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- (NEWS)(GOVT)(NYC)(00001)
-
- Internet Talk Radio Publishes Markey House Hearing 05/04/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Internet Talk Radio has
- announced that it has published the recorded proceedings of the April
- 29th meeting of the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and
- Finance.
-
- The subcommittee, chaired by Representative Edward Markey (Dem --
- Massachusetts), focused in this meeting on the rights and
- responsibilities of individuals and organizations in cyberspace. The
- meeting consisted of a technology presentation highlighting various
- technical issues and a panel discussion concerning the issues of
- encryption, computer crime, civil liberties and privacy.
-
- The demonstration was performed by a team of four engineers from Sun
- Microsystems and the San Diego Supercomputer Center, led by John Gage
- of Sun. In the demo, the team used an HDTV, an ATM switch, an ISDN
- switch, a Russian satellite dish, a Xerox Liveboard, a Barco projector
- with special video equipment, four Sparcstation 10s, a few
- Sparcstation 2s, and miscellaneous other equipment.
-
- Among the items demonstrated was how that, while DES (Data Encryption
- Standard) code could be pulled off anonymous FTP systems in Finland,
- US industry was unable to export the technology required to decrypt
- the code. Present government restrictions on such exporting are the
- subject of intense debates before the committee with opponents of the
- restrictions maintaining that the restrictions cause a competitive
- imbalance against United States software companies.
-
- The panel consisted of Raymond Kammer, acting director of NIST
- (National Institute of Standards and Technology); Bruce Sterling,
- science fiction writer on cyberspace and author of the non-fiction
- book, "The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic
- Frontier"; John Lucich, State Investigator with the New Jersey
- Division of Criminal Justice; and Joel Reidenberg, Professor of Law at
- Fordham University Law School.
-
- In his talk, Kammer spoke about the new government-endorsed "Clipper
- Chip" encryption technology while Sterling, Lucich and Reidenberg
- focused on the often overlapping areas of civil liberties, criminal
- investigation and privacy. Lucich stressed problems of on-line child
- pornography and reviewed his procedures of electronically infiltrating
- the underground computer bulletin boards of the "hacker" and "phone
- phreak" community in his investigations of crime.
-
- Sterling told Newsbytes that he thought the hearing was useful, adding
- "Representative Markey is aware of the issues involved in the new
- frontiers of technology and is trying to get ahead of the curve in
- planning for the future of cyberspace."
-
- Carl Malamud, founder of Internet Talk Radio, told Newsbytes: "Although
- we originally planned to focus solely on technical matters, we have
- added a channel, `Internet Town Hall,' to cover topics such as this."
-
- "There is certainly a need for the Internet community to be aware of
- things involving its future and, although National Public Radio often
- provides coverage of such matter, its audience is not international
- and it does not reach all segments of the Internet Community," he
- said.
-
- Malamud added that the Internet Talk Radio files for the hearing are
- 050293_spec_01_HALL.au (Testimony of John Gage) and
- 050293_spec_02_HALL.au (Testimony of Panel). A listing of Internet
- Talk Radio sites may be obtained through e-mail request to
- sites@radio.com and further radio on the service by e-mail to
- info@radio.com.
-
- (Barbara E. McMullen & John F. McMullen/19930504/Press Contact: Carl
- Malamud, Internet Talk Radio, 703-548-1126, carl@radio.com)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00002)
-
- Version 2 Of Omnis 7 Integrated Development Environment Debuts 05/04/93
- FOSTER CITY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Blyth Software has
- announced a new and more powerful edition of its Omnis 7 integrated
- client/server development environment for the Mac and PC Windows.
-
- The company that produced the first Mac database application in 1986,
- the first Windows database application in 1987, and the first
- Mac/Windows cross-platform development environment in 1989, plans to
- take several more pioneering steps with the forthcoming Omnis 7
- Version 2 package.
-
- A localization feature for faster porting of applications among
- languages, a "meta tool" for application cloning, and two new add-ons,
- CMS (Change Management System) and Version Control System (VCS) are
- among the advancements.
-
- Taken together, the enhancements mean faster development of fuller
- featured commercial and corporate database applications, including
- accounting, marketing, and PIM (personal information management), and
- mission-critical SQL (Standard Query Language)-based client/server
- applications, officials explained in a series of interviews with
- Newsbytes.
-
- The improvements apply across the product life cycle, emphasized
- Michael J. Minor, president and CEO of Blyth, previewing Version 2 for
- Newsbytes in Boston. Philip K. Edholm, vice president of worldwide
- marketing, added that Mac and PC users are becoming increasing
- familiar with the life cycle concept, as more corporations integrate
- Macs and PCs into enterprise client/server environments.
-
- As with past versions of Omnis 7, Version 2 will let developers create
- applications that will run unchanged across Macintosh and Windows.
- "You can literally use the same disk on either a PC or a Mac," noted
- Steve Weller, product marketing manager.
-
- The software includes a local RDBMS (relational database management
- system), with an SQL (Standard Query Language) interface that can be
- used to access data from Oracle, Sybase, RDB, DB2, Informix,
- SQLServer, and corporate legacy databases running on a variety of
- platforms. The program is written in a 4GL programming language that
- lets developers build reusable libraries of objects.
-
- Because the programming environment is interpreted, or "tokenized," no
- compiling is required. Through a capability known as modeless
- operation, developers can switch instantly from development to
- execution.
-
- Developers can employ Omnis 7 to produce standalone or file-sharing
- applications based on the RDBMS, as well as standalone and client-
- server SQL-based applications. The RDBMS permits data caching,
- allowing information to be stored locally to minimize network
- traffic or quicken response time.
-
- The new localization feature in Version 2 will be used in design
- and prototyping, the first phase of the product life cycle. According
- to Gerry Kessler, director of consulting services, the feature will
- allow applications to be rapidly ported from one language, such as
- English, to others, such as French, for example.
-
- The new meta tool cloning feature, dubbed "the notation," and the new
- VCS add-on will each speed up development, the second phase of the
- life cycle. "The notation lets the developer procedurally manipulate
- objects at runtime. The developer can create libraries that write
- other libraries, or even build applications out of other
- applications," Kessler commented.
-
- The new VCS add-on permits teams of developers to work
- collaboratively, sharing and reusing centrally stored source code
- libraries. The code can be kept in either a central RDBMS or on an SQL
- database server.
-
- Rules incorporated in the RDBMS provide author management and overall
- application linking, Kessler told Newsbytes. The tool will be
- available in a "locked" version, as well as an "unlocked" version that
- allows developers to modify the rules.
-
- CMS will come into play during the third stage of the life cycle,
- deployment, and the fourth phase, maintenance and revision. The new
- add-lets developers deploy and update database applications on
- multiple desktop computers, without sending out a disk to each and
- every end user.
-
- CMS stores applications in a central database as series of linked
- objects. At deployment -- which can be pre-timed to a certain time and
- day, such as next Monday at 8:00 a.m. -- these objects are downloaded
- to end-user Macs and PCs.
-
- As changes are made to screens, reports, and other elements of the
- application format, these updates can be automatically deployed, as
- well. Any Mac or PC that has these modifications already installed
- will "ignore" the changes.
-
- CMS consists of two main components: CMS Server, which resides on the
- file server, and CMS Deploy, which sits on the end user's desktop
- computer. Currently, CMS operates with the Omnis RDBMS only. "But it's
- likely that CMS will take advantage of the SQL interface in future
- versions," Kessler told Newsbytes.
-
- Omnis 7 Version 2 contains other enhancements as well, including the
- ability to create applications that can keep unlimited numbers of
- Omnis databases, libraries and tables open at the same time. The
- package is scheduled for release this summer.
-
- Blyth will be elaborating on Version 2 to the 8,000 developers who
- currently use Omnis 7, as well as to interested potential users,
- during its first annual users conference.
