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- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00001)
-
- Guide To Electronic Publishing 04/09/93
- BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- The Digital
- Publishing Association has released version 2 of Ron Albright's
- "Publishing in the 21st Century: An Electronic Guide for Authors,
- Publishers, and Entrepreneurs." Albright is founder and president
- of the DPA, which recently changed its name from the Disktop
- Publishers' Association.
-
- Using the advanced HyperWriter hypertext and multimedia
- production software from Fairfield, Conn.-based Ntergaid Inc.,
- this disk book provides prospective self-publishers or commercial
- electronic publishers with answers to the following questions:
-
- "Why books don't get published? Hint: It often has little to do
- with their readability or worth."
-
- "Why one expert says: 'The entire book publishing industry will
- cease to exist' in the 21st Century? We'll also explain why he is
- right."
-
- "How you can 'publish' your material without ever learning how to
- use complicated desktop publishing software or buying an
- expensive laser printer. If you are using a computer and a word
- processor to write, you are producing a product that can be sold
- to other computer users."
-
- "How you can distribute readable works without ever printing or
- binding a single page of type. Electronic publishing saves the
- trees as well as your time."
-
- "What alternatives exist for getting your work sold? Mail order?
- Electronic distribution? The 'BBS Pipeline?' Commercial networks
- (such as GEnie?), fax?"
-
- The $10 "book" is, true to the Association's goals to move
- publishing into the 21st Century, published on high density
- floppy diskette.
-
- (John McCormick/19930408/Press and Public Contact: Ron Albright,
- Digital Publishing Association, Voice: 205-853-8269, Fax: 205-
- 853-8478, BBS: 205-854-1660)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00002)
-
- Government Technology Conference 04/09/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- The Washington-based
- Cato Institute is sponsoring the fourth annual Regulation
- Conference on federal technology policy on April 22 and 23 at the
- Carlton Hotel in Washington. This year's conference will focus on
- the question, "Can the federal government improve American
- economic performance and international competitiveness by
- supporting commercial research and development in critical
- technologies?"
-
- Panel discussions will cover the following six major topics:
-
- "Government's Role in Technology" will feature Murray L.
- Weidenbaum, Washington University; Charles L. Schultz, Brookings
- Institute; and David C. Mowery, The University of California at
- Berkeley.
-
- "The Cost and Availability of Capital" will include Lawrence A.
- Kudlow, Bear Stearns & Co.; Robert Glauber, Kennedy School of
- Government; Michael T. Jacobs, Kurt Salmon Associates; and David
- Packard, co-founder of Hewlett-Packard.
-
- James Bovard from Cato Institute, F.M. Scherer from the Kennedy
- School, and J. David Richardson from Syracuse University will
- speak on "Trade Policy and High-Tech Industry."
-
- Other speakers from MIT, the Hudson Institute, The University
- of California at Davis, the American Enterprise Institute, and
- other well-known organizations will speak on "Biotechnology and
- Pharmaceuticals," "Emerging Telecommunications Technology," and
- "Technology Policy in Japan and Europe."
-
- Conference registration is $250 until April 15 and $300
- thereafter for corporate attendants.
-
- (John McCormick/19930408/Press Contact and conference passes:
- Julie Riggs, Conference Director, Cato Institute, 202-546-0200 or
- fax 202-546-0728)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00003)
-
- LaserAccess NT COLD Optical Storage 04/09/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- LaserAccess has
- recently announced the LA2000 computer output to laser disc
- (COLD) which provides a high-performance Windows NT-compatible
- optical storage system capable of maintaining more than one
- billion pages of data with the jukebox option.
-
- Twelve-inch write-once or WORM laser disc technology is used to
- provide online access to vast quantities of mainframe-based data
- to PCs via a Windows NT Operating System local area network
- interface that provides a full 32-bit data path.
-
- The company says that the LA2000's NT interface capabilities will
- provide vital backup access which will allow a user to
- access the gigabytes of data stored on the redundant disk arrays
- even if the mainframe system is down. LaserAccess says that this
- lack of alternative emergency access to their data is the primary
- reason that many companies have continued to store critical
- records in microfiche despite the proven reliability of WORM
- storage itself.
-
- The basic LA2001 system provides 10.2 gigabytes of online data,
- while the largest, seven-drive system stores 30 gigabytes or 24
- million pages of data online and offers fast access to a full
- terabyte (1,000 gigabytes) or one billion pages of information
- using the jukebox.
-
- WORM or write-once read-many discs use a high-powered laser to
- physically change the surface of the recording media on a disc,
- providing archival (very permanent and secure) data storage. The
- data is read off of the discs using a very weak laser beam.
-
- (John McCormick/19930408/Press Contact: Warren Wilkins,
- LaserAccess, 206-485-1555 or Tim Dubes, Lages & Associates, 714-
- 453-8080)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00004)
-
- Mathematica 2.2 Shipping 04/09/93
- CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Mathematica,
- Wolfram Research's powerful high-end mathematics tool, has just
- undergone a major modification process which has resulted in more
- than 2,000 enhancements and new features added to the
- latest version, 2.2 which was recently released. Mathematica runs
- on MS-DOS, Macintosh, Unix, and Windows platforms, providing
- numerical, symbolic (equation solving), and graphical
- computation.
-
- Mathematica's powerful symbolic analysis capabilities have been
- improved with more sophisticated singularities in definite
- integrals, enhanced solutions to differential equations, and
- symbolic solutions to both nonlinear ordinary differential
- equations and first-order partial differentials.
-
- A new graphics package included in version 2.2 offers many
- enhancements to earlier features.
-
- Using this massive program, a mathematician, scientist, or
- engineer can perform sophisticated data analysis on an
- inexpensive PC or workstation, often saving the time needed to
- access a mainframe or supercomputer, or pre-processing problems
- and preparing them for faster execution on a supercomputer.
-
- Mathematica 2.2 for Macintosh, Windows, and Sun Micro systems are
- already available while Unix versions for Silicon Graphics, HP,
- MIPS, Next, and DEC will ship before July.
-
- (John McCormick/19930408/Press Contact: Jane Rich, Wolfram
- Research, 217-398-0700 or fax 217-398-0747)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00005)
-
- Low Price On History Of The World CD-ROM 04/09/93
- PARSIPPANY, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Bureau
- Development has drastically lowered the price on "History of the
- World," a multimedia CD-ROM for MS-DOS and Macintosh computers.
- Previously the disc has only been affordable to schools and
- libraries because of its high $795 retail price, but until
- May 15, 1993 the Bureau is reducing the price of the same disc
- to only $79.95.
-
- History of the World contains a multicultural overview of all
- parts of the earth throughout history using hundreds of full-text
- works and the two best-selling textbooks from HarperColins:
- "World Civilization - The Global Experience" by Peter N. Stearns
- et al, and "Civilization - Past and Present" by T. Walker
- Wallbank et al.
-
- In addition to fully searchable plain text, "History" carries
- audio files of 25 important speeches and 567 pictures,
- illustrations, and tables.
-
- Cut-and-paste tools permit students and researchers to export
- articles of interest.
