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- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00001)
-
- PacTel Completes Wireless IPO 12/07/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Pacific Telesis has
- spun-off its wireless businesses with a public offering of a 12
- percent stake for $1.38 billion, one of the largest public offerings
- of stock ever. The shares started trading at $23 each and rose to
- $25.50 on the first day's trade.
-
- The next step in the spin-off is for PacTel to give existing holders
- of its shares new shares in the spin-off, which will have revenues
- of $1.1 billion this year and 900,000 cellular subscribers along
- with 821,000 paging customers and 40,000 customers in foreign
- markets.
-
- The spin-off will be free of the kind of regulation faced
- by units of other regional Bell companies, but will also be cut off
- from funding from its former parent.
-
- Many analysts have criticized the spin-off for just that reason, but
- others are touting the new PacTel, calling it among the few "pure
- plays" in the business, meaning it's only involved in wireless
- communications. The parent company's shares traded at about $55 per
- share at the time of the spin-off, and moved little in early trade
- on December 6.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931206)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(DEL)(00002)
-
- India's Govt Spins Off Software Companies 12/07/93
- BANGALORE, INDIA, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Three months ago, National
- Aeronautical Laboratory set up a new company, Naltech, to
- commercialize its technologies. Earlier was the creation of Antrix
- Corp., the commercial front of Indian Space Research Organization.
- Now it is the turn of the Indian Institute of Science (IISc),
- Bangalore, India's premier research institute, to set up an outfit
- to market high-end scientific application software.
-
- The yet-unnamed company will develop and export software used in
- areas as diverse as crystallography and biophysics to research
- institutes abroad. Coordinated by the Department of Supercomputer
- Research and Development of IISc, the subsidiary is expected to
- start functioning by the end of 1994.
-
- While the main objective of the company would be software
- development in frontier areas of research, it would also seek to
- market other technologies developed by IISc. The company would have
- a core group of about 100 software professionals, drawn from the
- institute's various departments. The developers would work on
- application-specific software already existing in the IISc's
- software bank and customize it according to the needs of the foreign
- laboratories. The company would also take up software development
- jobs on behalf of foreign clients. IISc has already begun
- strengthening its software bank by gathering together the software
- developed by the various laboratories of the institute.
-
- (C. T. Mahabharat/19931206)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TYO)(00003)
-
- Japan - Fujitsu, IBM Team Up On Multimedia PC 12/07/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Fujitsu and IBM Japan
- have agreed to produce and sell a multimedia personal
- computer. This is an unprecedented agreement because it
- represents the possibility that a unified multimedia personal
- computer will be created by IBM Japan, Fujitsu and Apple
- Computer.
-
- The agreement between Fujitsu and IBM Japan is still tentative
- -- these two firms are working out the details. But based on
- preliminary talks, Fujitsu will provide IBM Japan with the
- board that includes the operating system of the FM Towns,
- Fujitsu's popular multimedia personal computer. IBM Japan will
- use this board on its new personal computer that will be
- released in the near future. The new Japanese IBM PC is
- expected to operate both Fujitsu's and IBM's applications.
-
- Fujitsu's FM Towns uses Fujitsu's original operating system.
- The PC is already well accepted in Japan's school market
- where it is considered the premier multimedia personal
- computer. This will benefit IBM Japan, which is still behind
- in the multimedia personal computer business.
-
- Fujitsu is also planning to release a personal computer which
- operates both its own and IBM's software. Fujitsu is a member
- of IBM Japan's Open Architecture Developers Group where it has
- access to technical information on the development of
- IBM-compatible personal computers.
-
- Meanwhile, Fujitsu has recently signed an agreement with Apple
- Computer concerning mutual use of each company's applications.
- This means that Macintosh programs may be used on both
- Fujitsu and IBM computers in the future.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931206/Press Contact: Fujitsu,
- +81-3-3215-5236, Fax, +81-3-3216-9365)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00004)
-
- IDC Says Oracle Accounting Software Leader 12/07/93
- REDWOOD SHORES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Oracle has
- been named the market leader in client/server and Unix accounting
- software applications, according to analysts at International Data
- Corporation (IDC). In addition, Oracle announced its Applications
- products are now available for Digital Equipment Corporation's
- (DEC's) 64-bit Alpha AXP reduced instruction set computing (RISC)
- hardware platform.
-
- An IDC study to be released later this month reports 28.5 percent
- of the $263 million packaged applications software market is held
- by Oracle's accounting products. Oracle's nearest competitor,
- SAP, holds only 16 percent. In addition, Oracle has the lead in
- the Unix-based accounting software market with 12 percent of the
- $156 million market in 1992, IDC said.
-
- Oracle plans to further extend its market reach in offering its
- application software line for the OSF/1 (Unix) and OpenVMS
- operating environments from DEC, both of which are running on
- DEC's most recently released microprocessor, the AXP Alpha.
-
- The company has long boasted its leadership in cross-platform
- database application software market with its Oracle7 product
- line. The IDC study also claims Oracle's human resources
- applications have the lead with an 11 percent market share.
-
- Clare Gillan, director of applications and information access at
- IDC, said: "Among leading business applications vendors, Oracle
- was the first to provide a broad portfolio of client/server
- capable applications. The breadth of its applications product
- line, support for numerous server platforms, and its commitment
- to multinational companies has strongly positioned Oracle to
- maintain leadership in the client/server application market."
-
- Headquartered in Redwood Shores, California, Oracle (NASDAQ:
- ORCL) software runs on personal digital assistants (PDAs),
- personal computers (PCs), workstations, minicomputers,
- mainframes, and massively parallel computers. The company
- reported $1.5 billion in revenue for its 1993 fiscal year and
- more than doubled its earnings with net income of $141.7 million.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931207/Press Contact: Christine Mossmer,
- Oracle tel 415-506-3117, fax 415-506-7815; Clare Gillan, IDC,
- 508-935-4267)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00005)
-
- Japan - Ricoh To Sell NEC, Apple, Compaq 12/07/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Japan's major office equipment
- firm Ricoh has agreed to sell personal computers from
- NEC, Apple and Compaq. This is significant because Ricoh has
- until now, been in a tight alliance with IBM Japan -- it sells
- IBM Japan's personal computers under its own brand name. The
- move also continues a trend by major sales firms to spread out
- their eggs among several baskets.
-
- Other major sales firms such as Otsuka Shokai and Fujitsu's
- PFU have also started selling a variety of personal computers.
-
- Ricoh has received supplies of personal computers from IBM
- Japan on an OEM (original equipment manufacturer) basis.
- These PCs are mainly Japanese versions of the PS/2. Ricoh and
- IBM are also co-owners of a software development firm.
-
- Ricoh's decision to be non-exclusive in personal computer
- sales is the result of customer demand. Ricoh wants to sell
- a variety of personal computers as part of its system
- integration unit, which bundles personal computers, printers,
- and other peripheral equipment such as fax machines and
- copiers. Customers are demanding the most economical systems,
- and many want Macintosh or NEC-compatible systems.
