number of typeface packages in the Adobe Type
- Library to over 360. Adobe has also announced the new Sanvito
- and Caflisch Script multiple-master typefaces for the Macintosh.
- Multiple-master faces allow users to modify many characteristics of
- the typefaces to suit their preferences. Through December 31,
- Sanvito and Caflisch Script and the other multiple-master
- typeface packages are available for $89 through Font & Function,
- Adobe's recently updated type catalog. After December 31,
- Sanvito and Caflisch Script will be available for $185 and $95
- respectively. For more info, call 415/961-4400.
-
- (Chris Oakes & Computer Currents/19931122)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TYO)(00024)
-
- Japan - New Cable Service To Link To PCs 11/22/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Tokyu Cable TV is getting
- ready to launch a hybrid telecommunication service, which is
- a combination of cable TV signals and personal computer-based
- telecommunication. This industry first is expected
- to start in April 1994.
-
- Tokyu Cable TV, owned by Tokyu Electric Railways, has
- already been providing cable TV service to its registered
- users along the railways. These people will also be the
- first recipients of the new service.
-
- Tokyu Cable TV will link with Tokyu Electric Railways'
- computer network, named "Seran" to provide news and information
- at first, and links to value-added networks in the future.
-
- No other technical details are available at this time.
- Tokyu Cable TV will submit an application to the Japanese
- Ministry of Posts & Telecommunication in early 1994 in order
- to get permission to start the service. The Japanese
- Ministry is expected to accept it because the new Hosokawa
- government is pushing the deregulation of businesses
- in Japan.
-
- Other telecommunication firms are also planning to create
- multimedia telecommunications services in Japan. For example,
- NYNEX and Tomen are planning to set up a cable TV network
- that combines with regular telephone services.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931122/Press Contact: Tokyu Cable
- TV, +81-45-912-1205)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00025)
-
- China - Pocket Beeper Factory 11/22/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Tokyo-based Casio Computer has
- signed agreements with two Chinese firms to set up joint
- ventures in China designed to produce pocket beepers and
- other consumer devices. The papers will be signed in December,
- at which time the business is also expected to start.
-
- Casio will link with the Chinese firms to create two joint ventures --
- one will be created with Japan's Mitsui Bussan Trading
- and China's Shanghai Kokumyaku, which is affiliated with China's
- Telecommunication Ministry. The other joint firm will be
- created with China's Rocho Electric and Japan's Nichimen.
-
- The first firm will be capitalized with US$1.5 million,
- which will be paid 21 percent by Casio, 19 percent by Mitsui
- Bussan and 60 percent by the Chinese firm. The second firm will
- have more money to start -- US$7.5 million -- with
- 29 percent from Casio, 21 percent from Nichimen Trading,
- and 50 percent from Rocho Electric.
-
- These new firms will manufacture pocket beepers. At
- Rocho Electric's plant, Casio will also manufacture Chinese word
- processors and cash registers. In the future, Casio wants to
- manufacture portable phones and mobile phones at these plants.
-
- Some 150,000 pocket beepers are expected to be shipped from
- these two firms in the first year.
-
- Demand for pocket beepers has been growing rapidly in
- China. This is because more foreign firms are creating a
- base of operations in China.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931122/Press Contact: Casio
- Computer, +81-3-3347-4830, Fax, +81-3-3347-4669)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00026)
-
- Improper Grounding Major Cause Of System Failures 11/22/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- According to a
- recently published report from CBEMA, the Computer and Business
- Equipment Manufacturing Association, 90 percent of information
- technology equipment failures are due to internal causes, and
- three-quarters of those causes are related to poor grounding.
- CBEMA has published a new set of guidelines establishing
- recommended methods for grounding power supplies and computer
- systems.
-
- The Power Interface Committee of CBEMA has determined, according
- to Committee Chairman John Roberts of IBM, that inadequate
- electrical grounding is a major cause of problems in many
- sophisticated computer systems, especially distributed processing
- or networked installations.