-
- (John McCormick/19930408/Press Contact: Vanessa Trezza, Warner,
- Bicking, Morris & Partners for The Bureau, 212-759-7900 or fax
- 212-759-8087; Public Contact: Bureau Development, 201-808-2700 or
- fax 201-808-2676)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00006)
-
- Monarch Notes On Floppy Diskettes 04/09/93
- PARSIPPANY, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Monarch Notes,
- that vital crib information known to millions of students as the
- last-second grade saver when a book report is due on an unread
- novel, were previously only available in print or on an
- expensive-to-access CD-ROM disc, but now Bureau Development has
- published the more than 200 guides on a five-volume set of floppy
- diskettes.
-
- The Bureau, a leading CD-ROM publisher and mail-order retailer,
- already publishes the entire Monarch Notes set on its "Monarch
- Notes" CD-ROM and at a reasonable cost, but a CD-ROM
- requires further hardware investment that makes the titles less
- accessible to many students, especially those who use portable or
- laptop computers.
-
- Each of the four basic sets (The Literary Tradition,
- 19th Century Literature, and 20th Century Literature A-L, and M-Z)
- carries a list price of $49.95, while the fifth volume,
- Shakespeare, lists for $59.95.
-
- All volumes come on 3.5-inch high-density floppy diskettes and
- must be copied to a hard drive before they can be accessed.
-
- (John McCormick/19930408/Press Contact: Vanessa Trezza, Warner,
- Bicking, Morris & Partners for The Bureau, 212-759-7900 or fax
- 212-759-8087; Public Contact: Bureau Development, 201-808-2700 or
- fax 201-808-2676)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00007)
-
- $200 Uninterruptible Power Supply 04/09/93
- NECEDAH, WISCONSIN, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Best Power
- Technology has added an inexpensive new small systems 300 VA
- Patriot Standby Power System. Many sophisticated power protection
- systems are available, but at only $199 list this is a very
- sophisticated standby power system which transfers systems to
- inverter power in 4 milliseconds or less.
-
- Best reports that the Patriot 300 VA will operate an IBM PS/2
- Model 30 with VGA monitor for a full 22 minutes. The company says
- that its premium battery will last from three to five years
- without any maintenance and that comparable products must have
- their batteries replaced every two years or less.
-
- The regulated inverter power output will be less likely to damage
- a PC's power supply than will systems with unregulated square-
- wave output which can cause overheating and reduced
- dependability.
-
- Besides providing a backup power supply during power outages,
- this $200 Patriot system also protects against lighting and surge
- damage, gives overvoltage protection, and offers full-time
- electrical noise filtering. Good quality power supply filters
- which provide this level of protection without the inverter
- feature cost from $100 to nearly as much as the Patriot 300VA
- which includes the battery backup.
-
- This is a standby power supply rather than one of the company's
- more sophisticated (and more expensive) uninterruptible power
- supplies, so it may not be suitable for critical applications such
- as powering an indispensable local area network server in a
- business. The unit is designed for small companies and
- especially for home offices.
-
- One interesting application would be to use the Patriot 300VA to
- power a bulletin board system which would operate for an extended
- period on the small backup supply because a BBS usually doesn't
- have a monitor powered up at all times and a computer's monitor
- normally draws far more than half the total system power.
-
- (John McCormick/19930408/Press Contact: Scott Knickelbine, Best
- Power Technology, 608-565-7200 or fax 608-565-2929)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00008)
-
- 50-Gigabyte Robotic Tape Storage System 04/09/93
- BOULDER, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Exabyte Corporation
- continues to expand its robotic tape library subsystems offerings
- with the announcement that it is now shipping a 50-gigabyte (GB)
- random access 8mm tape library subsystem that automates tape storage
- management operations for workstations, PC networks, and midrange
- computer systems.
-
- Called the EXB-10e (the "e" is for enhanced, says the company), the
- new system is a second generation version of the company's EXB-10
- series. Software from third party developers automates operations
- such as unattended backup and restore, scheduled archiving, file
- migration, and periodic drive cleaning.
-
- Robotic tape systems automatically locate and mount the appropriate
- storage tape when files on that particular tape are required, or to
- perform archiving, backup, and restoration tasks.
-
- The EXB-10e is a desktop system, with the four main modules enclosed
- in a cabinet measuring 15.7 inches high, 8.5 inches wide, and 19.1
- inches deep. The modules include a full-height Exabyte 8mm tape
- drive; 10 eight-millimeter data cartridges which snap into a
- removable data cartridge magazine; a robotics arm mechanism which
- moves the cartridges back and forth from the magazine to the tape
- drive, and a liquid crystal display (LCD) interface and control
- panel. When configured with an EXB-8500 8mm cartridge tape subsystem
- the new unit provides random access to 50 GB of data. The data
- storage capacity can be doubled by substituting the company's
- EXB-8500c tape drive that compresses the data.
-
- Exabyte says the robotics mechanism has been redesigned to provide
- smoother and more precise movements of the robotics arm. The system
- takes about 16 seconds to select and mount a tape cartridge. The
- unit also has a key lock in the door panel to provide physical
- security for the tapes.
-
- Prices for the EXB-10e systems start at $15,000, and it's on
- display at Exabyte's booth at the AIIM show in Chicago this week.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930408/Press contact: Susan Merriman, Exabyte
- Corporation, 303-447-7434; Reader contact: Exabyte Corporation,
- 303-442-4269 or 800-392-2983)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00009)
-
- Low Cost PC-To-TV Adapter 04/09/93
- BEAVERTON, OREGON, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Consumer Technology
- Northwest Inc., has announced Presenter Plus 2, a PC-to-TV adapter
- that the company says makes displaying computer-generated
- presentations more affordable, portable, and convenient.
-
- The Presenter Plus 2 is the latest addition to the company's
- Presenter series of pocket-sized adapters that are compatible with a
- variety of multimedia software programs allowing users to present
- computer generated data and video images on a standard television
- set. The adapters connect the TV set's video input port to the
- computer's external VGA port. The adapters also provide a connector
- for a standard VCR so the presentation can be recorded in a video
- cassette.
-
- Consumer Technology VP and co-founder Mark Lieberman says the
- adapters are both efficient and cost-effective. "The big advantage
- to PC-to-TV adapters is that you don't have to carry around
- specialized and cumbersome overhead projectors or high-resolution
- equipment for your presentation. Standard or large-screen TVs are
- much less expensive and there's one in virtually every conference
- room or class room."
-
- The company says the Presenter 2, measuring 1.06 by 3.56 by 5.69
- inches and weighing just under 10 pounds, is compatible with most
- common VGA cards, and provides an image enhancement feature for easy
- adjustment of the screen image to fit the television format.
- Ultravision fonts are supported.
-
- When you buy the Presenter 2, you get the interface, a VGA extension
- cable, power supply, video cable, and control and font software. The
- system is compatible with both DOS and Windows-based applications,
- NTSC, S-Video and VGA outputs, and can display up to 32,768 colors
- simultaneously.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930408/Press contact: Mark Lieberman, Consumer
- Technology, 503-643-1662; Reader contact: Consumer Technology,
- 503-643-1662 or 800-356-3983)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00010)
-
- A Computer That Decorates Cakes 04/09/93
- OLATHE, KANSAS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Cake decoration has
- always required a steady hand, good handwriting, and an eye for art.
