home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1993-04-15 | 68.4 KB | 1,550 lines |
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TYO)(00001)
-
- Fujitsu, AMD Create Joint Venture 04/15/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Fujitsu has linked with US-
- based Advanced Micro Device (AMD) to create a joint venture
- concerning next generation memory chips in Japan.
-
- The new firm of Fujitsu and AMD, called Fujitsu-AMD
- Semiconductor, will be set up this week. It will start with
- a capitalization of 100 million yen ($0.9 million), and expects
- to raise total capital to 40 billion yen ($360 million) in the
- future. Fujitsu will provide 50.05 percent of this capital, and
- AMD will pay the rest, 49.95 percent.
-
- Formerly of Fujitsu, Kimio Yanagida will assume the
- presidency of this new firm, which will be located at Fujitsu's
- Kawasaki plant.
-
- The new firm will mainly develop and manufacture flash memory
- chips, a technology seen as important to future electronic
- devices. The firm is planning to start building a CMOS chip
- plant in Fukushima Prefecture and it will be in operation
- around the end of next year. About 200 to 300 people will be
- hired at this plant.
-
- Meanwhile, Fujitsu has developed a prototype superconducting
- transistor. It is a bipolar-type transistor, and Fujitsu has
- applied an oxygen-magnesium layer on the electrodes. With this layer,
- it can create 1,000 ampere electric current in 5 volts. This
- superconducting transistor has an extremely fast response speed,
- and consumes little electricity, Fujitsu says.
-
- Fujitsu has developed this transistor as part of the Japanese
- Ministry's Next Generation Element Development Project. Fujitsu
- wants to this product to be commercially available in the
- future.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19930415/Press Contact: Fujitsu, +81-
- 3-3215-5236, Fax, +81-3-3216-9365)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00002)
-
- Lapis' L-TV Pro Ships In April 04/15/93
- ALAMEDA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Lapis
- Technologies reports that its L-TV Pro series of interface cards
- will begin volume shipments next week.
-
- The company claims that L-TV Pro is the lowest-cost way to
- get high-quality flicker free video out of a Macintosh computer.
- L-TV Pro LC has a suggested retail price of $449 and is
- compatible with the Macintosh Color Classic, LC family, and
- Performa 400 family. L-TV Pro NuBus has a suggested retail
- price of $499 and is compatible with the Macintosh Performa 600,
- II family, Centris 650, and Quadra family.
-
- L-TV Pro supports both NTSC and PAL video standards, includes Lapis'
- proprietary software to filter out all flicker on the television
- or videotape, and comes with both composite video and S-Video
- connections to offer users a choice of high quality video output.
-
- The interface card supports a maximum of 16-bit video, optimized
- for QuickTime movies and photographic quality pictures.
- L-TV Pro offers four separate modes of operation, listed as:
-
- Video Recording Mode: Use L-TV Pro to record the Macintosh screen to
- videotape.
-
- Presentation Mode: Everything displayed on the computer monitor
- is duplicated on the television or onto videotape.
-
- Dual Display Mode: The television and computer monitor act independently,
- allowing for different windows or applications on each display.
-
- Television Only Mode: If a computer monitor is not available, the
- television can connect to the computer as the only display.
-
- "L-TV Pro delivers a desktop video recording system at a price for
- the masses. Now everyone can connect a Macintosh to a television
- for presentations or record images to videotape for distribution,"
- says James Harris, Lapis President and CEO. "L-TV Pro provides an
- excellent presentation and recording system, replacing the need to
- use more expensive and cumbersome solutions such as LCD panels,
- projection systems, large screen computer displays, or expensive
- scan converter boxes," adds Steve Beck, Lapis chief scientist and
- lead developer of the L-TV product line.
-
- L-TV Pro drives any television, video monitor, or VHS VCR in 4,
- 8, and 16-bit modes at a maximum of 640 x 480 resolution in NTSC
- and 704 x 508 in PAL. The interface card provides both standard
- RCA and S-Video connectors and requires no other special adapters.
- There are four L-TV Pro models, offering support for all LC
- and NuBus-based Macintosh systems as well as both NTSC and PAL
- video standards.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930415)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00003)
-
- Faster Drive Formatter For Macintosh 04/15/93
- GREENBRAE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Casa Blanca
- Works, Inc., has released version 2.3.4 of Drive7, its universal
- drive formatting software with faster fixed and removable drivers
- to increase read/write performance.
-
- The company has licensed System 7.1 and current Enablers in
- order to allow all Macintoshes to be able to boot from a Drive7
- disk. A System version 6.0.8 double-density disk is also
- included for Mac Plus and SEs that will not accept a
- high-density disk.
-
- Other improvements include direct support for full SyQuest/SCSI
- Probe compliance, SyQuest S105 Drives, Fujitsu 2511 Optical
- Drives, and the Toshiba MK2224, 200MB 2.5" Powerbook drive.
- The new release also clears up a conflict with Apple's new
- 32-bit System Enabler.
-
- Included with Drive7 is Drive7rem, a driver for removable devices
- that replaces multiple removable device drivers in the Macintosh
- System Folder. Drive7rem supports most removable cartridge
- SyQuest, Bernoulli, optical and CD-ROM drives.
-
- Version 2.3.4 of Drive7rem also includes a unique "intelligence"
- feature that avoids driver conflicts. At boot time, Drive7rem
- checks the Macintosh memory and SCSI addresses for removable
- drivers. If it finds a conflicting driver at any particular
- SCSI ID, it does not load itself, avoiding a potential conflict.
- Then it tells the user about the potential conflict with a
- warning box.
-
- The charge for the upgrade is $10, which includes US ground
- shipping costs. For the System 7.1 boot disk, the company asks
- that the original disks be returned to install the System and
- enablers.
-
- Additional information can be obtained by telephoning Casa
- Blanca Works at 415-461-2227 or faxing 415-461-2249.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930415)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00004)
-
- New Apple Laserwriter Printer Driver 04/15/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- The new Apple
- LaserWriter printer driver, version 8.0, is designed to improve
- the functionality and performance of PostScript-compatible
- LaserWriter printers, especially those capable of supporting
- PostScript Level 2.
-
- The driver software combines all of the features of previous
- LaserWriter printer drivers, including application compatibility,
- support for TrueType fonts and PostScript Level 1 compatibility,
- and it adds support for features that are specific to individual
- printers, Apple says. "Specific PostScript Printer Description" files
- (PPDs) offer fingertip control for printer features such as multiple
- paper trays, printer resolution, PhotoGrade and optional envelope
- trays.
-
- The new driver is also designed to improve background printing
- performance up to 30 percent for business graphics. It also
- provides support for PostScript Level 2 features, including data
- compression, real-time error reporting, patterns and pattern-caching
- and color.
-
- The new software is scheduled to begin shipping with Apple's
- PostScript Level 2 LaserWriters -- currently the Personal LaserWriter
- NTR and LaserWriter Pro 600 and 630 -- in late April. Apple
- plans to replace previous versions of LaserWriter drivers with
- this software.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930415/Press Contact: Pat Kinley of Apple Computer,
- 408-974-2589)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00005)
-
- Add Japanese Characters To Non-Japanese Macs 04/15/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Apple
- Computer is offering its Japanese Language Kit, a new software
- product that enables customers to use Japanese characters on their
- non-Japanese systems.
-
- With the Japanese Language Kit, customers can input, edit and
- display Japanese characters without having to use a fully
- localized Japanese version of the Macintosh operating system.
-
- The Japanese Language Kit builds on WorldScript technology,
- delivered in System 7.1 in October 1992. WorldScript provides
- system-level support for most written languages, enabling
- customers to take advantage of multilanguage computing.
-
- Using the Japanese Language Kit, a Macintosh computer with System
- 7.1, and any application that supports Apple's WorldScript,
- customers will be able to create documents that mix Japanese
- characters with their native language, such as English or
- Chinese.
