home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-02-22 | 96.5 KB | 2,121 lines |
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00001)
-
- Lasermaster Ships Photo Quality Digital Color Printer 02/22/94
- MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Lasermaster
- Technologies has announced it is now shipping a wide format digital
- color printer that produces photo quality output directly from
- Macintosh and IBM-compatible computers.
-
- The new Displaymaker Professional Big Color Printer joins the
- Displaymaker Digital Color Printer Lasermaster, which started
- shipping in June, 1993.
-
- Like its older sibling, the new printer includes a multi-platform
- Postscript-language color server and an ink-jet printer that can
- print on roll-fed or cut-sheet paper that is up to 36 inches wide.
- Rolls of up to 18 feet long can be accommodated. The new model
- uses Lasermaster's ink delivery system and ink calibrator.
-
- Lasermaster's Big Ink Delivery System increases the ink capacity of
- the printer by a factor of 10. The company says it designed the ink
- delivery system to work with its Colormark color management
- system, which depends on specific color profilers that Lasermaster
- provides with each supply of ink.
-
- The color server includes a number of job management and job
- logging features and an icon display for easier print job
- management. The server can be upgraded to add a second Big Color
- printer. The second print head, called Displaymaker Remote, is
- tentatively priced at $17,995 and is scheduled to ship in the
- second quarter.
-
- Lasermaster says the Displaymaker Professional is the ideal unit
- for service bureaus, quick printers and photo labs that need a wide
- format printer. "Users won't have to change ink cartridges as often,
- they are less likely to run out of ink in the middle of a print job,
- and we provide them with the tools that allow them maintain
- accurate, consistent color from print to print," says Lasermaster
- CEO Mel Masters.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19940218/Press Contact: David Noah, Lasermaster,
- 612-944-9457; Reader Contact: Lasermaster, 612-944-9457)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00002)
-
- Windows Dynamic User Interface Design Tool Intro'd 02/22/94
- COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- A
- Colorado company has announced a interface design tool for
- Microsoft Windows 3.1 that it claims fits the firm's motto of
- "Software to Visualize the Future."
-
- Colorado Springs-based Altia Inc.'s Altia Design 1.3 for Windows
- 3.1 is a software tool that can create a dynamic user interface
- to simulate products ranging from automobile dashboards and
- airplane cockpits to oscilloscopes, ultrasound machines, and
- communications equipment without having to write any computer
- code.
-
- Altia says customers are using the software early in the product
- design cycle to acquire customer feedback on product features,
- functionality, and human factors. Imagine you are designing a
- revolutionary new cellular phone. Instead of building a prototype
- device, you simply design it electronically using Altia Design 1.3,
- says the company. The buttons work and testers can exercise all
- the proposed functions such as programming and dialing. Human
- factor data can be automatically collected for later analysis.
-
- If you want to design a control panel for your latest mechanical
- device, you can use Altia Design 1.3 to create a realistic-looking
- panel on which all the knobs turn, the switches work, and the
- gauges and readouts display data. The company says the software can
- create an electronic prototype in a matter of hours or days, instead
- of the weeks or months it would take to build a working mechanical
- device.
-
- A complete Altia Design system for Windows 3.1 carries a $4,900
- price tag, and runs on 386 and 486-based personal computers.
- Versions are also available for Windows NT and Unix workstations.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19940218/Press Contact: Denise Fields, Altia,
- 719-598-4299; Reader Contact: Altia Inc, tel 719-598-4299,
- fax 719-598-4392/PHOTO)
-
-
- (NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00003)
-
- HP & Fujitsu In Intelligent Network Deal 02/22/94
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Software
- is a vital element of any telecommunications switching system,
- especially in newer, highly complex networks. Now Hewlett-Packard
- Co., and Fujitsu Ltd., have announced a long-term deal to provide
- intelligent-network systems to telecom operators.
-
- While value and terms of the nonexclusive deal were not disclosed,
- the companies did say that it combines Fujitsu's "technology and
- market experience in central-office switching system FETEX-150
- with HP's expertise in Unix system-based, open-systems computing
- and telecommunications."
-
- The companies maintain that the intelligent-networks architecture
- to be developed will allow operators to upgrade present networks,
- and to offer "competitive and advanced telecommunications
- services."
-
- As a result, the two companies agreed to integrate their existing
- intelligent-network elements and "further develop others." Fujitsu
- plans to provide the service-switching point (SSP) based on its
- FETEX-150 system and the service-management system (SMS)
- running on HP's computers. HP will contribute the service-control
- point (SCP) and the service-creation environment (SCE). HP's Unix system-
- based computers will be used for SCP, which will include
- Signalling System 7 technology, and in turn connected to the
- network through Fujitsu's FETEX-150 system.
-
- In announcing the deal, Akio Moridera, general manager of
- telecommunication network systems at Fujitsu, said: "Fujitsu
- sees intelligent networks as a universal core technology that can
- integrate a variety of future services including multimedia over
- different networks including broadband integrated services
- digital networks (B-ISDN) and personal communications networks
- (PCN). With intelligent networks, new services need not be
- implemented separately at each exchange, but are provided on a
- central system allowing for rapid and low-cost implementation
- of telecom services by operators."
-
- Both Fujitsu and HP concurrently will develop elements for the
- Unix system-based service-management system. Research
- and development work by Fujitsu and HP will be done at each
- firm's facilities in Kawasaki, Japan, and in Grenoble, France.
- The first Fujitsu/HP products are set for delivery at the end
- of 1994.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19940218/Press Contact: Korendo Shiotsuki,
- 81-3-3215-5236, Fujitsu Ltd - Japan)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(SFO)(00004)
-
- Report - Wireless Comms To Grow To $10 Billion By 1999 02/22/94
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- From
- the continued growth of pagers, cellular and digital telephones,
- and accessories in the past five years, a new report projects that
- US sales will quadruple from $2.5 billion in 1992, to $9.5 billion
- in 1999.
-
- International high-technology research firm Frost & Allen's newly
- released study, entitled, "US Cellular and PCS Telephone, Pager and
- Accessory Markets: Time to Focus on Applications," is the result of
- "extensive" interviews with marketing and technical experts and
- selected individuals from the communications industry, says the
- company. The research also reportedly involved secondary research
- in databases, news releases, magazines and other sources.
-
- The company claims that the study further indicates an increasing
- growth in the retail channels as the general population becomes
- more accustomed to an affordable cellular and digital
- communications market.
-
- Retail sales are projected to rise from 22 percent in 1992 to 34
- percent by 1999. Digital technology -- personal computer network
- (PCN) or personal computer services/systems (PCS) -- is
- stimulating price reductions and increasing channels of
- communication that will allow a greater number of users to enter
- the market.
-
- Speaking with Newsbytes, Virginia Reeves, an analyst with Frost
- & Sullivan, said, "The price reductions that had been expected as
- cellular service grew has not been as dramatic as once thought
- because the companies have had to reinvest in digital technology,
- but in the long run this will introduce more and more users to
- wireless communication and further price reductions are expected."
-
- While the introduction of digital will provide more capacity,
- improved data services, more privacy and security and lower
- operation costs, there may be an adjustment time that will have
- difficulties with both phones and service, says the report. Among
- new users, projected increases are expected in personal use,
- healthcare, security, and blue-collar end-users.
-
- Reeves goes on to say, "While conducting research we found a
- growing segment of users who were entering the market because
- of personal safety and security."
-
- The study goes on to conclude that handheld portable phones will
- show the fastest growth as fixed-mobile units decline in demand.
- New dual-mode phones will appear on the market that offer both
- analog (current cellular signal) and digital signals. Cellular/pager
- phones are projected to continue to grow as users desire to
- monitor their calls. Similarly, numeric pagers will see continued
- growth and tone-only pagers will become obsolete. The future of
- alpha-numeric pagers that deliver text have a seemingly small
- niche that will not show significant growth.
-
- The results of distribution by revenue indicate a large growth in
- retail sales by as much as a 33.9 percent share in 1999 and a
- declining share for automobile manufacturers and retail auto
- stores. Electronic specialty stores will continue with a slight
- growth and direct carrier sales are predicted to decline.
-
- (Patrick McKenna/19940217/Press Contact: Amy Arnell, Frost
- & Sullivan, 415-961-9600)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(MSP)(00005)
-
- NewsPix Images For Newsbytes Publishers 02/22/94
- MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- These are the
- photos that have been digitized and correspond to stories Newsbytes
- has reported recently. These photos are not available to the
- general public, but are designed for use by licensed Newsbytes
- publishers who log into our private bulletin board system in
- Minneapolis. For information on how to become a licensed
- Newsbytes publisher in any medium call Newsbytes at
- 612-430-1100.
-
- Newspix weekly summaries will appear Mondays on the Newsbytes
- wire. All photos are in JPEG format. Photo file names
- correspond to year-month-day-story number-brief name of picture
- contents.
-
- ---------------------------
-
- Week of January 21-25,1994
-
- ---------------------------
-
- 94021414CpqAero - Color from slide of subnotebook computer.
- Newspaper in foreground for scale.
-
- 94020305PanlBook - Demonstration with presenter using Panel
- Book to project image. Color from slide.
-
- 94021805Sanrio - That lovable kitty in color.
-
- 94021501Ofoto - Color from slide; screen shot of Ofoto app.
-
- 94021720BookWrk - Color from slide; Books That Work screen
- showing how to replace a shingle on a roof.
-
- 94011412Gravis - Color from slide; array of personal piano gear,
- keyboard, discs, speakers, cables, etc.
-
- 94020305LitePro - Color from slide; video projector on display
- column. Lighting is colorful, column is faux greco-roman.
- 94020909HPtoner - B&W of printer, toner cartridge and
- remanufacturing program brochure.
-
- 94020820Netpwr - B&W of terminal and drive towers.
-
- 94020821Kodak1580 - Color from slide of copier.
-
- 94021120skel - Color from slide of workstation with skull in
- foreground.
-
- 94012715ATIGWondr - Color from slide: view of ATI Technologies
- windows accelerator card and product box.
-
- 94020428MTouch - B&W shot of TruePoint DS-17 flat
- square touch monitor. With hand coming off frame to touch
- screen.
-
- 94012118CLIRad - Color of desk setup showcasing Compression
- Labs Inc new Radiance videoconferencing system. Product and
- people shot.
-
- 94011423gore - Head and shoulders portrait vice president Al
- Gore, (b&w).
-
- 94010708sumer - Color from slide. Wide shot
- of Sumerian ziggurat courtesy Sumeria, producers of the CD-ROM
- Ancient Cities images of historical sites.
-
- 94011019nagel - David Nagel, senior vice
- president and general manager of Apple's AppleSoft Div. Color
- from slide.
-
- 94011310gryph - Gryphon software in action,
- Mona Lisa morphs into wacky grin. Color from slide.
-
- 93111611spindl - Michael Spindler, Apple's
- president and chief executive officer (CEO). Color from slide.
-
- 94011207mosc - Very wide angle, almost fish
- eye, shot of Moscone center, site of recent Macworld Expo.
- Color from slide.