-
- Set for May 11 to 13 in San Jose, the conference will include 30 in-
- depth technical seminars, organized into three primary and concurrent
- tracks: Omnis 7 Technology, Omnis 7 Customer Applications, and
- Client/Server Technology.
-
- Dr. Donald Haring, a member of MIT's research staff and a noted
- expert on client/server technology, will be delivering a half-day
- seminar entitled "Understanding Client/Server Architectures and How
- to Apply Them" during each of the three days of the conference.
-
- Other speakers will include Frank Michnoff, vice president and
- securities analyst at Needham and Company; Albert Yu, senior vice
- president and general manager of the Microprocessor Products Group
- at Intel, and Glorianna Davenport, associate professor of media
- technology at MIT.
-
- Blyth has also announced the company's selection as both a member
- of IBM's AS/400 Application Development Program (ADP) and a
- Client/Server Tools partner to Apple.
-
- ADP is intended to expand the application development portfolio for
- IBM's AS/400 mid-range computer systems. Vendors such as Blyth have
- early access to AS/400 developments and are licensed to use an
- emblem identifying their software as participating in the program.
-
- Under the Apple partnership, Blyth's Omnis 7 will support
- AppleScript and the Apple Open Collaborative Environment (AOCE),
- giving users tools for developing applications within the Virtually
- Integrated Technical Architecture Lifecycle (VITAL) framework.
-
- VITAL is a set of guidelines that help corporate customers design
- information systems for integrating desktop computers into
- enterprise systems.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/05041993/Press contact: Denise Burrows, Capital
- Relations for Blyth, tel 818-889-9100, or Eileen Quinn Smith,
- Capital Relations for Blyth, tel 408-970-8500; Reader contact:
- Blyth Software, tel 415-571-0222)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00003)
-
- Microsoft's FoxPro Resource Directory Unveiled 05/04/93
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Computer users have
- two choices when it comes to setting up a software program to meet
- their needs -- buy it off the shelf or have someone develop it for
- them. Unfortunately, off the shelf programs seldom, if ever, are
- perfect for the user's needs. But where do you find someone to
- develop a custom program?
-
- There is a good chance that someone already has a program that does
- what you need, whether your business is church management, health
- services, running a hotel or motel, importing and exporting, or doing
- physical conditioning and testing of athletes. You might start by
- looking at the 1993 Microsoft FoxPro Resource Directory. Microsoft
- calls this 667 page soft cover book "A quick reference to developers,
- consultants, and training centers around the world."
-
- The book lists more than eight hundred "vertical specialists",
- software developers that use the FoxPro or FoxBase+ database software
- to develop a specialized application for a particular industry. It
- also includes companies that provide training, courseware, and books
- for users who want to develop their own applications but need to
- sharpen their skills to do so.
-
- The first section of the directory lists individuals and companies,
- sorted alphabetically by state, that offer database design,
- application development, consulting and training services. Each
- listing includes the developer/company name, address and phone, what
- platforms (DOS, Windows, Macintosh, local area networks) they work
- in, and the developer's specialization area. The second part
- contains descriptions of vertical market applications written using
- FoxPro or FoxBase+.
-
- The directory is organized alphabetically by the type of application,
- i.e., Academic, Construction and Contracting, Home and Hobby, or
- Subscription Management, just to mention a few of the categories. Some
- of the companies listed have purchased ads in the directory that
- provide additional information about their services, although that's
- not necessary in order to be listed.
-
- In the Indexes section, the applications are listed alphabetically,
- by category, by platform, and alphabetically be developer.
-
- Microsoft spokesperson Julie Briselden told Newsbytes that more than
- 30,000 copies of the directory have been distributed to registered
- developers and through trade shows and seminars. North American
- readers can contact Microsoft at a tollfree number to order the $19.95
- directory. International readers can obtain the directory by
- contacting their local Microsoft representative.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930504/Press contact: Julie Briselden, Microsoft,
- 206-882-8080; Reader contact: Microsoft Corporation, 800-426-9400)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00004)
-
- Sculley To Speak At American Film Institute 05/04/93
- HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- John Sculley, the
- head of Apple Computer is scheduled to appear May 24, 1993 at the
- American Film Institute in a special session entitled, "An Evening
- with John Sculley."
-
- The session is a part of AFI's celebration of its two year old AFI-
- Apple Computer Center to which Apple donated $1 million in computer
- equipment. Founded in 1967, AFI is focused on education of media
- professionals in the area of the integration of computers with film
- making and holds 70 seminars, workshops, and special events each term.
-
- Subjects range from hands-on Macintosh training, to use of computers
- in media production, to exploration of the emergence of digitally-
- based media and its impact on traditional media arts.
-
- The Institute also annually holds awards to honor outstanding
- achievement on the part of both professionals and students in the area
- of computer-aided film making. The session with Sculley will be a
- moderated forum with topics to be announced. AFI is charging a $25
- admission fee and recommends advanced reservations as seating is
- limited.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930504/Press Contact: Katie Cotton, Allison
- Thomas Associates for AFI, tel 818-981-1520, fax 818-981-4230;
- Public Contact, AFI, 213-856-7664)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00005)
-
- Do-It-Yourself Hard Drive Upgrades 05/04/93
- RICHARDSON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Identity Systems has
- signed an agreement with Maxtor Corporation to distribute that
- company's hard disk drives in upgrade kits through mass merchant
- channels.
-
- Identity Systems distributes a selection of computer subsystems and
- peripherals that can be installed by the user by following the
- directions contained in the kit, which for some products, such as the
- hard drive kits, includes an instructional video and essentials like
- as static grounding straps.
-
- The company says that available Maxtor hard drive upgrade kits include
- storage capacities from 130MB to 345MB, and come in a one-inch high
- form factor that can be used in almost any PC or Macintosh. Identity
- says it will also market and merchandise Maxtor drives with storage
- capacities up to 1.7 gigabytes (GB) to selected customers within the
- mass merchant channel. Identity spokesperson Alan Weinkrantz told
- Newsbytes that upgrade kit prices will range from $339 to $579.
-
- Several PC manufacturers, including Dell and Acer, have recently
- announced they will distribute their PCs through mass market channels.
- Weinkrantz said: "People are not only buying through those channels,
- but will want to upgrade through those channels. We're tagging on to
- the success of those vendors. If they are buying their systems there,
- they might as well buy their upgrades there also."
-
- Weinkrantz told Newsbytes that the kits will be available through
- office product stores, warehouse clubs, consumer electronics and
- appliance outlets, and discount department stores such as Sam's
- Warehouse, Price Club, Lechmere's, and Incredible Universe. Identity
- is expected to announce a distribution deal with Wal-Mart shortly.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930504/Press contact: Troy Cooper, Identity Systems,
- 214-235-3330; Reader contact: Identity Systems, 214-235-3330, fax
- 214-807-9227)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(NYC)(00006)
-
- ****Hewlett-Packard Introduces HP 100LX Palmtop 05/04/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Hewlett-Packard has
- announced the introduction of the HP 100LX palmtop personal computer.
- The 11 ounce unit is available immediately at a suggested retail price
- of $749.
-
- Hewlett-Packard spokesperson Lucy Honig told Newsbytes that the HP
- 100LX "represents a significant upgrade from our highly successful
- 95LX product. In the same size unit, we now have a graphic icon-based
- interface, a full 80-column screen rather than the 40-column on the
- 95LX and greater ROM capacity for applications software."
-
- "We have added e-mail provisions with Lotus cc:Mail and all of the
- 95LX software has been upgraded. Beyond cc:Mail, we have also enhanced
- the communications handling that was found in the 95LX. The 100LX
- supports file transfer by the Y-modem and Z-modem protocols as well as
- x-modem," she said.
-
- The 100LX contains, like the 95LX, a ROM-based version of Lotus 1-2-3;
- in this case, release 2.4, up from 2.2 found in the earlier machine.