-
- The Japanese Language Kit is intended for customers who need to create
- Japanese documents and presentations.
-
- The Japanese Language Kit includes the software extension,
- the Kotoeri Japanese character input method, two Japanese
- TrueType fonts (HonMincho and MaruGothic) and the Osaka screen font.
- The Japanese Language Kit requires a Macintosh computer with at
- least 4MB of RAM, System7.1, and a hard disk drive with at
- least 20MB of storage available. The suggested retail price is
- $249.
-
- The Japanese Language Kit is also available through specially
- authorized KanjiTalk dealers. Customers can call Apple's
- reseller hotline at 800-732-3131 for information about KanjiTalk
- dealers.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930415/Press Contact: Cindy McCaffrey of
- Apple Computer, 408-974-1578)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00006)
-
- AST Research UK - First Pen-Based Notebook 04/15/93
- BRENTFORD, MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- AST Research
- has announced its first pen-driven portable computer, the
- Penexec. The notebook PC is expected to ship in the UK within a
- few weeks.
-
- The Penexec is actually a hybrid computer -- not a true pen-
- driven, nor a keyboard-driven notebook PC. The idea behind the
- machine, according to the company, is to give users the best of
- both worlds. The heart of the machine is a 25 megahertz (MHz)
- 80386SL chipset, driving 2 megabytes (MB) of memory, expandable
- to 20MB internally.
-
- Data storage is via a built-in 3.5-inch high density floppy
- drive, as well as a choice of 120 or 200MB hard disk. Despite the
- inclusion of the floppy drive as an integral feature of the case,
- the machine tips the scales at 5.5 pounds.
-
- Announcing UK plans for the machine, which was pre-announced
- earlier this month in the US, Con Mallon, AST UK's product
- marketing manager, said that AST is already a leader in the
- portable marketplace with its Premium Exec and Powerexec
- notebooks.
-
- "We believe that the Penexec, which provides highly sophisticated
- handwriting recognition capabilities, will deliver pen computing
- to a whole new generation of computer users," he said.
-
- In use, the Penexec's screen acts as both a display and a data
- input device. The screen operates to VGA resolution and includes
- a 400 dots-per-inch (dpi) digitizer as a standard feature. The
- 9.5-inch screen can display up to 64 grey scales, with the pen
- (or similar instrument) controlling data input.
-
- AST has opted to supply Windows for Pen Computing, the Microsoft
- Windows package, with the Penexec. The Windows front-end package
- interfaces with MS-DOS 6.0 and Windows 3.1, which are bundled
- with the machine. Also bundled with the machine is Pen
- Essentials, a suite of applications software developed by Slate
- Corporation in the US.
-
- Slate is developing several packages for use with pen-driven and
- portable PCs. The suite of software supplied with the Penexec
- includes: a loose-leaf notetaker, Delrina Winfax Pen, Daytimer
- pen scheduler and Penbook business reference pages.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930415/Press & Public Contact: AST Europe - Tel:
- 081-568-4350)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00007)
-
- Amstrad's Penpad Gets PCMCIA RAM Cards 04/15/93
- HATFIELD, HERTS, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Mitsubishi has
- revealed it has become the first supplier of PCMCIA random access
- memory (RAM) cards to gain approval for use with the Amstrad
- Penpad computerized personal organizer unveiled last month.
-
- The Japanese company is supplying the PCMCIA RAM cards in a range
- of storage capacities, ranging from 128 kilobytes to 4 megabytes.
- Amstrad versions of the Mitsubishi cards are being supplied to
- Amstrad for supply to its customers.
-
- The move is highly strategic for Mitsubishi. At the Amstrad
- Penpad's launch last month, company chairman, Alan Sugar, said that
- he intended to work with a number of companies on the peripherals
- front. Amstrad has a track record of being careful whom it
- appoints as an official supplier of add-ins for its electronic
- products.
-
- Mitsubishi, meanwhile, has been looking for a "presence" in the
- portable computing industry for some time. While the company is a
- major original equipment manufacturer (OEM) supplier of PCMCIA
- cards to the computing industry, it has not had a major tie-up
- like the Amstrad deal before.
-
- Newsbytes would like to point out that, contrary to much press
- reporting, the Amstrad Penpad is not a true personal digital
- assistant (PDA) in the vein of the Apple Newton or planned Sharp
- and Citizen machines. The UKP 299 machine emulates most of the
- functions of a personal organizer ("Filofax"), but is not DOS-
- compatible. Instead, it relies on three eight-bit proprietary
- processors to run a proprietary operating system.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930415/Press & Public Contact: Mitsubishi - Tel:
- 0707-276100; Fax: 0707-278692)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LON)(00008)
-
- Zenith Data Pitches For UK Govt Sales 04/15/93
- SLOUGH, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Zenith Data
- Systems (ZDS) has announced it is offering substantial discounts
- -- some as high as UKP 2,000 -- on desktop and portable computers
- supplied into the government sector. The idea behind the
- discounting plan is to establish the company as a major
- government supplier, just as ZDS has done in the US.
-
- "The public sector is an expanding target market for ZDS and we
- therefore place a high importance on servicing customers in this
- area. We expect that these prices, specific to the public sector,
- will encourage such organizations to buy ZDS equipment so that
- they too can experience the state of the art PC technology and
- first-class support provided by ZDS," explained John Lonergan,
- the company's UK managing director.
-
- Lonergan says that ZDS's range of portables offer a variety of
- options to potential users, but he acknowledged that pricing is
- an issue. This is why the company is offering discounts of up to
- 50 percent on machines sold into the government marketplace.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930415/Press & Public Contact: Zenith Data Systems
- - Tel: 0628-668588)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00009)
-
- NEC Ships New Ultralites In UK 04/15/93
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- NEC UK has announced it is
- shipping a new range of Ultralite portable PCs in the United
- Kingdom. The Versa series of machines are available in a wide
- variety of configurations.
-
- According to NEC, the Versa range is available in both monochrome
- and active matrix color screen editions, pricing from UKP 2,125
- for the mono and UKP 3.195 for the color versions. All models are
- based on the Intel 486SL processor and feature local bus video
- for high-performance graphics. Newsbytes notes that the Versa
- series is the first from the company to support local bus on a
- portable.
-
- The Versa series is one of the first notebooks of its type to
- include twin PCMCIA card slots as a standard feature. Another
- interesting feature is the facility to remove the floppy drive
- and slot in a second battery pack. NEC calls this feature the
- "Doubletime" facility, since it doubles working time on the
- machine.
-
- "NEC has carried out substantial research into the portable
- computer market and the results have shown that the products
- available at the moment do not meet the requirements of the
- users," explained Steve Finnimore, NEC's PC divisional product
- marketing manager.
-
- According to Finnimore, the mobile user needs all the computing
- power available on a desktop, but requires greater control over
- his or her computing environment. "They don't want to send their
- computer back to the dealer, or even buy a new one, every time
- they need to upgrade the power or specification of their
- machine," he said.
-
- "The user-friendly modular design of the Ultralite Versa passes
- power to the user giving them the ability to change their own
- hard disk, upgrade memory, move from mono to color display and
- introduce communications devices when they want and without
- having to rely on third party assistance," he added.
-
- UK versions of the Versa are supplied with a 120-megabyte (MB)
- hard disk as standard. Upgrades to 180MB are available using the
- same "slot in/slot out" technology that the Versa battery
- displays. The heart of the machine is an Intel 25 megahertz (MHz)
- 80486SL processor, although Newsbytes notes that this is a 3.3
- volt version, reducing the power requirements of the machine.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930415/Press & Public Contact: NEC UK - Tel: 081-
- 993-8111; Fax: 081-992-7161)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00010)
-
- IBM, CIC Work On OS/2 Handwriting Recognition 04/15/93
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- IBM and
- Communication Intelligence Corp., of Redwood Shores, California,
- have signed a joint development agreement to put a version of
- CIC's Handwriter Recognition System (HRS) software on the OS/2
- Pen operating system extension from IBM's Personal Software
- Products division.
