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- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00001)
-
- NEC Stops Making 2.5" Hard Disks 06/22/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- NEC was planning to ship
- 2.5-inch hard disks in March 1994, but has decided to stop
- shipments due to low market demand.
-
- NEC's 2.5-inch hard disks offered a 265-megabyte storage
- capacity. NEC had been trying to obtain low cost parts
- from suppliers, but did not succeed, and claims that
- factor was also a part of its decision not to release the
- units. Competition in the 2.5-inch drive market is severe
- because many firms sell similar units. The market has also
- seen the withdrawal of Japan Victor, which has decided not
- to market any more 2.5-inch hard disks.
-
- In place of 2.5-inch hard disks, NEC is planning to ship 1.8-inch
- hard disks at the end of this year. These have 125.8MB of storage,
- are extremely small in size, and weigh only 75g. Also, the retail
- price will be only 50,000 yen ($450) thanks to lowered costs
- in NEC's mass production plans.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19930621/Press Contact: NEC, +81-3-
- 3451-2974, Fax, +81-3-3457-7249)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(DEL)(00002)
-
- Mac Sales Slow In India 06/22/93
- BANGALORE, INDIA, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- After all the fanfare that
- accompanied the launch of locally manufactured Macintosh LC II and
- other products in Apple Computer's range, Macintosh sales took an
- unexpected beating in 1992-93 in India.
-
- While Digital Equipment India Ltd. (DEIL), the Indian subsidiary of
- DEC, sold just 90 machines as against the projected 500 units, Raba
- Contel's (nee RCL Systems Ltd.) sales too fell much below
- projections. The latter has managed to sell about 400 Macs, while
- the target was for 1,000. And this was despite the price reductions
- resulting from local manufacture and lowering of customs duties.
-
- The main reason, as Kapil Jain, general manager, marketing, DEIL
- sees it, is the demand slump in March. But if demand slump alone
- were the reason, Mac sales should have picked up in April when most
- companies, including DEIL itself, reported an upsurge in sales.
- Moreover, most of the 90 Macs sold by Digital were sold to
- desktop publishing users instead of the graphics and animation
- segments the company hoped to penetrate.
-
- Says Jain, "The familiarity with IBM machines has put users in a
- mindset. It will be some time before one can get out of it." The
- penetration of IBM-compatible systems into almost every conceivable
- application area is a hurdle DEIL has to cross. Support is yet
- another area. Remarks a competitor, "Support for IBM machines is
- easily available, even in small towns. Digital's support image is
- brighter only among the urban users."
-
- The kind of ad campaigns and roadshows that accompany desktop
- launches did not go with Macs. These, some reckon, would have helped
- DEIL promote Macs as office machines and not just a special purpose
- system for DTP as it has been perceived all along. Arun Nath, the
- chief of RCL Systems Ltd., also admits the lack of concentrated
- marketing effort required to boost Mac sales in India. But he
- expects the sales to grow considerably in 1993-94. "RCL has already
- sold about 150 machines since April last and we expect to cross the
- 650 Mark by March '94," claimed Nath.
-
- (C.T. Mahabharat/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00003)
-
- African Computing Topic Of Coming Conference 06/22/93
- GRAVELEY, CAMBRIDGESHIRE, ENGLAND, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Computers &
- Communications in Africa magazine has announced it is sponsoring
- "Computers & Communications for Development in Africa," this coming
- September in London. The two-day event claims to be the premier pan-
- African information technology (IT) conference of its type.
-
- According to Sean Moroney, editor/publisher of Computers &
- Communications in Africa magazine, the conference has been timed to
- coincide with Business Computing '93, which takes place from
- September 21 to 24 at the Earls Court exhibition center. C&C in
- Africa takes place at the nearby Olympia center on September 22/23.
-
- C&C in Africa is aimed at anyone with an interest in IT in the
- African continent. A number of vendors with a keen interest in
- Africa will be staging a small private exhibition in parallel with
- the main conference. The event organizers claim that this exhibition
- will be an ideal opportunity to meet with these vendors to discuss
- business opportunities in Africa.
-
- The conference event costs UKP 190 for the two days. Accommodation
- in the nearby Earls Court Park Inn has been arranged at the special
- rate of UKP 65 per night. Other special deals are available on
- request.
-
- AITEC (African Information Technology Exhibitions & Conferences),
- the event organizers, have made special arrangements for travel and
- accommodation requirements for non-UK delegates to the conference.
- Contact agents are available in Egypt, Kenya, South Africa and
- Zimbabwe.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930622/Press & Public Contact: AITEC - Tel: 0480-
- 830724; Fax: 0480-831131)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00004)
-
- 3Com Slashes UK Pricing by 15% 06/22/93
- MAIDENHEAD, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1993, JUN 22 (NB) -- Claiming to be
- signalling a general reduction in the price of networking
- technology, 3Com has cut its UK pricing by an average of 15 percent.
-
- According to Richard Joyce, 3Com's European president, the move is
- part of an aggressive new marketing strategy for the company in
- Europe generally.
-
- "We believe this move will stimulate growth in the market, which
- will benefit our channels in addition to end users. It will
- undoubtedly put pressure on the smaller, niche networking companies,
- because they do not have the economies of scale to allow such a
- move," he said.
-
- 3Com claims that several contributory factors have allowed the
- company to cut its prices in Europe. The move is partly due to the
- company having achieved what its calls critical mass in Europe, which
- it says has allowed economies of scale to be passed onto the end
- user.
-
- 3Com also claims that the opening of a new manufacturing facility in
- Ireland last year has been a positive factor in reducing
- manufacturing costs, as well as import duties.
-
- Most of 3Com's business in the UK centers around products such as
- adapter cards and fixed port hubs, Newsbytes notes. The company
- claims that it is also working towards servicing its major company
- customers who also need a high degree of technical support and
- advice. 3Com officials claim that the price cuts will not affect
- this element of its services at all.
-
- Example pricing on 3Com's products are the popular Etherlink III
- adapter, which falls in price from UKP 185 to UKP 155. The
- Linkbuilder FMS Twisted Pair Stackable Hub,, meanwhile, falls from
- UK 890 to UKP 735.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930622/Press & Public Contact: 3Com UK - Tel: 0628-
- 897000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(BOS)(00005)
-
- Enterprise '93 - Integris Upgrades UniKix Software 06/22/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Integris, a
- systems integration unit of Bull that competes against similar
- ventures from the likes of IBM and DEC, has unveiled a new version
- of its UniKix applications software. The Bull company claims that
- this latest revision of its downsizing software for Unix users
- migrating from an IBM mainframe environment is more powerful, yet
- easier to use.
-
- In an interview with Newsbytes at Enterprise '93, where UniKix R4.0
- was introduced last week, Michael C. Kott, marketing director for
- Downsizing Solutions, said that Integris was formed in 1991 as the
- North American component of a worldwide plan by Paris-based Groupe
- Bull to move into the expanding systems integration arena.
-
- Now 150 employees strong, Integris is made up of two divisions. One
- division produces off-the-shelf systems for downsizing IBM
- mainframe applications, while the other supplies custom systems
- integration for complex applications that can involve products from
- virtually any vendor.
-
- UniKix, a shrink-wrapped package from Integrix, consists of a
- transaction monitor and related tools for porting IBM/COBOL/VSAM
- CICS mainframe applications to Unix operating systems. In addition,
- applications using IBM's DB2 mainframe relational database
- management system (RDBMS) can be migrated to Unix-based RDBMSes.
- UniKix also provides support for existing SNA mainframe networks.
-
- In one recent application, Burlington Coat Factory employed UniKix
- to build a new warehouse and merchandising system. Kott explained
- that, after completing a multi-year transition away from
- mainframes, the clothing firm found that applications that would
- support its needs for centralized merchandise distribution and
- "just in time (JIT) allocation" were still available for mainframes
- only. Using UniKix to port these applications to Unix saved the
- company the expense that would have come from implementing and
- maintaining a mainframe.
-
- According to the marketing director, the Integrix software offers
- several advantages over CICS/6000, a rival downsizing product from
- IBM. Although IBM has announced support for HP workstations,
- CICS/6000 currently works only with IBM RISC 6000 workstations, he
- said. In contrast, UniKix can be operated with any of the 12
- flavors of Unix that support symmetrical multi-processing.
-
- In addition, unlike CICS/6000, UniKix gives IBM 3270 "dumb"
- terminals on existing SNA networks direct access to Unix
- applications, without preliminary mainframe processing, stated
- Kott.
-
- Integris' XPU4 migration tool allows 3270 clustered devices to
- connect directly to Unix systems through SDLC and Token Ring links,
- and thereby access UniKix applications. Another tool from
- Integris, XPU5, permits a Unix system to act as a mainframe host
- within an IBM SNA network. Networked 3270 terminals can then
- address UniKix applications on the Unix system directly.