-
- Ricoh has been doing fairly well despite the sluggish economy in
- Japan. The firm has developed a hybrid copier, which can be used
- not only as a copier but as a computer printer and fax
- machine. Ricoh has been selling PCs with this system.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931206/Press Contact: Ricoh, +81-3-
- 5411-4704, Fax, +81-3-3403-1578)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(TYO)(00006)
-
- Japan - Mitsubishi Develops Technology For 256Mb DRAM 12/07/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Mitsubishi Electric says it has
- developed the technology to draw extra-thin circuit lines to
- create a 256-megabit dynamic random access memory (DRAM). The
- firm is planning to release sample versions of a 256Mb DRAM
- within 4 years.
-
- Mitsubishi's 256M DRAM technology is based on what's called
- the exima-laser and electronic cyclone resonance etching method
- which reportedly allows circuit lines 0.25 microns in width to be
- drawn.
-
- Mitsubishi Electric will release a prototype version of the
- 256M DRAM by 1997, and by the year 2000, will release
- actual product.
-
- Meanwhile, Mitsubishi Electric is preparing to release a
- 64-megabit DRAM this month. Toshiba, Fujitsu, and Hitachi
- will also release 64M DRAMs by the end of this month.
- NEC is slightly ahead in this 64M DRAM race since it has been
- selling this chip on a sample basis.
-
- The 64M DRAM is expected to become popular within two years
- and chip firms will launch quantity production of the chip
- around the end of 1995.
-
- Other chip firms are working on 256M DRAMs in parallel with
- Mitsubishi Electric.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19931206/Press Contact: Mitsubishi
- Electric, +81-3-3218-2332, Fax, +81-3-3218-2431)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00007)
-
- O'Reilly Offers Internet-in-a-Box 12/07/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- In the latest
- effort to make joining and using Internet networks easy, O'Reilly
- & Associates announced Internet-in-a-Box.
-
- The product, developed with Spry Inc., of Seattle, includes
- Spry's applications combining Microsoft Windows and the
- Internet's TCP/IP protocol, along with a version of the O'Reilly
- book "The Whole Internet User's Guide," by Ed Krol of the
- University of Illinois. The Krol book, which drew top ratings
- from Newsbytes and other reviewers, has since sold 200,000
- copies and has led to a flood of copycat books from major
- computer book publishers.
-
- To complete the offering NovX InterServe will provide Internet
- services to buyers of the package using Sprintnet's packet
- data network and a toll-free number for access.
-
- The Internet has become a hot topic this year for a number of
- reasons. It's a key component in the Clinton Administration's
- "data superhighway" planning, and many officials, including the
- President, now have Internet addresses. Internet traffic has been
- growing at 15 percent per month, in part because most use is
- subsidized by colleges and government agencies. The net's public
- profile was further raised by a series of "Doonesbury" panels,
- most recently a series of cartoons in which Kennedy assassination
- buffs discuss their latest theories on it.
-
- O'Reilly estimates 150,000 new users are logging onto the
- Internet each month, despite the fact access has been difficult
- for those without dedicated data lines or Unix-based workstations.
-
- Most major online services, including CompuServe and America
- Online, have allowed access to Internet mailboxes for some time,
- and America Online recently introduced Internet Center, an easy-
- to-use way to access Usenet conferences or news groups and
- databases stored under systems like Gopher and WAIS under
- Microsoft Windows. Internet-in-a-box is similar, offering a
- Windows-based access to all those services as well as Telnet
- database access and Mosaic.
-
- David Pool, president of Spry, said this will open use of the
- Internet to a host of new home-based and small business users.
- Buyers of the package automatically get subscriptions to
- O'Reilly's Global Network Navigator, an online resource
- launched in October on Internet resources, providing
- direct links to over 600 of them, along with news, an online
- magazine, an interactive catalog, and a global marketplace
- containing advertiser-sponsored information on a range of
- products and services.
-
- NovX InterServ offers buyers Domain and Network number
- registration, e-mail, fully interactive access to major networks
- like CIX and NSF, Gopher databases, news servers, and more. The
- Windows version comes out in the first quarter with the Macintosh
- version to follow. Distribution will be through bookstores and
- retail software stores.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931207/Press Contact: Ron Pernick, for
- O'Reilly, 415/615-7891; FAX: 415/615-7901; e-mail:
- pernicknetcom.com; Spry, Deanna Leung, 206/442-8231 FAX: 206/447-
- 9008; e-mail: deannaspry.com; Customer Contact: O'Reilly GNN,
- 800/998-9938, Spry, 800/SPRY NET)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00008)
-
- AT&T Launches 155-Megabit Service 12/07/93
- BASKING RIDGE, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- AT&T has
- launched a service called Accunet T155 under the Sonet fiber
- networking standard which moves data as fast as 155 million
- bits/second. The service was recently tested with Comdisco, which
- offers disaster recovery services and back-up computing to large
- businesses.
-
- T155 thus becomes the top of AT&T's Accunet line of fast-data
- offerings. It's also the fastest network speed now commercially
- available, AT&T said. The company said that, like other Accunet
- services, T155 is supported by its FASTAR technology, offering
- Fast Automatic Restoration in case of cable cuts or natural
- disaster through an automatic system of finding alternate routes
- for data through the AT&T network.
-
- AT&T said medical imaging, links between supercomputers, and high
- definition TV can all use the new service, which combines
- equipment from several vendors. Medical X-rays will move across
- the country using T155 in less than one-tenth of a second. The
- service can also be multiplexed, meaning it can combine slower
- lines linking local and wide area networks.
-
- The service will be priced upon customer requests, with the
- price based on the specific city-to-city links being purchased,
- although AT&T said term and volume discounts will also be
- available. The company estimated prices will be 10-15 percent
- below the price of equivalent bandwidth offered through the
- company's T45 45 million bit/second lines. Accunet technicians
- will be in charge of the network, and their service assurance
- warranties apply to the new service.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19931207/Press Contact: Shelly London, AT&T,
- 908/221/4355)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00009)
-
- SofTech Sells Govt Services Division 12/07/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Waltham,
- Massachusetts-based, SofTech, a systems integration and project
- management consultant, has announced that it has sold its
- Government Sales Division to CACI International on the same terms
- as were announced in the October 13, 1993 letter of intent
- released by the two companies.
-
- In the deal, CACI paid about $4.2 million in cash to acquire
- SofTech's ongoing contracts with the government, along with about
- $900,000 worth of computer hardware.
-
- SofTech expects to show a stronger position at the end of the
- fiscal year due to the deal which does not transfer the already
- earned receivables.
-
- Of the 327 former SofTech Government Sales Division employees,
- the company reports that CACI has already hired 216, and expects
- to eliminate about 15 headquarters jobs which were formerly based
- in Waltham.
-
- (John McCormick/19931207/Press Contact: Joseph Mullaney, VP and
- CFO SofTech, 617-890-6900 or fax 617-890-6055)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00010)
-
- Canadian Product Launch Update 12/07/93
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- This regular
- feature, appearing every Monday or Tuesday, provides further
- details for the Canadian market on announcements by international
- companies that Newsbytes has already covered. This week:
- Microsoft adds Creative Writer and Fine Artist to its Microsoft
- Home line of software.
-
- Microsoft Canada Inc., joined its US parent company in unveiling
- two software packages meant for children. Creative Writer and
- Fine Artist (Newsbytes, Dec. 3) are the company's first creative
- arts packages for elementary and middle school-aged children.