-
- IBM Personal Software Products already distributes and
- exclusively sublicenses CIC's PenDOS pen-based operating system,
- which began shipping last July, and Handwriter Recognition System
- for PenDOS to other pen hardware manufacturers around the world.
-
- In March, the IBM Personal Computing Company announced the
- availability of HRS and PenDOS on IBM's newly announced ThinkPad
- 710T pen-based tablet computer. On the ThinkPad 710T, IBM now
- offers a choice of PenDOS or the rival PenPoint operating system
- from Go Corp.
-
- CIC's multilingual Handwriter Recognition System software is
- designed for many different users with a various handwriting
- styles, according to the vendor. It is available in English (both
- US and UK versions), German, French, Italian, Spanish, and
- Japanese.
-
- Besides IBM, companies with licenses to use HRS in their products
- include Fujitsu Ltd., NEC Corp., NCR Corp., Samsung, Acer Inc.,
- Seiko Epson, and others. HRS for Windows for Pen Computing is
- available to large end-user accounts and hardware manufacturers
- from CIC.
-
- The capabilities of the OS/2 Pen version of Handwriter
- Recognition System will be the same as those of existing
- versions, said Madeline Duva, director of business development at
- CIC. "The operating system really is less important to the
- individual than the application," she said, and CIC's goal is to
- provide a common handwriting recognition engine across multiple
- operating systems.
-
- Founded in 1981 as a spinoff from the Stanford Research
- Institute, CIC develops and sells products that use pen, voice,
- and image for computer input.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930414/Press Contact: Germaine Gioia, CIC,
- 415-802-7754)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00011)
-
- DEC Loses $30 Million In Quarter 04/15/93
- MAYNARD, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Digital
- Equipment Corp. has lost money again in its latest financial
- quarter, but the loss is smaller than in the last quarter or in
- the corresponding quarter last year.
-
- DEC lost $30.12 million on total operating revenues of $3,453.68
- million in its third quarter, which ended March 27, 1993.
-
- Revenues in the quarter were up six percent from $3,252.51
- million in the comparable quarter a year ago, and the loss is
- substantially smaller than last year's third-quarter loss of
- $311.31 million.
-
- In the second quarter of this year, DEC lost $73.86 million on
- revenues of $3,689.44 million.
-
- "We are meeting the goals we have set for ourselves in returning
- Digital to profitability and growth," said Robert B. Palmer,
- president and chief executive of DEC, in a prepared statement.
-
- For the nine months ended March 27, DEC reported total operating
- revenues of $10,457.42 million, up four percent from $10,025.09
- million in the comparable period a year ago. Digital lost $364.53
- million in the first nine months of fiscal 1993, versus $940.38
- million -- including a $485.5-million charge for a change in
- accounting principles related to post-retirement health benefits
- -- in the comparable period of 1992.
-
- Digital is in the midst of ongoing cost-cutting efforts. The
- company said it has cut its total worldwide staff by 4,000 in the
- third quarter, to 98,100, making total cuts of about 16,000 since
- the beginning of the fiscal year.
-
- Earlier in April, DEC announced plans to move its head office out
- of the historic woolen mill here that has been its home since the
- company was founded in 1957. Employees will begin moving to other
- office space in Maynard this summer, a company spokeswoman said.
-
- Palmer, who succeeded founder Ken Olsen last fall, reorganized
- the company into nine business units in December. The new
- structure, comprising five industry-sector units and four built
- around DEC product lines, is to be fully in place by the end of
- the fiscal year, according to a company spokesman.
-
- DEC is pinning much of its hope for recovery to the Alpha AXP
- architecture, a high-powered reduced instruction set computing
- (RISC) technology that will form the basis of DEC's next
- generation of hardware as well as being licensed to other
- companies.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930415/Press Contact: Bradley D. Allen, DEC,
- 508-493-7182; James Chiafery, DEC, 508-493-8009)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00012)
-
- New Print Shop From Broderbund 04/15/93
- NOVATO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Broderbund
- Software will release The Print Shop Deluxe 1.2 (MS-DOS), an
- enhanced version of its best-selling title, in May. At the same
- time, it will release a graphics collection for The Print Shop
- Deluxe: The Print Shop Deluxe Comic Characters Graphics Collection.
-
- Highlights of The Print Shop Deluxe 1.2 include increased speed.
- Version 1.2 is 200% faster than the original version, the firm
- says. Both screen rendering and printing speed have been
- significantly improved; import capabilities -- users can import
- graphics in EPS, PCX, and TIFF formats for use in the creation
- of greeting cards, signs, banners, calendars and letterhead.
-
- There are also enhanced export capabilities. With version 1.2,
- users can export entire files in EPS, PCX, TIFF, and CGM formats.
- In addition, users can export graphics in Adobe Illustrator format,
- Broderbund says.
-
- "Users told us they loved creating their own designs with 'The
- Print Shop Deluxe,' but would like to import and export to other
- programs," said Harry Wilker, Broderbund's vice president of
- publishing. "We're happy to oblige with a new version that
- further extends the program's capabilities."
-
- Broderbund is also shipping "The Print Show Deluxe Comic Characters."
- The collection features a unique selection of more than 300
- graphics, numbers and letters with personality. (Each graphic
- has its own humorous human features and expressions). The collection
- is available for the suggested retail price of $44.95.
-
- "The Print Shop Deluxe" is designed for IBM PC/Tandy and 100%
- compatibles with an 80386SX, 80386 or greater microprocessor.
- It requires MS-DOS 3.0 or higher, 1MB of RAM, a hard disk, a
- high-density 1.2MB 5.25" or 720K 3.5" drive, a VGA monitor and
- a keyboard or mouse. The product carries the suggested retail
- price of $79.95.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930415/Press Contact: Broderbund Software, Novato
- Karen Omholt, 415/382-4639)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00013)
-
- Seybold - SuperMac's Latest 24-Bit Windows Accelerators 04/15/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- At Seybold,
- SuperMac has announced Spectrum/24, a 24-bit color Windows
- accelerator priced at under $1,000, along with the addition of
- integral color calibration to Thunder/24, a 24-bit card for Windows
- first released last fall.
-
- EISA and ISA versions of the two new cards are shipping this month,
- and editions for the new, high-speed VL bus architecture are
- expected to become available in June. Spectrum/24 is priced at
- $999, and Thunder/24 at $1,999, said Thomas B. Clarkson, Windows
- product marketing director, during an interview with Newsbytes.
-
- Clarkson told Newsbytes that the results of benchmark tests show
- Spectrum/24 and Thunder/24 to be the fastest accelerators in their
- class. Each card displays 16.7 million colors at up to 1152 x 910
- resolution, for a 30% greater viewing area than the 1024 x 786 of
- Super VGA. Resolution this high is hard to find in a card sold for
- less than $1,000, he stated.
-
- In addition, Spectrum/24 and Thunder/24 each offer a refresh rate
- of 75 Hz. "On most PC boards, 72 Hz is the highest you get," he
- commented. The high refresh rate is aimed a providing flicker-
- free, easy-on-the eyes display.
-
- The new color calibration capability in Thunder/24 is provided by
- the SuperMatch Display Calibrator Pro, a cuplike device that
- can be attached to the front of the screen.
-
- In a demonstration on the show floor, Clarkson told Newsbytes that
- the Calibrator Pro's electronic sensor and calibration software
- makes sure that the color information from the card corresponds to
- the colors actually seen on the display.
-
- The calibration results can be automatically inserted into Adobe
- Photoshop files, guaranteeing that users will get consistent color
- results each time, regardless of changes in temperature or other
- physical characteristics of the room.
-
- The calibrator also provides point-and-click control over lighting
- conditions, letting the user adjust for white points, or
- brightness, and gamma, or the distribution of pixels over the RGB
- (red/green/blue) color scale.