- Likewise Microsoft DOS version 5.0 replaces the earlier 3.22 while an
- outline and database retrieval have been added to the memo capability.
-
- Additionally, Hewlett-Packard stated that the use of the Intel 80c186
- processor, rather than the earlier NEC V20h, provides a 50% increase
- in processing speed. The rated speed of the Intel chip is 7.91
- megahertz (MHz) while the NEC V20h speed is 5.37 MHz.
-
- The communications feature of the 100LX are utilized through connection
- to an external data modem as well as through packet radio modems into the
- RAM and ARDIS nationwide wireless radio networks.
-
- Announcing the integration of cc:Mail into the new product, Larry L.
- Crume, vice president of Lotus cc:Mail and Mobile Computing Division,
- said: "By placing cc:Mail, our award winning e-mail package, on such a
- highly mobile device, Lotus can now offer an unparalleled level of
- portability for our cc:Mail customers."
-
- "With cc:Mail on the HP 100LX, HP and Lotus have together magnified
- the power of the palmtop by dramatically increasing its communications
- capabilities," he said.
-
- (Barbara E. McMullen & John F. McMullen/19930504/Press Contacts: Lucy
- Honig, Hewlett-Packard Company, 503-750-2038; Dave Grip, Lotus
- Development Corporation, 617-862-4514)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00007)
-
- Tallgrass Upgrades Network Storage Management Software 05/04/93
- LENEXA, KANSAS, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Tallgrass Technologies has
- upgraded NetSecure, its server-based storage management software
- program.
-
- NetSecure is an integrated storage management package to control
- backup, restoration, and archiving of data, and is designed to
- optimize server-based performance and maximize unattended operations.
-
- Some of the NetSecure features include a tape rotation manager to
- maintain daily, weekly, monthly and yearly tapes, disk grooming to
- make more tape space available by ageing files that aren't accessed
- frequently so they can be moved to off-line tape archives, and
- background operation without interrupting client or server processing.
-
- Tallgrass spokesperson Karen Saper told Newsbytes that the rotation
- manager recommends when a particular tape should be retired, based on
- tape wear. "It's a really nice feature," she said.
-
- New features of NetSecure 5.0 include a Windows interface,
- installation of Windows programs on the network from a single
- workstation, and synchronous processing, which allows up to seven tape
- devices to be operated concurrently by a single SCSI (small computer
- system interface) host adapter. Concurrent operation allows users to
- simultaneously backup multiple data volumes to multiple drives.
-
- Version 5.0 supports Novell NetWare 4.0, including directory services
- and extended attributes. A real-time statistics feature provides
- information about each backup, including time to completion, file
- size, the name of the file being processed, and the total number of
- files and bytes in each. The new version also includes System
- Independent Data Format (SIDF) support which allows for interchange of
- data across hardware and software platforms.
-
- According to Jeff Platon, product marketing manager for the company
- and chairman of its SIDF committee, the entire PC LAN environment is
- shifting to Windows-based applications and administration.
-
- "NetSecure 5.0 addresses these user requirements for an easy-to-use,
- graphical user interface in a data storage management environment. The
- SIDF support ensures that a user's investment in hardware and software
- is well protected and ensures data transportability," he said.
-
- Saper told Newsbytes that NetSecure 5.0 is expected to ship by mid-
- June. Version 5.0 will have a suggested retail price of $1,395 for a
- 20-user pack. Pricing of other packs has yet to be determined.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930504/Press contact: Karen Saper, Tallgrass
- Technologies, 913-492-6002; Reader contact: Tallgrass Technologies,
- 800-825-4727 or 913-492-6002, fax 206-936-7329)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(MOW)(00008)
-
- ****Hewlett-Packard Announces New Printers In Russia 05/04/93
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- As happened yesterday with the HP
- 100LX palmtop, Hewlett-Packard has unveiled several new laser and
- inkjet printers at the Comtek computer show, ahead of their launch in
- the West. The printers include the expanded Laserjet 4 series, plus
- the Deskjet 510 and the Deskwriter 510.
-
- The Laserjet 4L is a small 300 dots per inch (DPI) printer that
- features HP's proprietary resolution enhancement technology. The
- printer, which is based around a 16 megahertz (MHz) 68000 processor,
- features HP's page control language (PCL) 5, as well as 26 scalable
- fonts built in.
-
- HP claims that the printer is the cheapest in its range currently
- available, although no price announcements were made at the show. The
- printer, which has a footprint of 14.5 x 13 inches and stands 6.5
- inches high, is around half the size of the current Laserjet 4
- machine. It also has a very low power consumption -- around five
- watts, compared to the 40 watts consumption on the Laserjet 4.
-
- The Postscript version of the unit is called the Laserjet 4ML. It is
- scheduled to ship in mid-summer, while the 4L is available
- immediately.
-
- Another announcement made by HP at Comtek was the DeskJet 510 and
- DeskWriter 510, two inkjet printers which are destined to replace the
- DeskJet 500 series. Both printers are expected to retail for $480.
-
- According to sources close to Hewlett-Packard, HP Moscow obtained
- special authorization to announce and show the new printers at the
- Comtek show. Press announcements of the new machines will take place
- this week around the world by other HP operations, Newsbytes
- understands.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19930504/Press Contact: HP Moscow, phone +7 095 181-
- 8002; fax +7 095 181-7829)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(NYC)(00009)
-
- SEA Announces New York General Meeting 05/04/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- The Society for
- Electronic Access (SEA) has announced that it will hold a general
- membership meeting on Wednesday, May 5, at 6:30PM. The meeting will be
- held at Science Fiction Mysteries & More bookstore, 140 Chambers St.
- (near West Broadway in downtown Manhattan).
-
- The SEA was originally constituted with the intention of becoming a
- New York City chapter of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).
- While the group, at that time called the NTE ("Not-The-EFF"), was
- debating the merits of the association, the EFF announced it was
- changing direction to become a Washington-based policy group and would
- not be setting up or affiliating with local chapters. The fledging NTE
- group then changed its name to SEA, formed its own mission statement,
- and began recruiting as a membership organization.
-
- The mission statement enacted by the SEA follows: "The purpose of SEA
- is to help make our corner of cyberspace a civilized place to live,
- work and visit. We believe that the world of computers and the
- communications links that bind their users together should be open to
- everyone. Furthermore, if this new medium is to have a chance of
- fulfilling its great potential, the same civil rights that protect our
- freedom in the physical world must prevail in cyberspace."
-
- "Therefore SEA will work to educate people about computer networks and
- how to use them to find information and to communicate with one another.
- We will also reach out to computer users, government officials, legislators
- and the media to foster better understanding of cyberspace and to ensure
- that laws are written and enforced to enhance individual rights rather than
- to curtail them. Finally, we will do our best to bring into cyberspace those
- who might not otherwise have the opportunity or awareness to make use of
- it, in the belief that doing so will enrich our lives as well as theirs."
-
- Stacy Horn, SEA chairman, told Newsbytes: "It is important that people
- become involved with the issues that the SEA has articulated. Whether or
- not people feel that they are involved with technology, they will be affected
- by decisions made now and in the immediate future."
-
- "The Clinton Administration clearly has the development of the
- telecommunications infrastructure as an early agenda item and
- decisions are being made about who builds it, who owns it, who pays
- for it, and who has use of it. Decisions made in these areas will have
- lasting impact on all of us," he added.
-
- Horn continued: "We are trying to involve groups such as women and
- minorities involved with defining the structure and access issues of
- cyberspace. Presently, it is the same relatively small cast of
- characters that has guided the Internet to its present state that is
- defining its future. We would like to broaden that."