-
- Creative Artist is now available, and Fine Artist is due to be
- available early in 1994, the company said. Both have Canadian
- list prices of C$89.95, with single-user teacher editions
- available for C$59.95.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931207/Press Contact: Linda Carnell, Microsoft
- Canada, 905-568-0434 ext. 4238, fax 416-568-1527)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(TOR)(00011)
-
- Meca Fined, Will Relabel Head Start Tax Software 12/07/93
- FAIRFIELD, CONNECTICUT, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Meca Software
- will relabel the 1993 Head Start Edition of its Andrew
- Tobias' TaxCut software and offer refunds to any customers who
- want them after being accused of misleading labelling. Meca is
- also to pay $17,500 in penalties and costs to the Massachusetts
- Attorney General.
-
- The dispute arose after Meca changed the way it sells the Head
- Start and Final Editions of the tax software. Eric Jacobsen,
- director of marketing at Meca, said that like other vendors of
- tax software, Meca sells a Head Start Edition that does not
- include final Internal Revenue Service (IRS) forms and is meant
- for tax planning. Until this year, the company shipped the Final
- Edition free of charge to all buyers of the Head Start Edition
- once the IRS forms for the year were ready.
-
- In 1993, Jacobsen said, Meca tried a new approach. It sold the
- Head Start Edition for $10, and included with it a coupon for a
- $10 discount on the Final Edition. The idea was to encourage new
- customers to buy the Head Start Edition and try it out -- and to
- make the purchase less confusing, Jacobsen claimed.
-
- The second goal apparently wasn't achieved. The Massachusetts
- Attorney General's office was alerted -- by competitor Chipsoft
- Inc., of San Diego, California, Jacobsen said -- because Meca's
- box bore the printed claim that the Head Start software could
- print approved IRS forms. That was a mistake, Jacobsen admitted:
- "We shouldn't have said that."
-
- Jacobsen said Meca is placing stickers on all new boxes of TaxCut
- to correct the error, and is sending the stickers to distributors
- to be put on boxes already in the distribution channel.
-
- He said no users have complained to Meca about the software, but
- any who are unhappy can have their money back. That would have
- been true anyway, he added, "We have always had ... an
- unconditional guarantee."
-
- As a result of this dispute, Jacobsen added, the Massachusetts
- Attorney General is now going to require that Head Start Editions
- of all tax preparation software clearly explain on the front
- panel of their boxes what a Head Start Edition is and that an
- update to the Final Edition will be needed to file a return.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931207/Press Contact: Eric Jacobsen, Meca
- Software, 203-256-5000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(WAS)(00012)
-
- Bell Labs Develops 0.1 Micron Room Temp Silicon Chips 12/07/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Ran-Hong Yan, leader
- of a 16-person research team at AT&T's Bell Laboratories, ignored
- traditional wisdom to produce the first-ever room temperature 0.1
- micron silicon device. It has generally been believed that such
- tiny components would only operate at reduced temperatures.
-
- The problem with such tiny devices is that there is very little
- material available to conduct electricity and in order to provide
- enough impurities (doping) to make the transistor junctions
- operate, they would normally become resistors.
-
- Silicon-based semiconductors (transistors) operate because the
- extremely pure silicon is selectively contaminated with arsenic
- and boron which alter the atomic structure of the material and
- allow electrons to pass through the silicon crystal lattice in a
- very special way. Silicon in its pure form is an insulator.
-
- Transistors with smaller amounts of boron and arsenic can operate
- at lower temperatures, but until the recent development, current
- leaks from the tiny devices caused them heat up too much at room
- temperatures and they ceased to operate.
-
- The newly patented process uses a new "vertical doping
- engineering" system to eliminate or greatly reduce the leakage
- making it possible to build much smaller and faster
- semiconductors.
-
- The current generation of fast integrated circuits use 0.5 micron
- components and operate at 2.7- to 5-volts while the new 0.1
- micron circuits operate at only 1.5 volts.
-
- The developer said in his announcement that he doesn't see 0.1
- micron as the smallest possible size for the newly developed
- process and predicts that 0.05 micron devices are possible.
-
- This and other developments in semiconductor technology are being
- announced this week at the International Electron Devices Meeting
- being held at the Washington Hilton and Towers, Washington, DC.
-
- Of course this new development is just a technological advance
- and is not a practical manufacturing process at the moment so
- initial mass production of 0.1 micron integrated circuits is
- years away and 0.05 micron devices are only a theoretical
- possibility.
-
- Even the 0.1 micron device is capable of switching speeds up to
- 116 gigahertz and Bell Labs says that current testing technology
- is inadequate to properly evaluate the integrated circuits if
- they went into mass production.
-
- By mid-1995 AT&T Microelectronics and NEC have plans to mass
- produce 0.35 micron complementary metal oxide semiconductor
- (CMOS) chips in volume and on November 15, the two companies
- entered into another agreement to develop a process to
- manufacture ICs using 0.25 micron designs.
-
- (John McCormick/19931207/Press Contact: Bert Vorchheimer, AT&T
- Bell Labs, 908-582-7889 office or 908-464-9512 home)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00013)
-
- TI Restructures Top Management 12/07/93
- DALLAS, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Texas Instruments has
- restructured the office of chief executive, naming the heads of its
- semiconductor and defense electronics units as vice chairmen.
-
- William Weber, currently executive VP of semiconductor, materials
- and controls, consumer businesses, and international operations; and
- William Mitchell, executive VP of Defense Systems & Electronics and
- the Information Technology Group, will assist TI Chairman, President
- and CEO Jerry Junkins.
-
- Both individuals currently report to Junkins, but as vice chairmen
- will assist Junkins in strengthening TI's position as a global
- company, according to TI spokesperson Buddy Price. Price denied that
- the creation of a triumvirate to lead TI dilutes Junkins powers or
- responsibilities. "This only formalizes the team concept Junkins has
- always stressed," according to Price.
-
- The company also announced the election of four executive vice
- presidents, who will share the duties formerly held by Weber and
- Mitchell.
-
- Junkins led TI through some of the company's most difficult years as
- the defense electronics fell off due to dwindling defense contracts.
- TI has recovered from huge losses to report a record profit in the
- third quarter. The semiconductor group under Weber's leadership has
- moved from being a commodity producer to becoming a custom designer
- of computer chips, while the Information Technology group has
- shifted its focus towards software and related services.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931207/Press contact: Texas Instruments,
- 214-995-3481)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00014)
-
- Hardware Spending To Drop, Software/Services Go Up 12/07/93
- ROME, ITALY, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- It comes as no surprise
- to those following the computer industry that the Xtra '93 Global
- Directions survey says there is strong interest in open systems
- and companies are increasing spending. However, it might come as
- a surprise that the survey asserts hardware spending worldwide
- will fall, while software and services spending will jump up
- significantly over the next three years.
-
- Of the companies surveyed, spending on open systems will increase
- from the 35 percent allocated now to 58 percent by 1996. By
- region, the figures are a 48 to 70 percent increase in Europe; 32
- to 59 percent jump in North America; and the lowest increases in
- industrialized Asia (Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea,
- and Taiwan) with 16 to 36 percent predicted.