-
- Kott told Newsbytes that R4.0 offers many enhancements over
- previous releases of UniKix, including the new KixWorld system
- management tool, new algorithms for faster online transaction
- processing (OLTP) and batch processing on very large Unix systems,
- a new Extended Batch Facility option, additional RDBMS support, and
- new support for the SNA LU6.2 protocol stack.
-
- The new KixWorld tool provides a single control point for all
- system management functions under an X/Motif GUI, including
- security, accounting, capacity planning, and systems monitoring.
- KixScan, a previously offered monitor, is being integrated into
- KixWorld, and upgraded with the ability to monitor multiple UniKix
- systems on a single screen.
-
- The new algorithms in UniKix R4.0 are designed to boost processing
- speeds on large Unix systems by reducing the number of message and
- I/O requests, according to Kott. A recent benchmark showed the new
- release beating an ES/9000-720 mainframe running the same CICS
- application, in both OLTP response time and elapsed batch
- processing.
-
- The new Extended Batch Facility option for R4.0 includes an
- automated IBM MVS JCL (Job Control Language) conversion product
- designed to provide batch capabilities that are similar in job
- management and control functionality to those available for
- mainframes.
-
- UniKix R4.0 also supports Sybase, in addition to the
- Unix-based Oracle and Informix RDBSes supported in the past.
-
- The new support for the SNA LU6.2 protocol stack is designed to
- increase the ability to support existing mainframe applications in
- implementations where only some applications are ported to Unix.
-
- The first LU6.2 protocols to be supported are function shipping,
- which will provide UniKix applications with access to data running
- on the mainframe, and transaction routing, which will allow users
- to execute applications on either the mainframe or the UniKix
- system within a single session.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19930621/Press contact: Debbie Tabone, Clarke &
- Company for Bull, tel 617-536-3003)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00006)
-
- AT&T Releases Dominant Carrier Shackles 06/22/93
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- AT&T has won
- through the courts what it failed to get politically, the removal
- of the "dominant carrier" rules which it says hurt it in
- competition with MCI and others.
-
- The US Supreme Court let stand without comment lower court
- rulings which would force MCI and other long distance carriers
- to post all their rates publicly, even special deals with large
- customers. In the past, only AT&T has been required to post its
- special deals, allowing competitors to come in and undercut its
- prices. And when competitors made special deals, AT&T did not
- have the same right to look at the details.
-
- The rules were set in place in the 1980s because AT&T was
- considered the "dominant carrier" in long distance, a potential
- monopolist. As its market share dropped to between 60-65 percent
- of the market today, AT&T argued before the FCC and Congress that
- it was, in fact, no longer dominant. Rebuffed, it argued in court
- that the rules were unconstitutional. And there it seems to have
- won.
-
- The complex filings were considered a bureaucratic nightmare even
- by AT&T, and if required of all companies, could drive many of
- them out of business, so it's likely they'll be changed. That
- would suit AT&T, which didn't like anyone having to go through
- the filings. All this is now before the Federal Communications
- Commission, which in 1989 had dismissed AT&T's original complaint
- on the matter, but was overturned by the US Court of Appeals.
-
- In the final Supreme Court appeal, however, the US Justice
- Department sided with AT&T, and the FCC reversed its position
- earlier this spring, demanding that MCI file its special tariffs.
- AT&T will now go to court and demand that MCI comply with that
- order. MCI calls the latest AT&T move "without merit." What's
- most interesting, however, is the position of interim FCC head
- James Quello, who now says AT&T and MCI compete on an equal
- basis, and should be subject to identical rules.
-
- In other news, the FCC is expected to vote this week on a new
- round of price caps on AT&T. AT&T won the caps in 1989, under
- former chairman Al Sikes, as a replacement for rate of return
- regulation, and regional Bell companies have since been fighting,
- usually successfully, on a state by state basis for similar
- rules. AT&T wants the caps lifted so it can set prices on a
- competitive basis, noting that other companies aren't subject to
- the caps.
-
- Finally, AT&T made its first competitive reply to MCI's 800-
- COLLECT service, stating that it would offer 30 percent discounts
- off collect calls from certain airports this summer. MCI has been
- heavily advertising 25 percent discounts for its 800-COLLECT
- service, and the ads don't mention the carrier by name.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930622/Press Contact: AT&T, John Mellor,
- 908/221-5017)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00007)
-
- NYNEX Selling BIS 06/22/93
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- NYNEX said it
- has reached agreement to sell its BIS Group software unit to ACT
- Group of the United Kingdom for $140 million. BIS is best known
- for its Midas banking software.
-
- ACT, based in Birmingham, specializes in software for
- international finance, health care and governments. The deal is
- due for completion in July, and NYNEX expects a small profit.
-
- Included are BIS Banking Systems, BIS Information Systems, Brann
- Direct Marketing, and the corporate parent, BIS Group Ltd. The
- company operates primarily in Europe and Asia, and was part of
- NYNEX' efforts in the 1980s to diversify outside the phone
- services business. Many of its regional Bell counterparts made
- similar moves during the decade, and most were losers. NYNEX
- itself had a computer store chain it lost money on -- many other
- companies lost money in real estate. In recent years, the Bells
- have concentrated their attention on such areas as cellular
- phones and international investments.
-
- BIS Strategic Decisions is not part of the current transaction,
- but NYNEX acknowledged that unit too is on the block. BIS
- Strategic Decisions is a high-tech consulting firm.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930622/Press Contact: Betsy Ricci,
- NYNEX, 914-644-7589)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00008)
-
- "Hard Copy Consumables" Conference Opens Tomorrow in Boston 06/22/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Right after
- wrapping up the two-day Color Hard Copy Conference, BIS Strategic
- Decisions will be opening a three-day event, adding up to a full
- five days industry discussion in Boston this week around hard copy
- issues.
-
- Slated to start tomorrow, the Hard Copy Consumables Conference will
- deal with topics ranging from PDAs to plain paper fax, and from
- today's superstore shakeout to the future of the copier
- marketplace.
-
- Activities get underway Wednesday morning with an overview of
- "Electronic vs. Print Technologies" by C. Thomas Ashley, vice
- president of Consumables Markets Services for the BIS facility in
- Norwell, MA. Speaking next, Gary N. Tisley, managing director for
- BIS Shrapnel Pty, Ltd., North Sydney, Australia, will focus in on
- "Paper in the Pacific Rim."
-
- That afternoon, the forum moves on to the environmental front, with
- presentations by Chris Denniston of the National Office Paper
- Recycling Project on "The Office Recycling Challenge" and related
- talks by representatives of Lexmark International and Jaakko Poyry
- Consulting.
-
- Thursday's agenda features industry-wide tracks, a new addition for
- the eight-year-old show. In the morning session, attendees will
- have their choice of "Track 1: Traditional Media" or "Track 2:
- Copier and Fax Markets."
-
- Afternoon selections are "Track 3: Marking Materials" and "Track
- 4: Electronic Technologies." Each of the four tracks consists of
- five or six sessions on topics geared to a particular industry
- segment.
-
- Track 2 participants, for example, will hear about such subjects as
- "State of the Copier Marketplace," "Charting the Course for Plain
- Paper Fax," and "Reaching the Small Business Customer -- In the US
- and Abroad."
-
- "Office Technology -- A Market in Evolution," "Personal Digital
- Assistants -- Paper Substitute or Supplement?" and "World of Pen
- Computing -- It's Not about the `Pen' Anymore" are among the
- entries in Track 4.
-
- On Friday, the final day of the show, the emphasis turns to
- "Channel Challenges in the 1990s" and "End-users with an
- Environmental Conscience."
-
- Highlights for Friday include presentations on "The Small Business
- and Home Opportunity" and "Superstore Games -- Survival of the
- Fittest," plus a pair of industry roundtables. One panel will
- examine "Competitive Supplies," while the other will consider
- "Recycling as a Corporate Initiative."
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19930622/Press contact: Martha Popoloski, BIS
- Strategic Decisions, tel 617-982-9500; Reader contact: Conference
- Registrar, BIS Strategic Decisions, tel 617-982-9500)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(DEL)(00009)
-
- India - DoT To Launch Satellite Network 06/22/93
- NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- The Department of
- Telecommunications (DoT), of the Government of India has come
- out with a proposal to launch a satellite communication network
- system, to counter a plan for a similar system by Hughes Escorts
- Communications Ltd., an associate of General Motors.
-
- DoT has floated a tender calling suppliers to provide suitable
- equipment for this project. Sources in the department said that
- DoT, which initially considered Hughes' plan to launch a
- satellite-based data communication network for boosting
- software exports, has decided to come out with its own version,
- to provide an effective communication network for software
- exporters.