-
- (Barbara E. McMullen & John F. McMullen/19930504/Press Contact: Simona
- Nass, Society for Electronic Access, 212-982-4320,
- simona@panix.com)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(MOW)(00010)
-
- Texas Instruments Enters Russian Marketplace 05/04/93
- MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Texas Instruments has unveiled a
- complete range of computers and peripherals to the Russian market,
- courtesy of Elti-Kudic, the fledgeling sales and marketing operation.
-
- E-K is busy expanding its dealership network in the region, so as to
- offer Texas Instruments the widest possible exposure in Russia. E-K is
- also offering service facilities for TI kit in the region, according
- to Sergey Averin, the company's general director.
-
- Elti-Kudic is a relatively new company that was formed in 1992 to
- promote TI equipment on to the Russian market. Its marketing program
- concentrates on the educational establishments in and around the
- Moscow area.
-
- (Kirill Tchashchin/19930504/Press Contact: Elti-Kudic, Sergey Averin,
- phone +7 095 320-2122; fax +7 095 324-3055)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00011)
-
- Philips Sells Matsushita Stake To Staunch Red Ink 05/04/93
- AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS, 1993 MAY 5 (NB) -- Philips has sold off
- its 35 percent stake in Matsushita Electric Industrial (MEI) for three
- billion guilders. The Dutch electronics giant claims that it will use
- the money to cut its hefty balance sheet debts.
-
- The deal effectively gives Mitsubishi complete control of its destiny
- once again. The company, which has operations in Japan, Malaysia,
- Singapore and the US, manufactures semiconductors, TV tubes and
- lighting equipment.
-
- Officials with Philips say that the sell-off was decided after it
- realised that MEI had become too big for a joint venture. Neither
- company has said who approached whom in the transaction.
-
- The three billion guilders stemming from the sale will go a long way
- towards satisfying shareholders who have been complaining about
- Philips' current 15 billion deficit on the balance sheet.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930504)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00012)
-
- IBM, Ingram Micro In Distribution Deal 05/04/93
- SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- IBM and computer
- products distributor Ingram Micro have announced that Ingram will
- provide fulfilment services to IBM's mass-market retail customers
- under the manufacturer's Easy Options Program.
-
- Plans call for Ingram Micro to stock a variety of IBM-branded PC
- products, take orders directly from IBM retail customers, ship
- products to those customers and provide end-user support, officials
- said. The deal applies only in the United States.
-
- Ingram Micro has appointed Mary Galvin as program director for the IBM
- Easy Options program. Galvin joined Ingram Micro in January, after
- more than 12 years at Microware Distributors, where she held a variety
- of executive positions. Her last job with Microware was as vice-
- president of the products division.
-
- While Galvin would not put a specific number on the contract, she said
- it represents "a large volume. Certainly we feel that it's the largest
- fulfilment contract that we know of in the channel," she told
- Newsbytes.
-
- The contract covers such IBM products as memory chips; PC expansion
- boards (video and audio adapters and modems); disk and tape drives;
- uninterruptible power supplies and surge protectors; and input devices
- such as mice, trackballs, and keyboards. The deal does not include
- complete systems, Galvin told Newsbytes.
-
- Ingram Micro said that the deal is of strategic importance to its
- fulfilment services business, which officials said has been attracting
- a growing amount of interest among computer vendors.
-
- A fulfilment deal differs from a distribution arrangement in that
- Ingram Micro will provide the products to IBM's customer base rather
- than to its own base of dealers.
-
- Ingram Micro is the world's largest wholesale distributor of
- microcomputer products, claiming sales of $2.7 billion in 1992. It
- sells to 60,000 resellers in 65 countries.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930504/Press Contact: David R. Dukes or Mary
- Galvin, Ingram Micro, 714-566-1000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00013)
-
- IBM Adds Two New ThinkPad Models To Its Range 05/04/93
- SOMERS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- IBM has extended its
- ThinkPad 700 notebook computer line with new color and monochrome
- models.
-
- The new ThinkPad 720C has the same 10.4-inch active matrix color
- display as the ThinkPad 700C. IBM said it is the largest active-matrix
- color screen on the market. Both the 720C and the monochrome 720
- replace the 25 megahertz (MHz) IBM 486LC processor in the older models
- with a 50 MHz version of the chip. They also offer larger hard disks
- and added power-management features that IBM said will improve battery
- life by 20 percent.
-
- IBM also launched a port replicator -- a sort of docking station
- without expansion slots -- which the company said will simplify quick
- transition between mobile and desktop use for both ThinkPad 700 and
- new ThinkPad 720 users.
-
- The new units are available immediately, and a spokesman for the
- company said IBM booked orders for more than 100,000 units in the
- United States alone on the day of announcement.
-
- The spokesman acknowledged that the existing 700 and 700C models have
- been so popular that IBM has been having trouble meeting the demand.
- There is a backlog of orders for the machines, he said, and the
- introduction of the new models will help to relieve it.
-
- IBM will continue selling the 700 and 700C at least for the time
- being, he added.
-
- IBM said that improved power management, more extensive use of 3.3
- volt components, and a cut in the power consumption of the color
- display bring a 20-percent gain in the 720C's battery life. It will
- run up to 2.4 hours in continuous use and up to 4.8 hours in a typical
- workday environment, IBM said. Comparable figures for the monochrome
- unit are 3.8 and 7.5 hours.
-
- The new 720 machines are available with a 160-megabyte removable hard
- disk drive. The ThinkPad 720 is also available with a 120-megabyte
- drive.
-
- The larger drive will be available as an upgrade option for 700
- owners, as will a 240-megabyte drive due later this year. The 700
- comes with a 120-megabyte removable hard disk.
-
- Owners of the 700 and 700C machines can also upgrade their
- processors to the 50-megahertz chips.
-
- IBM officials said that the ThinkPad 720C and 720 are the first two
- notebook computers to support Level 2.01 Personal Computer Memory Card
- Interface Association (PCMCIA) standards, providing compatibility with
- newer memory and expansion cards as well as with most based on earlier
- levels of the PCMCIA standard.
-
- The 720C, with a 160-megabyte hard drive, has a list price of
- $4,695, while a similarly configured ThinkPad 720 is $3,355. A
- 720 with a 120-megabyte drive is $3,195. The port replicator will
- sell for about $75.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930504/Press Contact: Steve Hoechster, Jennings
- & Co. for IBM, 914-251-5997; Jonathan Gandal, Jennings & Co. for
- IBM, 914-251-5989)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(LON)(00014)
-
- Olivetti Predicts Black Ink On Balance Sheet Next Year 05/04/93
- IVREA, ITALY, 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Olivetti, the troubled Italian
- computer and electronic company, has revealed its will break even this
- year, returning to profitability in the next calendar year.
-
- Speaking with analysts and shareholders late last week, Olivetti's
- chairman, Carlo de Benedetti, said that sales rose by a healthy 5.5
- percent in the first quarter of 1993. This was, he said, "the first
- time in a long time" that sales had actually risen.
-
- The shareholder's meeting was held in Italy to formally approve last
- year's results from the company. During 1992, Olivetti reported a loss
- of 650 billion lire, compared with a loss of 460 billion in 1991.
-
- Despite the fact that Olivetti is returning to profitability, de
- Benedetti was honest enough to admit that he still does not know when
- the company will report a share dividend. Like so many other European
- computer companies, Olivetti is treading water, waiting for the
- recession to end.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930504)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00015)
-
- Canada's Geac Acquires Two British Companies 05/04/93
- MARKHAM, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Geac Computer Corporation
- has announced its purchase of MAI (UK) Ltd. and Tekserv Computer
- Services, both of Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire in the UK.
-
- Geac said it paid less than C$1 million in total for the two
- companies, both of which sell and service MAI Basic Four and other
- brands of computer hardware in the United Kingdom. No further details
- of the deal were available.
-
- Geac said the two companies have annual sales of more than C$2
- million. According to Geac spokesman Harrison Cheung, Geac recorded
- about 36.4 percent of its C$83.5 million in total revenues last year
- in Europe. That amounts to about C$30.4 million.