-
- Interoperability is the number one reason for the interest in
- open systems. Interest is high in open systems during purchase
- decisions as the migration from mainframe systems to
- client/server computing continues. Also highly rated were access
- to applications and data across a network as well as portable
- software and data. Conversion costs and incompatibility are the
- biggest barriers, according to survey respondents, however the
- benefits appear to outweigh the potential problems, the survey
- added.
-
- The emphasis on software and applications was in the portion
- of the survey on budget spending. Spending on hardware is
- expected to drop dramatically between 1993 and 1996 as it is
- partially replaced by spending on software. Hardware spending in
- Europe will fall 42 to 33 percent; in North America 38 to 33
- percent; and the biggest drops will be in Asia where hardware
- spending is expected to decrease from 51 to 42 percent. Software
- spending will jump 33 to 38 percent in Europe, Asia, and North
- America.
-
- Spending on services is also expected to increase. An additional
- 25 to 29 percent is being budgeted in Europe, while North
- American spending will go up 29 percent and Asian companies are
- planning 19 to 20 percent increases.
-
- The research was conducted by the X/Open Company with
- international market research firm Dataquest during the summer of
- 1993 and involved 57 prominent computer user groups in Asia,
- Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, and Europe. Those surveyed
- were senior information technology (IT) managers from more than
- 750 enterprises representing over 40 countries and six continents
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931207/Press Contact: Jeff Hansen, X/Open
- Company, 415-323-7992; Elizabeth Chaney, Regis McKenna for
- X/Open, tel 415-494-2030, fax 415-494-8660)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(DEN)(00015)
-
- Texas Commissioners May Offer Apple Deal 12/07/93
- GEORGETOWN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- When the Williamson,
- Texas county commissioners voted to turn down Apple Computer Inc.'s
- request for tax breaks in exchange for building a $80 million
- support center in the North Central Texas area, they said they made
- the decision based on moral standards.
-
- Specifically three of the five commissioners turned down Apple's
- request for $750,000 in tax breaks because of the computer maker's
- policy of offering health benefits to employees' same sex partners.
- The commissioners said that that violated the community's moral
- standards.
-
- But now the commissioners will reportedly consider a new proposal in
- which the county would get the right of way for a road and related
- improvements worth $1.5 million. And Apple would pay their taxes
- like any other county resident but would get $750,000 in rebates
- over a seven-year period.
-
- One commissioner explained the difference between the old plan and
- the new one is that under the old proposal it was taxpayer money
- involved. Under the new plan it's Apple's dollars. The deal is
- reportedly being drafted by at attorney for the commission's
- consideration later today.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931207)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00016)
-
- Artisoft Shipping Low-Cost Home Office Network 12/07/93
- TUCSON, ARIZONA, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Artisoft has announced
- it is now shipping Simply Lantastic, a low-cost entry level network
- system for small business and home offices.
-
- Simply Lantastic provides basic file, printer, and drive (including
- CD-ROM drive) sharing, with the basic kit containing everything
- necessary to connect two computers. Additional add-on kits and
- software-only kits for adding one additional computer to the network
- are also available.
-
- Artisoft says it has designed a new internal 10-megabit-per-second
- Ethernet-capable network adapter for use with the Simply Lantastic
- software that uses plug and play technology to eliminate the cabling
- problems often encountered when installing more complex networks.
- The company says an external network adapter is expected to ship in
- early 1994, eliminating the need to open the cover on PCs being
- connected via Simply Lantastic.
-
- Simply Lantastic software is compatible with Artisoft's Ethernet
- series adapters as well as a variety of other third party network
- adapters, and works with PCs running either DOS or Windows. It can
- be used with older PCs using an 8088 microprocessor or the latest
- 486-based systems.
-
- The Simply Lantastic network starter kit includes two software
- licenses, two internal network adapters, one 25-foot connecting
- cable, and the necessary documentation. Suggested retail price of
- the starter kit is $299. To add one additional PC to the network,
- you can purchase the Simply Lantastic Network add-on kit which
- includes one software license, one internal network adapter, one
- 25-foot cable, and documentation for $149. The software can be
- purchased separately for $79, allowing the user to connect a PC to
- the basic network using a third party adapter and providing their
- own cable.
-
- A menu interface provides all the necessary control functions,
- including sharing or accessing network drive and printer
- connections, print job display and control, and an electronic mail
- capability. Three levels of drive access control are possible: full
- access, read-only access, or no access.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931207/Press contact: Joe Stunkard, Artisoft Inc,
- 602-270-7145; Reader contact: Artisoft, 602-670-7100 or
- 800-233-5564, fax 602-670-7101)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00017)
-
- CD-ROM Interactive Training To Ship In January 12/07/93
- MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) - Wilson Learning
- Corporation has announced it will begin shipping the first of several
- CD-ROM-based interactive training programs for Macintosh and
- PCs in late January.
-
- The company says the interpersonal, sales, and management skills
- development training programs are being developed in conjunction
- with Sony Electronic Publishing Company. A total of 10 titles will
- be produced in the joint project with Sony, while Wilson will also
- develop further titles independently.
-
- The first programs, scheduled to ship January 24th, are "Connect
- for Success: Connect With Others and Influence Them;" Sell to Needs:
- Sell the Way People Like to Buy;" Relate with Ease: Build and Keep
- Interpersonal Relationships;" and "Decide For Sure: Add Certainty to
- Your Decision Making."
-
- According to Dave Ehlen, Wilson Learning Corporation CEO, studies
- show that computer-based multimedia training programs enhance
- learning by as much as 35 percent. "CD-ROM training programs are
- the next step in computer-based training - a natural progression
- from the more expensive interactive video discs." Ehlen says the
- lower cost of the CD-ROM programs make them more readily accessible
- to individuals and small businesses, as well as large organizations.
-
- "We like to think of these programs as 'serious fun,' providing
- users with engaging, real-life situations that draw them into the
- learning process," says Ehlen.
-
- Wilson Learning Corporation spokesperson Julie Fusella told
- Newsbytes the programs will be available for both Macintosh and
- Windows platforms. Wilson spokesperson Nancy Brenny said the first
- four titles to be released will be available through retail
- outlets such as Computer City and Software, Etc at the suggested
- retail price of $69.95. They will be distributed by Navarre
- Corporation, a Minneapolis-based company specializing in the
- marketing, merchandising, and distribution of prerecorded music,
- multimedia, and computer software products.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19931207/Press contact: Julie Fusella, Kovak-Thomas
- Public Relations for Wilson Learning Corporation, 212-246-0540;
- Reader contact: Wilson Learning Corp, 612-944-2880 or 800-328-7937)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00018)
-
- Claris Says Filemaker Pro Easier To Use Than Access 12/07/93
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Claris is
- pleased to report its Filemaker Pro for Windows 2.1 outscored
- Microsoft's Access 1.1 for Windows in usability tests conducted
- by Usability Sciences Corporation of Irving, Texas. While Claris
- commissioned the tests, it says this is the second test in which
- its product outdid Access, the other being a set of tests for
- ease-of-use conducted by Software Digest/NSTL.
-
- The main claim Claris is making for Filemaker Pro for Windows is
- ease of use. In the Usability Sciences study novice database
- users were able to complete an identical set of tasks 20 percent
- faster with the Claris product than with Microsoft Access. The
- tasks were: creating a database, entering records into the
- database, querying the database, creating a form, adding two new
- records into the form, adding a scroll bar to the record field,
- and stamping a system date onto the form.