- But no longer. The Sweet Art Division of Olathe, Kansas-based
- Kauffman Machine Shop is marketing a computerized cake decorator that
- can transfer a digitized photo image to the cake.
-
- The Sweet Art Series 1000 package consists of a camera to capture
- the image, a personal computer, a robotic arm equipped with spray
- nozzles called air brushes, and a stand for the cake that raises and
- lowers itself on command from the computer to control the width of
- each line. Colors are produced by mixing the primary colors (red,
- blue, yellow) plus black to achieve the desired shade for each
- portion of the image. Kauffman spokesperson Sid Wolfe told Newsbytes
- the images and writing are formed by spraying food coloring onto an
- already iced cake. Wolfe says just a thimble of food coloring will
- do as many as 20 cakes.
-
- Wolfe says the device will handle anything from 2-1/2 inch cookies
- or cupcakes to a full-sized sheet cake and can reproduce artwork,
- logos, color and black-and-white photos or handwriting, but they are
- still working out a few problems reproducing high-contrast images.
- The custom software has some capability to reduce contrast, and
- users with their own PCs could edit contrasty images using their own
- software or create their own custom image. "If you have a good
- smooth icing, it comes out exactly like a photograph," says Wolfe.
-
- The Series 1000 utilizes a Commodore Model 108-4S equipped with a
- mouse, a Samsung touch-screen monitor to control the software, and a
- Panasonic camera to capture the images. The system ships with 1200
- pre-programmed images including rabbits, a haunted house, a
- cornucopia, a ginger bread house, several holiday, airplanes and
- helicopters, and a train, and can store up to 2,000 images.
-
- Kauffman Machine Shop got involved because they were manufacturing
- some of the parts for the system, then later acquired the patent.
- Wolfe says the Series 1000 is popular with small bakeries. Buyers
- who shell out the $19,750 (plus freight) get several days of
- on-site instruction by a Kauffman representative.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930408/Press and Reader contact: Sid Wolfe, Kauffman
- Machine Shop, 800-541-0252 or 913-764-3496)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(LAX)(00011)
-
- Visual Workflo Software For Windows 04/09/93
- CHICAGO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Filenet, known
- for its pioneering in workflo technology, says it has developed
- an object-oriented version of its Workflo software called
- Visual Workflo which it expects to release in the fourth
- quarter of this year. It facilitate the processing and management
- of paper documents by moving the document from one person to
- another via a computer network.
-
- Filenet representatives said Workflo can be as simple as
- electronic mail or as complex as the processing done on a
- mortgage application in a financial institution. A script is
- written to direct the image of the document as it enters the
- system, usually through scanning with an optical scanner,
- and the document is directed through the necessary channels by
- the software. The product is being demonstrated at the
- Association for Information and Image Management (AIIM) show
- this week in Chicago, Illinois.
-
- Visual Workflo's scripts are based on objects called
- Workperformers, which can be re-arranged by a project manager
- if need be, instead of requiring the rewriting of a script.
- Each step of the process can be automated, including execution
- of PC or server applications. Applications include those
- from Visual Basic, Word for Windows, Excel, database queries,
- electronic mail, or "C" language programs.
-
- The object-orientation brings with it the advantages of
- class libraries, encapsulation, messaging, abstraction, and
- inheritance. The software itself is Unix-based geared toward
- a client/server network environment and works with the major
- personal computer (PC) network software products,
- including Novell, Filenet said.
-
- The workflow applications can also incorporate dynamic
- routing, automatic work allocation, prioritization of work,
- system administration, and work-in-process management
- reporting. Users of previous versions of Workflo can also bring
- their pre-existing scripts into the new Windows Workflo product
- as well, Filenet said. Pricing for the Visual Workflo product
- won't be announced until this summer, Filenet representatives
- said.
-
- Workflo operates with the Unix servers such as the IBM RS6000,
- Olivetti, and Unisys workstation computers. Filenet also just
- announced an agreement with Hewlett-Packard (HP) to port the
- Workflo software products to HP's 3000 and 9000 business
- systems and servers.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930408/Press Contact: Margaret Burger, Mesa
- Communications for Filenet, tel 310-820-2846, fax 310-820-6422)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00012)
-
- Pocket Portable Ethernet Adapters 04/09/93
- FELTHAM, MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- PPCP, a UK-based
- portable connectivity specialist, has unveiled a family of
- credit card-sized Ethernet adapters which conform to the
- PCMCIA 2.0 standard.
-
- The PCMCIA standard means that PCs equipped with a suitable "credit
- card" sized slot can take the adapters. The idea behind PCMCIA
- is to allow all manner of peripherals to "dock" with a portable
- PC with the minimum of fuss and using a common interface standard.
-
- The Socket EA and EA-Plus cards are some of the smallest on the
- market, Newsbytes notes. In use, they emulate the popular NE2000
- network interface card, which is supported by Novell Netware,
- Microsoft LAN Manager, Microsoft Windows for Workgroups and Artisoft
- Lantastic, as well as myriad other networking technologies.
-
- According to PPCP, the new Ethernet cards support multiple device
- drivers and multiple hosts, thanks to the inclusion of ODI and NDIS
- network drivers. The cards can be linked up to 10BaseT (unshielded
- twisted pair) Ethernet, while the EA-Plus can also link to 10Base 2
- coaxial Ethernet networks.
-
- Announcing the new cards, John Nolan, PPCP's managing director, said
- they have been designed to work with a wide variety of PCMCIA-
- compatible portable PCs. "The work done in allowing NE2000 and
- network device driver compatibility will make life easier for
- users," he said.
-
- According to Nolan, the cards are another step along the road of
- PCMCIA, which he claims is fast becoming a universal standard. "For
- the user, this means fast, trouble-free connectivity for his or her
- notebook PC into the office LAN," he said, adding that, as demand for
- PCMCIA network cards grows, he expects that the range of cards
- will be in demand.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930409/Press & Public Contact: PPCP - Tel: 081-893-2277;
- Fax: 081-893-1182)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00013)
-
- Performance Technology To Open In Europe 04/09/93
- BRACKNELL, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Performance
- Technology, the US networking company, has opened an office in
- Bracknell. The company is headed up by Tony Bassett and Dave Ball,
- respectively, director of European operations and European marketing
- director.
-
- Both men are networking industry veterans, having recently left
- Artisoft when the company closed its UK office to consolidate its
- operations to the Netherlands. According to Ball, Artisoft nearly
- acquired Performance Technology last year, hence their close
- relationship with the company in the US.
-
- "We were disappointed when Artisoft didn't buy the company, so
- it was a natural choice for us when Artisoft went to Holland.
- I didn't fancy learning Dutch or leaving England, so Tony and
- I set up Performance in the UK," he told Newsbytes.
-
- Ball added that Performance Technology's products are being
- distributed on this side of the Atlantic by CMS Enhancements, the
- distributor. "They've been handling the products for the past few
- years, so we see no reason to change that arrangement," he said,
- adding that he plans to take on extra staff, once he has had a chance
- to increase the company's presence in the UK marketplace.