-
- 94010428Eworld - View of E-world, Apple's
- coming online service, screen.
-
- 94011423LaTime - Color group shot of Pacific
- Telesis and Times Mirror execs signing agreement for the
- creation of "the home-shopping lane of the communications
- superhighway." Includes Richard T. Schlosberg III, publisher &
- CEO of the LA Times; Hal Logan, general manager of the
- Pacific Telesis Electronic Publishing Services; Robert F.
- Erburu, chairman, president and CEO of Times Mirror; Lee Camp,
- president of Pacific Telesis Electronic Publishing Services and
- VP of Pacific Bell.
-
- 93111613bastien - B&W portrait of Gaston
- Bastiaens, general manager for the P.I.E. division of Apple
- Computer.
-
- 94010608SirSp - B&W shot of Sir Speedy
- franchisee at workstation with Team CD.
-
- 94011321philip - B&W of fullmotion video
- cartridge and box. Cartridge is being inserted in back of CDI
- unit with Maganavox monitor in background.
-
- 9401008citiz - B&W product shot of new
- lighweight Citizen printer.
-
- 94011015photoCD - Basic product shot of PhotoCD.
-
- (Newsbytes/19940221)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00006)
-
- Windows Show UK - IBM Pushes OS/2 Software 02/22/94
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- At the Windows Show,
- which opened in Olympia in London today (Tuesday), IBM showed it
- is getting serious about selling software. This is the first year
- that Big Blue has attended the show and, according to Val Russell
- of IBM's media relations department, marks the start of a major
- end-user campaign as far as software is concerned.
-
- Visitors to the IBM stand are greeted with a major push for the OS/2
- for Windows 3.1 package. As reported previously by Newsbytes, this
- is a special version of OS/2 for users of Microsoft Windows,
- allowing them "easy" access to both the Windows and OS/2
- environments.
-
- According to IBM, the idea behind the package is to get the message
- across that migrating to OS/2 is a one-way ticket as far as Windows
- applications are concerned. Many users are under the impression
- that OS/2 was only compatible with DOS, and that Windows
- applications required a reboot of the PC.
-
- As well as main theater extolling the virtues of OS/2 for Windows
- 3.1, IBM is offering show goers a chance for a hands-on with the
- package. This is, Newsbytes notes, the first time that the package
- has been made available for end users.
-
- Elsewhere on the IBM stand, there are mini-theaters that IBM
- describes as a means of getting an introduction to less mainstream
- products. One of the mini-theaters is giving a rolling presentation
- on desktop software, claiming to take personal productivity one
- stage further. The aim of the presentation is to show how modern
- software can be used to gain true competitive advantage.
-
- Other mini-theater presentations include "Software for your
- Workgroup,""Software for decision makers," and "Software for
- Communicating."
-
- The Windows Show runs through until Friday of this week.
- Newsbytes will be reporting on the show all this week.
-
- (Steve Gold/19940222/Press & Public Contact: IBM UK,
- 44-256-344390)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00007)
-
- UK - Networks '94 Show Details Confirmed 02/22/94
- LONDON, ENGLAND, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Blenheim Online has
- confirmed the details of one of the most popular communications
- shows in the calendar -- Networks '94 -- will be held at the
- Birmingham National Exhibition Center (NEC) from June 28 to 30
- this year.
-
- The show has expanded since last year, and plans now call
- for the event to span halls 9, 10, 11 and 12. Now into its 14th
- year, the show is claimed to be one of the UK's most successful
- information technology (IT) exhibitions. Last year, Newsbytes
- notes, there were 350 exhibitors with 20,000 show goers.
-
- This year, the show has 400 exhibitors and, judging from the
- preliminary list provided by Blenheim Online, the event is turning
- into a "who's who" of the communications world.
-
- In addition to planned demonstrations of interactive technology,
- Networks '94 is launching Networks TV (NTV) at the event.
- According to Samantha Stern, Networks '94 PR account director,
- NTV will feature the fastest news from the UK networking
- industry and a live satellite broadcast from PC Expo in New York.
-
- One of the biggest problems at events such as Networks '94 is
- keeping in contact with the office and friends outside of the show.
- The uptake of mobile phones in recent years has meant that it is
- well nigh impossible to "get a line" into or out of the NEC using an
- analog phone.
-
- Newsbytes has by-passed the problem by moving up to digital GSM
- (global system for mobile communications) as its primary means
- of communications at events such as these, but the organizers
- have gone one stage further and plan to implement "Messagenet"
- at the show.
-
- Messagenet claims to be a "sophisticated networking system"
- whereby visitors and exhibitors to the show can place and collect
- messages from their colleagues at the show, and also gateway
- back to a variety of electronic mail services.
-
- (Steve Gold/19940222/Press Contact: NGA Public Relations,
- tel 44-81-772-2828, fax 44-81-742-3259)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LON)(00008)
-
- ****ISDN Helps Injured At Winter Olympics 02/22/94
- LILLEHAMMER, NORWAY, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- The Winter Olympics
- are on at Lillehammer in Norway, and inevitably, some contestants
- will end up breaking a bone. However, doctors have a problem --
- with all the congestion on the roads in the vicinity of the games,
- it extremely difficult to get the patient to a major orthopaedic
- hospital for specialist treatment.
-
- Normally, the authorities would have had to organize an expensive
- air ambulance to ferry the patients to the main hospital. Since the
- games are split between the main site at Lillehammer and two
- venues at Hamar and Gjovick, this would have been an expensive
- option.
-
- Now the patients are being ferried to local hospitals, wherever
- they are in Norway. However, according to the organizers, they are
- receiving the best possible treatment.
-
- The reason for this is that Lillehammer is the first Winter
- Olympics to use integrated services digital network (ISDN)
- connections across the course and to/from all the emergency
- services. This means that doctors at all the local hospitals can
- video link their systems to the main radiology department at the
- Lillehammer hospital for "on-the-spot diagnosis" at a distance.
-
- The hospitals within the Winter Olympics catchment area are divided
- among several Norwegian regional health boards which means,
- Newsbytes notes, there is no ready method of linking them together.
- Using ISDN, this problem is alleviated, the organizers claim.
-
- Spider Systems, a UK connectivity company, claims it has assisted
- greatly in the inter-hospital links by supplying the health board
- with its M290 routers that operate over ISDN links. The company has
- been working closely with Kodak and Norwegian Telecom on the
- project.
-
- According to Spider Systems, the hospitals at Hamar and Gjovick are
- each equipped with Kodak's Ektascan Imagelink film digitizer, as
- well as a Kodak imaging workstation. The hardware then routes its
- image calls over the ISDN network using Spinder's routers.
-
- Kodak's health imaging systems operations in Richardson, Texas, has
- supplied the hardware in use at Lillehammer. Even after the Olympics
- have gone, the company plans to keep the system in operation as a
- reference site for potential customers.
-
- According to Larry Gawron, European marketing manager for Kodak
- health imaging, the entire linkup and cooperation is the end result
- of open systems technology. "Open systems and open standards are
- very important to us and our customers," he explained.
-
- "When we came to Europe, with our tele-radiology systems, we chose
- Spider Systems as our communications partner because its routers
- adhered to Euro ISDN standards, were approved by the European telcos
- and had the support plus technical expertise across the region we
- were looking for," he said.
-
- Gawron is a keen proponent of ISDN. He claims that the technology is
- accelerating in Europe. "ISDN is becoming the clear leader in the
- wide bandwidth communications in Europe, particularly for this
- type of application," he said. "You only need to pay for the time you
- are on the line which important, if you are only sending five or ten
- images a day."
-
- (Steve Gold/19940222/Press & Public Contact: Spider Systems,
- 44-734-774747)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(LON)(00009)
-
- Red Tape Snags Personal Data Privacy In Europe 02/22/94
- BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- While certain individual
- countries in the European Community have legislation protecting
- personal data on their statute books, the European Commission (EC)
- wants to enable a new Europe-wide set of legislation to protect data
- on a cross-border basis. However, some observers argue that the
- EC seems more bound up in its own red tape than in getting the laws
- passed by its own Parliament.
-
- According to Belgian media sources, the Greek government, which
- has only limited legislation itself, wanted to rush an EC-wide set
- of data privacy laws through in the first quarter of this year. EC
- officials stepped in and said that even a discussion of the proposed
- law was not possible until June of this year at the earliest.
-
- According to EC ministers, the Greek draft law has hit problems
- with very strong opposition from financial institutions. They see
- a problem in that, while intra-country transfer of data is legal,
- inter-country transfers are not. Bank officials are worried that, as
- the border controls come down, inter-country bank accounts will be
- in demand, though the information transfers required for handling
- such an account would be illegal.
-
- There may be an answer, albeit a low-tech one. It seems that paper
- files are not enshrined within the letter of the proposed law as it
- relates to personal data. So, while a data link passing information
- on customers between EC countries may be illegal, faxing the same
- data on a paper image basis, is quite legal.
-
- Now, European banks are said to be looking at ways of storing data
- electronically and printing it out to fax across borders, only to
- have that information scanned back into a computer at the distant
- end.
-
- (Sylvia Dennis/19940222)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00010)
-
- UK - Groupware Event Set For April 02/22/94
- OXTED, SURREY, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Office Futures has announced
- it is hosting a two-day workshop on "Selecting Groupware and
- Office Systems." According to Roger Whitehead of the company,
- the event will be held at the Britannia Hotel on April 19 and 20.
-
- Whitehead says that the aim of the workshop is to examine the
- claims that groupware can increase efficiency, arrive at better
- decisions, improve customer relations, and foster better group
- relations. The event will also investigate what is necessary to turn
- these ideas into reality.
-
- The idea behind the event is that delegates can look at the variety
- of products currently being sold as groupware and offer a method of
- deciding which of them may be relevant to organizations. Plans for
- the event also call for the group to consider the overlaps between
- groupware, workgroup computing and office systems, and look at
- the trends in these markets.
-
- According to Whitehead, among the suppliers to be discussed are
- Action Technologies, Applix, Ashmount, AT&T/NCR, Beyond, Borland,
- Bull, Collaborative Technologies, Corporate Memory Systems,
- CompuServe, Computer Associates, Data General, DaVinci, Delrina,
- Digital Equipment Corp, Farallon, Finansa, Fischer International,
- ForeFront, Fujitsu/ICL, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Internet, Lotus
- Development, Microsoft, Olivetti, On Technology, Oracle, Quadratron,
- Powercore, Reach, Siemens Nixdorf, Software Publishing Corp,
- Staffware, SunSoft, Uniplex, Unisys, Ventana, Verimation, Wang,
- WordPerfect, and Xerox.
-
- The workshop will, says Whitehead, provide attendees with an
- independent (and fully documented) assessment of the significant
- groupware and office systems suppliers and their products. He
- also says it will provide selection and implementation advice,
- "candid testimony" from genuine users of four different kinds of
- groupware, discussing the strengths and weaknesses of the
- suppliers and their products, as well as offer the opportunity to
- discuss groupware experiences and problems with fellow
- professionals.