-
- While it took both groups of participants well over an hour to
- complete the tasks, participants using Access took nearly 17
- minutes longer. Study participants were intermediate PC users
- with little or no database application experience.
-
- Microsoft representatives told Newsbytes Access has won a few
- usability tests of its own. PC Computing's December issue named
- Access number one in ease of use in tests not commissioned by
- Microsoft. In addition, Microsoft has shipped 1 million copies of
- Access in a market that International Data Corporation (IDC)
- estimated in 1992 was 1.2 to 1.4 million strong.
-
- Claris, the Santa Clara, California-based software subsidiary of
- Apple Computer, has cut the price of Filemaker Pro 2.1 for
- Windows to $129, and is offering upgrades for $20, and competitive
- upgrades from other database software products for $99. A
- Macintosh version of the product is available for $399.
-
- Microsoft Access 1.1 is retail priced at $495, however Microsoft
- has frequently offered the product for $99 since its introduction
- over a year ago.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931207/Press Contact: Kevin Mallon, Claris,
- tel 408-987-7227, fax 408-987-3931; Public Contact, Claris, 800-
- 544-8554 or 408-727-8227; Public Contact, Microsoft, 800-677-
- 7377)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(WAS)(00019)
-
- Interactive CD-ROM Vietnam From CBS, Apple, NY Times 12/07/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Joining forces with
- the formidable reporting resources and archives of the New York
- Times and the CBS television network, Apple Computer will publish
- and market "The Vietnam War" late in 1994. Chief reporters on the
- interactive CD-ROM will be veteran reporter Dan Rather, anchor
- and managing editor of the CBS Evening News, and R.W. Apple Jr.,
- Washington bureau chief for the New York Times.
-
- Other Vietnam War-oriented CD-ROM publications have been
- available for years from Quanta Press and Wayzata
- Technologies but these have been more in the nature of
- archives of data related to the War. While they are highly
- useful to historians and as reference materials, they lack
- the immediacy of war reportage which the publisher apparently
- expects this new disc to bring to the educational environment.
-
- The multimedia disc will include more than 700 news articles from
- The Times and film and video from CBS News' archives. Maps, and
- even audio recordings will also be included on the CD-ROM, along
- with the names of US military personnel either killed or missing
- in action.
-
- High points will be a time-line that will let users pick any
- point during the Vietnam era and call up pictures and text
- related to US and Vietnam events; interactive maps that can be
- used to view geographical and political detail of Vietnam; and an
- extensive photo library of the weapons used by the United States
- and Vietnam.
-
- The disc will also include biographies of political and military
- leaders; documents relating to the war; a comprehensive
- bibliography with thousands of titles; and a roster of winners of
- the Congressional Medal of Honor, complete with the details of
- their heroic acts.
-
- The New York Times' William Adler told Newsbytes said that he was
- not familiar with other CD-ROMs published about the Vietnam War
- but that their "goal is to make this the definitive encyclopedia
- on the war."
-
- He pointed to the fact that all the names listed on the Vietnam
- Memorial in Washington, DC would be cross-referenced on the disc
- with their location on the memorial as an important feature of
- the new disc.
-
- Asked about pricing, platforms, and whether the disc would
- contain information relating to current-day Vietnam, Mr. Adler
- told Newsbytes that they are still developing the exact
- contents of the disc and that price as well as just which
- computer platforms, other than the Macintosh, would be supported,
- had not yet been determined.
-
- (John McCormick/19931207/Press Contact: William Adler, 212-556-
- 7077)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00020)
-
- CA Adds OS/2 Version Of SuperProject 12/07/93
- ISLANDIA, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Computer
- Associates International Inc., has launched a version of its
- CA-SuperProject project management software for IBM's OS/2
- operating system. It is the second product CA has announced that
- will combine code for Microsoft Windows and OS/2 in a single box,
- said Marc Sokol, the company's vice-president of product
- strategy.
-
- CA will sell the Windows and OS/2 versions of SuperProject
- together for $649. The company will also continue offering
- version of the software for DOS and for Digital Equipment Corp.'s
- VMS minicomputer operating system. Versions for Unix and
- Microsoft's Windows NT are in development. The company hopes to
- have a version for Sun Microsystems' Solaris version of
- Unix in beta testing in the first quarter of 1994, said Chris
- Frew, SuperProject product owner at CA, and the NT version will
- come later.
-
- All the versions are binary-compatible, CA said, meaning that a
- project file created on one system can be opened unchanged on
- another.
-
- Because the OS/2 version of SuperProject is a native 32-bit
- application, it can handle as many as 64,000 tasks, about four
- times what the Windows version can manage, said Jean-Luc Valente,
- marketing manager. Computer Associates has tried to take full
- advantage of the power of OS/2 with this release, Valente said in
- a telephone press conference.
-
- The software also comes bundled with TimeSheet Professional for
- Windows, a time-card and expense system, and with a limited
- version of CA-Realizer 2.0 as a macro language. Several new
- training tools are also included.
-
- The software also has a "help assist" mode that Valente likened
- to the "wizards" in some Microsoft consumer software --
- facilities that walk new users through common operations.
-
- Speaking during the CA-run teleconference, Greg Schmidt, project
- manager for wide-area network implementation at MCI Corp., in
- Colorado Springs, Colorado, said MCI was happy to get the OS/2
- version of SuperProject because the company uses OS/2 widely in
- addition to Windows. OS/2's preemptive multitasking makes it
- possible to run SuperProject and do other things at the same
- time, he noted.
-
- Upgrades and competitive upgrades are $149, and for $59
- CA-SuperProject users can replace the limited version of
- CA-Realizer built into SuperProject with a full version.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931207/Press Contact: Bob Gordon, Computer
- Associates, 516-342-2391, fax 516-342-5329; Public Contact:
- Computer Associates, 516-342-5224)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(BOS)(00021)
-
- SGML '93 - Progress In Government, Industry, Publishing 12/07/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- SGML (Standard
- Generalized Markup Language) first took hold in government and
- the automotive and aerospace industries, and is now starting to
- move into such areas as wire services and newspaper publishing.
-
- In "Reports from the Front," a presentation at the SGML '93
- conference yesterday, representatives of these fields reported on
- the current status of the document interchange language, which is
- designed to allow data to be easily shared, retrieved and re-used
- among applications, regardless of hardware or software platform
- and independent of format.
-
- The federal CALS Initiative released a revised SGML standard
- called MIL-M-28001B in June, calling for an electronic review
- capability along with an operating system enhancement, reported
- Beth Micksch.
-
- Meanwhile, a prioritized list of 30 target capabilities (TCAPS)
- for MIL-HDBK-SGML has been submitted to the Roadmap 2000 review
- body. MIL-HDBK-SGML concerns the tutorial information on CALS.
- Comments on the TCAPS are due December 8, and a comment
- consolidation meeting is slated for the week of January 13.
-
- Pending approval of the TCAPS, the 28001 standard will be revised
- again, to include a CALS SGML Registry and a CALS SGML Library,
- according to Micksch. The revision will also include changes to
- page methodology and a reorganization of 28001. The
- reorganization will be aimed at streamlining the standard and
- making information easier to find, she explained.