-
- Under the DoT plan, around 200 very small aperture terminals (VSAT)
- will be set up. These will have direct access to the C-band
- transponders of Insat-1A for beaming software into other countries.
- The scheme is expected to be complete by end 1993.
-
- The scheme is expected to eliminate many lacunas faced by software
- exporters currently. Presently, this kind of link-up is only
- available to firms in designated software technology parks (STP).
- Though the STP scheme was conceptually sound, software firms were
- finding it difficult to move to the four designated STPs: Noida,
- near Delhi, Hyderabad, Ahmadabad and Bangalore.
-
- (C.T. Mahabharat/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00010)
-
- Northern Telecom To Install Longest Unrepeatered Cable 06/22/93
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- STC Submarine Systems, a
- division of Northern Telecom Europe, has been awarded a UKP 80
- million contract to supply and install the first European link to
- use undersea optical amplifiers together with the longest
- unrepeatered system in the world.
-
- The contract has been awarded by a consortium of telecom companies
- involved in the Rioja project, as the entire project is known. The
- consortium consists of Telefonica (Spain), DBT (Germany), Belgacom
- (Belgium), PTT Telecom (Netherlands) and BT plus Mercury in the UK.
- Terms of the contract call for the project to be completed by the
- end of 1994.
-
- The 1,800km system, which will link Santander in Spain with
- Porthcurno in the UK, Veurne in Belgium and Alkmaar in the
- Netherlands, in three separate sections, will operate to the new
- international synchronous transmission standard (SDH).
-
- All the segments on the link will use optically amplified
- technology, with two of them -- Spain/UK and UK/Belgium --
- incorporating optical amplifiers.
-
- From the beginning of service on the project, these two segments of
- the cable will be equipped to operate at 2.6 gigabits/second,
- offering what Northern Telecom claims is the equivalent to 60,000
- voice grade circuits. Plans call for the cable to have the facility
- to double this capacity.
-
- Northern Telecom claims that, because of the length of cable, it had
- to adopt a novel approach, a "stretched" unrepeatered system. Phil
- Black, technical director for STC Submarine Systems said that the
- systems used in the cable is at the leading edge of technology.
-
- "Here we are incorporating two technological firsts -- installing a
- future proof optically amplified system and linking that with the
- longest unrepeatered span to date," he said.
-
- (Steve Gold/19930622/Press & Public Contact: Northern Telecom Europe
- - Tel: 0628-812483)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00011)
-
- Microsoft Education Programs In Hongkong 06/22/93
- TAIKOO SHING, HONG KONG, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Microsoft has set up two
- complementary programs, Microsoft University and the Microsoft
- Certified Professional Program. The software giant claims that they
- will create new standards in the support of Microsoft system and
- application products in Hong Kong.
-
- Microsoft University will provide intensive, classroom-based courses
- that give application developers, and those involved in systems
- support, a thorough grounding in various Microsoft products. The
- Microsoft Certified Professional Program is a qualification system
- that assesses technical skills and verifies that an individual has
- the knowledge to support or train others on a specified product.
-
- "We have a responsibility to develop and support a substantial pool
- of knowledgeable IT professionals capable of applying Microsoft
- solutions to business problems. This is a responsibility that we
- take very seriously," said Laurie Kan, country manager of Microsoft
- Hong Kong Ltd.
-
- "By introducing Microsoft University to Hong Kong we hope to create a
- new standard of excellence in professional education. And with the
- Microsoft Certified Professional Program in place there will now be a
- rigorous international reference standard that Hong Kong employers
- can look to when hiring technical personnel," he said.
-
- To launch Microsoft University in Hong Kong the company has teamed up
- with the City Polytechnic of Hong Kong, where the first courses will
- be offered in July. These will be on Windows NT support and Win32
- application development. Another 10 courses are also scheduled during
- the summer.
-
- "This is something of a natural alliance for our institution and we
- are all very excited about it," said Charles Wong, head of the City
- Polytechnic's Centre for Continuing Education. "With a pool of more
- than 100 academic staff to draw from we have Hong Kong's largest team
- of expertise in computer education.
-
- "The Microsoft University will enable us not only to serve the
- community, but also to forge closer links with industry. It also
- provides our staff with valuable non-academic exposure to the world's
- most popular commercial software."
-
- The City Polytechnic has fitted out a teaching laboratory to Microsoft
- specifications, with 16 networked workstations, and will have
- completed another by the end of August. Microsoft is providing the
- City Polytechnic with full student kits (including handbooks, course
- and laboratory materials), delivery guides and train-the-trainer
- sessions in the United States and Australia.
-
- The two organizations have been working since April to mould these
- courses to match the high pace of learning that is the expected norm
- in Hong Kong. Courses will typically last between two and five days
- and will not only help participants to get the most out of their
- Microsoft software, but in some cases will prepare them for a
- Microsoft Certified Professional exam.
-
- The Microsoft Certified Professional Program has been running
- in the United States since late 1991.
-
- "If your business depends upon people in support, training or
- consultant positions, then periodic assessment of their technical
- knowledge is essential to ensure quality service and effective
- career development," said Kan. "Those holding Microsoft CP
- qualifications can be guaranteed recognition in the job market
- worldwide."
-
- The program, which will be independently administered in Hong Kong
- by Drake International, a worldwide training organization, has already
- attracted attention from some of the territory's leading businesses.
-
- A fee of HK$1,000 is payable per exam, each of which lasts about an
- hour.
-
- When a new product version is released, re-certification may be
- required, depending on the magnitude of changes to the product. In
- general, re-certification exams test only on these changes. Microsoft
- Certified Professionals will be notified of the need for additional
- testing and will have approximately three months to re-certify.
-
- Microsoft maintains a global database on Microsoft Certified
- Professionals, information from which can be accessed through the
- Microsoft Hong Kong office.
-
- (Brett Cameron/19930621/Press Contact: Sasha Skinner (Microsoft): Tel:
- +852-804 4261;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(TOR)(00012)
-
- EDS, Amdahl Launch Antares Joint Venture 06/22/93
- DALLAS, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Electronic Data
- Systems Corp. and Amdahl Corp. have announced a joint venture to
- sell technology they say will help speed up the development of
- applications software.
-
- EDS, a major systems integrator and computer services provider,
- and Amdahl, a maker of IBM-compatible mainframe computers, have
- named the new operation Antares Alliance Group. Initially Amdahl
- will own 80 percent of Antares and EDS will control the other 20
- percent. The companies said they are inviting other partners to
- join.
-
- Antares will bring together two key pieces of technology. One is
- Amdahl's Huron, an applications development platform that allows
- applications to be written once and then run on a variety of
- hardware from desktop workstations to mainframe computers. The
- other is InCASE, a 10-year-old, EDS-developed integrated
- computer-aided software engineering (CASE) tool.
-
- Amdahl will now sell both Huron and InCASE, and EDS is already
- using both products in providing services to its customers, said
- John Cavalier, president and chief executive officer of Antares,
- in a videoconference from the Harvard Club in Cambridge,
- Massachusetts.
-
- Joe Zemke, president and chief executive of Amdahl, said the
- backlog of applications waiting to be developed -- a problem in
- information processing for years -- has "assumed Gordian-knot
- proportions." He described Antares' software as "the sword that
- will cut the Gordian knot ... a very bold statement, but we
- believe it."
-
- Zemke said his company invested about $100 million and 10 years
- of work in Huron before releasing it in 1991. The company then
- realized that "if Huron was to become a pervasive standard ...
- that we would have to seek additional partners." More
- distribution channels were also needed, he added.
-
- "We felt we needed to establish a level of independence for Huron
- from our hardware business," Zemke said.
-
- Amdahl began discussing Huron with EDS, which has been an Amdahl
- customer for many years, about a year ago.
-
- Jeff Heller, senior vice-president of EDS, said his company sees
- "really big" market opportunities in Antares. He added that the
- joint venture will perform ongoing research that will benefit
- both Amdahl and EDS.
-
- Antares will have its world headquarters in Dallas, with
- development centers in Dallas and in Toronto, where Amdahl
- developed Huron. The company will have its own board of
- directors, and is to start off with about 300 employees.
-
- Antares' software will carry an initial license fee plus per-user
- pricing, Cavalier said.
-
- The company's name comes from astronomy: Antares is a red giant
- star. Cavalier said the name indicates the backers' ambitious
- plans for the company. It might also be a pun on a nickname
- occasionally applied to Amdahl, whose IBM-compatible mainframe
- computers with red panels on their outer casings have sometimes
- earned it the name "Big Red" in contrast to IBM's "Big Blue."