-
- Geac has been operating in Europe for about 15 years, Cheung said, and
- the UK, along with France, is a major part of its European business.
- He added that the latest acquisitions will help boost Geac's profile
- in the UK because MAI Basic Four equipment is quite widely used there.
-
- Hardware service, including service of its own proprietary
- hardware as well as that of other manufacturers, accounts for
- about 43.1 percent of Geac's business worldwide, he said.
-
- The Canadian company is also known for its vertical-market
- software, particularly in the library automation, insurance, and
- manufacturing markets.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930504/Press Contact: Harrison Cheung, Geac,
- 416-475-0525)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00016)
-
- European "Super-Airline" Proposals Announced 05/04/93
- SURUCH, SWITZERLAND, 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Four of Europe's major
- airlines have announced plans to form a joint venture company
- together. The aim of the new company, which will be formed by
- Austrian Airlines, KLM of the Netherlands, Scandinavian Airlines
- Systems (SA) and Swissair, is to compete more effectively with the
- international carriers.
-
- According to Swissair, which is co-ordinating the plans for a new
- company, the new operation will be jointly owned and managed by the
- group of four, in order to offer customers "a high-quality product at
- a competitive price."
-
- Plans call for Austrian Airlines to take a 10 percent stake in the
- combined operation, with the other three taking a 30 percent stake
- each. According to Swissair, the operation will consist of a multi-hub
- system, with each airline operating several hubs, and co-ordinating
- traffic flow between these hubs.
-
- While the airlines aim to increase their overall share of the world's
- airline revenue, Newsbytes notes that such a combination of resources
- could be considered an activity counter to the free market objectives
- of the European Community. For this reason, the whole proposal may be
- passed to the European Commission (EC) for its approval.
-
- In the meantime, all four airlines say that they expect to sign a
- memorandum of understanding on the project later this summer.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930504)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00017)
-
- Delrina's FormFlow For Windows Arrives 05/04/93
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Delrina Corporation, best
- known for its forms processing software, is branching out into work-
- flow management with the announcement of FormFlow for Windows. The new
- software builds on Delrina's PerForm forms software with links to
- electronic mail creating a work-flow management package for personal
- computers running Microsoft Windows.
-
- Delrina also announced a marketing and sales agreement with NCR, the
- Dayton, Ohio, computer maker, under which it will sell FormFlow
- through its direct sales force. Plans call for the two companies to
- work together to build future products based on FormFlow and
- communications services from AT&T, NCR's parent company.
-
- FormFlow will require electronic-mail software, Delrina spokesman
- Shelly Sofer said, and is compatible with the messaging specifications
- used by Lotus' cc:Mail, Microsoft Mail, DaVinci Mail, Beyond Mail, and
- Reach's MailMan. It also supports other mail systems through Dynamic
- Link Libraries, according to the company.
-
- Forms are created and filled out much as they are in Delrina's
- existing PerForm and PerForm Pro software. An Intelligent Forms
- Language (IFL) allows the creation of scripts that control what
- happens once the form is filled in.
-
- The software can also work with popular database management packages,
- including Borland's dBase IV and others that follow the Xbase
- standard, Borland's Paradox, IBM's DB2, Oracle, Microsoft's SQL
- Server, and IBM's OS/2 Data Manager.
-
- As an example, Delrina cited a sales order coming into a company.
- Filling out an order form would trigger a check against an
- inventory database. If enough inventory were on hand, the form
- would go directly to the shipping department. If not, one form
- would go to shipping for shipment of the inventory on hand, while
- another would go to accounts receivable to modify the invoice to
- reflect the back-order, and a third would go to operations to
- build or order more inventory.
-
- Scripts created with IFL are portable, Sofer said -- users can
- change e-mail or database systems without having to rewrite their
- scripts.
-
- Delrina is recruiting more value-added resellers to help sell the
- product. Sofer said that more than 100 VARs already selling PerForm
- and PerForm Pro will handle FormFlow too, but the company wants to add
- more VARs as well.
-
- FormFlow consists of manager and user modules. The manager module
- for developing applications costs US$399 or C$479. Users packs
- are available for five, 10, 25, or 50 users. A 10-user pack lists
- for US$1,840 or C$2,280. The software is due to be available in
- June.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930504/Press Contact: Shelly Sofer or Josef
- Zankowicz, Delrina, 416-441-3676, fax 416-441-6016; Randy Popson,
- NCR, 513-439-8498; Public Contact: Delrina, 800-268-6082; NCR,
- 513-539-8404)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00018)
-
- Sequent's New Winserver To Be Telemarketed 05/04/93
- BEAVERTON, OREGON, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Sequent Computer Systems
- has this week introduced its WinServer family of scalable SMP
- (symmetric multiprocessing) application servers designed specifically
- for Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. Plans call for WinServer
- to be marketed through a telemarketing channel called WinCentral
- Direct.
-
- Sequent says that WinServer will be an ideal complement to Windows NT.
- "WinServer is the only family of Windows NT servers that can scale to
- meet the needs of all corporate computing environments, from
- workgroups to departments to the data center. It will provide a great
- complement to our continuing leadership in Unix-based solutions,"
- explained Sequent president and CEO Casey Powell.
-
- Microsoft VP for systems strategy Jon Lazarus, said: "Windows NT was
- designed as an enterprise-wide, multiprocessing operating system, and
- Sequent WinServers will provide ideal, high performance SMP systems
- for its deployment."
-
- The WinServer family is made up of four systems that use up to 16
- processors and come preconfigured with Microsoft Windows NT Advanced
- Server and network and database software. Sequent claims that
- WinServer 1000 is the right platform for use by workgroups and small
- departments for client-server, business critical applications.
-
- The WinServer 1000 uses one or two Intel i486 66 megahertz (MHz)
- processors and 512 megabytes (MB) of memory. The company says it can
- also use Intel's Pentium chip when that chip becomes available. The
- 1000 system uses up to nine 3.5 inch disks and SCSI (small computer
- system interface) channels. Priced beginning at $29,900, the system is
- expected to ship concurrently with Microsoft's Windows NT Advanced
- Server.
-
- WinServer 1500 is designed for LAN (local area network) consolidation,
- decision support and workgroup computing. It also uses up to two Intel
- 486 processors, or the Pentium chip, and up to 21 disks and 4 SCSI
- channels. It's price starts at $39,300. According to Sequent, it is
- expected to ship when Windows NT Advanced Server does.
-
- Sequent calls the WinServer 3000 a high end system that supports large
- scale LAN consolidation, transaction processing and decision support.
- With up to six Intel 486 66MHz processors or Pentium chips, it offers
- up to 16 SCSI channels, one gigabyte (GB) of memory, 192 disks,
- optional fault tolerant data protection and redundant power supplies.
-
- Pricing for the 3000 series starts at $75,300, with the same
- availability as the other units.
-
- The top of the line WinServer is called the 5000, a 384 disk, 32 SCSI
- channel Pentium or 486 50MHz-based system that can have as many as 30
- processors. It comes with two GB of memory, and has the high
- bandwidth needed to support enterprise-level LAN traffic. The 5000 is
- scheduled to ship in the fourth quarter of this year, with pricing
- starting at $246,900.
-
- The WinCentral Direct program is described by Sequent as a telephone
- based sales channel that puts customers in direct contact with
- experienced Sequent technical and business consultants who will help
- customers make appropriate technology and configuration decisions
- using one of the WinServer family of servers.
-
- Windows NT-certified staff members will work with the customer to
- develop a system configuration, and take the order. Sequent will then
- build the system and deliver a turnkey system. "The objective of
- WinCentral Direct is to give customers convenient access to experts -
- not just order takers," Powell said.