-
- Another speaker, Eddie Nelson, said that the ATA, a consortium of
- aircraft manufacturers, component makers, and other companies in
- the aviation industry, is currently defining a series of seven
- different Document Data Types (DTDs), or rules for specifying
- SGML document structure.
-
- The DTDs will be used for technical manuals ranging from parts
- catalogs to operating and flight manuals, Nelson added.
-
- "But the DTDs can be very difficult to put together, because we
- all have our own issues to deal with," he commented.
- Complicating the process is the fact that "a new generation of
- aircraft is on the way."
-
- Dianne Kennedy, a representative of the Society of Automotive
- Engineers (SAE), noted that progress of SGML in the automotive
- industry has been especially swift, due to the need for
- compliance with the federal government's 1990 Clean Air
- Amendments by 1998.
-
- The amendments require auto manufacturers to provide better on-
- board diagnostics capabilities for detecting excessive emission
- levels, as well as improved emissions-related training and
- service information to the "aftermarket," or technicians who work
- with automobiles after the cars have come to market.
-
- In June, 1987, the SEA Motor Vehicle Council formed the Vehicle
- Electronic/Electrical Systems Diagnostic Committee, along with a
- number of task forces, including the J2008 task force.
-
- The mission of the J2008 task force is as follows: "Original
- Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) will make emissions-related
- service information publicly available in a standard organization
- and defined structure." J2008, however, does not require OEMs to
- provide presentation formats or application delivery systems.
-
- The J2008 Task Force is fulfilling its mission with an SGML
- specification that includes graphics standards, a relational data
- model, and provisions for data interchange, as well as DTDs.
-
- In July, 1993, the J2008 Task Force sent out a 2000-page draft
- document for straw vote, Kennedy said. The final document is
- being prepared this quarter, and is expected to be ready in the
- first quarter of 1994. "We hope that our document can be used as
- a model by other industries," she stated.
-
- In the wire service and newspaper publishing industry, the
- progress of SGML has been spurred by the annual SGML conference,
- said Kevin M. Roche, news systems manager for the Wall Street
- Journal.
-
- At previous meetings of the conference, two industry groups, the
- American Newspaper Publishers Association (ANPA) and the
- International Press Telecommunications Council (IPTC), discovered
- that each had been working separately on a standard that would
- allow wire service copy to be used by newspapers and other mass
- media in a device-independent manner.
-
- Since then, the two groups have started to collaborate on a joint
- SGML standard known as UTF (Universal Text Format), according to
- Roche.
-
- The UTF specification improves on current methods of wire service
- transmission to newspapers, which are based on the requirements
- of newspaper typography, he said. UTF takes into account data
- types such as audio, graphics, and video that will facilitate
- multimedia publishing, he elaborated.
-
- Participating in UTF's development are such key industry players
- as the Associated Press, the New York Times, and the Chicago
- Tribune, as well as the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones'
- electronic publishing arm, he added.
-
- The joint UTF committee plans to hold its next meeting in Miami,
- FL during January. Another meeting will take place during March,
- in Windsor, the UK.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19931207/Press and reader contact: Tanya
- Bosse, Graphic Communications Association, tel 703-519-8160)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00022)
-
- Stratus Acquires Isis Distributed Systems 12/07/93
- MARLBORO, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Stratus
- Computer, Inc., said it has signed a definitive agreement to buy
- Isis Distributed Systems, Inc., a software developer in Ithaca,
- New York. Isis' software is meant to ensure the reliability of
- distributed computing and client/server applications.
-
- Stratus Computer spokesman Paul LaBelle said the acquisition is
- the most significant in Stratus' history, because it extends the
- company's business from fault-tolerant computers to a broader
- range of continuous availability products.
-
- The company will pay about $24 million in cash and shares for
- two-year-old Isis, a spinoff from Cornell University, that expects
- to sell about $3 million worth of its software by the end of
- 1993, LaBelle said.
-
- Isis makes "middleware" -- software that manages the message
- traffic among distributed computers. Paul Jones, former
- vice-president of engineering at Stratus and now vice-president
- and chief operating officer of the new Isis subsidiary, said the
- software provides services to distributed applications to ensure
- reliable messaging.
-
- For instance, the Isis software will see that messages get
- through by retrying or sending them by an alternate route if
- problems arise, he said. The software will also ensure that
- information is kept consistent. For instance, if a piece of data
- is to be sent to three different database files, the software
- will make sure it reaches all three or will restore all three
- files to their previous state, much as database software will
- "roll back" a transaction if a problem occurs to ensure data
- remains consistent, Jones said.
-
- Dealing with such consistency issues is "probably the most
- difficult problem in distributed computing," Jones said, and by
- providing services to handle this for applications, Isis makes
- life simpler for application developers.
-
- Isis is to become a wholly owned subsidiary of Stratus and keep
- its present name, officials said. The company's roughly 25
- employees will all keep their jobs, LaBelle added. Dr. Kenneth P.
- Birman, founder of Isis, will remain as the company's chief
- scientist.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19931207/Press Contact: Paul LaBelle, Stratus
- Computer, 508-460-2068; David Hayword, Stratus Computer,
- 508-460-2796; Public Contact: Stratus Computer, 508-460-2000, fax
- 508-480-0416)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00023)
-
- In-Flight Phone Begins Beta Tests With German Airline 12/07/93
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Mercury In-Flight Phone Europe
- has announced that it will undertake a series of tests in
- conjunction with Mercury Communications on board Lufthansa Airlines'
- jets operating in the European area.
-
- The tests, which are scheduled to start next March, will involved
- limited public and staff testing of the digital mobile phone system,
- which will bounce signals to the nearest ground station, rather than
- use satellite or VHF radio links as other plane-based phone systems
- make use of.
-
- The IFPE service to be used on the Lufthansa jets uses a similar
- concept to cellular, with base stations handing calls over to other
- base stations as the plane travels through Europe. Up to 60 base
- stations will ensure that total coverage is available throughout
- Europe and nearby areas.
-
- As previously reported by Newsbytes, the system will be compatible
- with digital systems already in use in the US and some parts of
- Europe. Base stations are expected to be installed around Europe at
- diverse locations.
-
- Services available in flight will include digital phones, fax
- machines and ISDN (integrated services digital network)-like
- services such as interactive games, news services and even the
- ubiquitous phone shopping facilities seen on some intra-US flights.
-
- Plans call for onboard equipment to include a switched broadband
- local area network (LAN) on the plane, with under-seat computers,
- telephone handsets and LCD (liquid crystal display) "seat back"
- screens. Users are to be offered a choice of five languages,
- including English, French and German. Up to sixteen calls per plane
- can be made.
-
- (Sylvia Dennis/19931207/Press Contact: Mercury Communications - Tel:
- +44-71-528-2561; Fax: +44-71-528-2577)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LON)(00024)
-
- British Social Security Fraud Reaches Mammoth Proportions 12/07/93
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Britain's social security fraud
- problem is now estimated to top the UKP1,000 million mark each year,
- according to a report just issued by the Commons Public Accounts
- Committee (CPAC). The report calls for more computerization and
- enhanced anti-fraud facilities in order to beat the problem.