-
- The new VL-Bus versions of Thunder/24 and Spectrum/24 are ideally
- suited to professional work in prepress and digital photography,
- Clarkson said.
-
- By taking advantage of the VL architecture's second bus, the cards
- obtain up to fourfold improvement over the performance achievable
- on EISA. The second bus communicates with graphics applications at
- the high speed of 132 MB/S.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19930415/Press contact: Alexandrea Todd, McLean
- Public Relations for SuperMac, tel 415-513-8800)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(BOS)(00014)
-
- Seybold - Interleaf WorldView 2, SGML Express 04/15/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- At Seybold,
- Interleaf is introducing WorldView 2 and SGML Express, a pair
- of software programs that support the SGML (Standard Generic Markup
- Language) specification for format-independent document
- interchange.
-
- WorldView 2 is a new, fully SGML-capable version of WorldView, an
- electronic document viewing system for DOS, Macintosh, Windows,
- OS/2, Unix, DEC VAX, and IBM mainframes.
-
- SGML Express, an update of the Interleaf 5 SGML development tool,
- adds the ability to create SGML documents without any programming.
-
- WorldView, a system released last June, enables users to view files
- as either WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) pages or formatted
- dynamically to fit viewing windows.
-
- Bill Freeland, product marketing manager, told Newsbytes that
- WorldView 2 offers the ability to conduct a structured search
- through a huge document base.
-
- For example, the user might search for all subheads that contains
- the words "rotor" and "valve," and which pertain to products
- created after 1982. In SGML, structured searches like this are
- made possible by defining various aspects of documents as
- structural "elements," and then "tagging" these elements with
- identifying information.
-
- The new product also lets users output fully compliant SGML files
- from within WorldView 2, so what started out as read-only text will
- generate text that can be edited and reused.
-
- According to Karen Warner, vice president of strategic marketing
- and communications, the combination of these two capabilities has
- not been present in any viewing product up to now.
-
- WorldView 2 will also support an abundant variety of hardware and
- software platforms, file formats, and printers, she emphasized.
-
- The current version of WorldView provides support for PostScript,
- PCL, dot matrix, and AFP printers, as well as the following file
- formats: MS Word, WordPerfect, WordStar, PostScript, SGML,
- Interleaf, FrameMaker, PICT, TIFF, MacDraw, MacPaint, CGM, IGES,
- and HPGL.
-
- WorldView 2 will consist of two components, based around those in
- the first release. WorldView Press will take documents from major
- word processors, desk processing programs, and other applications
- and prepare them for online viewing -- compressing the documents
- and adding hypertext and a full-text index.
-
- WorldViewer will let end users view the documents, carry out
- searches, attach electronic notes, zoom in, and print.
-
- A few of the other new features in WorldView 2 include support for
- color text and images, an outline navigator that lets the user
- "click" through elements of a document to find information quickly,
- and an "intuitive search" function that lets the user select a
- paragraph or block of text and say, "Find me more like this."
-
- Moira Meehan, SGML/CALS product marketing manager, told Newsbytes
- that Interleaf's other new program, SGML Express, is designed to
- reduce the time and expense it takes to produce SGML documents.
-
- The word "Express" in the title has two meanings, she said. One
- refers to self-expression, and the other to rapid performance.
-
- Creating an SGML-compliant document involves two steps. First,
- document type definitions (DTDs) are employed to define the
- elements in a document. Then, once the DTDs are installed on the
- user's SGML authoring software, the user can create SGML-compliant
- documents based on those DTDs.
-
- According to Meehan, SGML Express carries out both steps without
- programming, and also allows easy customization of documents for
- WYSIWYG presentation. The program is designed to provide guidance
- to the user, while hiding the complicated syntax of SGML.
-
- SGML Express will operate on most major Unix platforms, including
- workstations from Sun Microsystems, IBM, DEC, and Data General.
- Interleaf expects to release both SGML Express and WorldView 2 in
- June.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19930415/Press contact: Karen Warner, Interleaf,
- tel 617-290-4981)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00015)
-
- ****The Sega Channel Debuts This Fall 04/15/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- A Time Warner
- spokesman expressed confidence room will be found on many cable
- systems for the Sega Channel, which will debut this fall.
-
- "In the short run the cable systems are expanding pretty
- rapidly," said spokesman Edward Adler. "We now have 77 channels
- in Manhattan, and 150 in Queens. We're building an Orlando system
- with unlimited channels. And other cable systems have announced
- upgrades. I'm sure capacity will be there. The whole future of
- cable is in expanded capacity."
-
- TCI, the nation's largest cable operator, and Time Warner are
- both joint-venturing with Sega on the Sega Channel, which will
- offer a carousel of videogames on an as-needed basis. A special
- decoder will be available for owners of Sega Genesis systems,
- Adler said, but the games cannot be saved. Pricing will be at
- about $8-10 per month, in the range of other pay cable services
- like Home Box Office.
-
- In addition to actual games, Sega Channel will offer game-playing
- tips, news, contests and promotions. Tom Kalinske, Sega president
- and chief executive officer, estimated there will be 12-14
- million homes with Genesis systems, which retail for about $100,
- when the system is rolled out. Sega Channel will compete most
- closely with video stores, which after a legal battle with game
- system makers now rent videogames. Time Warner and TCI serve a
- combined 17 million homes.
-
- Separately, Time Warner said that AT&T will supply the ATM
- switches needed for the upgrade of its Orlando system. Time
- Warner is creating an unlimited-channel, two-way network in
- Orlando called the Full Service Network, which it hopes will
- demonstrate the viability of a complete upgrade for all its
- systems. AT&T will start delivery of the switches this fall.
- The GCNS-2000 has a maximum data throughput of 20 billion bits
- per second -- it takes about 45 million bits per second to
- deliver a single TV channel without compression.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930415/Press Contact: Time Warner Cable,
- Mike Luftman, 203/328-0613; AT&T Network Systems, Pat Stortz,
- 201/606-2478; Time Warner, Edward Adler, 212/484-6630)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00016)
-
- BellSouth ISDN Plans 04/15/93
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- BellSouth said it
- will roll out digital service under ISDN standards in its largest
- urban markets in conjunction with a host of allies, including
- computer system integrators, hardware makers and software
- companies.
-
- The IAS+ Initiative will be tried first in Nashville, Tennessee
- and Huntsville, Alabama. The company said that 48 of its markets
- will be access to ISDN services by the end of this year, about
- 48 percent of its total customer base. ISDN, which stands for
- Integrated Services Digital Network, offers 2 digital channels at
- 64,000 bits/second, plus a 16,000 bit/second signaling channel,
- on a single phone line. Prices are set about 30 percent higher
- than regular business rates by most vendors, like Ameritech, but
- BellSouth won't set its tariffed rates until later this year.
-
- Among the vendors working in the Nashville roll-out are Apple,
- AT&T, Cisco, Compression Labs, DigiBoard, Motorola, Novell,
- Hayes, and Microcom, as well as 10 system integrators. A list of
- Atlanta partners is being developed by TelAviso Inc., BellSouth,
- which will also handle the partnership arrangements in other
- BellSouth markets, including Miami, Charlotte, and New Orleans.
-
- Phone companies have in the past been criticized for the slow
- roll-out of ISDN, which they've been talking up as the future of
- telecommunications since the early 1980s. A National standard for
- ISDN was finally demonstrated last October, and since then most
- regional Bell companies have been moving forward aggressively.
- However many companies, including BellSouth, have also been
- talking-up even faster data services like frame relay and ATM.
- BellSouth announced this week it is buying a large number of ATM
- switches from Fujitsu, so it can offer digital services faster
- than the 1.5 million bits/second limit available under primary
- rate ISDN.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930415/Press Contact: David Storey,
- BellSouth, 205-321-3413)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00017)
-
- Bell Company Update 04/15/93
- ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- The seven regional
- Bell companies are busy finding new businesses, and fighting the
- public image wars, nationwide.