-
- "It's still early days. We have some interesting plans for the UK, but
- we're initially aiming to support CMS as far as our resellers and end
- users are concerned," he said.
-
- Performance's mainstay product is Powerlan, a networking software
- package which retails for UKP 69 through CMS. Ball told Newsbytes that
- he expects the best seller to be the unlimited licence version which
- sells for UKP 595.
-
- "For that, users get a free copy of Lotus cc:Mail, which is a good
- bargain in itself. Some of our existing customers opt to buy cc:Mail
- for that price and effectively get free networking system software,"
- he said.
-
- Ball added that Powerlan has a significant advantage over Artisoft's
- Lantastic, which, up until a few months ago, he was promoting for the
- company.
-
- "Artisoft has a vested interest in promoting its hardware. We don't.
- We sell the software, so customers and resellers have the choice of
- almost any networking hardware they want. We think that's a major
- advantage," he said.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930409/Press & Public Contact: Performance Technology -
- Tel: 0344-301013; fax: 0344-303192)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00014)
-
- Informix Establishes European Software Center 04/09/93
- ASHFORD, MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Informix has signed
- an agreement with the Industrial Development Authority of
- Ireland (IDA), a division of the Irish Government, to open a
- European software center in Dublin.
-
- According to the open distributed data management company, the new
- center will be responsible for the development of European versions of
- Informix's software, as well as the production and distribution of
- packages.
-
- The opening of the new office follows closely on the heels of the
- company's 1992 results, which showed a 71 percent hike in European
- sales -- to more than UKP 100 million -- pushing Europe to account for
- 42 percent of the company's business.
-
- Announcing the agreement, Ken Coulter, the company's senior vice
- president for Europe, said that the center will be operational by
- August of this year.
-
- "This new center reinforces our continuing on-the-ground commitment to
- our customers in the rapidly growing European market, a commitment
- that already encompasses 15 offices in 12 countries and an extensive
- distribution and reseller network," he said.
-
- Kieran McGowan, the CEO of the IDA, was equally enthusiastic about the
- agreement. He said that the office will be an excellent boost for the
- country, which Newsbytes notes is fast becoming a "silicon center" for
- Europe owing to the Irish Government's generous tax breaks for new
- companies and office set-ups.
-
- "Informix is yet another world class name to recognize that Ireland,
- and the Dublin area in particular, with its unrivalled community of
- graduate software engineers, is a natural investment choice for high
- added value industries," he said.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930409/Press & Public Contact: Informix Software - Tel:
- 0784-240444)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LON)(00015)
-
- Epson Unveils Mac Printers 04/09/93
- HEMEL HEMPSTEAD, HERTS, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Epson UK has
- announced a family of dot matrix printers for the Apple Macintosh
- computers. They are equipped with an internal Localtalk interface.
-
- Localtalk is the name given by Apple to its proprietary networking
- technology. The Localtalk network technology is supported by a
- growing number of PC network companies, including Artisoft and
- Novell, although PC peripherals rarely support the protocol,
- Newsbytes notes.
-
- The Mac-specific printers will be distributed by Appropriate
- Technology, a specialist distributor in the UK. Pricing starts from
- UKP 469, which includes the Localtalk interface cards.
-
- According to Apple, all of its 24-pin printer range had been adapted
- for use with Appletalk. The company claims that its printers work to a
- resolution of 360 dots per inch and, thanks to the 24-pin print heads,
- are a lot faster than some of the other Apple-specific dot matrix
- printers on the market.
-
- "With cost cutting at the forefront of everyone's minds, the dot
- matrix printers really come into their own," explained Robert Clark,
- Epson's product manager for impact printers.
-
- "For example, when printing an invoice, one for the file, one for the
- customers and one for the accounts department, consumables on a dot
- matrix printer will cost around 0.5 pence, when using multi-part
- stationary, compared to around 6.0 pence for laser printer
- consumables," he added.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930409/Press & Public Contact: Epson UK - Tel: 0442-
- 61144)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SYD)(00016)
-
- Apple Global Warranty Program 04/09/93
- SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Apple Computer has
- introduced a service to make it easier for international
- travellers to keep their computers up and running. With
- the new global warranty program they can have their machines
- repaired under warranty when overseas.
-
- Until now they had to pay for the repair and then seek
- reimbursement when they returned home. "With the popularity of
- our PowerBook notebook range it's clear that more and more Apple
- customers are combining travel and work." said Apple Australia
- Managing Director David Strong. "At Apple we're recognizing the
- trend to mobility and the new global warranty program is an
- important step in better serving the needs of our customers.
- Now if there's a problem it's as simple as finding the nearest
- authorized Apple reseller in the overseas location, presenting
- proof of purchase, and arranging for the product to be repaired."
-
- Strong said a key part of Apple's global strategy has been to
- ensure that most service parts are identical around the world
- which means that most parts will be in stock in every country.
- Where country-specific parts are needed they can be specially
- ordered. The new warranty applies to all Apple products
- purchased after April 5, 1993.
-
- (Paul Zucker/19930409/Contact: Lee Hansen at Apple Australia on
- phone +61-2-452 8012 or fax +61-2-452 8160)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00017)
-
- Russians To Launch Inmarsat Satellite 04/09/93
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- A Russian rocket is to
- launch the Inmarsat satellite in 1995, the Russian Space Agency
- announced. A Russian launcher is half the cost of a similar
- one from Europe.
-
- The agreement between Inmarsat, an international communications
- consortia, and a Moscow-based group of companies developing and
- producing the heavy Proton launchers, is to be signed in London
- in the next few weeks, according to the announcement.
-
- The Russian launch is to cost Inmarsat US$36 million,
- instead of US$60 million asked by ArianSpace of France.
-
- The Commersant daily newspaper provided the detailed report on the
- manufacturers of various rocket types in Russia, all of which
- are capable of making several launches a year. The existing
- export restrictions, voluntarily regulated by the US
- government, are reportedly the major obstacle for Russians
- seeking to enter the international satellite launching
- market.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/199302)
-
-
- (REVIEW)(APPLE)(SFO)(00018)
-
- Review of - Tesserae, Game For Macintosh 04/08/93
-
- From: Inline Design, 5 West Mountain Rd., Sharon, CT,
- 06069 (203) 364-0063
-
- Price: $49.95
-
- PUMA rating: 3.75 (on a scale of 1=lowest to 4=highest)
-
- Reviewed for NEWSBYTES by: Naor Wallach, 04/09/93
-
- Summary: A fun game that involves solving puzzles.
-
- =======
-
- REVIEW
-
- =======
-
- Remember the game where you had a bunch of pegs in holes
- and you had to jump one over the other, removing one peg at
- a time, until only one remained - preferably in the center?
- If you liked that game, or others similar to it, then you
- can expect quite a treat with Inline Designs Tesserae game.
-
- Tesserae comes on one floppy disk with a registration card,
- a poster detailing other Inline Design programs, and a
- two-page user manual. The user manual is very brief because
- the complete set of instructions are contained within the
- program itself.
-
- The opening screen has a button on it that allows you to go
- ignore the instructions.