-
- "This workshop presents comparative information that is not
- available in this form from any other external source. To gather
- similar information directly for yourself would involve more time,
- trouble and expense than most user organizations can afford. In
- addition, attending this workshop lets you benefit from the
- questions that other people ask," he said.
-
- The workshop has been developed by Roger Whitehead, who will be
- leading the two days. Newsbytes notes that he is a director of
- Office Futures, an independent consultancy specializing in
- groupware and office systems, that he established over twelve
- years ago.
-
- Whitehead claims to have advised a wide range of user organizations
- on system selection and development, and on the strategic aspects of
- information technology. He is a frequent writer and speaker on
- groupware and office systems, and edits the subscription newsletter,
- GroupWare News.
-
- Other speakers at the event include Mark Braddock, divisional
- manager of Blackhorse Financial Services; David Dewsbury, head of
- National Sales at Powerline, Midlands Electricity; Mark Turrell of
- the London City University Business School; and Michael Chapman
- Pincher, managing director of SMI Public Relations.
-
- Further details of the event can be obtained from Ms Dipti Chauhan,
- IBC Technical Services: telephone at 44-71-637-4383, or fax at
- 44-71-631 3214.
-
- (Sylvia Dennis & Steve Gold/19940222/Press Contact: Roger
- Whitehead, Office Futures, tel 44-883-713074, fax 44-883-
- 716793; Email on the Internet: rwhitehead@cix.compulink.co.uk)
-
-
- (NEWS)(UNIX)(LON)(00011)
-
- HP Laserjet Printers Supported In AIX Environments 02/22/94
- BRACKNELL, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Hewlett-
- Packard (HP) has announced that its Laserjet printers are now
- being supported directly under IBM's version of Unix - AIX 3.2.5,
- using HP JetDirect network-printer interfaces.
-
- According to HP officials, this support will allow IBM's RISC
- System/6000 users to connect HP printers directly to their
- Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)-based
- Ethernet networks, providing what HP calls "convenient access to
- the full range of performance and manageability benefits offered
- by HP network printing solutions."
-
- HP claims that a RISC System/6000 network administrator can
- install, configure and manage HP printers easily because the support
- is built into the AIX operating system. No additional software is
- required as the printer is configured using native AIX utilities.
-
- "IBM's RISC System/6000 customers are accustomed to high
- performance from their workstations, and now they can also
- expect high performance and greater flexibility and manageability
- from their HP printers by attaching them to the network,"
- explained Mark Hollister, HP's UK network marketing manager.
-
- "In addition, because IBM has supported our HP JetDirect interfaces
- in the AIX operating system itself, RISC System/6000 users will
- be able to get their HP network printing solution up and running
- quickly and easily," he said.
-
- According to HP, connecting its printers directly to Ethernet local
- area networks (LANs) improves printer performance by transferring
- data to the printer at fast network speeds. Simple Network
- Management Protocol (SNMP) support built into HP JetDirect
- interfaces makes HP printers easy to monitor and manage through
- any SNMP console, such as HP OpenView, IBM NetView and others,
- said the company.
-
- Direct network connections from HP are also claimed to provide
- printer location flexibility, allowing HP printers to be connected
- anywhere along the network.
-
- AIX 3.2.5, Newsbytes notes, is now one of 11 network operating
- systems that can be supported simultaneously on a single HP
- JetDirect interface, including the internal JetDirect cards and
- the external JetDirect EX network interface. Others supported
- include Novell NetWare 3.11 and 4.0, Microsoft LAN Manager,
- Windows For Workgroups, Windows NT, IBM LAN Server,
- AppleShare, HP-UX, SunOS, Solaris, and SCO Unix.
-
- (Sylvia Dennis/19940222/Press & Public Contact: Hewlett-
- Packard, 44-344-369222)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(TOR)(00012)
-
- Unitel Will Not Offer Long Distance In Alberta 02/22/94
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Unitel
- Communications Inc., has announced that it will not make long-
- distance telephone service generally available in the province of
- Alberta. The company, which competes in long-distance with
- regional telephone companies in eight provinces, said it cannot
- make money in Alberta because of the terms under which federal
- regulators would allow it to enter the market.
-
- Unitel will offer long-distance service to the Alberta offices of
- large organizations that use its long-distance services across
- the country, but will not serve local businesses or residential
- customers.
-
- "We can't pay for the privilege of offering service in a market,"
- Unitel spokeswoman Stephanie MacKendrick told Newsbytes.
-
- The issue is the amount Unitel has to pay to AGT Ltd., the
- company that provides local and long-distance telephone service
- in Alberta, and to Edmonton Telephones, an independent phone
- company serving the city of Edmonton.
-
- The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission
- (CRTC) set contributions that Unitel must pay to each regional
- telephone company to help support local phone service. The
- payments are higher in Alberta than in other provinces, and
- higher again in Edmonton because Unitel would have to pay
- Edmonton Telephones as well as AGT for access to the city.
-
- The CRTC's figures were based on data provided by AGT on the
- cost of providing local and long-distance service in the province.
- Unitel maintains AGT has exaggerated the cost of local service
- and understated its long-distance costs. Unitel officials said
- AGT's figures put its long-distance costs at less than half those
- of major US carriers such as AT&T, MCI, and Sprint, while its
- local service is the least cost-efficient in North America.
-
- AGT has said in the past that its local-service costs are high
- because of the large number of customers it serves in remote
- rural areas. Company spokesman Ron Liepert told Newsbytes he
- had no comment on Unitel's allegations other than to say that the
- CRTC's review of AGT's cost claims was "rigorous and exhaustive."
-
- (Grant Buckler/19940222/Press Contacts: Carleen Carroll, Unitel,
- 416-345-2114; Ken Stewart, Unitel, 416-345-2094; Ron Liepert,
- AGT, 403-498-7322)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00013)
-
- Canadian Product Launch Update 02/22/94
- TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- This regular
- feature, appearing every Monday or Tuesday, provides further
- details for the Canadian market on announcements by international
- companies that Newsbytes has already covered. This week: Wang's
- Open/workflow.
-
- Wang Canada Ltd., of Toronto, introduced Open/workflow work
- management software (Newsbytes, Feb. 9). Open/workflow for IBM
- AIX servers will begin shipping by the end of February, company
- officials said. Support for HP-UX is scheduled to arrive in
- March. Server prices begin at C$10,500, including the graphical
- builder, integration and reporting tools, and sample reports and
- procedures. Open/workflow clients start at C$695, with volume
- discounts.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19940222/Press Contact: Gay Lynne Potts, Wang,
- 416-868-5227)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00014)
-
- Interleaf Offers Intellecte Document Management 02/22/94
- WALTHAM, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Interleaf
- Inc., has announced Intellecte, an integrated document management
- application, at the Documentation '94 trade show in Los Angeles.
-
- Due to be available worldwide in June, Intellecte is a
- combination of software and services to create customized
- document management systems for large organizations. Likely
- buyers of the package would include businesses where documents
- are critical to operations, such as financial institutions or
- manufacturers of complex equipment, a spokeswoman for the
- company told Newsbytes.
-
- The application combines automated workflow and configuration
- management, electronic document viewing and distribution, and
- automated document assembly.
-
- Intellecte is a client/server application that organizes key
- documents into a document repository and lets end users on
- Microsoft Windows, Macintosh, or Unix computers use full-text
- searches and hypertext links to find the documents they need.
- Documents can be edited and output to printers. The system also
- automates the workflow by which the document repository is kept
- up to date.
-
- Interleaf said it will implement Intellecte in each client
- organization over a 12-week period, in three phases. First,
- Interleaf staff will work with a customer team to analyze and
- organize documents and load them into a repository. Second, the
- team will build a graphical front end for access to repository,
- supporting 100 users or more. Third, the team will evaluate and
- streamline the document creation process.
-
- The complete application, including software, training, on-site
- services, and a one-year support contract, will cost $175,000.
- The document assembly component costs extra.
-
- Interleaf said it plans to begin beta testing Intellecte on Unix
- servers from several vendors, including Hewlett-Packard Co., IBM,
- and Sun Microsystems Inc., in March. Client software for Unix
- Motif, the Macintosh, and Microsoft Windows is also to begin beta
- testing in March. First customer shipments of English-language
- software are due in June, worldwide, with other languages to
- follow soon after, the spokeswoman said.
-
- (Grant Buckler/19940222/Press Contact: Carol McGarry, Schwartz
- Communications for Interleaf, 617-431-0770)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00015)
-
- ****Dell Re-enters Portable PC Market 02/22/94
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Nine months after it
- decided it pulled out of the portable PC market, Dell Computer
- Corporation has announced its re-entry into the fray.
-
- Dell has announced its Latitude line of 486-based 25 and 33
- megahertz portable computers which will feature wired and wireless
- communications capabilities. The company says the computers being
- announced now are the first step of its re-entry into the highly
- competitive portables market. Future Dell offerings are expected to
- include high-end portable computers and a line of subnotebook
- systems.
-
- Depending on the configuration, the five Latitude units weigh from
- 5.75 to 6.4 pounds. All use Intel's 486SX chip and have power
- management features to extend the life of the nickel metal
- hydride battery between charges. Dell says normal battery
- life is two to four hours. Available displays include monochrome,
- dual-scan STN (SuperTwist Nematic) color, and active-matrix TFT
- (thin film transistor) color.
-
- Other features include a trackball mounted in the keyboard, hard
- drives with capacities up to 260 megabytes (MB), and support for
- PCMCIA (Personal Computer memory Card International Association)
- Type II and Type III peripheral cards (which can be changed
- while the system is running). Dell will install its Windows-based
- CommCentral software that includes access software for the on-line
- subscription service America Online where users can exchange mail,
- upload and download files, and find information on a myriad of
- topics.
-
- Latitude will also have CommWorks for Windows, a communications
- program from Traveling Software that allows the user to connect to
- any on-line service or communicate with any other suitably equipped
- computer. Commworks for Windows includes fax send/receive
- capability, remote control of a distant computer, Laplink V for
- inter-computer file transfer, and a program to notify the user when
- a fax or electronic mail arrives.
-
- Perhaps most interesting of the installed software is RadioMail, a
- two-way wireless messaging service that allows the on-the-go PC
- user to send and receive electronic mail without having to connect
- the PC to a phone line. The America Online and RadioMail packages
- both come with one-month free trial periods.
-
- If you purchase a Latitude and want to use the various
- communications programs included you will have to purchase a
- modem, since that necessary communications device is not a part
- of the standard Latitude configuration. Dell offers factory-installed
- modems at prices ranging from $199 to $799. Modems are included
- in the various upgrade packages being offered.
-
- Dell is offering several hardware/software configurations. The "Must
- Have" package includes: a 2,400/9,600 data/fax modem; an extra
- battery; Microsoft Works, a software collection that includes word
- processing, database, spreadsheet and charting; Lotus Organizer,
- and Intuit's Quicken financial management software.
-
- The "Mobile Sales Manager" pack includes ACT! Contact Manager,
- Microsoft Powerpoint presentation software, and Microsoft Works.