-
- Committee recommendations are provided free of charge to
- interested readers in the form of a report titled "Guidelines for
- Grounding Information Technology Equipment. The report is
- available by sending a request to: Christine Zvonkovich, CBEMA,
- 1250 Eye St., N.W., Suite 200, Washington, DC 20005, or faxing to
- 202-638-4922.
-
- CBEMA represents the leading US information technology
- providers with combined sales of nearly $300 billion annually.
-
- (John McCormick/19931119/Press Contact: Jan Goebel, CBEMA 202-
- 626-5725, fax 202-638-4922)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00027)
-
- ****LSI Logic, Zenith Join To Develop Digital Cable TV Chips 11/22/93
- MILPITAS, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Digital cable
- television is gaining in public attention as the industry becomes
- increasingly connected with telecommunications. Now, in an
- alliance that the two companies hope will "accelerate the
- deployment of high-performance, cost-effective digital cable
- television systems," Zenith Electronics Corp., and LSI Logic Corp.,
- have teamed up to develop advanced integrated circuitry for
- digital cable TV boxes.
-
- John Taylor, spokesman for Zenith, told Newsbytes that the
- alliance involves, "a joint development effort for a chip that
- will be inside of the digital cable boxes of tomorrow."
-
- Under terms of the deal, Zenith will work with LSI Logic to
- develop a chip to be used in digital decoders based on Zenith's
- 16-level vestigial sideband (16-VSB) digital transmission
- systems.
-
- Taylor said that there is no joint venture planned, and that
- it is, "their engineers working with our engineers."
-
- Zenith claims that these systems increase the amount of digital
- information that can be transmitted on cable TV systems
- without additional video compression. This will expand the
- capabilities of digital cable TV systems beyond the expected
- 500 channels to 1,000 or more channels.
-
- Zenith says it plans to use LSI Logic's chip in its digital cable TV
- decoders, which are scheduled for introduction in 1994. The
- company also plans to license its 16-VSB technology to other
- manufacturers of digital decoders. LSI Logic plans to sell
- the chips as application specific standard products (ASSPs) or
- customized ASSPs to Zenith licensees.
-
- The 16-VSB digital transmission system can reportedly deliver as
- many as 23 movies or nine live video programs in each six megahertz
- (MHz) channel. The system can also send two digital high-definition
- television (HDTV) signals on a single 6-MHz analog cable channel.
-
- The companies maintain that the jointly developed chip, based on
- LSI Logic's proprietary Reed-Solomon forward error correction
- (FEC) and optimized demodulation building blocks, will be able to
- handle such functions as forward error correction, adaptive
- equalization, and synchronization detection. The chip can also
- switch from 16-VSB to 8-VSB.
-
- Zenith Electronics has also announced that it has sold $42
- million of 8.5 percent senior subordinated convertible debentures
- in a private transaction to institutional investors. The debentures,
- due November 19, 2000, are convertible into Zenith common stock
- at a conversion price of $9.76 per share. Proceeds from the sale
- are intended to be used to redeem the company's 12-1/8 percent
- notes.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19931122/Press Contact: John Taylor,
- 708-391-8181, Zenith; or Carey Mitchell, 408-433-7175,
- LSI Logic)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00028)
-
- Cray Comms LAN Connection For Remote PCs 11/22/93
- ANNAPOLIS JUNCTION, MARYLAND, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- In
- a world where a company's workforce is increasingly dispersed,
- access to centralized corporate resources is vital. Now Cray
- Communications Inc., has introduced RemotePC, an access server
- that allows up to 24 simultaneous users to dial in and use the
- resources available in an enterprise network.
-
- In announcing the product, Scott Rey, Cray's director of marketing,
- said: "RemotePC meets the three criteria network managers set for
- remote access: it provides strong and flexible security; it gives
- remote users the same network access and functionality as
- in-house users; and it provides full control of costs and network
- use."
-
- Rey told Newsbytes that the RemotePC, "installs at the central
- and not the remote site, and acts as a server/bridge." He also
- said that the product "allows connectivity to multiple devices."
-
- The company says that RemotePC is designed for users such as
- salespeople, telecommuters, branch offices too small to justify
- a router, and dial-in network services, whose usual environment
- is remote from the main local area network (LAN).