-
- The game itself is very simple. Like the peg games of old,
- this game has you jump one tile over another to clear the
- board. The goal is always the same - try to have only one
- tile left on the board in the shortest amount of time and
- with the least amount of tile flipping. The computer version
- of this game adds a bunch of other rules that will help in
- keeping interest in the game.
-
- First, there are nine different board layouts. So, if you
- get tired of the standard rectangular board, you can
- switch to another that is shaped like an X, or an oval.
- The second twist is that instead of having only one kind
- of peg, there are three kinds of pegs and they can be
- combined in various ways to create a total of seven designs
- of peg.
-
- These different peg types have restrictions placed
- on them with regards to what happens to them. Some of the
- restrictions state that certain pegs cannot jump over other
- pegs; other pegs can only jump to squares occupied by other
- like-pegs, etc.
-
- The different pegs are represented on the screen in two
- different ways. First, each peg has its own distinctive
- shape on its face. Secondly, if you have a color Macintosh,
- the pegs have different colors. One of the final twists is
- that when some of the pegs land on different kinds of pegs,
- they turn to yet a different kind of peg.
-
- With all of these twists, one would think that the rules
- would be so complex that it takes a long time to get
- comfortable with the game - not so. My wife and I
- independently read the rules and started playing the game.
- Both of us discovered that the rules started making sense
- within a couple of tries of playing the game. In all, we
- spent about 15 minutes with the rules in total, and much
- more time playing the game and enjoying it.
-
- In addition to the different pegs and rules, the game also
- has three difficulty levels. I could not figure out what
- those did except for the fact that the peg combinations
- that populated the boards became a bit more difficult. All
- in all this game was easy to learn and play. My wife and
- I discovered that we kept it on the hard disk and
- frequently brought it back and played it when we had a
- few quiet minutes that we wanted to spend with a computer
- game.
-
- There are only a select few games that qualify in that
- way and Tesserae will occupy a place of honor among them.
-
- =============
-
- PUMA RATINGS
-
- =============
-
- PERFORMANCE: 4 The game operates quickly and with no problems.
-
- USEFULNESS: 4 If you like the kind of puzzle solving game
- that this represents, then you will quickly learn to enjoy
- its various facets.
-
- MANUAL: 4 There really isn't one. But then, with the
- instructions built into the program itself, there is very
- little need for one.
-
- AVAILABILITY: 3 Available from mail order and software stores.
- Inline Design does not maintain a toll-free number for
- technical support. However, you shouldnt need to use such
- a service with this game.
-
- (Naor Wallach/19930319/Darryl Peck, Inline Design)
-
-
- (REVIEW)(IBM)(LAX)(00019)
-
- Review of - ScanPlus Pagereader 04/09/93
-
- Runs on: IBM and compatible personal computers (PCs)
-
- From: Plustek USA, 3550 Scott Boulevard, Bldg. #46, Santa
- Clara, CA 95054, 800-685-8088
-
- Price: $349
-
- PUMA Rating: 3.75 (1 lowest, 4 highest)
-
- Reviewed for Newsbytes by: Linda Rohrbough, 04/09/93
-
- Summary: The most practical scanner I've seen yet, the Plustek
- Scanplus Pagereader is easy to use, obviously designed by
- someone who's actually used a scanner before, and delightfully
- low priced on the street.
-
- ======
-
- REVIEW
-
- ======
-
- Scanning is one of those operations most people don't do every
- day and that's the market the Plustek Scanplus Pagereader is
- geared toward. The one I looked at is a full-page black and
- white scanner that gets its power from the personal computer
- (PC) to which it is connected and automatically shuts off after 5
- minutes of non-use. It also comes with scanning software
- although it is Hewlett-Packard Scanjet-compatible.
-
- I've tried hand scanners and found the experience disappointing
- and frustrating. Plus, I don't usually have the desk space
- cleared to lay down a full sheet of paper and the elbow room to
- slowly guide a scanner down that sheet of paper. That's why I
- like full-page scanners. They control the rate the paper goes
- through to suit themselves and they can be placed more out of
- the way and still be practical for use.
-
- The Scanplus meets my criteria for a scanner, but also has a
- very modern look and feel when you take it out of the box, and
- it's light in weight. It also comes with a tight fitting dust
- cover, something other low end scanners have lacked.
-
- My favorite feature of the Scanplus is it doesn't require me to
- hunt around for somewhere to plug it in as it gets its power
- from the PC. I suppose this requires the user think about
- the size of the power supply they have, but I have
- a 230-watt power supply, so that's not a problem for me. The
- Scanplus also considerately shuts itself off after 5 minutes of
- non-use, but is available again at the touch of a button.
-
- The software that comes with the Scanplus is for Microsoft
- Windows, but since the scanner is Hewlett-Packard Scanjet
- compatible, it should work with any software program that
- supports scanning. Like most black and white scanners it offers
- several choices of resolution (depending on the software used)
- up to 300 dots per inch (dpi).
-
- I cheated in installing the Scanplus as I used Winsleuth Gold's
- install help from Dariana Technology of Buena Park, California
- to tell me what interrupts I had free and if the scanner's card
- would work on the current settings before I installed it.
-
- Surprisingly the Scanplus does not require the use of direct
- memory access (DMA), so it works find with the modem, compact
- disc read-only memory (CD-ROM) drive, sound card, and tape
- backup drives I already had on my system. Most users will find
- the installation difficult if they haven't worked with setting
- interrupts before, but that's true of any scanner. However,
- there is an 800 number for customer support.
-
- Much emphasis is made of optical character recognition (OCR)
- capability in the software, but OCR has only been practical for
- me when I've lost a file I printed on my laser printer. Since
- the laser produces good quality documents, I've been able to
- scan the document back in and OCR it. It usually needs a few
- tweaks, meaning some characters didn't get recognized and I
- have to manually type them in or run the spell checker to fix
- them, but that's faster than retyping it. However, I tried the
- OCR on a fairly clear but not great original produced
- outside my office and the results were disappointing.
-
- Since I use my scanner mostly for graphics work, I found the
- emphasis in the software on OCR annoying as I had to reset the
- software each time I went into it to do graphics only. Also,
- the scanner has no shelf, tray, or facility for catching the
- paper on the way out. On my large desk, the scanner is placed
- out of the way on the back half of one side, the paper goes
- through the scanner and unceremoniously falls out on the floor
- behind the desk. This happens unless I stand up to lean over
- and catch the paper as it is coming out of the scanner.
-
- But over all, I am very impressed with both the features and
- the price of the Scanplus. I would certainly recommend it.
-
- ============
-
- PUMA RATING
-
- ============
-
- PERFORMANCE: 4 The Scanplus is obviously designed by someone
- who's actually done some scanning and knows what the occasional
- user wants.
-
- USEFULNESS: 4 This is scanner not only performs well, but is a
- good buy if you can get the street price of $349. The retail
- price with the software is $499, a not-so-good buy.
-
- MANUAL: 4 The manual was everything I expected and all the
- information I needed was there.