-
- US West said it would follow Ameritech into the credit card
- business, by offering a private-label version of credit cards
- from US Bancorp of Portland, Oregon. Like Ameritech's card,
- which is handled by Household Finance, the US West card will
- double as a telephone calling card. The most successful such card
- is AT&T's Universal Card, which is now one of the most popular
- credit cards in the nation.
-
- Ameritech won praise from Illinois Governor Jim Edgar by funding
- a $500,000 program to train teachers in the use of communication
- technology for teaching. The Edtech program will be handled by 53
- Illinois colleges that have teacher education programs, and will
- help train teachers in the use of online resources and remote
- learning. The money can also be used to link small schools with
- videoconferencing-based classes.
-
- Such grants are important for two reasons. First, teachers with
- knowledge of advanced communications will use the services, and
- that increases revenues directly. Second, grants can help build
- goodwill which phone companies can use in their continuing
- battles with state legislatures for deregulation, and with state
- utility commissions for higher, more flexible rates.
-
- Phone companies do tend to spend that goodwill whenever
- legislatures are in session, as Southwestern Bell is doing now in
- Texas. The company wants price caps it says will let it run more
- fiber cable and digital services, and supports two bills which
- failed to pass the recent session of the legislature. But its
- tactics, including a rally by company employees and a media
- blitz, have brought down the wrath of the state's lieutenant
- governor, Bob Bulluck, who also presides over the State Senate.
- The issue is complicated by the fact that Southwestern Bell is in
- the process of moving its headquarters from St. Louis to San
- Antonio. While the deregulation bill is dead, SW Bell is getting
- another shot at deregulation through a "Sunset" bill aimed at the
- Public Utility Commission.
-
- Pacific Telesis announced it will take a $2 billion hit on 1994
- earnings as it moves toward spinning-off its wireless operations.
- Many of the company's top executives, including Chairman Sam
- Ginn, will join the new company. Most of the charge is related to
- an option businesses were given last year, to either capitalize
- or immediately write-off health benefits of future retirees. The
- company also said it will take a $210 write-off on real estate,
- and take hits on restructuring its cable and equipment
- businesses. The news did not impact the company's stock price,
- which recently broke-out of a narrow trading range to the upside
- and now trades at nearly $50 per share.
-
- The company's PacTel Teletrac joint-venture, which will be part
- of the spin-off, also announced an enhancement to its $18 per
- month security service. Teletrac Roadside Assistance will let
- drivers activate a vehicle location device in their cars when
- they need service. Teletrac offers vehicle location services
- through networks of ground antennas in major markets including
- Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, Dallas/Ft. Worth and Miami.
-
- Other enhancements to the service let parents learn where their kids
- have taken the family car by calling the company and activating
- the tracking service remotely. RoadAmerica, a service of Brickell
- Financial Services Motor Club, will handle the auto service.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930415/Press Contact: PacTel Teletrac,
- Ron May, 310/338-7187)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(MOW)(00018)
-
- AT&T Offers Phone Service In Moscow 04/15/93
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- AT&T and Moscow phone monopoly
- MGTS today announced that their Russian joint venture has officially
- started offering local and international telephone services to
- business and residential customers in Moscow.
-
- The Telmos Company will be operating the 5ESS digital switch,
- supplied by AT&T and installed in the building near the Olympic
- Penta hotel in Moscow.
-
- Telmos has installed a 5ESS digital phone switch with a capacity of
- 4000 subscriber lines; the capacity will be increased to 10,000
- lines before the end of the year. With this switch Telmos can
- offer services comparable to those available in Western Europe
- or the United States, including simultaneous transmission of
- voice and data (ISDN) and Centrex services.
-
- During a demonstration of the new system, Newsbytes was able to
- place a call to London several minutes ahead of the "first official
- ISDN call in Moscow." The connection was clear but not immediate.
- Newsbytes was told by the Telmos staff that new company utilizes
- international satellite and land connection provided by InterTelecom,
- the trunk line owner.
-
- The signup fee will be US$1050 both for business and residential
- lines.
-
- Talks on the subject were held since 1989 but a joint venture
- agreement was signed only on September 13, 1992. "After that
- everything went fast," AT&T representatives said at the
- press conference.
-
- The Telmos company is an equal equity venture between Moscow City
- Telephone Company (MGTS) and AT&T. According to Telmos President
- Vladimir Lagutin the registered capital of the new company is 2
- billion roubles (about US$2.6 millions at the current exchange
- rate).
-
- The Board of Directors of the operating company will comprise
- three AT&T members, three MGTS members, and one member jointly
- nominated by the two firms. President of the Telmos Management
- Council is Vladimir Lagutin (MGTS), with Stan Krylow (AT&T
- International) as vice-president.
-
- According to MGTS Director Mr. Vasilyev, the revenues generated
- by the services of the operating company will be used to finance
- the expansion and further modernization of the Moscow telephone
- network.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin & Eugene Peskin/19930415/Press Contact: Young &
- Rubicam/Sovero, Natasha Radzetskaya, phone +7-095-253-2189; Public
- Contact: AT&T Network Systems International, Cees Steijer!
- phone + 31-35-871212, fax + 31-35-875835)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00019)
-
- ****Microsoft Ships 2 Million DOS 6, Earnings Up 04/15/93
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Microsoft
- Corporation says it has shipped two million copies of its MS-DOS 6
- to retail outlets already since the newest version of the operating
- system was introduced two weeks ago. The company said the figure
- does not include copies shipped to hardware manufacturers which
- pre-install the operating system on their PCs.
-
- Microsoft also announced its third quarter earnings, reporting per
- share earnings of $0.80, which was slightly above what most
- financial analysts had expected. The company reported earnings of
- $243 million on revenues of $958 million for the fiscal year '93
- third quarter. That's a 36 percent increase over the same period
- last year. The results were released just minutes after the market
- closed Wednesday, with Microsoft stock closing up 1/8 at $89 per
- share. The stock rose slightly higher than that in after-hours
- trading. The company attributed the gain to strong demand for
- product.
-
- Microsoft Windows, of which 25 million copies have been licensed
- since it was introduced, contributed to the results also. "These
- results reflect the continuing adoption of Microsoft Windows by
- our customers around the world, as well as the on-going popularity
- of the MS-DOS operating system," said Chief Financial Officer
- Frank Gaudette. The company said about a dozen PC makers have
- licensed more than one million copies to run on their systems
- with Windows pre-installed on about 60 percent of the personal
- computers shipping.
-
- Microsoft is expected to start shipping Windows NT, the latest
- version of Windows, a few weeks after it has its official debut
- next month.
-
- Microsoft is being cautious about the fourth quarter results,
- telling analysts it will be satisfied if fourth quarter revenues
- rise half of the approximately 20 percent the company has experienced
- in recent years.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930415/Press contact: Microsoft Public Relations,
- 206-882-8080)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(WAS)(00020)
-
- ****Wrist, Hand Site Of Most Work-Related Injuries 04/15/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- The reported
- incidence of repetitive stress injuries (RSI), the pain and
- related weakness caused by constant small movements such as those
- experienced by computer keyboard operators, have, according to
- the latest PC World Magazine, tripled in the past ten years,
- making RSI the number one cause of worker complaints to the
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
-
- Although more progressive European companies have made an effort
- to prevent such injuries through special regulations, outside San
- Francisco and affluent Suffolk County, New York, few local
- governments here in the US have given any serious attention
- office regulations that might reduce RSI injuries.
-
- Newsbytes recently interviewed a Pennsylvania-based expert in RSI
- who told this bureau that her practice has also seen a great
- increase in such injuries. According to Sherry G. Sabine, OTR/L
- CHT (occupational therapist and certified hand therapist) RSI, or
- "cumulative trauma disorders" can occur at any time in a worker's
- career. Occasionally problems show up within days after a
- particular job is begun. Often symptoms are vague and non-
- specific and may not develop until the worker has performed the
- same job over months or years. "There are no one-time incidents
- that can be identified as a cause of RSI."