-
- RemotePC client software supports DOS, Windows, or OS/2. It
- is priced at $2,595 for the base unit. The product is available
- immediately. Rey told Newsbytes that ports are added by way
- of add-in boards, consisting of "six ports per card," at the cost
- of $1,395 for each group of six ports.
-
- The company says that RemotePC enables remote users to access
- network resources -- such as printers, electronic mail, and data
- bases -- as if they were directly connected to the network. The
- product reportedly works as a bridge on the main LAN, and can be
- implemented in any Ethernet LAN without regard to the network
- operating system or transport protocols.
-
- Continued Rey, "RemotePC is a better alternative than the most
- common solution, where a remote PC dials into another PC in the
- main office, and simply provides a remote keyboard and screen
- function. RemotePC lets the remote user do anything a local user
- can do."
-
- Cray Communications is a division of Cray Electronics Holdings
- PLC. In its latest fiscal year, which ended April 30, 1993, Cray
- Electronics says it recorded earnings of $26.5 million on sales of
- $303 million.
-
- In June, Newsbytes reported that Cray Communications was part
- of a group of British modem manufacturers that joined together
- under the mantle of the Modem Approvals Group (MAG), which was
- formed to voice their concern about the lack of enforcement of UK
- approvals for modems.
-
- In July Newsbytes reported that the MAG was stepping up its
- campaign against unapproved modems by asking magazine
- publishers to ensure that advertising for such products are not
- illegal.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19931122/Press Contact: Scott Rey, 301-317-7218,
- Cray Communications)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00029)
-
- Adobe Streamline For Macs In Japan, Deals 11/22/93
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Adobe
- Systems has announced availability of version 3.0J of Adobe
- Streamline for the Macintosh, software for converting color,
- grayscale as well as black and white bitmapped images into
- PostScript language line art. The software is designed for the
- Japanese market. The company has also announced its PostScript
- Level 2 Emerald RIP is available from Linotype-Hell, and that
- Agfa is now shipping Adobe's PostScript Level 2 Emerald RIP
- with both the Star 400 and 600 series of RIPs, as well as the
- MultiStar 400 and 600 RIPs.
-
- According to Adobe, version 3.0J includes new image processing
- tools, powerful color capabilities, scanner driver support, a
- redesigned user interface, extensive pre- and post-processing
- features and improved interoperability with Adobe Illustrator
- and Adobe Photoshop software.
-
- Patricia J. Pane, spokesperson for Adobe told Newsbytes that,
- for US users, "You can order it through a distributor in the US.
- We do have a lot of Japanese language users in the US, and they
- do like to be kept up with what's happening. There is a market,
- although it is certainly not the size of what we get in Japan."
-
- In announcing the new Japanese version, Katsunori Tanaka,
- marketing manager for Adobe Systems Japan, said: "With Adobe
- Streamline's new conversion options and pre- and post-processing
- tools, users have more control over the end results. This new
- version has also been completely redesigned to permit interactive
- and intuitive image conversion and to provide a visual consistency
- with our other graphics programs."
-
- Said Yoshifumi Hyodo, sales manager for application products,
- Adobe Systems Japan, "Adobe Streamline is an important tool for
- professional users, and releasing this major upgrade concurrently
- with the US version gives users in Japan access to the identical
- feature set US users have, the most up-to-date, powerful
- enhancements of the product that Adobe has to offer."
-
- The company claims that enhancements in the new version provide
- the ability to scan artwork directly into the program using any
- Adobe Photoshop-compatible plug-in, to retouch images with an
- assortment of pixel-editing tools, and to convert images using a
- variety of options or through custom settings.
-
- Users can posterize both color and grayscale images, and convert
- them into filed and stroked PostScript language objects. The
- company says that the resulting PostScript language paths can
- then be recolored and edited. Once converted, the artwork can be
- edited further in a drawing program or incorporated directly into
- a page layout.