- You also get a 2,400/9,600 data/fax modem and a attache-style
- carrying case. Options for this package include Microsoft Office
- (Powerpoint, Microsoft Word, Access database software, and a
- Microsoft Mail license) and an extra four megabytes of system
- memory, or you can choose a higher speed (14,400) fax modem and
- an extra battery.
-
- The "Mobile PowerPack" includes the faster fax modem, the 4MB
- memory upgrade, an extra battery, and the carrying case. If you
- choose the "Desktop Solution" you get a color monitor, a desktop-PC
- style keyboard and a mouse so you can use your Latitude as the basis
- for a desktop system.
-
- Latitude buyers get around-the-clock toll-free hardware and
- software support, 45 days of free access to Dell's "Getting Started"
- help line and one year of return-to-factory, rapid response service
- with Dell paying for the round-trip overnight shipment.
-
- Dell spokesperson Roger Rydell told Newsbytes Latitude pricing
- starts at $1,699, which includes 4MB of memory, a 120MB hard disk,
- one 3.5-inch high-density floppy drive, one serial port, one enhanced
- parallel port, one PS/2 external keyboard port, a mouse port, an
- external VGA monitor port, and a 9.5 inch monochrome display. All
- Latitude systems come with Windows 3.1 and MS-DOS 6.2
- pre-installed.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19940222/Press Contact: Roger Rydell, Dell
- Computer Corp., 512-728-4100)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(DEN)(00016)
-
- Ohio Weather Info, Book Borrowing Goes Computerized 02/22/94
- COLUMBUS, OHIO, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Motorists and book
- borrowers in Ohio are getting some help from computers, according
- to a recent announcement by state officials.
-
- The Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) says by next winter a
- network of computerized roadside weather stations will help them
- make better use of snow plow crews in northwest Ohio.
-
- The 35 sensing stations to be installed in an eight-county area will
- report temperature and wind data and perform a radar sweep to
- check for falling precipitation. Special sensors embedded in the
- roadway will report conditions such as snow or ice on the road as
- well as the presence of de-icing chemicals.
-
- The unmanned stations will be connected to a master computer at
- ODOT District 2 headquarters in Bowling Green. District Director
- James McCarty says 80 percent of the $2 million cost for the system
- will be paid by a federal grant. Other states using similar systems
- have reportedly recouped the cost of the system within two to three
- years through savings from more effective use of snow and ice
- removal crews.
-
- The state has also unveiled a statewide on-line computer borrowing
- system as part of its new statewide library system, OhioLINK. The
- system allows students at Ohio university and colleges to
- electronically borrow from other state educational institution's
- libraries. By logging into the system from any computer you can
- search the statewide catalog, make a request, and have the item
- delivered at the requestor's campus within a few days.
-
- Officials say the OhioLINK system has been in development since
- 1991 and now contains the library records of 10 state universities
- and colleges. By the end of 1995 the catalog will include the
- libraries of 17 educational institutions, the State Library of Ohio,
- and Ohio's 23 community and technical colleges. It is expected to
- eventually contain more than 20 million items.
-
- In addition to the on-line statewide catalog, OhioLINK offers
- newspaper, magazine and journal databases, medical databases, and
- access to a large portion of the information services available on
- Internet. Future plans call for development of scholar's workstations,
- access to full-text books and articles, and real-time delivery of
- full-text articles.
-
- (Jim Mallory/19940222)
-
-
- (NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00017)
-
- Networks Expo - Cross-Server License Sharing From Saber 02/22/94
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- At Networks
- Expo, Saber unveiled Saber Enterprise Application Manager (SEAM),
- a product billed as the first to allow real-time license sharing
- across multiple servers.
-
- Also at the show in Boston, Saber launched a new bi-monthly
- technical publication for LAN administrators called "Saber LAN
- Journal," along with a new, three-part distribution strategy for
- 1994 that includes marketing Saber's network management
- software in major retail stores.
-
- At an interview in the Saber booth, Liz Bross, sales support
- manager, said that SEAM, a new NetWare Loadable Module (NLM)
- add-on to Saber LAN (local area network) Workstation, is aimed at
- reducing organizations' software costs by permitting a software
- license to be employed by PC users throughout the enterprise.
-
- In addition to letting users of DOS- and Windows-based applications
- share software licenses across servers, SEAM provides software
- metering across multiple servers and on local hard drives, she
- added. The new tool permits the network manager to assign multiple
- license security levels, from a "completely secure" mode to "audit
- only."
-
- In a demo, Newsbytes saw how, if all copies of an application are
- in use, users denied access to the application for this reason are
- first placed in a queue, and then notified when the application
- becomes available.
-
- If a user then tries to access the application without having
- loaded the metering terminate-and-stay-resident (TSR) utility that
- comes with SEAM, the user will be automatically logged off, Bross
- explained. SEAM will also close a metered application if a user
- "locks up" or turns off the machine without first existing the
- application.
-
- In addition to the TSR program, SEAM comes with Windows VXD
- files. The new utility requires Saber LAN Workstation 2.0, and is
- reportedly fully compatible with the metering in that product.
- NetWare 3.x or 4.x and DOS 3.1 or higher are also required.
- Windows 3.1 is needed for Windows clients. The product is
- scheduled to ship this month.
-
- The new "Saber LAN Journal" provides "real-word solutions" to
- problems encountered in designing, maintaining or managing a
- network, and also explains methods for integrating third-party
- products such as Novell's NetWare Management System (NMS) and
- Microsoft Excel, the company said.
-
- Saber's new distribution plans call for a "more visible" retail
- presence, in addition to expanded relationships with corporate
- resellers and a revised program for systems integrators.
-
- Although networking products are not commonly sold in retail
- stores, Saber is working aggressively to change that, according to
- officials. Saber LAN Workstation can now be purchased off-the-
- shelf at both Computer City and Fry Electronics, and Saber is also
- working with CompUSA to establish a retail presence in that store
- chain.
-
- In addition, ASAP Software recently joined a list of corporate
- resellers for Saber that already included Egghead, Corporate
- Software, 800 Software, Software Spectrum, and SoftMart.
-
- Saber has also established the Saber Solution Provider program,
- which supplies sales and technical training, marketing services,
- technical support, and "priority access" to Saber's system
- engineers and sales personnel for resellers who provide high levels
- of network integration.
-
- Saber Software Systems is based in Dallas, TX and London, UK, and
- distributes its products worldwide. The products have earned such
- awards as the Infoworld Buyers Assurance Seal, LAN Times Reader's
- Choice, and PC Week Labs' Top Products of '92.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19940222/Reader Contact: Press Contact: Laura
- Langendorf, Saber Software Corporation, 214-361-8086; Reader
- Contact: Saber Software Corporation, 800-338-8754 in US,
- 9344-30470 in UK)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00018)
-
- Networks Expo - Expert "Travel Tips" For Internet 02/22/94
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- With more
- than three million users today and over one million connected
- networks, the Internet is getting bigger all the time, observed
- John Krick, senior analyst for Datapro, at the start of a talk called
- "Driver Training on the Information Superhighway" at Networks Expo.
-
- Over the next hour or so, Krick gave some of these users Internet
- "travel tips" ranging from basic facts on addressing and types of
- connections to explanations of Internet-related concepts like
- "Archie," "Veronica," "Mosaic," and "News Groups."
-
- The major Internet applications, he explained, include File
- Transfer Protocol (FTP), Gopher, Telnet, Network News (USENET),
- World Wide Web, and Wide Area Information Service (WAIS).
-
- Users can send and receive Internet electronic-mail via commercial
- services such as CompuServe, America OnLine, Genie and MCI Mail,
- desktop applications such as POPmail, or connection of a LAN
- e-mail system via a gateway, he added.
-
- Internet addressing follows this scheme: user@domain.organization.
- Internet domain types include: commercial organizations (.com);
- educational institutions (.edu); government agencies (.gov);
- military sites (.mil); nonprofit organizations (.org); and network
- providers.
-
- Services beyond e-mail to the Internet can be obtained through any
- of three types of connections: on-line dialup services, dialup via
- Internet Protocol (IP) software installed on the desktop, or
- attachment through a LAN (local area network).
-
- Dialup Internet service providers are not all the same, Crick told
- the group. Some US providers supply service to users throughout the
- country, and others only to a particular region. Advanced Networks
- and Services, for example, is a national Internet provider.
-
- Further, some providers supply only limited Internet services,
- such as bulletin boards, while others, situated on the Internet
- "backbone," offer a much wider range of Internet access. Fees
- tend to vary accordingly.
-
- Providers offering both kinds of services can be found at both
- the national and regional levels. For instance, Global Enterprise
- Services Inc., a regional service based in Princeton, NJ, is a
- backbone service. Public Access Networks Corp., a "regional" in
- New York City, concentrates on local bulletin boards, he said.
-
- FTP, another major Internet application, is "simple to learn and
- use," according to Crick. FTP provides access to software,
- Internet documentation, and more from thousands of FTP servers
- worldwide, he added. WUarchive, for example, a widely used FTP
- server at Washington University in St. Louis, offers free access to
- thousands of archived software packages, for popular operating
- systems that include DOS, Windows, Macintosh, and Unix.
-
- The software on the Wuarchive server ranges from high quality
- word processors, spreadsheets and databases to esoteric offerings
- like geneology, he said. Wuarchive "mirrors" Simtel20.mil, a
- service of the US military that keeps copies of software uploaded
- on to on-line services, he advised. Wuarchive "is a busy place, and
- hard to get on to during business hours," he added. The Internet
- address for Wuarchive is wuarchive.wustl.edu.
-
- Another popular FTP server is the University of Minnesota's
- BoomBox, birthplace of both POPmail and Gopher. A third, located
- at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA),
- provides simple FTP and Telnet implementations for Pcs, and is
- also the home of Mosaic, an Internet application with multimedia
- functionality. Boombox can be addressed at boombox.micro.umn.edu.
- The address for the NCSA server is ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu.
-
- Archie, the search tool for FTP, is "a corruption of the word
- `archive,'" said Crick. Archie allows "Unix regular expressions,"
- but has a generally "crude" user interface, and does not permit
- searches with logical connectives such as "and" or "but."
-
- "There are only about 20 Archie servers, six of them in North
- America. That isn't enough. So I wouldn't recommend that you call
- (Archie) during business hours," cautioned the Datapro analyst.
-
- Newsbytes notes that users can also employ commercial services
- such as CompuServe, America OnLine, Genie or MCI Mail, as well as
- a wide range of other outside e-mail, to carry out Internet
- searches, and to request files to be sent from servers on the
- Internet.
-
- For example, by sending e-mail to archie@archie.sura.net, and
- typing the word "help" in the body of the message, you can receive
- instructions for performing an Archie search by e-mail. By sending
- e-mail to netlib@uunet.uu.net, and putting "send index" in the
- body, you can receive an index of software available through
- e-mail.
-
- Also during his talk, Crick explained that Gopher, a menu-driven
- interface to the Internet, has been used mostly by universities so
- far, but is now spreading into the commercial sector.