-
- According to Ms. Sabine, because the worker does not have a
- broken bone or cut, and there is no sign of bruising or visible
- swelling, the individual who suffers from cumulative trauma will
- probably not appear injured to a supervisor who therefore might
- not recommend appropriate rest or changes in working conditions
- until an injury becomes severe, perhaps causing permanent
- disability.
-
- "Some days the worker feels fine," she told Newsbytes, "and other
- days discomfort may be severe. A history of generalized
- complaints may develop in such a way that the employer and
- sometimes even the worker become unsure of whether the symptoms
- are job- or hobby-related, or even if they are real."
-
- Carpal tunnel syndrome is probably one of the most widely
- recognized diagnoses when considering cumulative trauma or
- repetitive stress injuries. This is a soft-tissue injury which
- occurs at the wrist. As soft tissue becomes irritated, internal
- swelling occurs, she said. The extra fluid coming into the
- tissue serves two basic functions. The fluid "splints" the
- irritated tissue to prevent movement which could increase the
- irritation, and it begins the healing process of the injured
- tissue.
-
- "Unfortunately, as motion continues with day-to-day activities,
- the nerves enclosed in the tunnel become pinched as the pressure
- from the swelling increases."
-
- But CTS is far from the only RSI commonly seen according to Ms.
- Sabine. The well-known "tennis-elbow" (actually lateral
- epicondylitis), DeQuervain's Syndrome (a soft tissue injury to
- the thumb), and thoracic outlet syndrome (which causes pain to
- the entire arm), are also being seen more often.
-
- Ms. Sabine recommends taking the following steps to avoid such
- injuries:
-
- Computer operators should be encouraged to stretch frequently,
- moving head, neck, shoulders, and arms briefly to balance muscle
- tension.
-
- The worker should be seated properly with the chair providing
- firm support for the back, with either adjustment capability or
- shape that allows for the addition of a cushion. The seat height
- should be adjustable so that, with the operator seated, the
- keyboard can be used with the elbows in about 80- to 90 degrees
- of flexion. A freely adjustable footrest should be used to
- prevent fatigue.
-
- The keyboard should be positioned so that the operator's wrists
- are supported with an appropriate wrist rest, which maintains the
- wrists in a neutral position with the fingers comfortably on the
- keys.
-
- Work should be placed slightly behind, and to the side of, the
- keyboard at a comfortable reading distance and at the proper
- height to prevent a stoop-shouldered position. The computer
- screen should also be positioned at proper eye level, she says.
-
- And, in some situations, specific keyboards or other adaptive
- equipment may be suggested for individual workers.
-
- Ms. Sabine is a registered occupational therapist and certified
- hand therapist who has been practicing in the York, Pennsylvania,
- area since 1972.
-
- Much of the adaptive equipment needed for the work site is
- commercially available and can be obtained through industrial
- suppliers or rehabilitation equipment suppliers, such as
- Susquehanna Rehab Products, in Wrightsville, Pennsylvania to
- which Ms. Sabine is a consultant.
-
- The locations of occupational therapists in other regions who are
- skilled in evaluating upper extremity problems, can be obtained
- from The American Society of Hand Therapists, 1002 Vandora
- Springs Rd., Suite 101, Garner, NC 27529.
-
- (John McCormick/19930415)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(WAS)(00021)
-
- Problems With DOS 6 Reported 04/15/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- As Microsoft's
- earnings surge and the Redmond, Washington-based software giant
- claims MS-DOS 6 sales in the millions only a week after its
- debut, Computer Reseller News dated April 12 says that some users
- are having difficulties with the DoubleSpace disk compression
- utility and others are experiencing problems running under MS-DOS
- 6 on Artisoft's LANtastic local area network software.
-
- MS-DOS 6 includes features of MS-DOS 5 bundled with a number of
- enhancements like file compression; power management and file
- transfer for portables, anti-virus capabilities, and other
- utilities which many users already have purchased from third-
- party suppliers.
-
- Microsoft spokespersons say that there have not been an unusual
- number of complaints considering the number of copies sold in the
- first week.
-
- It is difficult to gauge the number of complaints properly but
- there have been a number of complaints about various MS-DOS 6
- features, especially the DoubleSpace disk compression utility,
- posted on various computer bulletin board systems.
-
- Newsbytes has learned from a source close to the federal
- marketplace that there have been reports of trouble but that they
- were relatively minor so far.
-
- (John McCormick/19930415/)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(WAS)(00022)
-
- Administration Favors High-Tech Highways For Cars 04/15/93
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Remember the time
- President Bush was reported as being surprised to learn about the
- use of bar code scanners in checkout lines? Whether that
- incident was true or not, the Clinton Administration apparently
- not only knows what retail scanners are, it intends to expand
- their use by adding radio frequency tags to automobiles to create
- smart sensors which would be used to automate toll collection.
-
- Privacy advocates have expressed some concern as to possible
- alternative uses that to which police agencies might put such
- sensor systems, such as tracking when and where people drive as well
- as how fast.
-
- The Associated Press reports that besides the smart tags, Clinton
- Administration high-tech aficionados are proposing spending
- several hundred million dollars on the Intelligent Vehicle
- Highway Systems concept put forward by Representative Bob Carr,
- Democrat from Michigan.
-
- Under Rep. Carr's plan, cars would be equipped with an on-board
- computer linked to roadside stations via infrared sensors that
- would provide road condition reports to the driver.
-
- (John McCormick/19930415/)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00023)
-
- ****Viacom Buys ICOM Simulations 04/15/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Viacom
- International, a major cable channel operator whose holdings
- include MTV, Nickelodeon, and Showtime, said it will buy ICOM
- Simulations, a privately held video game producer based in
- Wheeling, Illinois. No price was disclosed. ICOM will be
- integrated into Viacom's New Media division, which was formed
- last October.
-
- ICOM is best-known for multimedia products like a CD-ROM
- entitled "Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective," as well as
- video games like the Super Nintendo hit "Roadrunner's Death
- Valley Rally." Viacom President Frank Biondi said the move by his
- company accelerates its timetable for introducing products in the
- video game area, as well as multimedia. ICOM will become the
- research arm of Viacom New Media, he added.
-
- Like many other broadcast-related companies, Viacom is searching
- for new markets for its properties. In addition to its ownership
- of cable programming networks, Viacom is a major program
- distributor, having re-run rights to shows such as The Cosby Show
- and Roseanne. It also owns TV and radio stations. It's
- controlled by National Amusements Inc., but it was originally a
- spin-off of CBS.
-
- The idea behind the acquisition is to combine Viacom's
- trademarks and franchises in entertainment with ICOM's
- ability to create multimedia and video game products.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930415/Press Contact: Hillary Condit, Viacom,
- 212-258-6354)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00024)
-
- Entry Level Champion Bookkeeper 04/15/93
- ENGLEWOOD, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Champion Business
- Systems says it is now shipping its entry into the low-cost
- accounting arena with the introduction of Champion Bookkeeper.
-
- The PC-based system allows corrections to be made after-the-fact,
- maintaining a full audit trail. That allows users to retrieve posted
- transactions and make the necessary corrections without having to
- make reversing entries. The audit trail recording the corrections
- maintains the integrity of the data. Chief Software Engineer Rusty
- Fraser says other software packages allow corrections after posting
- but don't maintain an audit trail. "The real issue isn't just
- accounting improprieties in other low-end programs, but the
- multitude of problems users must face when trying to track changes
- and corrections." Accountants says an accounting system that doesn't
- provide an audit trail of all transactions and changes is unreliable
- and meaningless, says Fraser.