-
- WinCentral Direct has a tollfree number, and is staffed from 6AM to
- 6PM Pacific Time.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930504/Press contact: Mike Green, Sequent Computer
- Systems, 503-626-5700; Reader contact: Sequent Computer Systems,
- 800-243-6768)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(SFO)(00019)
-
- Software Ventures' $99 Microphone For NextStep 05/04/93
- BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- With all the
- confusion surrounding the Next platform, Software Ventures claims that
- its MicroPhone Pro 1.0 for NextStep communications software is selling
- well. The price tag of $99 may have something to do with it, down from
- the normal list price of $395.
-
- The promotion lasts through May 31, 1993, when customers order
- through Next Connection's mail order service at (1-800-800-NEXT).
-
- Greg Ogarrio, a spokesman for Software Ventures, told Newsbytes that,
- while the promotion is planned to coincide with the release of the
- NextStep operating system for Intel Computers, scheduled for May 25,
- 1993, the MicroPhone for NextStep product is for the "Motorola
- version" of NextStep, adding: "we don't have an Intel version." He
- told Newsbytes that the company wanted to take advantage of all the
- market interest currently surrounding NextStep.
-
- Recently, Newsbytes reported on Next's decision to get out of the
- hardware business and concentrate on its NextStep software product.
- Canon originally announced its intention of buying up the hardware
- business, but is now playing hard to get.
-
- Said Kevin McGrath, director of channel sales for Software Ventures:
- "We saw our Next sales more than quadruple in April, thanks to the
- special price. Obviously, users are responding to the discount."
-
- MicroPhone Pro for NextStep was introduced in September 1992.
- According to the company, it gives Next users a flexible set of tools
- to transfer data, communicate with remote computers, build custom
- scripts and design graphical interfaces. Using scripting tools, users
- can automate much of their communications, without having to memorize
- log-in and navigation sequences.
-
- Protocols supported include Text/ASCII, XMODEM, YMODEM, ZMODEM and
- Kermit. Terminal immulation includes TTY, VT100, VT102 AND VT 220.
- Also, TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) support
- allows users to connect directly to TCP/IP networks, such as the
- Internet.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19930504/Press Contact: Greg Ogarrio, 510-644-3232,
- Software Ventures)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00020)
-
- Cable Rate Regulation Not So Bad, Says Industry 05/04/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- The Federal
- Communications Commission (FCC) has released 500 pages of rules for
- enforcing the new cable television law yet, amazingly, the industry
- isn't griping too loudly.
-
- To get a rollback, local governments must first certify that the local
- cable company is a monopoly, starting in about a month. Those
- certifications would not go into effect until 30 days later, and the
- cable companies then have another 120 days to change rates. This means
- rates can't really change for at least another six months. The FCC
- estimates consumers will save about $1 billion through regulation.
-
- Then there are 16 tables of pricing schedules, based on how many
- channels an operator has, the number of subscribers and how many
- signals come in through satellites. The tables tell operators how much
- they can charge per channel, and if they exceed that by over 10
- percent, they have to cut rates 10 percent.
-
- Once rates are lowered, cable monopolies then fall under price caps,
- maximum prices they can't exceed until a competitor emerges in their
- market. Satellite-delivered channels, which cost the cable companies
- more per-subscriber, can also be priced higher under the new
- regulations. Estimates are that the average cable channel will cost
- about 45 cents, once everything if figured in, so the fair price for a
- 50-channel system will be about $22.50, which is slightly less than
- most basic cable charges now.
-
- Early reaction from cable industry analysts is that it could be worse.
- They recommended the purchase of big cable stocks like Tele-
- Communications, Time Warner and Comcast Corporation, all of which rose
- slightly in late trading May 3.
-
- TCI had threatened to tie-up the new regulations in court if they were
- too strict, and chairman John Malone was quoted as saying that
- anything worse than the FCC's original proposal was unacceptable and
- would harm the industry. The FCC will have jurisdiction over cable
- operators' appeals of local rate decisions.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930504/Press Contact: FCC Press, 202-632-
- 5050)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00021)
-
- Allen Moves Closer to America Online Bid 05/04/93
- VIENNA, VIRGINIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- America Online executives
- were huddled together and unavailable for comment as Microsoft co-
- founder Paul Allen increased his stake in the company's common stock
- to 24.9 percent, just short of the 25 percent needed to spark a
- "poison pill" plan approved by directors just last week.
-
- AOL originally set what it calls a shareholder rights plan, designed
- to give new shares to existing holders and make an unwanted takeover
- prohibitively expensive, to kick-in when an investor took a 20 percent
- holding. Practically before the ink was dry on that, AOL officials
- learned Allen was over the 20 percent threshold, and the bar was
- quickly raised to 25 percent. Now Allen is hovering just under that
- number, with about 1,431,000 shares.
-
- Allen became a billionaire from his Microsoft holdings, but left the
- company in 1983 and now runs Asymetrix Corp. of Bellevue, Washington,
- which produces multimedia software. He also owns the Portland
- TrailBlazers' basketball team. Allen bought his stock at prices
- ranging from about $20 to nearly $30 per share, and it may be
- impossible for him to earn a short-term profit on the open market.
-
- Analysts speculate that his stake is large enough that, combined with
- the roughly 500,000 shares or warrants held by a number of AOL
- "strategic partners," like the Tribune Corporation, Apple Computer and
- Sprint, it would represent a controlling interest in AOL. Analysts
- think Allen's move could spark a bidding war among the partners, each
- fearing another will takeover AOL.
-
- The risk to Allen is that the partners could get-together with AOL
- management and agree not to pursue a takeover. At that point, however,
- Allen could still look for a single buyer for his big stake, and
- companies like AT&T have expressed interest in buying an online
- service.
-
- In previous filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
- Allen described himself only as an investor. In his latest
- filing, however, he outlined several methods for increasing his
- influence over the company, including a tender offer, a seat on the
- board, an asset acquisition, a merger, or just buying more stock on
- the open market.
-
- Allen, now 40, left Microsoft after getting Hodgkin's Disease, a
- treatable form of cancer whose best-known victim right now is
- Pittsburgh Penguins' star Mario Lemieux. He still holds a large
- Microsoft stake, and Forbes' Magazine has estimated his fortune at
- $2.8 billion.
-
- He started buying AOL heavily after it announced the price cut, which
- now offers users 5 hours of service each month for $10. That
- announcement sent the price of AOL stock tumbling to a low of $22 per
- share, before the company announced the alliance with Sprint that
- seems to assure it can make a profit at that lower price.
-
- The AOL price cut came just weeks after Prodigy, which unlike AOL is
- not profitable, was forced to impose time-based charges on its $15 per
- month service for the first time, in a bid to become profitable.
- Allen's buying has raised the price of AOL common to over $30.
-
- In his SEC filing, Allen also said he had talked with AOL executives
- for about a year about possible business relationships, during which
- AOL suggested he keep his holdings to 20 percent. Allen declined that
- request, and added that he has been unable to obtain a copy of AOL's
- shareholder rights plan, under which current shareholders get the
- right to puchase 1 share of a new series of preferred for every 100
- shares of common they own, if an investor gets over the 25 percent
- threshold. He said the "poison pill" plan led him to reconsider his
- status as a passive investor.
-
- In cases like this, it's usually normal for the two sides to have
- a formal meeting. No such meeting has yet been scheduled in this
- case.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930504/Press Contact: America Online, Jean
- Villanueva, 703-448-8700)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00022)
-
- ****Hacker Insurance Offered To PABX Owners 05/04/93
- HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Travelers has
- combined with Xiox Corporation, which makes security systems for
- telephone networks, to offer insurance against computer criminals who
- "hack" their way into your private business switch.
-
- Here's the deal. Install Xiox' anti-fraud software on your private
- automatic branch exchange (PABX) according to the company's
- instructions, and you will be warranted against $100,000 in losses due
- to fraud. You can also get additional insurance from Travelers' at a
- discount.