-
- AVAILABILITY: 3 There are distributors for the Plustek Scanplus
- Pagereader but I was unable to find them without calling the
- company. You can, however, order the scanner with a credit
- card from a Plustek distributor. Distributors can be located
- by calling the company's toll free number at 800-685-8088.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930402/Press Contact: Christie Kohlstedt,
- S&S PR for Plustek, tel 415-986-0966, fax 415-986-8270)
-
-
- (EDITORIAL)(TELECOM)(NYC)(00020)
-
- Editorial - Stop Bashing Caller ID! 04/09/93
- JEFFERSON VALLEY, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- While at the
- recent Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference (CFP'93) in San
- Francisco, I listened to a number of people saying that to be
- concerned with "privacy" was to be automatically
- anti-Caller ID. One attendee, for example, prefacing a
- question, "Well, everyone in this room is a privacy advocate
- and against things like Caller ID but ..."
-
- Whoa! Let's not assume that. I consider myself squarely on the
- side of privacy -- I'm for optional encryption of e-mail,
- against random use of social security numbers for identification,
- -- but I think that Caller ID enhances my privacy and,
- therefore, I look forward to its universal implementation.
-
- The opposition to Caller ID has centered on the "rights" of
- callers to remain anonymous. Much has been written about
- the possibility of Caller ID casting a chill over
- whistle-blowers, people reporting crimes, and informants. It
- seems to me that pay phones will more than give these
- individuals the opportunity to perform these activities.
-
- I am of the "home-is-a-castle" tradition, having grown up
- in an apartment house where "No Soliciting, No Panhandling"
- signs were obeyed. Those living in more elegant apartments
- had the further protection of a doorman to enforce these
- regulations. Addition, apartment dwellers have peep-holes
- in their doors which will allow them to decide whether or
- not to open the door and converse with a bell-ringer.
-
- Those who grew up in houses had the protection of "No
- Trespassing" signs, enforceable by law, and some even added
- the presence of an inhospitable dog to further send the
- message of "Uninvited, Unwelcome." House owners also
- tended to have peepholes or other systems of recognizing
- callers before deciding on whether to open the door.
-
- Of course, not all people availed themselves of such
- devices -- some leave their doors open or holler "Come in" to
- whomever rings. That is their right but it is the result
- of a choice made by them.
-
- The telephone, by in large, has taken this choice away
- from us. When the phone rings we do not know if it is a
- parent or a telemarketer, a close friend or a bill
- collector, a business associate or a con-person asking about
- our copying machine. We have no chance to make a decision about
- whether to let a person into our virtual environment before
- picking up the phone.
-
- If a person comes to the door or our residence and is
- insulting or commits lewd acts, we may have the advantage of
- having seen them and be able to describe them to the police,
- if necessary. The obscene, the extortionist or the generally
- annoying all have had the cover of anonymity under which to
- bother us. Caller ID, in my judgment, restores the balance.
-
- Some may say that an answering machine does the same and that
- we may screen our calls that way. I don't agree -- I don't
- want my brother or my in-laws to have to wait for my message
- to end -- I don't want to have to go to the one room that
- contains the answering machine every time the phone rings.
- The answering machine provides no recourse against those who leave
- insulting or obscene calls.
-
- So, from the day that Caller ID is universally implemented, I
- will not answer the phone for any call that comes through with
- Caller ID "blocked" (the feature that allows the caller to escape
- identification). My answering machine will inform callers of this
- policy as well as informing them that I may not call them back.
- In short, if you don't want me to know who you are, I don't
- want to talk to you!
-
- (John F. McMullen/19930322)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(TRENDS)(ATL)(00021)
-
- Correction - JEDI - New Digital Effects Firm 04/09/93
- SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Newsbytes
- wishes to correct an error in a report with this headline which
- ran on this wire service on April 8.
-
- The report stated that at the National Association of
- Broadcasters' show in a few weeks, Silicon Graphics will
- exhibit its workstations and offer The Cave, a special
- multimedia exhibit designed by DataDisplay Corp., of Elk
- Grove Village, Illinois.
-
- Maggie Rawlings, special projects director at the University
- of Illinois' Electronic Visualization Laboratory writes to
- tell Newsbytes that "The CAVE was not designed by DataDisplay
- Corporation. It was designed by Thomas DeFanti and Daniel
- Sandin at the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at the
- University of Illinois at Chicago. Software implementation
- is by Carolina Cruz-Neira, and funding is by the National
- Science Foundation. DataDisplay Corporation is the A/V
- Company which supplies us with the external structure and
- projection equipment."
-
- Newsbytes apologizes for the error.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930409)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00022)
-
- Cable Industry Getting Hammered 04/09/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Ambitious spending
- plans by market leaders TCI, Time-Warner, and Cablevision
- notwithstanding, the interests of the cable television industry
- are getting hammered in Washington.
-
- Perhaps most important to the industry's financial interest, it
- lost an attempt to prevent enforcement of the 1992 Cable
- Reregulation Act before the US Court of Appeals. A panel of
- that court ruled 2-1 that the industry's First Amendment rights
- were not impacted by the bill, which imposes rate regulation and
- requires that systems pay to carry some broadcast signals
- homeowners can receive free. US District Judge Thomas Jackson
- held that video signals are an economic commodity subject to
- regulation, not constitutionally protected speech. Judge Stanley
- Sporkin agreed.
-
- Losers included Turner Broadcasting, Time Warner, and
- the Discovery Channel, all of which own stations that could
- get "bumped" off cable systems as required local stations are
- added. Judge Stephen Williams dissented, saying Congress impaired
- the protected speech of cable operators in order to promote the
- speech of local broadcasters.
-
- In another decision impacting the rights of cable, regulators
- were prevented from enforcing rules against indecent programming
- on local access channels, which is also part of the 1992 law.
- This is a preliminary decision -- the court only wants to hear
- arguments in the case this fall. Judge Patricia Wald, a rumored
- Supreme Court candidate, Ruth Ginsburg, and David Sentelle will
- hear the case, which charges that the rules being applied to the
- leased-access channels are stricter than those for broadcasters
- or other cable channels. The decision could cause some operators
- trouble in some localities, where activists want to eliminate
- sexual speech.
-
- Finally, Time Warner was warned it may have all its debt
- downgraded for even considering a move to buy parts of Turner
- Broadcasting System. Under a 1987 agreement, Time Warner has the
- right of first refusal to buy Turner's CNN channel, which is now
- worth $2 billion by some estimates. Time Warner, however, is
- burdened by nearly $10 billion in debt from the merger of Time
- Inc., and Warner Communications in 1990.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930409)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(ATL)(00023)
-
- Evergreen May Turn Brown 04/09/93
- MCLEAN, VIRGINIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Evergreen
- Information Technologies, which is working on a database service
- for US government procurement called Powertree, is in deep
- financial trouble.
-
- The company reported that it has received loans of $300,000 to
- cover salaries and other working capital requirements to continue
- its operations for a short term. It had previously announced that
- it had almost exhausted its cash reserves and needed additional
- funding to complete development of PowerTree. The company has
- also been delisted from the Pacific Stock Exchange.
-
- Spokesman Marg Donnelly emphasized to Newsbytes that the loans
- will only cover a short period. "We need to find additional funds
- to complete Powertree. I can't say anything else because there's
- nothing released. Originally we were going to have a CD-ROM
- product out in March, but we ran out of funding before that and
- it threw everything out. We just released our 10K," an annual
- financial report, "and say we'll have beta tests for that in
- August. We're projecting the same time frame for the online
- service."