-
- Marketing Director Bill McCabe told Newsbytes Champion Bookkeeper
- also includes a automatic data recovery system with what the company
- calls an "internal auditor." If your computer crashes, the feature
- detects if the books are out of balance then automatically balances
- them by analyzing the journals, ledgers and files and reposting
- where necessary. For example, if the data relating to a check were
- lost, the system reverses the check entry and makes the necessary
- adjustments. The user gets a list of all reversed and damaged items
- to maintain the audit trail. "Usually (in the computer crashes) you
- only use the current transaction in a real-time system, unlike a
- batch processing, where you can lose a lot of data," says McCabe.
-
- Champion Bookkeeper can open a new month without requiring the
- previous month to be closed first, begin a new year without closing
- the previous year, and keep two full years current. Retroactive
- reporting and transaction analysis allows the user to recreate
- reports from a previous period. In addition to the pre-defined
- reports, a custom report writing feature allows the creation of
- ad hoc reports. Laser and dot matrix printers are supported.
-
- The company says Champion Bookkeeper's entry screens are
- form-based, using a fill-in-the-blanks approach rather than
- accounting terminology. Modules include General Ledger,
- Accounts Receivable and Order Entry, Accounts Payable, Payroll,
- Inventory Pricing, check writing, and the custom report writer.
- According to Champion President Charlie Hager "Champion
- Bookkeeper is targeted toward small businesses who don't
- particularly like accounting, can't afford ongoing professional
- help, and don't need the power, expense and complexity of a
- high-end system."
-
- The program has a suggested retail price of $195, but Champion is
- offering an introductory trade-in deal that provides a $100
- allowance for users of other accounting systems. The company
- provides a 90-day, no questions money back guarantee, and says
- Champion Bookkeeper can be upgraded to one of its more sophisticated
- programs with full credit applied to the new purchase. McCabe told
- Newsbytes the company expects to release a Windows version of
- Champion Bookkeeper in late 1993, but presently has no plans to ship
- a Macintosh version.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930415/Press contact: Bill McCabe, Champion Business
- Systems, 303-792-3606 or 800-243-2626, X350; Reader contact:
- Champion Business Systems, 303-792-3606 or 800-243-2626)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00025)
-
- Dell To Offer NextStep-Based Systems 04/15/93
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Dell Computer
- Corporation says it will offer buyers of its Intel 486-based
- personal computers and future products the option of equipping the
- system with Next Computer's NextStep for Intel processors.
-
- Dell is one of several personal computer manufacturers, including
- Data General Corporation, Epson America, NEC, and Siemens
- Nixdorf Information Systems, to announce they will pre-install
- NextStep on 486 and Pentium-based PCs (see related Newsbytes
- story today.) NextStep for Intel is the IBM-compatible
- version of Next Computer's software development environment.
- The stand-alone program reportedly will have a suggested
- retail price of $795 when purchased from Next, with a programmer's
- kit costing $1,995. A Dell spokesperson told Newsbytes the company
- hasn't established the price it will sell the software for, but said
- "we'll be competitive with Next." Dell does not charge an
- installation fee for software pre-installed on its systems.
-
- NextStep, while it wouldn't run on IBM-compatibles, has been better
- received than Next's workstation itself. Developers of applications
- such as word processing programs say they can produce programs in
- less time using NextStep than can developers working in other
- systems.
-
- Dell declined to discuss specific terms of the relationship with
- Next, nor were distribution details disclosed. However the company
- did say it plans to sell NextStep-equipped systems directly into
- select target markets. Newsbytes reported in February that Next
- Computer planned to get out of the hardware business after a
- poor showing in the marketplace, and thought it had a buyer for its
- hardware arm in Canon. However, Canon backed out, and now could end
- up with the company anyway, since it owns nearly 18 percent of Next
- and has reportedly invested about $165 million in the company. Many
- potential buyers apparently saw the Next computer as overpriced and
- underpowered. The machines are not compatible with IBM-type systems.
-
- In January 1992 founder Steve Jobs said Next would have to be
- significantly better to get an advantage over entrenched systems
- like Sun, and that never happened. Next reportedly shipped over
- 63,000 workstations last year, and sales reached $140 million.
- According to figures compiled by market research firm International
- Data Corporation, that compares with about 217,000 Sun Microsystems
- workstations shipped last year.
-
- Dell says its NextStep offerings will range from a small-chassis
- L-series system, through the M and ME families of mid-sized systems,
- to the company's high-end DGX mid-sized workstation, which
- incorporates a 50 megahertz (MHz) processor, secondary processor
- cache, and the company's processor-direct graphics technology. Dell
- said it will offer the NextStep-based system to vertical markets as
- well as through its direct sales force. Availability, pricing, and
- specific distribution plans will be announced when Next begins
- shipment. That's expected to happen next month.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930415/Press contact: Lisa Rohlf, Dell Computer,
- 512-343-3782; Reader contact: Dell Computer, 800-289-3355)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00026)
-
- Borland UK Slashes Quattro Pro 4.0 To UKP 49-95 04/15/93
- READING, BERKSHIRE, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Borland International has
- announced it has slashed the price of Quattro Pro 4.0, its DOS
- spreadsheet, down to UKP 49-95. The move represents a price cut
- of around UKP 100 on "street prices" of the package.
-
- According to Rikke Helms-Wienszczak, the company's managing
- director, Quattro Pro has become a firm favorite in the
- spreadsheet marketplace in recent years. The idea of the price
- cut, she said, is to enhance the package's appeal still further.
-
- "It's become evident that the software industry is undergoing
- significant change, particularly in the level of software prices.
- As more operating platforms appear, the established market must
- alter, and software manufacturers must adapt to this," she said.
-
- "We feel that it's now the time to respond to the changing
- conditions of the DOS spreadsheet market, particularly since
- spreadsheets have now become core software for almost every
- business. Borland are confident that this will be greeted by
- consumers as a fair and positive move, and, by providing a best-
- of-breed spreadsheet for a great price, it supports Borland's
- commitment to empower the user," she added.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930415/Press & Public Contact: Borland UK - Tel:
- 0734-320022)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00027)
-
- US Robotics Upgrades Worldport Portable Modem 04/15/93
- SLOUGH, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- US Robotics has
- released an upgraded version of its Worldport fax modem. The
- previously 2,400 bits per second (bps) modem has been uprated to
- support V32Bis (14,400 bps), as well having a fax modem facility
- added.
-
- As with earlier Worldport modems, the 14,400 V42Bis fax modem is
- battery powered and comes with a USR-badged version of Delrina
- Technology's Winfax Lite and DOS Fax Lite comms/fax software.
- Pricing on the modem is now UKP 499.
-
- According to US Robotics, the new modem fleshes out the company's
- range of modems, which were recently enhanced with the arrival in
- the UK of the high-speed Sportster modems, first shown at COMDEX
- Fall in the US last November.
-
- Newsbytes notes that there is still a PCMCIA version of the
- Worldport to come from US Robotics, According to Dale Walsh,
- USR's Dale Walsh, the company's vice president of advanced
- development, the unit should be due out some time this fall.
-
- Speaking with Newsbytes just prior to COMDEX Fall late last year,
- Walsh said that the PCMCIA unit was still about a year off. The
- company's acquisition of PNB, the French connectivity specialist
- late last month is expected to bring this date forward, as PNB
- has considerable experience in PCMCIA technology)
-
- (Steve Gold/199304/Press & Public Contact: US Robotics - Tel:
- 0753-811180)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00028)
-
- Seybold - Leaf's Caspe Explodes Color Processing Myths 04/15/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- If you believe,
- like most people do, that high resolution means great image
- quality, then you're mistaken, said Bob Caspe, president of Leaf
- Systems.
-
- In a keynote speech at Seybold this week, Caspe pointed to -- and
- exploded -- this myth and three others commonly held about color
- image processing.
-
- Myth 1, "The greater the resolution, the greater the sharpness,"
- leads to Myth 2: "Resolution is more important than sharpness,"
- according to Caspe. In actual fact, the exact opposite is true,
- he asserted.