-
- Gopher is simple enough to be used not just by the "non-Internet
- literate," but by the "non-computer literate," he added. The
- application can deliver "most" kinds of Internet services,
- including text files by mail, FTP via Gopher, and Telnet to Archie,
- or to the NetFind, Whois, or X.500 directory services.
-
- Gopher also has a search tool, Veronica, jokingly dubbed "Archie's
- girlfriend" by Crick. Veronica allows for two types of services --
- by title, and by text. Like Archie, though, she is light on servers,
- and hard to access during business hours.
-
- Telnet provides basic terminal emulation and remote control of
- Unix applications, he asserted. NetFind, Whois, and X.500 provide
- access to portions of the Internet, and can be accessed by Telnet
- as well as by Gopher. "None of these directory services are
- dependable, though, and none are comprehensive. There is not, as
- yet, an overall directory to everyone on the Internet," he said.
-
- NetWork News, also known as USENET News, is a large collection of
- bulletin boards (bbs), broken down into seven "news groups": BIZ
- (business); REC (hobbies); SCI (science); SOC (social issues); K12
- (primary and secondary education); ALT; and COMP.
-
- BIZ bulletin boards are still relatively few, according to Krick.
- But COMP -- a category that concerns computer hardware, software,
- communications, and the like -- boasts more than 500 different
- BBSes, including comp,graphics.animation, comp,lang.c++,
- comp.protocols.tcp-ip, comp.sys.novell, comp.dcom.lans.ethernet,
- and comp.os.ms-windows.programmer.tools.
-
- ALT is an "alternative" category containing BBSes on everything
- from unidentified flying objects (UFOs) to mythical characters
- known as "devilbunnies," he said.
-
- When accessing an Internet news group, "Get the FAQs (Frequently
- Asked Questions) first," Crick recommended. Available for most
- Network News BBSes although sometimes difficult to find, "the
- FAQs" provides ready-made answers to the most frequently raised
- inquiries about the BBS. "Members of the BBS might not want to be
- bothered with responding to questions from new users like 'What
- is an Ethernet?'" he pointed out.
-
- WAIS, another Internet application, offers subject-specific source
- databases with a keyword search that is "powerful but complex,"
- according to Crick.
-
- World Wide Web, a hypertext application, provides browser software
- designed to access all Internet functionality, including Mosaic for
- both PCs and the Mac, and two other multimedia-capable
- services -- Cello for the PC and Samba for the Mac.
-
- Several DOS-based software packages for accessing the Internet are
- available from Boombox, said Crick, including POPmail, a single-
- user mail program, and the "easy to use" PC Gopher III. SLIPdial,
- a package incorporating NCSA Telnet and FTP as well as POPMail
- and PC Gopher III, is available through the NCSA server as well as
- Boombox.
-
- Also downloadable off the Internet is KA9Q, a DOS-based package
- with a command-line interface that contains News, Telnet and FTP,
- he added. Trumpet, a news reader developed at the University of
- Tasmania, is available for both DOS and Windows from
- ftp.utas.edu.au.
-
- Other Windows-based access packages that can be found on the
- Internet include NCSA Mosaic, HGopher, Wais Manager 3.0, USGS
- (United States Geological Survey) WinWais 2.3, EWAIS, and Gopher
- Book 1.1, a Gopher package with a book-inspired graphical user
- interface (GUI).
-
- Users can also opt to purchase commercial Internet packages such as
- FTP Software's PC/TCP (Transmission Control Protocol), Intercon's
- TCP/Connect II, and Spry Software's Air for Windows.
-
- Crick's "required reading list" for Internet users includes Brendan
- Kehoe's "Zen and the Art of the Internet," Ed Krol's "The Whole
- Internet Catalog," Susan Estrada's "short and concise" guidebook
- "Connecting to the Internet," Harley Hahn and Rick Stout's "The
- Internet - Complete Reference," and "Doing Business on the
- Internet," by Mary Cronin of Boston College. Noted Crick: "I
- can't recommend Cronin's book highly enough."
-
- Other books getting the nod from Crick are Edward T.L. Hardie and
- Vivans News' "Internet Mailing Lists"; Eric Brown's "The Internet
- Directory"; John S. Quarterman's "The Matrix," and "!%@:: A
- Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing & Networks," by Donnalyn
- Frey and Rick Adams.
-
- For those who like to do their reading on-line, there is "The
- Desktop Internet Reference," a Microsoft Windows help file,
- available from ftp.uwp.edu, providing 18,000 pages of Internet
- documentation, including "Zen and the Art of the Internet,"
- "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet," and much more.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19940222/Reader Contact: John Crick, Datapro,
- 800-328-8776; Press Contact: Annie Scully or Mark Haviland, The
- Blenheim Group, 800-829-3976)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(BOS)(00019)
-
- Networks Expo - Frye Intros SUDS WAND, Three Upgrades 02/22/94
- BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- At Networks
- Expo, Frye Computer Systems (FCS) released Software Update and
- Distribution System Wide Area Network Distribution (SUDS WAND)
- Module 1.0, a product designed to automatically route software
- updates throughout a large Novell local area network (LAN) or wide
- area network (WAN).
-
- The company also announced shipment of upgrades of three other
- products: the NetWare Management troubleshooting and diagnostics
- tool; SUDS utility for automated software distribution; and NetWare
- Early Warning System (EWS) software for monitoring network
- servers.
-
- In Version 2.0, the NetWare Management tool is enhanced with new
- features for centralized administration and management of NetWare
- LANs, including the ability to edit and update NetWare functions
- and clone user configurations from a central management console,
- according to Russell H. Frye, president of Boston-based FCS.
-
- "Network management can be extremely difficult (if) you have to
- navigate through various menus and applications to monitor and
- change a user or server configuration," said Frye.
-
- SUDS, a tool for automated software distribution, has been
- embellished in Version 1.5 with new distribution lists, as well as
- new "Pull" features for selective display of procedures pertinent
- to the user's network group or distribution list.
-
- In Version 1.51, NetWare EWS is able to accept alerts from SUDS as
- well as LAN Directory (LAND), a utility from FCS for automated
- hardware and software inventory.
-
- The new SUDS WAND is an add-on tool for SUDS 1.5 or later. The
- tool provides "fan out," distribution routing, destination lists,
- reporting, and "bundle inspection security" features that are aimed
- at simplifying software distribution for large LANs and WANs,
- according to Frye.
-
- "With the release of SUDS WAND, we have responded to our
- customers' needs once again, as the expansion of networks into
- WANs plays an increasingly important role in the life of a
- network administrator," he noted.
-
- The "fan out" feature in the new SUDS WAND is meant to permit
- distribution of SUDS procedures across a LAN or WAN through
- distribution or destination lists. SUDS procedures are made up of
- two elements: Criteria, in which the user decides which PCs and/or
- file service directories are going to be automatically updated; and
- Actions, where the user determines what steps to be taken
- automatically at the selected PC or file server directories.
-
- The distribution routing capability lets the SUDS WAND user create
- a path to destination servers within the network. Bundles are then
- dropped off for distribution to servers and workstations via local
- copies of SUDS. Routes are initialized with username and password,
- allowing configuration files for each server along the route to
- then be updated with the information needed to access the next
- destination in the route.
-
- The destination lists in SUDS WAND let users define multiple
- destination servers as "targets" along a destination list. Once
- distribution routes have been defined, destination lists may be
- created to define destination servers. These lists may be reused
- for other distributions.
-
- "Bundle inspection security" is an option that, if selected, will
- let the network administrator at each destination server inspect
- a received bundle before making it active for "fan out." The
- reporting feature in SUDS WAND is for maintained centralized
- log files of failed and completed procedures.
-
- New features in NetWare Management 2.0 include the ability for
- centralized editing and updates of NetWare's Syscon, Pconsole,
- Fconsole, Printcon, Printdef, Volinfo, and Filer information.
-
- The upgrade to Netware Management also adds to ability to clone
- user configuration information across multiple servers, create new
- users or groups, create or edit trustee assignments, rights and
- printer configurations for each network user; and create, edit
- and/or delete PRINTDEF forms and devices, print queues and print
- queue jobs.
-
- Users can also add realtime status for print server queues, file
- servers, and notification screens. Other new features in Version
- 2.0 include file/directory information, enhanced help screens, and
- the ability to launch any NetWare utility directly from NetWare
- Management, and send any report to Netware Message Handling
- Service (MHS) or to the queue of any attached file server.
-
- In SUDS 1.5, the new distribution lists are designed to save time
- for network managers by allowing reuse as often as needed. The
- administrator can use "flexible criteria searches" to pick and
- choose users for lists to be employed in executing SUDS procedures.
-
- The new "Pull" features, which are meant to complement the "Push"
- procedures which were previously available, give the user a menu
- of procedures, specific to the user's network group or distribution
- list, that can then be selected and run. Specific procedures can
- also be invoked from the command line. Users can employ their
- menus or batch files to run any individual procedure.
-
- A new "procedure retry" allows a retry count to be maintained for
- each user who has been given the right to defer a particular
- procedure. If the user cancels a procedure, the retry count is
- decremented, although the procedure remains active. There is also
- a "force execution" switch that requires the procedure to be run
- after the specified retry count has been reached.
-
- Other improvements in SUDS 1.5 include the ability to set up a
- "master procedure" with any number of sub-procedures for managing
- simple or complex operations, as well as added detail on the
- workstation maintenance screen regarding procedures that have
- been run and their status.
-
- The new alerting capabilities in NetWare EWS 1.51 allow the server
- monitoring utility to report on the status of procedure execution
- in SUDS, and also to provide notification for change tracking
- features in LAND. Users can be alerted through any of the many
- notification options in EWS, including pager and electronic-mail.
-
- Additional utilities from FCS include the NetWare Console
- Commander (NCC), for automatic scheduling of console commands,
- and Node Tracker, for node management and point-to-point
- diagnostics.
-
- FCS claims to have been the first to implement "functionally
- integrated network management processes" at the file server level,
- with the introduction of its Automated Network Management (ANM)
- technology back in 1989.
-
- Officials added that the company was also the first to
- introduce the following technologies: automated response
- capabilities for PC LAN management (1989); e-mail-, fax-, alpha
- pager-, and voice-enabled PC LAN management (1989-1990); "full
- support" for Novell NetWare 3.x critical statistics (1990); and
- "simplified, automated software updating and distribution" (1992).
-
- FCS is a three-time winner of LAN Magazine's "Product of the Year"
- award, twice for NetWare Management and once for SUDS. In 1994,
- the company has received a Reader's Choice prize from LAN Times for
- "Best Network Management Utilities," and its SUDS product has been
- named to Network World's Short List. Other honors include Editor's
- Choice awards from PC Magazine for the Frye Utilities in 1993, and
- from NetWare Solutions for the company's LAND product in 1992.
-
- The new SUDS WAND Module 1.0 is priced at $1,495. NetWare
- Management 2.0 and NetWare 1.51 are each priced at $495. Current
- users of NetWare Management can upgrade for $200 per server
- license. SUDS 1.5 is priced at $995 for the first 50 computers
- and $895 for each additional 100 computers.