-
- The financial problems have been a "major distraction," she
- added. "We had been projecting first quarter for the online
- service. We've been here working the whole time this month, but
- we haven't moved the product forward, because of finances. For
- every day we're not working we lose more than a day of production
- time."
-
- Powertree is designed to contain nearly all the information
- needed to either buy for the Federal Government or sell to the
- Federal Government, as well as produce goods aimed at the federal
- procurement market.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930409/Press Contact: Marg Donnelly,
- Evergreen Information Technologies, 703-556-6200; FAX, 703-
- 556-6210)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(TOR)(00024)
-
- Unisys Launches New Low-End A-Series Server 04/09/93
- BLUE BELL, PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Unisys Corp.
- has revamped the low end of its A Series OpenFrame line of
- enterprise servers by introducing the A7 models. The new machines
- will replace the A1, A2, A4, and A5 machines, company spokesman
- Martin Krempasky said.
-
- Unisys also announced that the new models and others in the A
- Series can now run the Novell NetWare local-area network
- operating system. The portable version of NetWare runs on the A
- Series processor, providing file and print services to network
- workstations concurrent with A series applications.
-
- The new A7 machines have two processors: Unisys' own Single Chip
- A Series Mainframe Processor (SCAMP) and an Intel 486 processor.
- This allows them to run Unix and OS/2 applications alongside
- those written for the proprietary processor. The two are linked
- by an Extended Industry Standard Architecture (EISA) bus,
- Krempasky said.
-
- Along with the new entry-level machines, Unisys unveiled two new
- models in the A11 series and 12 new A16 systems.
-
- The company also announced enhancements to networking software
- supporting the TCP/IP, OSI, SNA, and BNA protocols.
-
- Release 4.0 of the Unisys Cooperating Computing Environment (CCE)
- provides enhanced client/server integration of the A Series with
- Unix and OS/2 systems, according to the company.
-
- Prices for the new A7 models start at $20,000, and they will
- available this month, Unisys officials said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930409/Press Contact: Martin Krempasky, Unisys,
- 215-986-4788)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TOR)(00025)
-
- Denied Rate Hike, Bell Canada Cuts Costs 04/09/93
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Bell Canada, the
- largest of Canada's regional telephone companies, has announced
- plans to cut C$190 million from this year's capital spending
- budget and delay introduction of extended calling areas in major
- centers until next year.
-
- Having been denied an interim rate increase that was to take
- effect this month, Bell officials said they found it necessary to
- scale down their spending plans for the year.
-
- Filings are still before the Canadian Radio-television and
- Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) for a general rate increase
- in the fall. However, this would have little effect on Bell's
- revenues in 1993.
-
- Upgrading party-line service in remote areas, and extending phone
- lines to areas not currently served by Bell, are among the
- projects that will probably be delayed, company spokeswoman
- Susanna Cluff-Clyburne said.
-
- Community Calling Plan, which would extend the area within which
- residents of Toronto, Montreal, and the Ottawa area could make
- calls without paying long-distance charges, is also to be delayed
- until 1994. However, Cluff-Clyburne said, the CRTC is still being
- asked to give approval for the idea, which was originally
- scheduled for introduction this fall.
-
- Keeping the present calling areas until 1994 will save about
- C$140 million in capital costs this year, Cluff-Clyburne said,
- while the other cuts in Bell's construction program will reduce
- the year's expenditures by about another C$190 million.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930409/Press Contact: Susanna Cluff-Clyburne,
- Bell Canada, 613-785-0579)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00026)
-
- Geac Acquires Australian Software Distributor 04/09/93
- MARKHAM, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Geac Computer
- has bought Computer Library Services International
- (Australia) Pty. Ltd., of Melbourne. The Australian software
- distributor and integrator sells compact disc read-only memory
- (CD-ROM) titles and database subscriptions to Australian
- libraries, complementing Geac's core business in library
- automation.
-
- Harrison Cheung, a spokesman for Geac, said Geac views Australia
- and New Zealand as its springboard into the Pacific Rim market.
- Acquisitions in the region will help Geac prepare to attack the
- Japanese market and others in the Far East, not least because
- companies in Australia and New Zealand are already accustomed to
- competing in that highly competitive arena, he said.
-
- Computer Library Services also distributes the LIBS 100plus
- products in the Australian market.
-
- Geac will continue to operate the company as a distributor and
- value-added reseller (VAR), Cheung said. The acquisition will let
- Geac provide a wider range of services to its existing customers
- in Australia and New Zealand, he said.
-
- Geac said it paid about C$1 million for Computer Library
- Services, which has annual revenues of more than C$4 million.
-
- A month ago, Geac closed the purchase of Concord Management
- Systems, Inc., of Tampa, Florida, and that of Mentat Computer
- Systems Pty. Ltd. of Australia. Mentat is a maker of
- manufacturing software, with its products installed in
- manufacturing and distribution firms throughout Australia and New
- Zealand. Concord is the largest developer of software for
- construction companies in North America, said Cheung.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930409/Press Contact: Harrison Cheung, Geac,
- 416-475-0525, fax 416-474-3847)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00027)
-
- ****High-Tech Initiatives Funded In Clinton Budget 04/09/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Ever perused a
- 1500-page budget proposal? That is what all of official
- Washington and most of unofficial DC has been doing for the
- past 24 hours and while there are details galore which will
- be picked apart for months, some of the important Clinton-Gore
- high-tech telecom initiatives are definitely funded in the
- original White House plan.
-
- Bear in mind that this isn't the final budget until Congress
- integrates a lot of changes and dozens or hundreds of minor and
- major political compromises are made, but as things stand now it
- looks like the National Science Foundation will see $19 million
- in its new budget for high performance computing and
- communications programs. That appears to be all the actual
- funding earmarked for the often-touted information infrastructure
- that the Administration and earlier Clinton-Gore campaign talked
- about so much but there may be more squeezed into other parts of
- the budget.
-
- Another $51 million will be granted to companies doing research
- in satellite and fiber optic technology but the funding would be
- spread over a number of years so it might never actually
- materialize if, as seems likely, budget constraints get even
- tighter in future years.
-
- The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST),
- formerly the Bureau of Standards, which does a lot of research
- that is often directly related to the needs of emerging high
- technology businesses, will get about $30 million to continue
- this research and development effort.
-
- According to an Associated Press report, the budget also contains
- another $45 million in matching grants for NIST projects which
- will help manufacturers improve production efficiency.
-
- There is full funding for the Space Station Freedom included in
- the Budget proposal but Washington insiders expect a big fight
- over that spending with fiscal conservatives pointing out that
- much more useful research and investment could be done with the
- money.
-
- By way of comparison, the Administration is now feuding with the
- Senate over spending about $15 billion on summer jobs to
- temporarily boost the economy, some of which will go to building
- swimming pools and similar projects.