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930622/Press Contact: Larry Fillmer, Antares,
- 214-383-2993; Bill Stewart, Amdahl, 408-746-6076; Pat Callaway,
- EDS, 214-392-8056)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00013)
-
- ****Something For Everyone Is IBM LAN Strategy 06/22/93
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- IBM is trying to
- cover all the bases with its local-area network (LAN) strategy,
- an IBM executive speaking to developers in Toronto indicated.
-
- Susan Rubino, systems manager for IBM LAN systems products, was a
- keynote speaker at the OS/2 and IBM LAN Systems Technical
- Interchange conference in Toronto. She said IBM sees four parts to
- the LAN market: small companies, autonomous departments, bottoms-up
- enterprises, and tops-down enterprises.
-
- All have somewhat different needs, Rubino said, and IBM is trying
- to address them all with a variety of products.
-
- IBM maintains that its LAN Server 3.0 software, which runs on top
- of the OS/2 operating system, is the fastest performing server in
- the industry today. The company also, not surprisingly, contends
- that OS/2 is the ideal operating system for client PCs, and that
- there is an advantage in having one system -- OS/2 -- on both
- client and server.
-
- However, Rubino said, IBM will support whatever users already
- have on their desktops, including DOS and Microsoft's Windows.
- And IBM is reselling NetWare, the highly popular LAN operating
- system from Novell, because many customers want that choice.
-
- In the next couple of years, Rubino said, IBM will be focusing on
- network management and tools to support distributed and
- object-oriented computing on networks.
-
- She said the LAN NetView family of products, which provides
- network management and related functions, will evolve over the
- coming year or two. It will include not only IBM products but
- software from other vendors, including Computer Associates and
- Microcom, she said. The whole structure will be based on
- prevailing network management protocols: Common Management
- Interface Protocol (CMIP) and Simple Network Management Protocol
- (SNMP).
-
- IBM will soon introduce a certification program meant to ensure
- that products from third-party developers work not only with
- IBM's LAN products but with each other, Rubino said.
-
- IBM also plans software to make it easy for LAN administrators to
- set up LAN workstations remotely, and to help monitor and manage
- critical network resources, Rubino said.
-
- She added that the Distributed Computing Environment (DCE)
- specification from the Open Software Foundation (OSF) will be a
- key to the company's future approach to client/server computing.
- "We are committed to the interoperability between NetWare and DCE
- and LAN Server and DCE," Rubino said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00014)
-
- ****IBM Desktop OS Strategy Has Four Pillars -- Soyring 06/22/93
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- When John Soyring
- asked a room full of independent software developers and a few
- reporters how many understood IBM's desktop operating system
- strategy, only a couple of hands went up. Noting that there must
- be some IBM employees in the audience, Soyring, the company's
- director of software development programs, set out to clear up
- the confusion.
-
- Delivering a keynote speech at the OS/2 and IBM LAN Systems
- Technical Interchange conference here, Soyring said IBM is
- committed to four desktop operating systems: DOS, OS/2, AIX, and
- Workplace OS.
-
- Despite new 32-bit operating systems that offer greater power and
- added features, Soyring said, DOS will be around for a long time.
- He promised that IBM will very soon launch its own new version of
- DOS, to be dubbed 6.1 because, according to IBM, it offers some
- improvements over Microsoft's recently launched DOS 6.0, such as
- a better virus-detection feature.
-
- In the future, he said, IBM plans to add Workplace Shell -- the
- graphical user interface found in recent releases of OS/2 -- to
- DOS. The company is also planning to license its version of DOS
- to other hardware vendors, in direct competition with former ally
- Microsoft.
-
- Not surprisingly, OS/2 is next on IBM's list. Soyring said the
- recently launched OS/2 2.1 has had a very good response -- he
- claimed, for instance, that reseller Egghead Software ordered
- 13,000 additional copies. Another indicator that OS/2 has a
- bright future is strong sales of compilers and development tools
- that independent software developers need to create OS/2
- applications, Soyring said.
-
- Third on the list is AIX, IBM's variant of Unix, which is most
- prominent on the RISC System/6000 workstations but is also
- available on other hardware.
-
- This will evolve into the PowerOpen standard that IBM is
- developing through a joint venture with Apple Computer,
- Soyring said, and will "bring the capability of the Unix world
- together with the Mac world."
-
- The fourth piece of IBM's plan is Workplace OS, a
- yet-to-be-released operating system that will in a sense replace
- the Portable OS/2 that turned into Windows NT when IBM and
- Microsoft parted ways.
-
- Workplace OS will be built on the Mach III portable microkernel,
- developed at Carnegie-Mellon University. According to Soyring,
- IBM considered this and Microsoft's development work as possible
- bases for its future operating system, and chose Mach III.
-
- The microkernel itself is public and freely downloadable from
- computers at Carnegie-Mellon, he said -- a feature developers
- like because it ensures openness.
-
- Workplace OS will have "multiple personalities." It will be able
- to run software written for OS/2, DOS, Unix, and the Taligent
- system that IBM and Apple are working on in another joint
- venture. The latter will mean much closer ties between IBM and
- Apple hardware architectures, Soyring said.
-
- The graphical user interface on the system will be a new
- generation of the Workplace Shell, with added multimedia,
- pen-computing, touch-screen, and speech-recognition support, he
- said.
-
- Talking to reporters later, Soyring said Workplace OS could
- eventually replace the other operating systems, since it can run
- their applications. However, he noted that Workplace OS will be a
- 32-bit system and therefore will not be able to run on older PCs,
- so it is unlikely to supplant DOS on those machines. "The
- installed base of 16-bit machines is huge," he said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00015)
-
- BoCoEx Index 06/22/93
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Boston Computer
- Exchange for the week ending June 18, 1993.
-
- Closing Prices from the Boston Computer Exchange
- June 18, 1993
-
- Machine Main Drive Closing Price Ask Bid
-
- Price Change
-
- IBM PS1 386SX/25 130 MgB 850 900 750
-
- IBM PS/2 Model 70-A21 120 MgB 875 950 800
-
- IBM PS/2 Model 56SLC/20 120 MgB 1050 1300 900
-
- IBM PS/2 Model 55SX 60 MgB 650 800 700
-
- IBM ThinkPad 300 80 MgB 1400 1500 1325
-
- IBM ThinkPad 700 80 MgB 1850 2400 2000
-
- IBM ThinkPad 700C 120 MgB 3600 3700 3500
-
- IBM V\P 3/25T MOD. 80 80 MgB 1500 1600 1500
-
- IBM PS/2 Model 90-OH9 160 MgB 1700 1700 1600
-
- IBM PS/2 Model 95-OJF 400 MgB 3000 3300 2700
-
- Compaq Prolinea 4/66 340 MgB 2000 2150 2000
-
- Compaq Prolinea 486/50 240 MgB 1450 1500 1200
-
- Compaq Portable 386 100 MgB 650 800 600
-
- Compaq SLT-386 120 MgB 925 950 850
-
- Compaq LTE-286 40MgB 600 700 600
-
- Compaq LTE-LITE 3/25 120MgB 1350 1450 1200
-
- Compaq LTE-LITE 4/25C 120MB 3450 3600 3400
-
- Compaq SysProXL 1.02 Gig 8,100 12,500 6,000
-
- Compaq Syspro 486/50 Mod 1 6700 8500 6500
-
- Compaq Prosigna 486 /33 550 MgB 3500 3800 3350
-
- Compaq Portable 486/66 525 MgB 3650 4000 3500
-
- Compaq DeskP 486DX2/66i 240 MgB 2100 2400 1900
-
- AST Prem Exec 386SX20 40 MgB 675 750 650
-
- NEC UltraLite 25C 80 M0gB 2000 3400 3300
-
- NEC UltraLite Versa 20C 80 MgB 2850 2950 2800
-
- Zenith Mastersprt-386SX 60 MgB 800 900 800
-
- Zenith SuperSport 386SX 40 MgB 650 800 650
-
- Macintosh Classic 40 MgB 600 650 600
-
- Macintosh Classic II 40 MgB 750 800 700
-
- Macintosh SE 40 MgB 575 650 550
-
- Macintosh SE-30 80 MgB 1050 1150 1000
-
- Macintosh LC 40 MgB 1000 1300 800
-
- Macintosh II 40 MgB 1250 1300 1250
-
- Macintosh II SI 80 MgB 1200 1300 1200
-
- Macintosh II CX 80 MgB 1450 1550 1400
-
- Macintosh II CI 80 MgB 2150 2250 2000
-
- Macintosh II FX 80 MgB 2600 2800 2600
-
- Macintosh Quadra 700 160 MgB 3050 3100 3000
-
- Macintosh Quadra 900 160 MgB 3700 4000 3600
-
- Macintosh Powerbk 165C 80 MgB 2400 2500 2400
-
- Macintosh Powerbk 145 40 MgB 1450 1550 1400
-
- Macintosh Powerbk 180 80 MgB 2950 3100 2900
-
- Apple Imagewriter 2 200 ` 225 175
-
- Apple Laserwriter IINT 900 1000 900
-
- HP Laserjet II 675 700 650
-
- HP Laserjet III 1050 1100 1000
-
- Toshiba T-1200 XE 40 MgB 550 600 500
-
- Toshiba T-1600 40 MgB 525 575 500
-
- Toshiba T-2000 SX 40 MgB 700 800 700
-
- Toshiba T-2000 SXE 40 MgB 800 900 750
-
- Toshiba T-2200 SX 80MgB 900 1000 900
-
- Toshiba T-3100 SX 80 MgB 800 1000 800
-
- Toshiba T-3200 40 MgB 550 700 500
-
- Toshiba T-3200 SX 40 MgB 600 750 500
-
- Toshiba T-3200 SXC 120 MgB 1850 2000 1800
-
- Toshiba T-6400DX 200 MgB 2200 2300 2100
-
- Toshiba T-4400SX 120 MgB 1450 1600 1400
-
- Toshiba T-5200 200 MgB 2100 2200 1900
-
- BoCoEx Index data is compiled by Market Analyst, Gary M. Guhman
-
- Here are some current retail-oriented Seats on the Exchange, presented in a
- cyclic basis.