-
- Telephone toll fraud is estimated to be a $4 billion a year
- problem for businesses and government agencies in North America,
- with "hackers" illegally tapping into phone networks to make
- thousands of dollars worth of toll calls. Hackers also sell
- illegally obtained phone service to drug traffickers so their
- calls cannot easily be traced.
-
- The average incident of telephone fraud loss in 1992 was $168,000,
- according to telecommunications experts. Xiox Fort Knox line of
- security products includes an artificial intelligence-based system
- that restricts telephone system access. It can distinguish between
- authorized and unauthorized use, thwarting criminals through several
- levels of access protection while leaving the system available to
- authorized users.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930504/Press Contact: The Travelers, Francis
- Onofrio, 203/277-8510; Xiox -- Michael O'Connell 415-375-8188;
- Ford Kanzler, for Xiox, 408/253-5042)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00023)
-
- Adobe Signs Distribution Deal With Tech Data 05/04/93
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Adobe Systems
- has signed a distribution agreement with Tech Data. The company has
- also announced that the new HP DesignJet 650C color plotter offers the
- option of Adobe's PostScript Level 2 software.
-
- According to the companies, the deal gives Tech Data the rights to
- distribute Adobe's full line of type and application software on all
- platforms beginning in June 1993. Adobe says that it now has four
- major software resellers: Tech Data, Ingram Micro, Merisel and Douglas
- Stewart.
-
- Announcing the deal, John Brandon, vice president of sales for Adobe's
- application products division, said: "Tech Data's knowledge and
- experience with value-added resellers and networked environments adds
- more breadth to our distribution channel. Tech Data is also an
- excellent provider of technical support service, one of the
- requirements for expansion of our distribution channel."
-
- Adobe also says that Hewlett-Packard's new HP DesignJet 650C plotter
- is the first wide-format color inkjet plotter from HP to offer Adobe's
- PostScript Level 2 software as an option. According to the company,
- the plotter is targeted for CAD (computer-aided design) and graphics
- applications.
-
- The HP DesignJet 650 plotter comes as either the E size, which is 36-
- inches wide, or the 24-inch wide D size. A PostScript Level 2 software
- upgrade kit is available as an option for both models and includes 39
- of Adobe's Type 1 typefaces.
-
- The HP DesignJet 650C plotter is priced at $9,995 for the E
- size and $8,495 for the D size. The PostScript software
- upgrade kit sells for $1,195 and is expected to be available
- by August 1.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19930504/Press Contact: Patricia J. Pane,
- 415-962-3967, Adobe Systems Inc.)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(SFO)(00024)
-
- 3Com Settles Shareholder Class Action Suits 05/04/93
- SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- It seems that
- shareholder class action suits are an occupational hazard for
- publicly-traded companies. Now networking vendor 3Com has reported an
- agreement "in principle " with the plaintiffs to settle four pending
- consolidated class action shareholder suits.
-
- The suits date back to August 1989, and alleges violations of the
- federal securities laws by 3Com and certain individuals between
- December 1988 and August 1989.
-
- According to the company, the principal terms of the agreement call
- for the establishment of a settlement fund of $9.85 million. The
- company says that "a significant portion of which will be paid by the
- Company's insurance carrier."
-
- The agreement is subject to "execution of definitive settlement
- documents and Court approval." In a prepared press release
- the company said that, "3Com and its management continue to
- believe that the claims asserted in the shareholders suit are
- without merit.
-
- Nevertheless, the company believes it is in the best interest of
- shareholders and customers to settle the cases due to the continuing
- substantial costs of defense, the distraction of management's
- attention and the uncertainties inherent in any litigation."
-
- (Ian Stokell/19930504/Press Contact: Kate Patterson,
- 408-764-6802, 3Com)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00025)
-
- Dataquest To Host Its First Mobile Computing Forum 05/04/93
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Mobile computing is
- one of the fastest growing areas of the computer industry. Recognizing
- the demand, Dataquest is planning its first "Mobile Computing Forum"
- from June 21-23, 1993, at the Fairmont Hotel in Dallas, Texas. The
- three-day conference is targeted at corporate end users, government
- consultants, and systems integrators.
-
- The company claims that the conference will offer hands-on product
- demonstrations in order to allow attendees to become "familiar with
- the technology that is available to implement corporate-wide mobile
- computing applications."
-
- Co-sponsors for the event include PC Computing Magazine, Apple
- Computer, Electronic Data Systems (EDS), Hewlett-Packard, Toshiba
- America Information Systems, RadioMail, and McCaw Cellular
- Communications.
-
- Announcing the forum, J. Gerry Purdy, vice president and chief analyst
- of mobile computing at Dataquest, said: "Mobile computing products and
- services are rapidly emerging and end users need to understand how
- they can harness these resources to improve their corporations'
- efficiency and productivity."
-
- "Our forum, is designed to provide decision makers with information on
- the technologies, applications, and implementation of mobile computing
- systems in corporate settings," he added.
-
- The forum will allow attendees to actively participate in a live,
- RadioMail wireless electronic-mail network demonstration in a
- "controlled environment." HP will loan each attendee one of its
- palmtop PCs to use for the duration of the conference. EDS will
- design, implement and support the forum's integrated local area
- network.
-
- The conference program will include presentations from senior
- managers of such companies as Apple, AT&T/NCR, IBM, Motorola,
- and Toshiba. Author George Gilder will give an address entitled
- "Telecoms" from his forthcoming book of the same name. Also,
- PC Computing Magazine editors John Dvorak and Paul Sommerson
- will debate the future of personal digital assistants (PDAs).
-
- The conference fee is $1,395. A special early registration price of
- $1,195 is available for those signing up by May 31. Registration by
- phone is available at 800-457-8233 and 805-298-3262 if calling from
- outside the United States.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19930504/Press Contact: Beth Johnson, 415-968-4033,
- Edelman Technology Communications)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00026)
-
- Microsoft Gets Injunction Against U-TOP Printing 05/04/93
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Microsoft announced
- today that a federal judge has granted its request for a preliminary
- injunction in its software piracy lawsuit against U-TOP Printing
- Corporation and its owners.
-
- US Marshals, acting on a complaint filed by Microsoft, raided 10 U-
- TOP-affiliated locations in California and New Jersey in September
- 1992, seizing more than 150,000 allegedly counterfeit copies of
- Microsoft's MS-DOS version 5.0 operating system software. Microsoft
- alleges that the software, with an estimated street value of more than
- $9 million, was illegally manufactured and distributed by U-TOP.
-
- The injunction freezes an estimated $1 million in assets of U-TOP and
- owners James and Shirley Sung. The judge also dismissed most of U-
- TOP's counter-claims against Microsoft, which alleged that Microsoft
- had engaged in unfair competitive practices and asked for nearly $9
- billion in damages. The judge reportedly dismissed all of U-TOP's
- counter-claims.
-
- Microsoft attorney Jim Lowe sees the ruling as a signal that Microsoft
- will probably win when the case comes to trial. "By imposing a
- preliminary injunction that continues to freeze assets, the court has
- affirmed that in the end Microsoft will likely prevail at trial," said
- Lowe. The defendants assets had been frozen temporarily when the
- Microsoft suit was filed, reportedly to keep the Sungs from
- transferring their assets out of reach.
-
- The seized software packages contained the trade names of several
- former Microsoft licensees whose software reproduction rights were no
- longer valid, including MTD and Firenze. Microsoft says that any
- of its software still in the marketplace that contains those trade
- names should be considered counterfeit. Microsoft operates a toll free
- hotline for the reporting of possible software piracy or to answer
- questions about the legitimacy of software bearing the Microsoft name.
-
- "Microsoft takes counterfeiting very seriously. With the release of
- MS-DOS (version 6) we have initiated innovative security features to
- better protect our customers and resellers from buying illegally and
- poorly produced counterfeits," says Lowe. "All genuine MS-DOS 6
- product sold with new computer systems must now carry a Certificate
- of Authenticity which has a hologram and many other security devices
- on it. In addition, all genuine MS-DOS 6 upgrade product carries a
- distinctive Microsoft hologram affixed to the outside of the box."