-
- Resolution refers to the number of pixels on the screen, he
- explained. Resolution is theoretically restricted only by
- the capabilities of computers, but there are limitations
- on the number of pixels that the human eye can perceive at any
- given distance. Extending beyond those limitations is of
- no benefit to the viewer.
-
- Sharpness, or the strong definition of edges around the pixels,
- can be far better appreciated by the eye, he added. To illustrate
- what he meant, Caspe drew an analogy between pixels and mosaic
- tiles, and the edges of the pixels and the edges of the tiles.
-
- To develop truly high quality images, the imaging industry needs to
- follow the model of the radio business, Caspe stated. In devising
- FM channels, radio professionals studied the relationship between
- bandwidth and what the human ear can comfortably hear.
-
- Myth 3, he continued, is that "It's important to select a uniform
- color space." This, in term, is related to Myth 4: "24-bit color
- isn't enough."
-
- Today, all desktop software processes images in 24-bits, or 8 bits
- per RGB (red/green/blue) channel. Available color spaces, such as
- the color space for Photo CD, also provide 8 bits per channel.
-
- However, the problem is not so much the number of bits, but the
- degradation that the data experiences in making its way to final
- processing, he said.
-
- Some degradation in the original dynamic range occurs when the
- color arrives at the 8-bit color space, since some of the data is
- then thrown away. In addition, most desktop applications require
- the user to make a separate pass for each function, such as unsharp
- masking, sharpen, or color conversion. Each time a pass takes
- place, more of the dynamic range is lost.
-
- The answer, he said, is a new technology from Leaf called
- HDR (High Dynamic Range). This technology will take color
- data directly from a Leaf scanner to a Leaf Digital Studio
- Camera, assuring accuracy and consistency. If designers are
- using 8-bit color, they can select the 8 bits they want.
-
- After the keynote, Michael R. Brunzell, a product specialist for
- Leaf, explained that HDR will be featured in an upcoming product
- from Leaf, which will probably be released in the third quarter.
-
- HDR will start out with 48 bits of data, or three channels of 16
- bits each, he said. The data will move from the digital camera to
- the scanner in an automatic batch mode, assuring consistent
- results. All functions will be executed in a single pass, so the
- roundoff that takes place in using the 16-bit algorithms takes
- place only once.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19930415)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(DEN)(00029)
-
- Mayo Clinic Family Health Book On CD-ROM 04/15/93
- MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Interactive
- Ventures Inc (IVI) is now offering the "Mayo Clinic Family Health
- Book" on a CD-ROM disk that runs on Apple Computer's Macintosh
- platform.
-
- The program was originally introduced on CD-ROM for Windows-based
- PCs in November. In addition to Interactive Ventures, joining with
- the world-renowned Mayo Clinic to produce the CD-ROM disk is Sony
- Electronic Publishing, which will distribute the disk. IVI says it
- plans on publishing additional multimedia health care titles in
- conjunction with the Mayo Clinic, an integrated health care practice
- that treats over 300,000 patients annually and has facilities in
- Rochester, MN; Jacksonville, FL; and Scottsdale, AZ.
-
- The company says the Mac interface was developed by Clement Mok
- Designs. Mok, formerly a creative director at Apple Computer, says
- the Mac version of the program takes advantage of the best Macintosh
- features. "It's graphically based, and the look and feel is very
- dynamic."
-
- Apple's hyperlink feature allows the user to browse the CD-ROM disk
- by clicking on topic areas, key words, and illustrations to obtain
- more detailed information and cross references to other sections.
- There is also what the company calls a "hot spot" cursor that
- changes colors when it passes over a portion of a graphic that has
- more detailed information available elsewhere on the disk.
-
- IVI says the electronic versions of the book contain all the
- information found in the 1,378 page printed reference, which has
- reportedly sold more than 500,000 copies since it first appeared in
- 1990. It has been rated as the best health book of its kind by US
- News and World Report, and is the result of the combined efforts of
- more than 200 physicians, scientists and allied health care
- personnel at the clinic. It offers information on health care issues
- such as nutrition, wellness, first aid, and the health care system in
- general as well as information on more than 1,000 diseases and
- disorders, including symptoms, prognosis, and treatment. Included
- are 45 live video offerings that "look inside" the body, including
- ultrasound video of a fetus, or animation showing how glaucoma robs
- your eyesight, according to Ron Buck, IVI CEO.
-
- IVI spokesperson Joy Solomon told Newsbytes the disk has a suggested
- retail price of $99.95.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930415/Press contact: Joy Solomon, Interactive
- Ventures, 612-686-0779)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LAX)(00030)
-
- Nextstep Bundled By PCs, Canon Deal Slow But Alive 04/15/93
- REDWOOD CITY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 APR 15 (NB) -- Next is
- announcing a long list of major personal computer (PC)
- manufacturers and national distributor to will sell the
- Nextstep, its Intel-based version of the operating system
- originally developed for the Nextstep computer. However,
- reports are the company is fighting inertia from its slow
- moving major investor Canon.
-
- Next, started by former Apple computer founder Steve Jobs,
- developed both the Nextstep, a cube-shaped black box computer
- and a new graphical operating system to go with it. However, in
- February Next suddenly decided to dump the hardware and port
- the Nextstep operating system to the Intel platform. Next says
- it hopes to compete with the Apple/IBM venture Taligent and
- Microsoft's Windows NT with the Nextstep 486 operating system
- which will be introduced at the Nextworld Expo, May 25-27 in
- San Francisco. Nextstep will run both DOS and Windows
- applications, the company said.
-
- When Next dropped the hardware end, the company laid off half
- of its staff of 400. But Canon, which owns 17.9 percent of Next
- and has reportedly invested $165 million in the company,
- announced it planned to take over the Fremont manufacturing
- facility. Canon also had exclusive rights to Next hardware and
- software distribution in Asia. While it is widely reported
- Canon is backing out of the manufacturing facility deal with
- Next, Next representatives insist no final decisions on any
- part of Canon's arrangements with Next have been made.
-
- Next representatives say the reports concerning Canon are based
- on misunderstandings of the implications of the shut down of
- the hardware end, which has required re-negotiation of the
- company's deal with Canon as well as with other hardware and
- software dealers. However, company representatives insist that
- re-negotiation is continuing slowly with Canon and other
- companies are looking into the Fremont manufacturing facility
- as well.
-
- The bright spot in Next's future appears to be the announced
- support of Intel PC hardware vendors of the Nextstep 486
- operating system. According to Next representatives, the
- Nextstep 486 requires specific high-end video hardware, such as
- that on the Epson Progression product, in order to run. Epson,
- Dell, NEC, Siemens, and Data General have all said the Nextstep
- 486 will be available factory installed on the hard disks of
- certain of their 486- and Pentium-based PCs.
-
- In a separate announcement, Hewlett-Packard says it will market
- Nextstep-certified PCs via its resellers, who will integrate
- and deliver fully configured Nextstep systems.
-
- Next claims the Nextstep will run on over 100 other PCs from
- various manufacturers such as those from Altima Systems, AST
- Research, Digital Equipment, Gateway 2000, Intel, Lucky-
- Goldstar Information Systems, NCR, Toshiba America Information
- Systems, and Zenith Data Systems.
-
- Shrink-wrapped versions of Nextstep 486 will be available for
- purchase. Nextconnection, a division of PC Connection,
- headquartered in Marlow, New Hampshire, will distribute a
- shrink-wrapped version of Nextstep for Intel processors through
- its mail order operations. Next says its sales representatives
- will concentrate on distributing Nextstep 486 to major
- corporate and government accounts.
-
- The Nextstep 486 user environment will retail for a US list
- price of $795. The developer tools, named Nextstep Developer,
- will have a list price of $1,995 in the United States. The
- company says developers need both the user environment and
- Nextstep Developer, for a combined price of $2,790.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930415/Press Contact: Allison Thomas for
- Next, Allison Thomas Associates, tel 818-981-1520, fax 818-981-
- 4230)
-
-
-