-
- (Jacqueline Emigh/19940222/Reader Contact: Frye Computer
- Systems, 617-451-5400; Press Contacts: David Seuss, FCS,
- 617-451-5400; Dom Cilea, Set Marketing On, 212-989-3131)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(ATL)(00020)
-
- ****Home Schooling Under Threat By Govt Title I Funding? 02/22/94
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- A firestorm over
- home schooling has imperiled the re-authorization of Title I,
- the primary vehicle through which schools buy computers and
- software. The re-authorization is known as H.R. 6.
-
- Title I, sometimes called Chapter I, is a 30-year old piece of
- the Elementary and Secondary Education Act which sends $6 billion
- a year in federal aid to schools, aimed at the disadvantaged. The
- House Education and Labor Committee passed the bill recently. It
- will go to the Rules Committee February 23, which will decide
- whether amendments can be offered when it is considered by the
- full House February 24, in a session which will be televised on
- the C-Span cable network.
-
- The committee made a few changes to the formulae by which funds
- are distributed, aimed at targeting new funds on poor districts.
- But some columnists, echoing the Clinton Administration,
- criticized those changes as not going far enough, noting that 93
- percent of the nation's school districts now get Title I funds.
- Other Administration suggestions, including an end to segregation
- of Title I students from the rest of their classes, were taken by
- the committee. That move could also help move school-owned
- computers out of "computer labs" and into regular classrooms,
- where many reform advocates feel they would do more good.
-
- The re-authorization also requires that schools develop a
- "school-parent compact" outlining how responsibility for improved
- school performance will be shared by students, parents, and
- teachers, and requiring such things as annual parent-teacher
- conferences.
-
- But a small amendment by Rep. George Miller, a California
- Democrat, which he says was aimed at making sure all public
- school teachers are qualified in their subject areas, has become
- the subject of great debate. Rep. Dick Armey, a Texas Republican,
- charged that the amendment was an attack on home schooling,
- essentially requiring that parents be state-certified teachers.
-
- Many home-schoolers must file papers with local school boards to
- keep their kids at home. Armey offered an amendment to exempt
- home and private schooling from the bill's training provisions,
- but that was voted down on a party-line vote. Since then, the
- National Center for Home Education, the Family Council Action
- Committee and other conservative groups have asked members to
- write, call and fax the Congress against the plan.
-
- On February 18, Miller put a message on his office phones noting
- that he supports home schooling, and will support changes in the
- bill on the House floor to that effect. That message was still on
- when Newsbytes called February 22.
-
- Miller's press secretary, Danny Weiss, admitted to newsbytes that,
- "It's tough when everyone's calling" and calling volume is "fairly
- heavy. There are a lot of people with strong concerns." But he added
- that many callers don't want any federal role in public education, a
- view which was rejected 30 years ago and will continue to be
- rejected.
-
- Weiss added that his boss will support an "open rule" allowing
- any number of amendments to be offered to the bill when it comes
- up before the full House, but Miller is not a member of the
- Rules Committee which will make that decision.
-
- On February 21 the Family Research Council, headed by former
- undersecretary of education Gary Bauer, issued a press release
- claiming the bill "threatens federal control of private, religious
- and home schools in addition to advocating programs that will
- further decay public education."
-
- Newsbytes discussed those concerns with Bauer spokesman Kristi
- Hamrick, who said the concerns go beyond the home schooling
- controversy. She claimed the bill will speed entry of school-based
- clinics, which dispense condoms, into high schools and middle
- schools.
-
- She also attacked the idea of targeting federal funds on poor
- districts. "The most money spent per child is in the District of
- Columbia," where test results are very poor, she told Newsbytes.
- "We're talking about the federal government dictating who can
- teach and how to do it." She said her group remains convinced the
- present bill is an attack on home schooling and private religious
- schooling, and is urging its members to oppose its passage.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19940222/Press Contact: Kristi Stone Hamrick,
- Family Research Council, 202-393-2100; Rep. George Miller, 202-
- 224-3121)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(DEN)(00021)
-
- BIS Predicts Digital Camera Market To Explode 02/22/94
- NORWELL, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- A research
- firm which recently completed a survey on electronic photography,
- predicts that the market for digital cameras will jump more than
- 600 percent in the next four years.
-
- BIS Strategic Relations says it expects nearly 600,000 digital
- cameras will be sold by 1998. That is a 600 percent increase over
- the approximately 97,000 units expected to be sold this year. BIS
- says that is an annual growth rate of 70 percent.
-
- Digital cameras store their captured images electronically. The
- images can then downloaded to a personal computer for viewing,
- editing and printing.
-
- BIS Senior Analyst Susan Moyse says that while the concept sounds
- good, the cameras still have limitations to overcome. "Digital
- cameras are currently unable to capture the high level of detail
- that can be obtained with film. However, digital cameras can meet
- the needs of many businesses and offer significant advantages when
- processing large volumes of images or when immediate results are
- required."
-
- Toshiba introduced a $12,000 digital camera in 1990, but said it
- would not export the device. A short time later Fuji introduced its
- offering, which included a digital image professor and an image
- transmitter, had a zoom lens, and could take three pictures per
- minute. That system was priced at about the same price as the
- Toshiba.
-
- Digital cameras are currently available for press use in the form of
- an Eastman Kodak attachment to a Nikon F3 or F4 camera at about
- $20,000, and by several companies in a point-and-shoot format.
- Newspaper and magazine photographers began using digital cameras
- to capture and transmit images at the 1992 Winter Olympics. The
- technique was also used in the Persian Gulf war. A digital back is
- also available for Hasselblad cameras.
-
- Consumer-type digital cameras have been introduced by several
- companies, and sell for around $800. In late 1993 a California
- company announced it is developing a digital camera that captures
- its images on a PCMCIA (Personal Computer Memory Card
- International Association) card. The user then removes the card from
- the camera and inserts it in the PCMCIA slot of a personal computer.
- Personal Computer Cameras Inc., says it expects its S-400 color
- digital camera to be in retail stores in time for Christmas this
- year at a price under $1,000.
-
- Apple Computer recently announced its entry in the digital
- camera market -- the QuickTake 100. A color digital camera,
- Quicktake is scheduled to be available for Apple Macintosh
- computers in late March priced at $749. The Windows version is
- scheduled for release in June.
-
- Moyse told Newsbytes BIS expects the street price of the low-end
- digital cameras to come down to the $400 level while the
- functionality and image quality improves. She thinks they will be
- popular for such uses as images in product catalogs and pictures in
- company newsletters. "A lot of companies today are doing a lot of
- their own production work in house. These (cameras) may give them
- some advantages they haven't had before. There seems to be a big
- trend towards communicating with images in the business world."
-
- (Jim Mallory/19940222/Press Contact: Susan Moyse, BIS Strategic
- Decisions, 617-982-9500)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(DEN)(00022)
-
- Texans Get "Govt Services" Computerized Kiosks 02/22/94
- AUSTIN, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Texas says it will
- install touchscreen multimedia kiosks across the state offering
- Texans such government services as employment opportunities,
- unemployment benefits,worker retraining, and child labor laws.
-
- Called Info/Texas, the public access interactive multimedia kiosks
- use full-motion video, spanish and English audio text, and graphics
- to provide information and services available through the Texas
- Employment Commission. Texas Governor Ann Richards says the
- service will help the state deliver necessary information in a
- simpler, more efficient, and more cost-effective manner.
-
- Texas is the seventh state to install the kiosks developed by
- Santa Monica, California-based North Communications. The service
- is expected to eliminate the standing in line and filling out what
- are often confusing forms to receive state benefits. It will also
- free government workers from responding to the same question
- several hundred times each day.
-
- North Communications President Michael North says interactive
- multimedia kiosks will revolutionize the way government delivers
- services in the same way ATMs (automatic teller machines)
- revolutionized banking. The company has installed its devices in the
- Los Angeles area to provide information about available disaster
- relief for the earthquake victims in that area.
-
- Texas officials say other state agencies may choose to use the
- network to distribute their information and services. Citizens may
- be able to pay parking tickets, register vehicles, order duplicate
- birth certificates, and renew drivers licenses.
-
- At present the system only offers information about the various
- TEC services, but officials say they hope to eventually allow job
- seekers to apply for jobs, file unemployment claims, and allow
- employers to review company tax records and submit job opening
- listings. TEC Chairman Eddie Cavazos calls the network of kiosks
- "the single face to government the public has been waiting for."
-
- (Jim Mallory/19940222/Press Contact: Whit Clay, Capitoline/MS&L
- for North Communications, 202-467-3900)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(LAX)(00023)
-
- Compton's Cuts Price Of 1994 Encyclopedia By 62% 02/22/94
- CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Compton's
- has cut the retail price of the 1994 Compton's Interactive
- Encyclopedia for both Microsoft Windows and the Macintosh
- platforms by 62 percent to $149.95. This price was previously
- available to those upgrading from earlier versions or switching
- from other electronic encyclopedia products.
-
- The Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia is published on compact
- disc read-only memory (CD-ROM) and offers video clips as well as
- photographs and reference material. Compton's also boasts a user
- interface that allows the encyclopedia to be "open" several
- places at once so users can easily jump back and forth between
- references they have already located.
-
- For families with school-age children, a multimedia computer with
- an electronic encyclopedia product can often be obtained for the
- same amount of cash as an actual set of encyclopedias. The
- computer can then be used for other activities both educational
- and recreative as well. Compton's is involved in bundling deals
- with computer manufacturers for its encyclopedia product.
-
- Compton's also recently announced a deal with IBM to incorporate
- IBM's Continuous Speech Recognition so users with the appropriate
- computer hardware can "talk" to the encyclopedia.
-
- Specializing in CD-ROM titles, Carlsbad, California-based
- Compton's Newmedia was purchased last year by the Tribune
- Publishing Company. The most recent of its over 150 products
- include: "The Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous Cookbook,"
- "Jazz: A Multimedia History," "The Human Calculator," and "The
- Sporting News Pro Football Guide."
-
- The company became embroiled in a bitter controversy last fall
- when it announced at the world's largest computer trade show
- that it had a patent on multimedia. The Interactive Multimedia
- Association (IMA), populated by 280 companies and organizations
- including Apple Computer and IBM, was one of many in the computer
- industry who complained to the US Patent Office about issuing,
- "broad and non-technical patents." The Patent Office announced it
- would re-examine the Compton's patent and is currently involved
- in that process.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19940222/Press Contact: Pat Meier, Pat Meier
- Associates PR for Compton's Newmedia, 415-957-5999; Christina
- Germscheid, Compton's Newmedia, tel 619-929-2500, fax 619-929-
- 2555)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GOVT)(HKG)(00024)
-
- EDS Wins Contract From Hong Kong Immigration Dept 02/22/94
- CENTRAL, HONG KONG, 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- EDS Asia Pacific has
- been awarded a $HK14.4 million contract to implement a territory-
- wide data communications network to support the Hong Kong
- Immigration Department's new Information Systems Strategy.