-
- Dallas - Ft. Worth, TX - DFW Computer Exchange - M.B. Lee - 817-244-7833
-
- Escondido, Ca. - Affordable Computer Solutions - Dean Jacobus - 619-738-
- 4980
-
- New Orleans, Louisiana - Audubon Computer Rental - Mike Barry - 504-522-
- 0348
-
- Detroit, Michigan - CompuCycle - Walt Hogan - 313-887-2600
-
- Computer Exchange\\NorthWest - Dye Hawley - 206-820-1181
-
- Albuquerque, NM, Western Computer Exchange - David Levin - 505-265-1330
-
- Fresno, California - MacSource Computers - Mike Kurtz - 209-438-6227
-
- BoCoEx Index prices are based on complete systems with keyboard, VGA
- monitor and adapter, less the value of any software or peripherals.
-
- Boston Computer Exchange is available at: 617-542-4414, Buyer's HotLine: 1-
- 800-262-6399, In Alaska and Canada 1-800-437-2470, FAX: 617-542-8849.
-
- (BOCOEX/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00016)
-
- AST Boasts of Product Quality 06/22/93
- CAUSEWAY BAY, HONG KONG, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- AST's manufacturing
- operations in Hong Kong recently gained registration to the ISO 9001
- standards following a comprehensive assessment by the Hong Kong
- Quality Assurance Agency (HKQAA).
-
- "The old preconception that Asian local production is of inferior
- quality is now totally outdated with the increasing commitment to
- quality management by Asian manufacturers," said Philip Wong, AST
- Pacific managing director.
-
- "The quality of manufacturing coming out of this part of the world
- had made great strides. In fact, it's not the geographic factor which
- dictates a product's quality, but rather, the quality policy within
- the worldwide operation," he said.
-
- With plants in Kwai Chung and Tuen Mun producing more than 160,000
- units of computer systems annually, AST's total quality management
- systems have been recognized by its winning of the 1990 Industry
- Department Quality Award and the Quality Certificate of Merit in 1991
- and 1992.
-
- The Hong Kong facilities, which employ over 1,500 workers,
- manufactures 80 percent of its products for the US and European
- markets and 20 percent for the Asian markets.
-
- "At AST, quality is our first consideration and the ISO 9001
- certification represents an important milestone for our quality
- assurance," said Mr Wong.
-
- More than 15 percent of the Hong Kong facilities' workers are engaged
- in full-time quality control, performing outgoing audits, in-process
- audits, on-site quality control, and post-installation evaluations.
-
- Bill Lui, managing director of AST's Hong Kong Regional Manufacturing
- Headquarters, attributed the consistent standard to the continual
- employee education program that stresses the importance of quality.
-
- "We put a great deal of emphasis on design and built-in quality, and
- our quality standards are also compliant with the applicable
- regulatory requirements on the product," said Mr Lui. "Regular quality
- audits are carried out internally every quarter and on a corporate
- level twice a year."
-
- "We believe a successful quality management system is a team effort
- and requires a great deal of employee involvement," said Mr Lui. "So
- far, we have been very successful in instilling quality consciousness
- in employees by organizing regular seminars to explain the quality
- concept and workmanship standard, and by holding regular weekly
- meetings to review and discuss quality problems and solutions."
-
- (Brett Cameron/19930621/Press Contact: Billy Lui, AST Asia Pacific,
- Tel:+852-410 8888;HK time is GMT + 8)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TYO)(00017)
-
- Pioneer To Open Karaoke Rooms In US 06/22/93
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1993 JUN 21 (NB) -- Hoping to duplicate the
- success of the karaoke fad in Japan, Pioneer Electric, Tokyo,
- says it will launch "karaoke" rooms in the U.S. The karaoke
- room is a rental space equipped with a karaoke laser disk
- player.
-
- Already popular among families and university students in
- Japan, karaoke rooms are now headed for the US. Pioneer has
- already tested a karaoke room in Chicago in the US. The room
- was built in July 1992, and tested for about a year.
- According to Pioneer, Windy City residents lapped it
- up as much as their Japanese counterparts, prompting the
- company to set up karaoke rooms in other cities.
-
- To start, Pioneer will create karaoke rooms in Honolulu and
- Los Angeles in July. They are being located in restaurants and
- shopping centers. Each facility offers 6 to 7 rooms, and each
- room can accommodate 6 to 10 people.
-
- Pioneer aims to create 500 karaoke rooms by 1998 in the US.
- Most of them will be franchises. So, the firm will seek
- joint partners or investors in each area.
-
- In Japan, about 350,000 Pioneer Karaoke Laser Disk machines
- were sold to restaurants, bars and karaoke rooms. Karaoke
- was first popularized by Japanese businessmen, who wanted
- to let off steam from work by singing the voice parts to
- popular Japanese songs. Later it was picked up by families
- and university students as a way to break the ice socially.
-
- Pioneer and other record producers are now producing English
- language versions of karaoke disks, and some are already
- available. Also, Pioneer has just developed a family version
- of the Karaoke Laser Disk player, which is equipped with a
- game machine.
-
- (Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19930621/Press Contact: Pioneer
- Electric, +81-3-3494-1111, Fax, +81-3-779-1475)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(DEL)(00018)
-
- India - Confusion Reigns Over Cellular Tenders 06/22/93
- NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Officials of the Department
- of Telecommunications are not sure how to deal with the issue of
- granting licences for cellular phones in the four metros: Delhi,
- Calcutta, Madras and Bombay.
-
- This comes almost two months after the Delhi High Court indicted
- DoT for the manner in which it made its choice of licensees.
- The Court asked the DoT to accommodate Max-Hutchison among the
- eight licensees and lift the curbs on Sterling. While the
- chairman of the Telecom Commission, H.P. Wagle, wanted the court
- decision to be implemented, other members of the Commission
- advised against it, saying it was better to increase the number
- of licensees to three each for the cities of Bombay and Delhi
- (against the original two each).
-
- In a related development, the Ministry of Finance has also started
- looking for ways to solve the issue. Although, the ministry does not
- have a locus standi in the affair, sources suggest that its
- interest in the matter arises out of its perception that a delay
- will scare away foreign investors, whatever their level of interest,
- from the telecom sector. This will generally be against the spirit
- of liberalization.
-
- As of now there are at least five options before the telecom
- officials. Apart from the two mentioned above, a third one is to
- call for fresh bids or retendering. Also being considered are an
- appeal to the Supreme Court and an offer to include Hutchison Max in
- Bombay (as the company came up with the highest bid for Bombay city
- but was disqualified in the pretender rendering stage itself), and
- also expand the scope of tender to two additional cities. This would
- entail moving Bharati Cellular from Bombay to Delhi, Tatas from
- Delhi to Calcutta, and RPG from Calcutta to Madras. And then, to
- placate Sterling (one of the litigants), they would have single
- operator status for a new city, probably Bangalore, and accommodate
- India Telecomp in another new city.
-
- However, this option too is not easy to implement. It is more than
- clear to the Department that none of the parties are willing to be
- affected by any of its decisions. The Tatas, for example, have
- already stated that any attempt to dislodge them from Delhi, will
- mean their moving the Supreme Court.