-
- System requirements for Streamline 3.0J include: a Macintosh
- with a 68020 processor or higher; two megabytes (MB) of
- application RAM; a hard disk; and Apple KanjiTalk 6.0.7 or greater,
- including System 7.l. However, Adobe recommends 4MB of
- application RAM and a color monitor.
-
- Adobe Streamline 3.0J for the Macintosh is available immediately
- at a suggested retail price of 35,000 yen. Registered users of
- Adobe Streamline 1.2J for the Macintosh may upgrade for 15,000
- yen.
-
- Adobe's PostScript Level 2 Emerald RIP will ship with Linotype's
- RIP 50 and will drive Linotype's complete line of imagesetters.
- Linotype-Hell says it is also shipping the Vulcan RIP, a RISC
- (reduced instruction-set computer)-based add-in card with
- Adobe's PostScipt Level 2 software for the Macintosh series II
- and Quadra personal computers.
-
- The company says that the Vulcan RIP replaces the RIP 20
- product and drives Linotype's range of imagesetters through the
- Linotronic 560 and allows a single Macintosh configuration for
- both applications and RIPing.
-
- Agfa's deal with Adobe also involves the PostScript Level 2
- Emerald RIP. In announcing the deal, Steve MacDonald, senior vice
- president and general manager of Adobe's Systems Products
- Division, said: "Agfa's large installed base of Emerald RIPs now
- has access to the latest in Adobe's PostScript technology --
- PostScript Level 2. By offering PostScript Level 2 on its Star
- and MultiStar series products, Agfa's users can now take
- advantage of the software's many benefits, including device
- independent color, compression capabilities and performance
- enhancements."
-
- The companies said that PostScript Level 2 Emerald RIP is
- available immediately on Agfa's Star 400 and 600 and MultiStar
- 400 and 600 products, and is expected to be available on the
- Star 200 next month. Upgrades for the existing Star, Star
- Plus, and Star Plus SX RIPs are expected to be available
- mid-December.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19931122/Press Contact: Patricia J. Pane,
- 415-962-3967, Adobe Systems Inc.)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00030)
-
- Apple Computer, AST, AT&T Equipment Auctions 11/22/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 NOV 22 (NB) -- Apple
- Computer is auctioning off some of its inventory in auctions
- held by national auctioneers, Ross-Dave. But Apple isn't the
- only one as AST, Martin Marietta, AT&T, and Hughes Missile
- Systems are also holding auctions through the same group.
-
- The first Apple Computer auction took place November 20 in
- Chicago, but two auction dates remain -- one in Boston on
- December 4, and one in Washington, DC on December 11. Equipment
- is varied, but will include about 6,000 items of older and some
- discontinued, though new, Apple hardware.
-
- Apple representatives told Newsbytes the auctioned equipment is
- mostly buy-backs, meaning Apple has bought it back from its
- dealers when it released a new version of the product in
- question. Some examples are: the Duo Dock 210, the Mac IIsi,
- the Apple CD-ROM 150, and the Apple IIgs. Four peripheral items
- included are not buy-backs: the Laserwriter 310, the Apple 16-
- inch RGB monitor, the Color One Scanner, the Apple Color
- Printer.
-
- Any product still in the shrink-wrap at the time of the
- purchase comes with a one-year warranty, Apple said. In
- addition, there is no minimum bid, but Ross-Dove does charge a
- 5 percent buyers premium which is added to the total bid.
-
- Claris, Apple's software subsidiary, will be on hand at the
- auctions offering new software to go with the purchases and
- Apple items such as t-shirts and hats with the Apple logo will
- be available as well.
-
- Other auctions include the AST auction, scheduled for December
- 11 in Menlo Park, California and a Hughes auction, on the
- calendar for December 1 in Pomona, California. AT&T equipment
- goes on the auction block in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and Martin
- Marietta's auction is slated for Orlando, Florida.
-
- Auction brochures containing location information and further
- details are free for the asking by calling Ross-Dove toll-free.
- Admission is also free.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931122/Press Contact: Kate Paisley, Apple
- Computer, tel 408-974-5453, fax 408-974-2885; Public Contact:
- Ross-Dove, 800-445-3683)
-
-
-