-
- The contract is significant to EDS because it is the company's first
- major agreement with the Hong Kong Government. Under terms of
- the agreement, EDS will install a "comprehensive" data
- communications network linking the client server applications at
- each of Hong Kong's nine immigration control points, including the
- airport, Macau ferry and helicopter terminal, and all border
- crossings into China. EDS will also connect approximately 40
- immigration offices. The entire network will provide an
- infrastructure designed to speed immigration services.
-
- A new network management system, based on Hewlett-Packard's
- OpenView, will manage the new network and computing
- infrastructure. In addition, an FDDI (fiber distributed data
- interface) local area network (LAN) backbone will be installed on
- various floors throughout the Immigration Department's Wanchai
- headquarters, connecting the department's client server
- applications throughout the territory.
-
- "This tender was different from some others in that the bidders
- were required to propose an optimal network design for the
- integration of the proposed network equipment based on a set of
- workload and performance requirements," said Y.M. Cheung, chief
- systems manager with the Information Technology Services
- Department of the Hong Kong Government.
-
- Cheung continued: "The tender had to aim at maximum reliability,
- availability, security and fast response time to provide what the
- Immigration Department needed. There couldn't be a single
- point-of-failure in any of the proposed internetworking devices.
- EDS responded to this tender with a careful analysis of the
- requirements and proposed a solution including implementation
- services, training, and a disaster recovery plan."
-
- Stephen Wade, the EDS program manager responsible for integrating
- the department's computer systems, said, "As multiple vendors
- become involved in providing hardware and software, it will be our
- job to integrate all the different technologies seamlessly." Wade
- was transferred from EDS' Government Systems Group in Washington
- to prepare the bid and oversee the implementation of the system.
-
- (Keith Cameron/19940221/Press Contact: Terrence Shan,
- 852-867-9860, EDS)
-
-
- (CORRECTION)(TRENDS)(SFO2)(00025)
-
- Correction - Dataquest 1993 Semiconductor Survey 02/22/94
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- In a recent
- article by Newsbytes summarizing the results of Dataquest's
- 1993 Semiconductor Growth survey, there was an error in the
- reporting of the figures.
-
- Where it is stated, "As reported by the company, last year's 'entire
- industry growth' figure was 9.3%," the article should have read,
- "As reported by the company, 1992's 'entire industry growth' figure
- was 9.3%."
-
- Further into the report, where the article said, "Worldwide revenue
- from IC's, with the inclusion of IBM, was $35.1 million, with
- discrete devices $11.6 million, optical semiconductors $11.8
- million, and total semiconductor growth $31.2 million," the report
- should read, "Percentage of worldwide growth from IC's with the
- inclusion of IBM, was 35.1%, with discrete devices 11.6%, optical
- semiconductors 11.8% and total semiconductor growth 31.2%."
-
- Newsbytes regrets any problems this may have caused. An error
- occurred in the data transmission of the original report.
-
- (Patrick McKenna/19940222/Press Contact: Paul Wheaton,
- Dataquest Inc., 408-437-8312)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00026)
-
- ****3DO Multiplayer Cut To Under $500 02/22/94
- REDWOOD CITY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- 3DO
- announced its 3DO Interactive Multiplayer, manufactured by
- Matsushita under the Panasonic brand name, has been reduced $200,
- or 28 percent, from $699.95 to $499.95. In addition, a Video CD
- adapter for the playback of films on CD is expected this Spring.
-
- Of the new video cassette recorders (VCRs) of the 90's, 3DO's
- largest competitor is the Philips Compact Disc Interactive (CD-I)
- player. Philips cut the price of the CD-I player last year to the
- under $500, but an optional cartridge to make the unit able to
- play movies on CD brings the price up to $700. Philips also
- announced deals with major movie studios for movies in the CD-I
- format and now has a catalog of hit films available to consumers.
-
- The bane of the 3DO's existence has been its lack of titles,
- though company officials are quick to point out the number of
- developers and the number of titles is growing rapidly. The
- company claims there are about 200 titles in development or
- completed for the 3DO platform, 20 of which are currently
- available in retail outlets in the US. The latest titles,
- announced this month, include the space game "Total Eclipse,"
- a children's game show title "Twisted," and "John Madden Football."
-
- Trip Hawkins, 3DO's president and chief executive officer (CEO),
- claims the company has a jump on competitors who have announced,
- but not released "advanced CD" systems. In August, home game
- manufacturer Nintendo and workstation computer vendor Silicon
- Graphics, Incorporated (SGI) announced "Project Reality." The new
- game system, like the 3DO, is powered by a reduced instruction-
- set computing (RISC) chip and is aimed first at the video arcade
- market, then at the home user.
-
- The new lower 3DO pricing is due to manufacturing improvements
- and expansion of Panasonic's production scale. As an added
- incentive to move the units into the homes of consumers, 3DO
- said it is offering two shares of stock to Matsushita for each 3DO
- player sold before September 30, 1994.
-
- The stock deal in exchange for 3DO unit sales is not finalized,
- the company said, though it does plan to offer similar incentives
- to other of its hardware licensees. American Telephone &
- Telegraph (AT&T) and Sanyo, 3DO licensees, are expected to
- introduce 3DO hardware products this year. Matsushita is also
- releasing 3DO hardware in Japan on March 20 for a retail price of
- Yen54,800 in Japan, or about $500. This will make four 3DO-
- compatible hardware brands shipping on three continents this
- year, 3DO maintains.
-
- (Linda Rohrbough/19940222/Press Contact: Cindy McCaffrey, 3DO,
- tel 415-261-3236, fax 415-261-3231/PHOTO)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(ATL)(00027)
-
- Licensing Deals Continue In Educational Software 02/22/94
- NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- A gold rush is on
- as educational software producers seek to license characters for
- use on their products.
-
- In the last few weeks Davidson & Associates licensed the Fisher-
- Price name, K-III acquired the "Parents Magazine" line of products
- from Gruner + Jahr USA, and Electronic Arts' EA Kids signed a
- license for interactive rights to Ludwig Bemelman's book "Madeline."
-
- In the February 9 issue of "Inside Report on New Media," editor
- Tony Bove notes that such deals require a new way of doing
- business from software companies. Distribution will arise as the
- thorniest issue, he writes, since Hollywood studios control that
- absolutely. Silicon Valley is also learning how licensed
- characters are protected -- Berkeley Systems had to invoke the
- "prime directive" in its "Star Trek" screen saver and keep its
- "Disney" characters from selling products in order to win screen
- saver rights there. But the effort can be worth it -- Berkeley
- sold 200,000 of its Disney screen savers in six weeks, at about
- $30 retail each. Despite record growth last year, such numbers
- are unheard-of in the educational software market.
-
- You may also expect to see a lot more about software on your TV.
- Camelot Corp., said its Camelot Entertainment unit will begin
- selling its Professor Nozall educational titles using direct-
- response television ads. King Media will coordinate the ads, with
- West Telemarketing handling the calls. The TV campaign will start
- in March, Camelot said.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19940222/Press Contact: Danny Wettreich,
- Camelot, 214-733-3005; Gregory William Miller, for K-III, 212-
- 484-7404; Susan Dyssegard, Electronic Arts, 415-513-7307; Tony
- Bove, Inside Report, Customer Contact, fax 404-426-1044)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00028)
-
- Penn State Univ, AT&T Sign Telecom Deal 02/22/94
- STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Penn
- State University has signed a 10-year alliance with AT&T worth
- about $90 million.
-
- Under the agreement, the school's students, faculty and alumni
- will all be offered AT&T long distance calling plans at a set-
- rate, while Penn State's own distance education program will be
- expanded, providing another $17 million in revenue to AT&T. Penn
- State has 22 campuses around Pennsylvania. The college expects
- its students, faculty and alumni could save $20 billion from
- taking the AT&T calling plans over the 10-year life of the contract.
-
- Beyond selling services, AT&T also agreed to introduce and test
- new technologies at the campus, and create a new doctoral
- fellowship to encourage discovery of new applications for
- computing. Penn State has 68,000 students, 15,000 full-time
- and 13,000 part-time faculty and staff, along with hundreds of
- thousands of alumni.
-
- Robert Kavner, AT&T executive vice president and CEO of
- Multimedia Products and Services, said in a press statement
- the alliance redefines AT&T's relationship with academic
- institutions, adding he hopes it will be the first agreement
- among many.
-
- Penn State President Joab Thomas, a former president of the
- University of Alabama, said that the deal grew out of a report
- on the school's information infrastructure which recommended
- such strategic alliances, along with new funds from the state
- and internal reallocations of funds.
-
- In addition to other services, Penn State's conference hotel,
- which opens in May, will be equipped with a variety of AT&T
- products, including portable computers, fax machines, printers,
- telephone systems and cellular phones. Some funds will be used to
- support the Catalyst Center for Information Technologies in its
- School of Communications, and funds will also be used to benefit
- the Four Diamonds Fund, for families of children with cancer, at
- the school's Hershey Medical Center. Additional opportunities in
- collaborative research will also be pursued.
-
- Penn State spokesman Christy Rambeau, however, emphasized to
- Newsbytes that no one is being forced to go with an AT&T calling
- plan. "This is not a monopoly situation. People can stay on
- Sprint," she said. The $90 million AT&T expects to generate
- "would be mostly user fees of people who choose to take advantage
- of the discounts AT&T will provide to faculty, staff and alumni."
- The university is also naming AT&T its default long distance
- company, although most of the university has been using AT&T for
- some time.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19940222/Press Contact: Christy Rambeau, Penn
- State, 814-865-7517)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00029)
-
- FCC Finalizes Cable Rate Regulation 02/22/94
- WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- In a proceeding
- televised on the C-Span cable network, the Federal Communications
- Commission finalized its rules for re-regulating cable rates.
-
- Under the rules, local governments must file with the commission
- to regulate basic cable rates, but the FCC itself is regulating
- "expanded basic" rates, those most people pay. Charges for pay-
- per-view and premium channels like HBO remain unregulated.
-
- While the new rules passed on a unanimous 3-0 vote, remarks from
- commissioners made clear there were differences of opinion. While
- Commissioner James Quello praised new Chairman Reed Hundt, who
- apparently came around to his position on stiffening rates,
- Commissioner Andrew Barrett closely questioned staff members
- on the possible impacts of the rate case on operators' ability to
- invest in the "Information Superhighway."
-
- He finally concluded, "While this is on the high end" or rate
- reduction proposals, it does offer cable operators some leeway.
- That leeway is seen in a "cost of service" finding, which operators
- could use to get around the new, lower rates, and their ability to
- charge higher prices for new services.
-
- Chairman Hundt, a Clinton appointee, called the decision a
- "brilliant balance" and predicted it will save consumers $3
- billion a year, with rates cut 17 percent from where they were in
- September, 1992, when the cable re-regulation bill was passed
- over the veto of former President Bush. "That's a pretty big
- deal," he added. He noted that prices for basic cable rose 50
- percent from 1987-92, twice the rate of inflation. He also
- praised the commission for completing action on the case, which
- will allow a freeze on rates to expire as scheduled in May. Under
- the new rules, Hundt said, cable companies will be allowed a
- 11.25 percent rate of return.
-
- Technically, the action by the commission was a re-consideration
- of actions it took last year, before Hundt joined the panel.