-
- The Indian companies (with their foreign collaborations) are: BPL
- (France Telecom); Bharti Cellularr (CGE, UK; Emtel; Mauritius Mobile
- Systems, UK); Tata Cellular (Bell Canada); India Telecomp (Telecom
- Malayasia); Sterling Cellular (Cellular Communications International
- Inc.); Usha Martin (Telecom Malayasia); Skycell (Bell South, USA);
- Max Hutchison (Hutchison, Hong Kong); Mobile Communications India
- Pvt. Ltd. (Singapore Telecom); Modi Telecom (Nynex, USA); Adino
- Telecom (Alcatel, Canada); TCIL Vanguard (Vanguard Cellular, USA).
-
- (C.T. Mahabharat/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00019)
-
- ZiffNet Enters Book Distribution 06/22/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Ziff-Davis'
- ZiffNet unit will try distributing one of its major titles online
- in order to test the market.
-
- The "guinea-book" is PC Magazine DOS 6 Techniques and Utilities
- by Jeff Prosise, from Ziff-Davis Press, and it will be available
- beginning June 28 through ZiffNet on CompuServe. The 1,035-page
- book has been selling well at $39.95, and the printed version has
- a disk, the service says. Members can download the book, along
- with search and viewing software, at $12.95 plus connect-time
- charges. The service said it does not expect online distribution
- to replace printing presses anytime soon, citing research showing
- that only 13 percent of US households now have modem-equipped
- PCs, and 24 percent will have the equipment by 1995. Still,
- Ziff-Davis is one of the first major publishers to try this
- distribution method.
-
- The file itself is compressed with ZVIEW, a Ziff compression and
- file viewing technology. When uncompressed and viewed, however,
- the file looks like text as it would appear on a computer screen.
- The technology is unrelated to Adobe's new Acrobat or NoHands'
- Common Ground. "This is not a graphical viewing technology,"
- noted Lisa Landa of ZiffNet.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19930622/Press Contact: Janice Brown, for
- ZiffNet, 617-332-8066; Lisa Landa, ZiffNet, Lisa Landa 617-252-
- 5211)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00020)
-
- PsychSoft Offers Survey Software 06/22/93
- QUINCY, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- For those who
- must gather data through surveys, PsychSoft has released
- "Make-A-Likert" software, said to let researchers create
- Likert scale, True/False and other types of scale surveys
- and conduct them on PCs.
-
- Make-A-Likert offers a mouse-driven, windowing type interface
- throughout, even though it is DOS product, and allows the researcher
- up to 999 questions in one survey set.
-
- Make-A-Likert consists of three modules: a researcher interface
- module, which allows the researcher to set up surveys in a
- mouse-driven environment; the survey module, which conducts the
- survey on the PC by having respondents select choices by
- mouse; and the statistical analysis module, which allows
- the researcher to analyze the data collected.
-
- Make-A-Likert costs $300, and PsychSoft offers free updates
- and free tech support for life. The package runs on IBM PCs
- and compatibles with DOS 3.3 and above and works with, but
- does not require, a mouse. PsychSoft is at P.O. Box 232,
- North Quincy, MA 02171. Telephone 617/471-8733 or 800/426-3622.
-
- (Marguerite Zientara, Computer Currents/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00021)
-
- Intex Develops Graphics Add-In For Latest 1-2-3 Versions 06/22/93
- NEEDHAM, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Intex Solutions
- has announced a graphics add-in for users of Lotus 1-2-3 Release
- 3.x and 1-2-3 for Windows. UltraGraphics is said to be the first
- true spreadsheet graphics add-in for Windows.
-
- In addition to a dozen innovative 2-D and 3-D graph types,
- UltraGraphics is said to feature automatic range selection,
- 360-degree rotation, automatic scaling along all three axes, and
- "live" graphs, which automatically update as spreadsheet values
- change. The software reportedly offers many graph types not
- available in any spreadsheet program.
-
- One version of UltraGraphics is for 1-2-3 for DOS Release 3.1,
- 3.1+ or 3.4. The other version is for 1-2-3 for Windows Version
- 1.1 or higher (Windows 3.1 required). Approximately 2MB
- RAM is required for either version, in addition to the normal
- requirements of each spreadsheet. UltraGraphics costs $159.95
- plus $5 shipping and is available directly from Intex at
- 35 Highland Circle, Needham, MA 02194. Telephone 617/449-6222.
-
- (Marguerite Zientara, Computer Currents /11930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00022)
-
- RealWorld's First Windows-Based Software 06/22/93
- CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- RealWorld Corp.,
- a developer of accounting and business software, has introduced
- RealWorld Spectrum Accounting, its first Windows-based product.
-
- RealWorld Spectrum Accounting was developed for operation in a
- Windows environment using RealWorld Practical Accounting System,
- the firm's integrated software for small to medium-sized
- businesses.
-
- RealWorld Spectrum Accounting combines accounts receivable, sales
- invoicing, inventory management, accounts payable, payroll,
- check reconciliation and general ledger. The software includes
- action-oriented menus, which logically sequence accounting
- tasks, showing the flow of data and how the modules relate to
- each other. RealWorld Spectrum Accounting also displays up to
- four reports concurrently, so users can compare information
- among them.
-
- Spectrum Accounting reportedly contains a shutdown procedure
- that automatically checks all active applications for incomplete
- work. If any is found, the shutdown procedure ends and the user
- is positioned at the point of incomplete work and directed to
- complete the action.
-
- Spectrum Accounting costs $495 for the single-user version and
- $995 for the multi-user version, which accommodates up to four
- terminals. RealWorld Corp. is at 282 Loudon Road, P.O. Box
- 2051, Concord, NH 03302. Telephone 603/224-200 or 800/678-6336.
-
- (Marguerite Zientara, Computer Currents/19930622)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00023)
-
- First CD-ROM On Mars 06/22/93
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- If there are
- any Martians on Mars, they may be able to read all about the
- way we have envisioned them throughout the years, thanks to
- a CD-ROM project being created by a US/Russian research
- alliance.
-
- The Planetary Society, in cooperation with the Russian Space
- Research Institute (IKI), will create Visions of Mars, a CD-ROM
- collection of science fiction stories, and have slated it to travel
- to the red planet aboard Mars 94 when it is launched to Mars next
- year. The probe is slated to be launched by Russia in mid to
- late 1994.
-
- Visions of Mars will be a collection of science fiction stories,
- sounds and images on a compact disc that chronicle humanity's
- fascination with Mars and its imagined Martians from H.G. Wells
- to the present day. A copy of the disc will be placed inside
- each of the two small stations that Mars 94 will land on the
- surface of the red planet in September, 1995, say organizers.
-
- The stations will not contain a CD-ROM drive, unfortunately,
- says Carols Populus, speaking to Newsbytes from the Planetary
- Society Headquarters in Pasadena, California. "The CD-ROM will
- have to be built, or saved from the past," he suggested. "It's
- really a time capsule to ourselves."
-
- It is still unclear as to whether the disc will be sold
- commercially or a limited number of discs will be made for this
- one event, he added. The flight disc and CD-ROM replicas will
- be produced by Time Warner Interactive Group (previously Warner
- New Media) in Burbank, California. The CD-ROM will be designed
- to play on both Apple and IBM computers.
-
- Dr. Carl Sagan, president of the Planetary Society, at the
- news conference in New York, said: "Before our technology caught
- up with our dreams, the way to Mars was described by the great
- writers of modern science fiction. Those who built and operated
- the first robot explorers of Mars, the Mariners and Vikings,
- and those who are now designing new missions -- for robots and
- for humans -- often recall how they were motivated by science
- fiction. The first adventures of space exploration were some
- mix of fiction and reality, interacting in the minds of the
- spaceflight pioneers.
-
- "Now, in 1993, we are preparing the first mobile robotic explorers
- of Mars, and human exploration of Mars is becoming more and more
- feasible. It seems appropriate to place a collection of these
- works on Mars -- as a motivation and memento for future
- explorers there. These will be the first volumes in Visions
- of Mars."
-
- A label on the exterior of each lander will announce in five
- languages what's inside and how to play it. A microdot on the
- surface of the disc will contain additional technical
- information about its operation.
-
- At the press conference to announce the disc, the editors issued
- a special call for additional submissions from non-English
- speaking countries. All stories will be recorded onto the disc
- in the language in which they were written.
-
- The disc will also include a portion of the Orson Welles radio
- broadcast of War of the Worlds that panicked thousands of people
- when it aired on Halloween in 1938; an audio recording made the
- night that the Viking I lander made the first successful landing
- on Mars, featuring reactions from Gene Roddenberry, Robert
- Heinlein, Ray Bradbury and others; and brief messages to the
- future inhabitants of Mars from key figures such as Arthur C.
- Clarke.
-
- A portfolio of artwork will feature images from classic science
- fiction stories and films as well as works of astronomical art.
- Artists include Kelly Freas, Frank R. Paul, Frank Frazetta,
- Chesley Bonestell, Andrei Sokolov and Robert McCall.