-
- The report clearly rejects the assertion made by Sir Michael
- Partridge, permanent secretary at the Department of Social
- Security (DSS), that "no government has ever proceeded on the
- basis that you simply staff the Civil Service on the grounds of how
- much money you can recover."
-
- The report notes that the recent appointment of another 10 people to
- combat fraud within the DSS in recent months is marginal and calls
- on the ministry to "carefully consider the degree of priority they
- are giving to this type of work."
-
- The report claims that, where cases are referred to the Organized
- Fraud Branch (OFB) teams, a high rate of success in prosecutions is
- recorded. However, because of limited resources, the OFB teams only
- accept between 12 and 21 percent of referred cases.
-
- "In view of the difficulties in the exchange of information between
- investigating teams, and the absence in many offices of formal
- investigation review systems, we are concerned that some cases of
- organized fraud may not be being detected and pursued," the report
- said.
-
- MPs in the CPAC are also highly critical of the Ministry and the
- Benefits Agency for failing to provide training for fraud staff,
- for "bad coordination and delays" in introducing a new computer
- system to coordinate fraud detection.
-
- The report notes that the Ministry is studying the use of identity
- cards but felt that a more secure system was appropriate. "Nearly
- everything was capable of being forged. So far they had not found a
- solution," the report said.
-
- The report is available through Her Majesty's Stationary Office
- outlets in the UK and aboard. It is entitled "The Department of
- Social Security and Benefits Agency: Combating Organised Fraud; 48th
- Report of the Public Accounts Committee. HMSO #11)
-
- (Steve Gold/19931207/Press & Public Contact: HMSO London - Tel: +44-
- 71-873-0011)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LON)(00025)
-
- Chase Manhattan Intros Electronic Check Retrieval 12/07/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Chase Manhattan Bank
- has introduced Imageaccess, which it claims is the next generation
- of check processing technology. The system is the world's first
- corporate electronic imaging archive and retrieval system from a
- major bank.
-
- The new state-of-the-art electronic check retrieval service is
- designed specifically for customers such as insurance companies,
- broker/dealers, mutual funds operators and other organizations which
- process as many as 500,000 checks and field an estimated 1,500
- payment enquiries in a single month.
-
- According to Chase, Imageaccess will enable them to dramatically
- improve customer service, reduce internal operating expenses, and
- reduce the risk of check fraud, which the bank claims is currently
- increasing at 20 percent a year.
-
- In use, Image access scans and stores pictures of the front and back
- of a check in digital form on an optical disk, so that a customer
- can access a copy of a check in as little as nine seconds simply by
- entering an account number.
-
- Once checks are stored, customers can retrieve electronic images of
- them in one of two ways. They can be transmitted directly over an
- electronic network to a customer's computer and stored in an
- organization's customer correspondence and account payable files.
- Or, they can be exported in bulk. Bulk check images are stored on
- digital tape or optical disks, which are mailed to customers, who
- can load them onto their own image platforms.
-
- Prior to the introduction of Imageaccess, account reconciliation and
- customer service staff had to retrieve checks physically to respond
- to customer payment enquiries. They could shuffle through paper
- checks in numerical order and make a photocopy. Or, they could look
- through microfilm or microfiche, find the check, and make a copy.
- Either way, Chase claims that the entire process could take up to
- eight days. With Imageaccess, the system takes a few minutes.
-
- According to Chase, Imageaccess fights check fraud by speeding up
- the process for reviewing questionable checks which don't tally
- with issuance information such as serial number, date and amount.
-
- (Steve Gold/19931207/Press & Public Contact: Chase InfoServ
- International - Tel: 212/552-6224)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00026)
-
- Olivetti Sheds 2,000 Staff - Temporarily 12/07/93
- TURIN, ITALY, 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- After several days of speculation
- fuelled by a firm "no comment" from the company itself, Olivetti has
- announced plans to lay off around 2,000 staff from its Italian
- workforce in the middle of January.
-
- Although Olivetti is referring to the layoffs as temporary only, it
- has told the unions concerned that the staff will be offered a
- percentage of their salary for a fixed period, in compensation for
- the fact that some of them may not get their old jobs back.
-
- The unions concerned are reported to be up in arms over the layoffs,
- but Olivetti officials said that, since official discussions on
- staffing levels broke down late last week, the company now has no
- choice in the matter.
-
- Union officials have said that a further meeting with Olivetti's
- management will now go ahead on December 16, although Olivetti has
- refused to comment on the subject.
-
- (Sylvia Dennis/19931207/Press & Public Contact: Olivetti - Tel: +39-
- 125-523733; Fax: +39-125-522377)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LAX)(00027)
-
- Multimedia Developer Great Bear Buys Bulgarian Firm 12/07/93
- MORAGA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Multimedia
- software developer Great Bear has announced it has acquired
- Sofia, Bulgaria-based software development company Logatronix.
- Officials at Great Bear said the acquisition is expected to
- significantly enhance the company's custom multimedia title
- development capability.
-
- Great Bear describes Logatronix as staffed by more than 25
- computer scientists and programming professionals who
- participated extensively in computer software development for the
- former Eastern Bloc and Soviet Union. Logatronix president,
- Kostadin Yanev, is a senior research associate at the Institute
- of Computer Sciences in Sofia and received his PhD in computer
- science from the Polytechnical University, Sofia.
-
- In addition, Great Bear announced private venture capitalist and
- consultant William D. Jobe has been named as a director and as
- chairman of the company's board of directors. Jobe has been
- associated with companies such as MIPS Technology Development and
- MIPS Computer Systems, Chatham Venture Corporation, VMX, and Data
- General Corporation.
-
- Moraga, California-based Great Bear (NASD EBB: GTBR) is a
- recently formed interactive, multimedia software development
- company. Its recently released titles include reference materials
- such as medical dictionaries and health guides.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931207/Press Contact: John Lukrich, Great
- Bear, tel 510-631-1600; Bruce Russell, Russell Communications
- Group for Great Bear, tel 310-216-1414, fax 310-216-1223)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00028)
-
- Apple Newton Industry Association, Other Newton News 12/07/93
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Apple
- Computer says it is launching the Newton Industry Association at
- the first International Newton Development Conference being held
- this week in Apple's home town of Cupertino, California. Apple
- also announced it would work with Swedish company Telia to bring
- Newton products to mobile computer users in Sweden.
-
- Apple says the Newton Industry Association is aimed at promoting
- growth and interoperability of the Newton platform and associated
- devices. Standards is another focus for the association in the
- areas of wireless communications, telephony support, and office
- automation.
-
- One of the areas receiving attention right now is infrared
- communications between personal digital assistants (PDAs).
- Infrared standards do not currently exist, meaning that even
- though the Newton Messagepad and the Zoomer PDAs from Tandy and
- Casio both have infrared sensors, the devices use conflicting
- standards. The upshot is Apple's PDA won't talk to a Zoomer and
- vice versa. Apple representatives were unavailable to comment as
- to what the company or the Newton Industry Association are
- planning to do concerning standards.
-
- Apple listed beginning participants in the Newton Industry
- Association as licensees, original equipment manufacturers
- (OEMs), component suppliers, and marketing partners. Companies
- represented included: Alcatel, ARM, Bellsouth Mobilecomm, British
- Telecom/Cellnet, Cirrus Logic, Deutsche Telecom, GEC Plessey, LSI
- Logic, Matsushita, Motorola, Paragraph, Scriptel, Sharp,
- Siemens/ROLM, Telia, Toshiba, Traveling Software, and US West.