-
- This budget does not include spending earmarked for R&D in
- Congressional bills like the National Competitiveness Act (S 4
- and H.R. 820), which would increase high-tech spending from $68
- million to $210 million for fiscal year 1994 and to a whopping
- $420 million in fiscal 1995, nor does it count the approximately
- $7 billion in tax deductions that small companies receive from a
- temporary Research and Experimentation tax credit which the
- Clinton Administration wants to make permanent.
-
- The budget is so complex and technology crossover is so difficult
- to measure that no one really knows what the total amount of
- federal high-tech investment would be if the already described
- investments were added to other Agency and Pentagon research
- programs which might have a direct or indirect impact on US
- competitiveness.
-
- It does appear that most of the federal government's investment
- in the proposed information superhighway will be in the form of
- encouragement to commercial operations which will actually
- build and operate the system.
-
- (John McCormick/19930409/)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00028)
-
- Roundup - Stories Carried By Other Media This Week 04/09/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Roundup is a brief
- look at some computer stories carried in other publications
- received here this past week.
-
- Computer Reseller News dated April 5 says that Compaq is facing
- the wrath of resellers over its recent announcement that the
- company will begin bypassing its traditional marketing channels
- to sell its computers through mail order. The front-page article
- quotes a San Diego, California Computerland official as saying
- that the trust between Compaq and its reseller community is gone.
-
- InformationWeek for the week of the 5th says that Computer
- Associates Charles Wang is turning his company around in the
- customer relations area. The cover story describes the problems
- that customers used to have with arrogant CA representatives and
- quotes CEO Wang as saying. "CA knows it can no longer afford
- scrapes [with customers]. It's almost like adolescence. You think
- you can do everything a little to fast."
-
- The April 5 CommunicationsWeek reports that Ascom Timpelex's
- short and long-term plans for its next generation switching
- systems for enterprise networks call for the 80-megabit per
- second (Mbps) STS-50 Synchrony full-duplex switch to be available
- by the end of this year. This is a major downgrade from the
- announcement over a year ago when the company said the switch
- would have a 300 Mbps capacity and would be available by July of
- this year. In July of 1993 the company said it would reduce the
- switch's capacity on the advice of customers who said a 300 Mbps
- speed was faster than needed.
-
- PC Magazine dated April 27 features the Intel Pentium and says
- the 66 MHz. version rated 37 on the PC Bench Processor Benchmark
- compared to 21 for the 486DX2/66 and "1" for a 286-based AT.
-
- UnixWorld for May has an article called "Guerrilla Marketers"
- which looks at how underfunded companies can get a product to
- market without the money needed for a major marketing campaign.
- The tactics described are reportedly best suited to the Unix
- marketplace because they rely on a knowledgeable customer base.
- One of the main tools is to enlist the support of "power users"
- during the beta testing stage of product development. Another
- involves forming strategic partnerships with hardware vendors.
-
- (John McCormick/19930409/)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00029)
-
- FAA Lets Airlines Decide PC Bans 04/09/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- Reacting to an
- International Air Transport Association advisory not to let
- passengers use things like Game Boys and laptop PCs during
- airplane take-offs and landings, the Federal Aviation
- Administration has re-stated its position on the matter.
-
- Essentially, the FAA is leaving it up to the airlines. According
- to a draft advisory circular obtained by Newsbytes,
- "determination of the effects of a particular portable electronic
- device on the navigation and communication systems of the
- aircraft on which it is to be operated must be made by the
- operator of the aircraft." This means that Delta, which has
- issued strict guidelines against the devices, may continue its
- restrictions. The only proviso is that the airline spell the
- restrictions out clearly before departure, and provide procedures
- to turn off the devices when they're suspected of interference
- and report instances of suspected or confirmed interference to
- the FAA.
-
- Airlines with looser rules, on the other hand, are not going to
- have to change them.
-
- The draft circular, however, does make a distinction between
- things like laptop PCs, with signals that are essentially passive,
- and things like cellular phones, which have antennae capable of
- transmitting a signal. Cellular phones are a particular hazard,
- the circular continues, because they can use any of a number of
- frequencies, and those frequencies are frequently re-used to
- increase system capacity. Airplane phones installed by companies
- like GTE Airfone, In-Flight Phone or Clearcom, on the other hand,
- are operating on specific frequencies which have been pre-checked
- by the FAA. Their use is not being restricted.
-
- The IATA had advised airlines against allowing the use of any
- electronic devices after a two-day technical meeting in
- Switzerland, despite the fact that the technical committee could
- not find conclusive proof that PCs interfere with instruments or
- calls from airplane cockpits. The move was a precaution pending
- further research. The question involves how strong a suspicion of
- interference must be before action is taken, and the IATA is
- taking the cautious view. The FAA circular leaves the airlines
- free to follow the IATA advice.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930409/Press Contact: Hank Price, FAA, 202-
- 267-3883)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(BOS)(00030)
-
- New Mac, Windows Versions Of DynaText To Debut At Seybold 04/09/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 9 (NB) -- At Seybold Boston
- next week, Electronic Book Publishing (EBT) will unveil a Macintosh
- version of its DynaText electronic publishing system, along with an
- updated Windows edition, Newsbytes has learned.
-
- Available for Unix as well, DynaText is already being used by top
- players in the computer, telecommunications, defense, airline and
- automotive industries, a company spokesperson told Newsbytes.
-
- The CD-ROM documentation for Novell NetWare 4.0 was developed with
- DynaText, and so was Silicon Graphics' new Iris Insight
- documentation system. The US Navy has just used the product to
- create an online technical documentation system for its Tomahawk
- Cruise Missile aircraft carriers.
-
- By complying with the new SGML (Standard Genetic Markup Language)
- specification, DynaText gives users an easy-to-use, multi-windowed
- tool for reading and querying hypertext documents that remains the
- same from one operating system to the next, the spokesperson
- explained.
-
- The system is also able to place calls to outside multimedia
- programs, enabling windowed display of audio and video clips.
-
- Documents prepared with DynaText are built around two dynamic
- windows: a table of contents and a browser. Users navigate from
- one section of a document to the next by clicking on items in the
- table of contents. The selected contents then scroll before the
- user in the browser window.
-
- At any point, the user can "grab" sections of the scrolling
- document, displaying the text or graphics in separate
- windows, the spokesperson said. Some documents developed with
- DynaText also offer a "full browser" equipped with annotation
- capabilities that allow for online notetaking.
-
- DynaText is delivered to developers on a CD-ROM disk, the Systems
- Integration Toolkit (SIT). The kit can be used to generate
- applications for CD-ROM, floppy disk, or any other medium.
-
- The new Mac and Windows editions of DynaText will further the
- system's hypertext and search abilities by permitting multiple
- documents to be linked together, according to the spokesperson. In
- addition, readers will now be able to create their own hypertext
- links.
-
- A new annotation list interface will let users sort and filter
- their annotation entries. Readers will be able to store both the
- hypertext links and annotation entries in public and private webs,
- export them to other users, and reattach them to new document
- revisions.
-
- The new Mac version and Windows 2.0 will also include a number of
- other refinements, such as higher performance for the CD-ROM disc
- and the ability to include mathematical equations in electronic
- books. Both of the new editions are slated to ship in July.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19930409/Press contact: Paul Lamoureux, Miller
- Communications for EBT, tel 617-536-0470)
-
-
-