-
- (Wendy Woods/19930622/Press Contact: Planetary Society,Susan
- Lendroth, 818-793-5100)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00024)
-
- Microsoft's Insurance Office Software 06/22/93
- REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Microsoft
- Corporation has announced it will join forces with two other
- companies to develop integrated client-server software for life
- insurance offices.
-
- Microsoft announced this week that it will work with Andersen
- Consulting and Sterling Wentworth Corporation (SWC) to design a
- program called Solutions for Life Insurance Enterprise Computing
- (SLIEC). The program will be based on the Windows family, including
- Windows 3.1, Windows for Workgroups, and the recently announced
- Windows NT operating system that hasn't shipped yet.
-
- The software giant says the open design program will handle
- specialized life insurance industry tasks such as contract
- administration, customer service, underwriting, and investment
- management. Buyers will be able to pick and choose the components
- that best meet their needs.
-
- Microsoft says it will provide the systems technology and desktop
- applications, while Andersen Consulting will contribute its expertise
- in the life insurance process design, insurance systems methodology
- and technical integration of the suite of products. The deal calls
- for software vendor SWC to integrate the application with its PATH
- product, an agent marketing system that runs under Windows 3.1.
-
- The announcement says that while life insurance providers are under
- continuing pressure to find ways to better serve their clients and
- become more productive, they are frustrated by inefficient workflows
- and inflexible systems. SLIEC is designed to overcome some of those
- problems. "Many life insurance companies are looking for innovative
- solutions for leveraging their investments in legacy systems,
- improving time to market, and using technology to really improve the
- bottom line," says Andersen Consulting Managing Partner Thomas
- Skelly, who sees SLIEC as a viable approach with its incremental,
- open design.
-
- Microsoft says SLIEC will be designed as an open platform, allowing
- users to access information from any source via the Windows Open
- Systems Architecture (WOSA), which provides programming interfaces
- between Windows-based applications.
-
- The first version of SLIEC will integrate SWC's PATH technology,
- Microsoft SQL Server, and the Microsoft Office Professional, which
- includes word processor Word for Windows, spreadsheet Microsoft
- Excel, and PowerPoint presentation graphics. Microsoft's database
- program Access and a workstation license for Microsoft Mail will also
- be included.
-
- PATH is a program for the front office that includes the sales
- functions of prospecting, client profiling, needs identification,
- product selection, and cross selling.
-
- (Jim Mallory/1993062/Press contact: Anne Kutscher, Microsoft
- Corporation, 206-882-8080; Reader contact: Microsoft Corporation,
- 206-882-8080, 800-426-9400)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00025)
-
- Windows Program Sales Surpass DOS 06/22/93
- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- The Software
- Publishers Association (SPA) announced this week that North American
- sales of programs that run under Microsoft Windows have surpassed
- sales of applications for MS-DOS for the first time.
-
- SPA says sales of applications software that perform specific tasks
- such as word processing or spreadsheets reached $1.46 billion in the
- first quarter of 1993. That's an increase in dollar value of 20
- percent from the first quarter in 1992, and a 26 percent increase in
- unit sales, according to the trade association.
-
- SPA Executive Director Ken Wasch said Windows applications outsold
- DOS applications in all four of the largest business-oriented
- applications categories: word processing, spreadsheets, databases,
- and presentation graphics.
-
- For the first quarter, Windows application sales totaled $669 million,
- an increase of 114 percent from the prior year period. During the
- same period sale of DOS-based applications fell 20 percent to $502
- million as more and more computer users move to Windows.
-
- In just one category, databases, sales jumped 112 percent to $164
- million, boosted by the introduction of Microsoft's Access and an
- update of Borland's Paradox. Sale of both programs were aided by
- special introductory pricing. SPA says word processing and
- spreadsheet software remain the biggest sellers, with sales of $203
- million and $179 million respectively.
-
- Microsoft Windows was fist introduced in the mid-1980s, but didn't
- attain its current level of popularity until the company introduced
- version 3.0 in May 1990. Microsoft says currently more than one
- million copies of Windows are sold each month. The company had about
- one million orders already on hand for version 3.1 before that
- product started shipping.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930622/Press contact: Terry Childs, SPA, 202-452-1600)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00026)
-
- Dell Energy Efficient PC Line 06/22/93
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Dell Computer has joined
- the rapidly growing list of personal computer makers that are
- shipping personal computers that meet the US Environmental
- Protection Agency's voluntary guidelines for energy efficient
- machines.
-
- Dell says it will begin shipping its energy efficient computers June
- 23rd. The federal government, as outlined in President Bill Clinton's
- Earth Day speech, has committed to purchasing computers, monitors and
- printers that met the EPA's "Energy Star" guidelines for energy
- efficiency whenever possible. Computer equipment that meets the
- voluntary standards of using less than 30 watts of power when in the
- inactive mode can display the Energy Star logo. The government
- estimates that it can save as much as $40 million per year in reduced
- electricity costs from computer equipment, as well as reducing air
- pollution caused by power generation.
-
- It may be that the buying public isn't as committed to energy and
- pollution reduction as is the government unless it comes at little or
- no cost. Rob Howe, Dell acting senior VP of Dell USA, says while it's
- ecologically sensible to build products that use less energy, "It is
- clear that customers do not want to spend significant additional
- dollars to obtain this class of machine." Dell spokesperson Dean
- Kline told Newsbytes the company is also exploring incorporation of
- other energy saving technologies such as flat panels, PCMCIA devices,
- and some ergonomic issues at reasonable price points as customers ask
- for them.
-
- Dell says an energy efficient 425s/L with floppy drive, 120-megabyte
- (MB) hard drive, 4MB of system memory, a mouse, DOS and Windows will
- sell for $1,270. A similarly configured 466/L with a 170Mb hard drive
- will carry a $2,150 price tag. Kline told Newsbytes the additions to
- meet Energy Star requirements did not add anything to the cost of
- these systems. "They were originally designed to be energy efficient
- and run coolly. With minor changes, they are Energy Star compliant.
- With the additions we made we didn't to have to add to the (consumer)
- cost." Dell provides unlimited lifetime toll-free technical support
- and guaranteed next business day onsite service.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930622/Press contact: Kellie Leonard, Dell Computer
- Corporation, 512-728-8499; Reader contact: Dell Computer Corporation,
- 800-289-3355 or 512-728-4400)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00027)
-
- Computer Network Technology To Acquire Ultra 06/22/93
- MAPLE GROVE, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Computer Network
- Technology Corporation says it has reached an agreement to acquire
- Ultra Network Technologies.
-
- CNTC says it will issue 432,000 newly issued shares of its stock,
- valued at $2.75 million, to cover the cost of the acquisition, and
- will assume certain unstated liabilities of Ultra. The deal is still
- subject to approval by Ultra shareholders but could be completed as
- soon as early next month.
-
- Ultra Network Technologies, located in San Jose, California, produces
- the Ultranet HUB 1000 with supercomputer and IBM host channel
- interfaces as well as other networking products. Ultra reported 1992
- revenues of $13 million.
-
- Ultra President and CEO Mike Paul declined to discuss specifics of
- the deal, but told Newsbytes acquisition talks were initiated in
- April. Paul said the 50 Ultra employees have been offered positions
- with CNTC in Minnesota. The San Jose operations will be moved
- to Minneapolis over the next 3-4 months, said Paul. Ultra employed
- about 150 people a year ago, but has experienced a series of layoffs
- throughout the year, he told Newsbytes.
-
- Newsbytes recently reported on Channelspeed, a CNTC software product
- designed to increase the volume of file transfers between mainframe
- computers that can be used by banks to speed up electronic data
- transfer.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19930622/Press contact: Doug Anderson, Computer Network
- Technology Corporation, 612-550-8000)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00028)
-
- ****Apple Rumor Mill -- AT&T Merger, Layoffs Expected 06/22/93
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Apple
- appears to be accelerating into a major change and rumors are
- flying fast and furious as to what that change will be.
- Speculation is layoffs are just around the corner and the
- company may be purchased by telecommunications giant American
- Telephone & Telegraph (AT&T).
-
- Talks with AT&T have been reported by industry publication PC
- Week, which says discussions have run from potential joint
- ventures involving personal digital assistants (PDAs) to a
- merger between Apple and AT&T's computer division NCR. NCR
- makes IBM-compatible personal computers (PC) and other computer
- products. Apple public relations specialist Kate Paisley said
- regarding the Apple/AT&T rumor, "We talk to lots of companies
- all the time. We have no comment on that rumor."
-
- However, the notion that the company was for sale became wide
- spread after several magazines published statements from
- Apple's chief executive officer, John Sculley, that he
- suggested IBM buy Apple. Sculley said the suggestion was made
- to a search committee formed by IBM earlier this year who
- talked with him as part of their pursuit of a new leader for
- the failing computer giant.