- Rates will be determined based on charges in areas where two
- cable companies compete, but this "competitive differential" will
- be phased in. There are also exceptions for operators who now
- charge abnormally-low prices, and for small systems. And, in a
- warning to cable operators that they not sue to block the new
- rules, Hundt said, "We've tried to win-again for cable companies
- the trust and confidence of their consumers."
-
- In addition to the televised hearing, which FCC spokesman
- Rosemary Kimball told Newsbytes was the first to be televised
- live, the FCC also moved to disseminate its findings in other
- ways. Hundt said a phone line is being established for consumers
- with questions on the plan, 202-416-0856, and staff members will
- be divided into four regions to answer questions, so consumers
- should know what state they are calling from. Local governments
- which want to learn more about how to get in step with the new
- regulations should call 202-416-0940. In addition, Hundt said,
- the FCC is in the process of setting-up a computer bulletin board
- system offering information on its work. In addition, files will
- be available on the Internet through remote ftp procedures.
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19940222/Press Contact: Rosemary Kimball, FCC
- Press Office, 202-632-5050; consumer contact: 202-416-0856)
-
-
- (NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00030)
-
- Prodigy To Offer Chat 02/22/94
- WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- Prodigy
- said it will add live, interactive chat services to its system this
- summer.
-
- Chat involves two or more people typing messages back-and-
- forth -- live. Prodigy already offers hundreds of bulletin boards
- for its members in which messages are written and posted
- sequentially.
-
- Most of Prodigy's rivals in the on-line industry have long offered
- chat. In the last year the service, which is a joint venture
- between IBM and Sears, has made a number of moves aimed at
- making Prodigy more like its rivals, allowing some file
- downloads, for instance.
-
- Prodigy added that its "Prodigy Live" TV ad campaign has resulted
- in solid growth in its membership, with 55,000 new customers
- signing-on for the first time in January alone. Additional orders
- are coming in through the service's link with CBS and its Winter
- Olympics coverage, which is pushed during Pat O'Brien's late-
- night coverage of the games. A special bulletin board set up by
- CBS has received over 7,000 messages so far, the service said.
- Prodigy also estimated it is getting 700,000 log-ons each day.
-
- Spokesman Brian Ek told Newsbytes many Prodigy members belong
- to other services because Prodigy does not provide chat. Prodigy
- has a bulletin board called "new members" and messages to that
- effect have been posted there. "It'll be here in the summer."
-
- (Dana Blankenhorn/19940222/Press Contact: Brian Ek, Prodigy,
- 914-448-8811)
-
-
- (NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00031)
-
- Newsbytes Daily Summary 02/22/94
- PENN VALLEY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1994 FEB 22 (NB) -- These are
- capsules of all today's news stories:
-
- 1 -> Lasermaster Ships Photo Quality Digital Color Printer 02/22/94
- Lasermaster Technologies has announced it is now shipping a wide
- format digital color printer that produces photo quality output
- directly from Macintosh and IBM-compatible computers.
-
- 2 -> Windows Dynamic User Interface Design Tool Intro'd 02/22/94 A
- Colorado company has announced a interface design tool for Microsoft
- Windows 3.1 that it claims fits the firm's motto of "Software to
- Visualize the Future."
-
- 3 -> HP & Fujitsu In Intelligent Network Deal 02/22/94 Software is a
- vital element of any telecommunications switching system, especially
- in newer, highly complex networks. Now Hewlett-Packard Co., and
- Fujitsu Ltd., have announced a long-term deal to provide
- intelligent-network systems to telecom operators.
-
- 4 -> Report - Wireless Comms To Grow To $10 Billion By 1999 02/22/94
- From the continued growth of pagers, cellular and
- digital telephones, and accessories in the past five years, a new
- report projects that US sales will quadruple from $2.5 billion in
- 1992, to $9.5 billion in 1999.
-
- 5 -> NewsPix Images For Newsbytes Publishers 02/22/94 These are the
- photos that have been digitized and correspond to stories Newsbytes
- has reported recently.
-
- 6 -> Windows Show UK - IBM Pushes OS/2 Software 02/22/94 At the
- Windows Show, which opened in Olympia in London today (Tuesday), IBM
- showed it is getting serious about selling software. This is the first
- year that Big Blue has attended the show and, according to Val Russell
- of IBM's media relations department, marks the start of a major
- end-user campaign as far as software is concerned.
-
- 7 -> UK - Networks '94 Show Details Confirmed 02/22/94 Blenheim Online
- has confirmed the details of one of the most
- popular communications shows in the calendar -- Networks '94 -- will
- be held at the Birmingham National Exhibition Center (NEC) from June
- 28 to 30 this year.
-
- 8 -> ****ISDN Helps Injured At Winter Olympics 02/22/94 The Winter
- Olympics are on at Lillehammer in Norway, and inevitably, some
- contestants will end up breaking a bone. However, doctors have a
- problem -- with all the congestion on the roads in the vicinity of the
- games, it extremely difficult to get the patient to a major
- orthopaedic hospital for specialist treatment.
-
- 9 -> Red Tape Snags Personal Data Privacy In Europe 02/22/94 While
- certain individual countries in the European Community have
- legislation protecting personal data on their statute books, the
- European Commission (EC) wants to enable a new Europe-wide set of
- legislation to protect data on a cross-border basis. However, some
- observers argue that the EC seems more bound up in its own red tape
- than in getting the laws passed by its own Parliament.
-
- 10 -> UK - Groupware Event Set For April 02/22/94 Office Futures has
- announced it is hosting a two-day workshop on "Selecting Groupware and
- Office Systems." According to Roger Whitehead of the company, the
- event will be held at the Britannia Hotel on April 19 and 20.
-
- 11 -> HP Laserjet Printers Supported In AIX Environments 02/22/94
- Hewlett- Packard (HP) has announced that its Laserjet printers are now
- being supported directly under IBM's version of Unix - AIX 3.2.5,
- using HP JetDirect network-printer interfaces.
-
- 12 -> Unitel Will Not Offer Long Distance In Alberta 02/22/94 Unitel
- Communications Inc., has announced that it will not make long-
- distance telephone service generally available in the province of
- Alberta. The company, which competes in long-distance with regional
- telephone companies in eight provinces, said it cannot make money in
- Alberta because of the terms under which federal regulators would
- allow it to enter the market.
-
- 13 -> Canadian Product Launch Update 02/22/94 This regular feature,
- appearing every Monday or Tuesday, provides further details for the
- Canadian market on announcements by international companies that
- Newsbytes has already covered. This week: Wang's Open/workflow.
-
- 14 -> Interleaf Offers Intellecte Document Management 02/22/94
- Interleaf Inc., has announced Intellecte, an integrated document
- management application, at the Documentation '94 trade show in Los
- Angeles.
-
- 15 -> ****Dell Re-enters Portable PC Market 02/22/94 Nine months
- after it decided it pulled out of the portable PC market, Dell
- Computer Corporation has announced its re-entry into the fray.
-
- 16 -> Ohio Weather Info, Book Borrowing Goes Computerized 02/22/94
- Motorists and book borrowers in Ohio are getting some help from
- computers, according to a recent announcement by state officials.
-
- 17 -> Networks Expo - Cross-Server License Sharing From Saber 02/22/94
- At Networks Expo, Saber unveiled Saber Enterprise Application Manager
- (SEAM), a product billed as the first to allow real-time license
- sharing across multiple servers.
-
- 18 -> Networks Expo - Expert "Travel Tips" For Internet 02/22/94 With
- more than three million users today and over one million connected
- networks, the Internet is getting bigger all the time, observed John
- Krick, senior analyst for Datapro, at the start of a talk called
- "Driver Training on the Information Superhighway" at Networks Expo.
-
- 19 -> But COMP -- a category that concerns computer hardware,
- software, communications, and the like -- boasts more than 500
- different BBSes, including comp,graphics.animation, comp,lang.c++,
- comp.protocols.tcp-ip, comp.sys.novell, comp.dcom.lans.ethernet, and
- comp.os.ms-windows.programmer.tools.
-
- 20 -> Networks Expo - Frye Intros SUDS WAND, Three Upgrades 02/22/94
- At Networks Expo, Frye Computer Systems (FCS) released Software Update
- and Distribution System Wide Area Network Distribution (SUDS WAND)
- Module 1.0, a product designed to automatically route software updates
- throughout a large Novell local area network (LAN) or wide area
- network (WAN).
-
- 21 -> ****Home Schooling Under Threat By Govt Title I Funding?
- 02/22/94 A firestorm over home schooling has imperiled the
- re-authorization of Title I, the primary vehicle through which schools
- buy computers and software. The re-authorization is known as H.R. 6.
-
- 22 -> BIS Predicts Digital Camera Market To Explode 02/22/94 A
- research firm which recently completed a survey on electronic
- photography, predicts that the market for digital cameras will jump
- more than 600 percent in the next four years.
-
- 23 -> Texans Get "Govt Services" Computerized Kiosks 02/22/94 Texas
- says it will install touchscreen multimedia kiosks across the state
- offering Texans such government services as employment opportunities,
- unemployment benefits,worker retraining, and child labor laws.
-
- 24 -> Compton's Cuts Price Of 1994 Encyclopedia By 62% 02/22/94
- Compton's has cut the retail price of the 1994 Compton's Interactive
- Encyclopedia for both Microsoft Windows and the Macintosh platforms by
- 62 percent to $149.95. This price was previously available to those
- upgrading from earlier versions or switching from other electronic
- encyclopedia products.
-
- 25 -> EDS Wins Contract From Hong Kong Immigration Dept 02/22/94 EDS
- Asia Pacific has been awarded a $HK14.4 million contract to implement
- a territory- wide data communications network to support the Hong Kong
- Immigration Department's new Information Systems Strategy.
-
- 26 -> Correction - Dataquest 1993 Semiconductor Survey 02/22/94 In a
- recent article by Newsbytes summarizing the results of Dataquest's
- 1993 Semiconductor Growth survey, there was an error in the reporting
- of the figures.
-
- 27 -> ****3DO Multiplayer Cut To Under $500 02/22/94 3DO announced
- its 3DO Interactive Multiplayer, manufactured by Matsushita under the
- Panasonic brand name, has been reduced $200, or 28 percent, from
- $699.95 to $499.95. In addition, a Video CD adapter for the playback
- of films on CD is expected this Spring.
-
- 28 -> Licensing Deals Continue In Educational Software 02/22/94 A gold
- rush is on as educational software producers seek to license
- characters for use on their products.
-
- 29 -> Penn State Univ, AT&T Sign Telecom Deal 02/22/94 Penn State
- University has signed a 10-year alliance with AT&T worth about $90
- million.
-
- 30 -> FCC Finalizes Cable Rate Regulation 02/22/94 In a proceeding
- televised on the C-Span cable network, the Federal Communications
- Commission finalized its rules for re-regulating cable rates.
-
- 31 -> Prodigy To Offer Chat 02/22/94 Prodigy said it will add live,
- interactive chat services to its system this summer.
-
- (Ian Stokell/19940222)
-
-
-