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930504/Press contact: Marty Taucher, Microsoft,
- 206-882-8080; Reader contact: 800-662-6796 (to report piracy))
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00027)
-
- DOS 6 Sales Top 3 Million, While Problem Reports Persist 05/04/93
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Microsoft says that
- sales of its MS-DOS 6 upgrade topped three million in April, just one
- month after the company begin shipping what may be its most
- controversial product. Controversial because despite Microsoft
- assurances, problems continue to be reported, particularly with the
- DoubleSpace data compression feature.
-
- Microsoft says DOS 6 upgrade sales are greater than the previous
- record for MS-DOS 5 and Windows 3.1 upgrades combined. Microsoft told
- Newsbytes last month that sales of DOS 6 had exceeded expectations and
- there were some delays in meeting demand. However, Microsoft
- spokesperson Collins Hemingway now says the order backlog is clearing
- up. "We have spot shortages as opposed to significant backlog."
-
- The company says that its product support lines have been jammed with
- inquiries and some customers have had what Hemingway described as
- "significant wait times" to get their calls answered. He claims that,
- although Microsoft strives for a wait of no more than one minute, many
- callers have hung up in frustration. "We are gaining on the problem,"
- he said.
-
- Despite the frustration of would-be buyers of DOS, Hemingway told
- Reuters news service the call volume per number of units sold is
- lower than it has been on any of the other top 10 Microsoft sellers,
- and there is no pattern to indicate any serious problems or bugs in
- the program.
-
- However, industry publication InfoWorld, which operates its own
- testing laboratory, reported that it experienced varying types of
- problems of its own when it was attempting to replicate reader
- reports of bugs.
-
- InfoWorld said that the problems included "sector not found", "damaged
- CVF", "cross linked files", "lost cluster", and other problems
- resulting in data corruption. Many of the problems appear related to
- DoubleSpace, and some DOS 6 users report they don't have problems if
- DoubleSpace is not installed.
-
- Microsoft continues to insist that the problems are a very low
- percentage of the number of units sold, but with over three million
- units already sold even a very tiny percentage is a high number of
- frustrated users. So many, in fact, that InfoWorld says some of the
- corporate users it contacted have decided to wait until Microsoft
- finds the problem or IBM introduces its version of DOS 6, which is
- expected to be priced lower than Microsoft's DOS.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930504/Press contact: Collins Hemingway, Microsoft,
- 206-882-8080; Reader contact: 800-426-9400 or 206-882-8080)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00028)
-
- ****VITAL Guides Now Available From Apple 05/04/93
- SAN ANTONIO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Originally
- announced over a year ago, the San Antonio, Texas-based Enterprise
- Systems Division of Apple Computer has finally announced that the
- encyclopedic VITAL Technical Architecture Guides are now available.
-
- The Virtually Integrated Technical Architecture Lifecycle (VITAL)
- guides contain connectivity documentation for corporate management
- information systems (MIS) executives interested in migrating to
- client/server computing. The series is a "blueprint for connectivity,"
- according to Apple, which adds that VITAL contains both directions and
- software engineering techniques.
-
- VITAL consists of more than six volumes of information, which Apple
- describes as information for developing systems that will talk to each
- other. "We have had a significant nine-month effort underway to
- completely update and revise the architecture guides originally
- developed in Apple's IS&T organization," explained Morris Taradalsky,
- vice president and general manager of Apple's Enterprise Systems
- division.
-
- VITAL categorizes enterprise systems into four interrelated
- pieces: desktop integration, data capture, data access, and a
- repository for data. While originally announced to cover systems
- infrastructure as well, Apple has dropped that piece from its
- description of VITAL.
-
- Along with VITAL, a qualification program for systems integrators is
- being implemented by Apple so third parties can provide fee-based
- training, as well as architecture and project consulting. Bear River
- Associates, Kpmg.exis, Martin Marietta Information Systems, and RWD
- Technologies all plan to begin VITAL training and consulting beginning
- in July of this year.
-
- Toll-free information lines at Apple have been established to provide
- information on training and consulting and purchase information.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930504/Press Contact: Eric Wee, Apple
- Computer, tel 408-862-7797, fax 408-974-8644; Public Contact
- training and consulting 800-767-2775 ext 943, VITAL Guide
- purchase information, part number C1883, 800-795-1000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00029)
-
- ****Apple Unveils Toolkits For Electronic Book Authoring 05/04/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Apple Computer is
- offering two new multimedia software tools for multimedia software
- development. The new tools are The Author's Solution for Interactive
- Electronic Books and The Apple Media Kit.
-
- Electronic books is one of the fastest growing areas of multimedia
- development, but author's have complained about the complexity of
- developing multimedia titles. Apple says that The Author's Solution
- for Interactive Electronic Books is aimed at helping multimedia book
- authors develop new titles. Included in the author's development kit
- are tools from Wings for Learning/Sunburst and the Voyager Company.
-
- Available in two versions, the author's kit comes as a Level I kit
- which acts as a starter product for designing multimedia documents,
- especially for internal distribution within a school or company,
- according to Apple. The product is based on Mediatext, a Wings for
- Learning/Sunburst product. Mediatext is much like a word processor in
- its approach, but allows incorporation of media clips such as
- graphics, sound, and Quicktime movies, Apple maintains.
-
- The Level II Kit is based on Voyager's Expanded Book Toolkit product
- and allows the production of professional quality electronic books,
- Apple said. Voyager uses the product internally to create its own
- books, such as Jurassic Park and The Autobiography of Malcom X.
- Interactive books with automated word-search and annotation options in
- addition to multimedia elements may be produced using the Level II
- Kit, Apple maintains.
-
- Apple is inviting would-be authors to join its The Apple Multimedia
- Program (AMP) which it describes as an organization for developers of
- multimedia products and projects. AMP members receive quarterly
- mailings, including technical guidebooks, market research reports, as
- well as discounts on Apple and third-party products, videos on human
- interface design and information on Apple's directions in
- multimedia.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930504/Press Contact: Marcella Wucher, Apple
- Computer, tel 408-862-3364, fax 408-974-8644; Public Contact,
- AMP, 408-974-4897)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00030)
-
- Symantec Acquires Contact Management International 05/04/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 MAY 4 (NB) -- Symantec is buying
- companies again. This time the company announced it has signed an
- agreement to purchase Carrollton, Texas-based Contact Management
- International, makers of the contact management software ACT!.
-
- Symantec will account for the acquisition as a pooling of interests in
- which the company will issue three million shares of its common stock
- for the current outstanding shares of Contact Management
- International. At the current price of Symantec stock, the acquisition
- will cost Symantec over $40 million.
-
- Contact Management International says it has shipped over half a
- million copies of its ACT! software product geared use by salesmen and
- service providers. ACT! is available on several platforms including
- DOS, Windows, the Macintosh, and the Hewlett-Packard palmtop HP95LX
- computer.
-
- The market for ACT! continues to expand in the US with 14 million
- individuals involved in sales, 5.9 million laptops installed, and an
- anticipated 16-percent annual growth in computer automation for the
- small business segment, according to Contact Management International.
-
- Patrick Sullivan, former president and chief executive officer of
- Contact Software International will now head Symantec's newly formed
- contact management group.
-
- Symantec has relied heavily on acquisitions for new products. In the
- last three years the company purchased Peter Norton Computing, The
- Whitewater Group, Multiscope, Certus International Corporation, and
- DMA. Symantec just reported losses of $11.5 million for its 1993
- fiscal year ending March 31, 1993.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930504/Press Contact: Brian Fawkes,
- Symantec, tel 408-446-8886, fax 408-253-3968; )
-
-
-