-
- Further, there's the question of what Apple would have to offer
- AT&T. AT&T and EO have already beat Apple to market with the
- AT&T/EO Personal Communicator, a hand-held, pen-based, portable
- PDA device. Newton, Apple's PDA, is behind Apple's estimated
- delivery date. When asked if Newton could help Apple in its
- current dilemma, Computer Intelligence analyst Dan Ness quipped,
- "Newton is a statement of vision."
-
- Apple has been looking carefully into telecommunications work
- and into ways to allow people to "really communicate,"
- according to Ness who mentioned Apple is doing work on voice
- recognition technology. Last week when John Sculley stepped
- down to pursue "new business opportunities for Apple," he said
- in a prepared statement, "My personal interests have long been
- in defining the opportunities and technologies for Apple in the
- convergence of computing, communication, and content." Ness
- noted the words "computing, communication, and content," saying
- a lot could be read into that statement. "The introduction of
- Microsoft Windows 3.1 and the PC price wars have put Apple
- under tremendous pressure and Apple's answer traditionally has
- been to explore new territory," Ness added.
-
- "PC Week" magazine executive editor, John Dodge, who wrote the
- story, talked with Newsbytes about the report that AT&T may
- buy Apple. He said he's certain of his sources, although no
- one on either side of the talks would go on the record.
-
- He tells Newsbytes that AT&T would bankroll Apple's expensive
- visions in PDAs, electronic publishing and enterprise computing,
- while Apple would give AT&T unique technology.
-
- "The story is not the two will merge tomorrow," Dodge warned,
- "We just describe the nature of the talks going on."
-
- Newsbytes asked Dodge for his personal opinion on all this. "The
- idea is interesting," he said. "I don't greet it the way people
- greeted NCR. That has turned out fairly well. They've been hands-
- off on NCR -- they let NCR be NCR and stay in Dayton with few
- cutbacks. Looking with Apple I think there's a lot to be gained
- on both sides." He says Apple's big ideas carry risks. "The idea that
- PDAs are a huge business is a long way from being proven. And
- just because you're big doesn't assure success."
-
- To observers, Apple Computer right now appears to be scrambling
- around trying to gather its direction before it has to announce
- its earnings. "The New York Times" reported Apple plans to lay off
- 10% of its workforce, or nearly 2,000, including the US marketing arm,
- software development, and European operations. The company
- announced June 9 investors can expect lower earnings than last
- year for the first six months of its current fiscal year, which
- will end on June 30, 1993. Traditionally, Apple's mid-year
- earnings statement has been released in the middle of July each
- year.
-
- The company's stock has dropped over a third in value since the
- beginning of this month and the Institutional Brokers Estimate
- System (I/B/E/S) is reporting the trend among over 2,500
- financial analysts at 130 brokerage is to continue to revise
- Apple's earnings estimates downward.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough & Dana Blankenhorn/19930622/Press Contact:
- Christopher Escher, Apple Computer, tel 408-974-2202, fax
- 408-967-5651)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00029)
-
- Adobe To Demo Premiere 3.0 At Digital World 06/22/93
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Adobe
- Systems will demonstrate for the first time at Digital World in
- Beverly Hills, California this week its Adobe Premiere 3.0
- product, the latest version of its software for creating
- digital video movies, videotapes, and multimedia presentations
- on the Macintosh.
-
- The company says enhancements in the new version include faster
- previewing, 99 stereo audio tracks, 99 superimpose tracks, a
- video wave monitor, multiple layering, batch digitizing, and an
- enhanced titler.
-
- The improved previewing feature allows the user to preview long
- edits at full motion and previews can be made from disk at the
- frame rate supported by the Macintosh on which the software runs.
- In addition, the software will compile and cache only those
- sections of a preview that have changed since the last preview
- and previewing can be processed at a different resolution than
- viewing. The Print to Video command can be used to export
- previews to videotape without additional compiling time.
-
- Adobe claims users have more creative control with layers and
- virtual clips. Motion, filters and transparency can be set
- independently for each of 97 superimpose tracks. Also, a
- virtual clip feature allows any area on the video timeline to
- be treated as a clip so that multiple transitions can be
- applied to any layer.
-
- Like style sheets, pre-sets allow the application of options
- and are especially helpful for new users, Adobe maintains. The
- company supplies pre-sets in the product that have already
- selected combinations of frame rate, output options, preview
- options, compression settings, and timebase. Users are free to
- also create and save their own pre-sets, the company added.
-
- Users can add effects for titles using the title window, such
- as gradient fills that can be applied to any object, including
- shadows and alpha channel masks. Drop shadows and soft edges
- can be applied to any object and can be set to show from any angle or
- distance.
-
- Adobe says the batch digitizing, list information, and sub-
- pixel motion and field rendering will be of particular interest
- to professional users, Batch digitizing stores a list of clips
- to be automatically captured at one time to simplify the
- process of acquiring video clips. List information can be
- imported or exported from the Movie Capture window or a dialog
- box or from a text file. Sub-pixel motion and field rendering
- make motion flow smooth.
-
- A enhanced sequence window improves control of multiple items,
- such as providing multiple item select and move, and multiple
- item dragging to the construction window. In addition, the
- ability to have Print to Video pause for mouse clicks aids in
- constructing presentations.
-
- Scheduled for release in the third quarter of 1993, the retail
- price of Adobe Premiere 3.0 is $695. However, the company is
- planning a compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM) Deluxe
- Edition of Premiere 3.0 version which is expected to include:
- Quick/Time tutorials on new features; Quick/Time tips and
- techniques and demonstrations; electronic versions of portions
- of the product's documentation; stock Quicktime movie examples,
- titles, templates, type fonts, still images, sounds, and
- animation; demo versions of Adobe and third-party products; and
- the Adobe Type On Call CD-ROM. Retail price for the CD-ROM
- Deluxe version is $795.
-
- Upgrades are $129 for the standard version, and $199 for the
- Deluxe CD-ROM Edition until November 2, 1993 when the prices
- will change to $179 and $249, respectively. Those who purchase
- the current Adobe Premiere for the Macintosh product between
- June 21, 1993, and the date the new version ships will receive
- a free upgrade to Adobe Premiere 3.0, the company added.
-
- The minimum system requirements for Adobe Premiere 3.0 for
- Macintosh are: a Macintosh computer with 68020 or greater
- processor, and 80 megabyte (MB) hard drive and 4 (MB) of random
- access memory (RAM) available; Apple System Software 6.0.7 or
- greater. Quicktime is required, but is included with the Adobe
- Premiere 3.0 program.
-
- However, Adobe recommends a little more muscle for running
- Premiere 3.0. The company encourages users have 6 MB or more of
- RAM available for the application, a Quicktime capture card, a
- 200 MB or greater hard drive, and Apple System Software 7.0 or
- greater.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930622/Press Contact: Patricia Pane, Adobe
- Systems, tel 415-962-3967, fax 415-961-3769; Public Contact,
- Adobe, 800-833-6687)
-
-
- (NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00030)
-
- New CD-ROM Title For Kids, "The Last Dinosaur Egg" 06/22/93
- SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 JUN 22 (NB) -- Dinosaurs
- are hot and Sanctuary Woods is taking advantage of the
- fascination with the prehistoric beasts in its new multimedia
- title for children, "The Last Dinosaur Egg."
-
- In the new title, the player is a museum archivist for the 22nd
- century Museum of Fantastic Phenomena. Guided by field agents,
- Victor Vector and Yondo, players travel into the past to
- recover an egg from one of the last surviving and most terrible of
- dinosaurs, the Tyrannosaurus Rex. The company maintains the
- title offers the most accurate and up-to-date information on
- the dinosaurs and their surroundings in the compact disc read-
- only memory (CD-ROM) adventure.
-
- Sanctuary Woods boasts over 100 hand-painted backgrounds and
- animated characters in the new game as well as video clips,
- digitized sound effects, and original music.
-
- The company's other titles include Sanctuary The Vampire's
- Coffin and actress Shelley Duvall's "It's a Bird's Life."
- Electronic Arts is handling distribution of "The Last Dinosaur
- Egg" in North America and the suggested retail price is $59.95.
- In addition, the company is scheduled to release "The Last
- Dinosaur Egg" on the IBM compatible multimedia personal
- computer (MPC) platform in July, 1993.
-
- Founded in 1988, Sanctuary Woods describes itself as a
- developer of interactive education and entertainment titles on
- CD-ROM. The company is an affiliated label of Electronic Arts
- and is a licensed developer for the new 3DO Interactive
- Multiplayer expected to make its debut to consumers this fall.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19930622/Press Contact: Joseph F. Flatley,
- Sanctuary Woods, tel 604-684-8177)
-
-
-