-
- For Swedish users, Telia is hoping its alliance with Apple will
- bring integrated mobile technology, using the Newton, to Telia's
- current mobile services. Stig Johansson, director of marketing
- for Telia, said: "Telia's growing number of mobile customers need
- integrated services which work seamlessly with today's computer
- technology... The collaboration between Telia and Apple enables
- Newton technology to be integrated into some of Telia's mobile
- services such as Minicall text, NMT 900, GSM, and the PLUS and
- Access information system. Products based on Newton technology
- may even be sold in Telia's retail outlets."
-
- While the Newton has been well-received by enthusiastic users who
- have snatched up 50,000 units since the product was launched in
- August, reports from mainstream media have expressed
- disappointment and sharp criticism for the PDA. It appears,
- however, that things may be turning for Apple as four industry
- publications have awarded the unit top honors. PC Laptop
- Computers Magazine called the Newton the "Most Promising
- Portable," PC Magazine awarded the Newton MessagePad first place
- in its "Design Category," Byte gave it the 1993 Byte Award of
- Excellence, and Reseller magazine called it the "Best-To-Sell
- Products of the Year."
-
- In new announcements concerning the Messagepad, Apple said
- Newtonmail is expected to be available in a final commercial
- release throughout the United States in January 1994. Newtonmail
- allows Newton users to exchange text messages easily with each
- other and anyone who can be reached through online services
- available on the Internet and is currently available in a limited
- commercial release in the United States. Newtonmail requires the
- Newton Fax Modem Card, a credit-card sized Personal Computer
- Memory Card International Association (PCMCIA) modem, for
- communication via online services as well as the ability to send
- faxes.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19931207/Press Contact: Emma Bufton, Regis
- McKenna for Apple Computer, tel 408-974-1856, fax 408-974-2885;
- Wolf Fernlund, Apple Computer Europe, 46 8 703 33 33; Michael
- Gunnarsson, Telia, 46 8 713 25 38)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00029)
-
- Trellis Expose 2.0 Provides Distributed SNMP Management 12/07/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- Trellis, the
- Southborough, Massachusetts-based developer of network
- applications software for the Banyan Systems VINES operating
- system, has announced that its new Expose Distributed Network
- Manager will include a large number of major enhancements which
- will provide network managers with the tools they need to monitor
- and troubleshoot SNMP or simple network management protocol
- devices.
-
- Expose 2.0 (written with an accent sign on the final e) will
- introduce the SuperMIB (management information block) tool that
- presents vendor's MIB information in an easily understood
- display. The main object of SuperMIB is to filter out the
- extraneous data which is not really useful in managing a
- particular network.
-
- Several other new functions will support VINES 5.0 network
- performance statistics, alphanumeric pager alarm notification,
- performance graph printing, and bitmap image generation for
- network topology diagrams.
-
- Pricing for the software, which will ship this month, starts at
- $1,500.
-
- (John McCormick/19931207/Press Contact: Chip deVillfranca,
- Trellis, 508-485-7200 or fax 508-485-3044)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00030)
-
- SGML '93 - 5 Electronics Vendors Create "Pinnacles" 12/07/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 DEC 7 (NB) -- It isn't easy
- for competing companies to work together in preparing an SGML
- (Standard Generalized Query Language) specification, but five
- electronics vendors are meeting this goal so well that they
- deserve to be held up as a role model, said Yuri Rubinsky,
- conference chair and president of SoftQuad, introducing a session
- at SGML '93.
-
- Employees of the five companies -- Intel, National Semiconductor,
- Texas Instruments, Philips, and Hitachi -- have been
- collaborating so closely that these activities extended to the
- joint preparation of the presentation they gave at the conference
- yesterday, "Multi-Company SGML Application Standard Development
- Process."
-
- The collaborative SGML effort, "Pinnacles," was formed because
- staffers at each company had faced similar problems in the area
- of publishing product data sheets, and republishing these
- documents into compilations, or databooks, said the first speaker
- from the group, Bob Yencha of National Semiconductor.
-
- These documents are typically small in size, but very complex,
- "with many dependencies and relationships, many of them
- implicit," he noted. Company employees had found paper-based
- publishing too slow and expensive, and were interested in placing
- the documents online.
-
- Speaking next, Jeff Barton of Texas Instruments said that the
- idea of a joint development program was appealing for several
- reasons, including the ability to build on existing development
- partnerships, the opportunity to minimize costs, and the chance
- to avoid "the major risk of individual companies implementing
- proprietary SGML solutions."
-
- To get the ball rolling, employees of Texas Instruments, National
- Semiconductor, Intel, and Philips began to meet, learning about
- SGML applications in other industries, testing assumptions about
- their own document types, and defining a common approach.
- Hitachi came into the program a little later.
-
- After meeting for nine months, the members of "Pinnacles"
- submitted an identical proposal to top management at their
- respective companies.
-
- "Interestingly, although we used exactly the same proposal, the
- objections raised at each company were different," noted Barton.
- Top management at each firm did "buy into" the program, though,
- and the stage was set for the "Process" phase.
-
- During the "Process" phase, Pinnacles developed a timeline and
- vendor selection process, "defined the deliverables," analyzed
- its own actions to that point, and drafted and reviewed a
- standard, said Alfred Elkerbrout of Philips.
-
- The group decided to base its specification on SGML due to the
- modularity and extensibility of the SGML architecture, and its
- ability to accommodate print as well as future electronic
- publications, he explained.
-
- Pinnacles opted to work with a consultant, but specified that the
- same consultant should be used throughout the process. The group
- further decided to hold four one-week "document analysis"
- sessions, to be followed by one or two "reconciliation" sessions.
-
- Each session was to consist of "participants" as well as two
- "observers" from each company. Two-thirds of the participants
- would be "content experts" (such as engineers, product managers,
- and standards experts).
-
- One-third of the participants would be "publications experts" and
- information consumers (technical writers, editors, component
- managers, actual consumers).
-
- The observers would be invited to assure continuity, and to serve
- as an additional resource to the participants. They would
- consist of "politically necessary people from each host company,"
- as well as "people that will be responsible for implementing or
- supporting an SGML-based information system" and external and
- internal consultants.
-
- Tom Jeffery of Hitachi said that, in drafting the SGML standard,
- Pinnacles took a "modularization approach" and took into account
- "what to adopt from other standards." The group was looking for
- the ability to handle structure as well as content models.
-
- Once completed, the draft standard will be reviewed by invited
- semiconductor companies, third-party vendors, customers, and
- vendors of authoring, publishing, and EDA (Electronic Design
- Automation) tools.
-
- Patricia O'Sullivan of Intel stated that the draft standard is
- due for completion by December 31 of this year. The review
- process is set to be completed by March, 1994. In April, 1994,
- Pinnacles plans to submit the specification to a standards body.
-
- What has Pinnacles learned in the process? "Plan, plan,
- plan...but be flexible, too. And constant communication is
- critical," Yencha advised.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19931207/Reader and press contact: Tanya
- Bosse, Graphic Communications Association, tel 703-519-8160)
-
-
-