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Subject: Edupage, 16 January 1996 (
*****************************************************************
Edupage, 16 January 1996. Edupage, a summary of news items on information
technology, is provided three times each week as a service by Educom,
a Washington, D.C.-based consortium of leading colleges and universities
seeking to transform education through the use of information technology.
*****************************************************************
TOP STORIES
Are IBM And Sears Abandoning Prodigy?
Software Piracy Case Settled
Windows 95 Sales Raise Concerns
Academic Networking Assessment
Cal Tech Benefits From Intel Largesse
France Telecom Gears Up For Internet Access
Internet Domain Policy
ALSO
Credit Card Software For Internet
Cisco Buys Cable Modem Maker
IBM Is Number One Patent Winner
Microsoft To Acquire Vermeer Technologies
Spy Agency Warns Of Corporate Spies
Asian TV Network From NBC
Pirate Chips
ARE IBM AND SEARS ABANDONING PRODIGY?
Corporate spokespersons have declined comment on reports that IBM and the
Sears, Roebuck Co. are talking with investment bankers in order to devise a
way to extricate themselves from their ownership of Prodigy, the
third-largest consumer online service after AOL and CompuServe. Prodigy's
marketplace value may have increased in recent months as a result of its
aggressiveness in positioning itself as an Internet access provider with
some ownership of content. (New York Times 16 Jan 96 C2)
SOFTWARE PIRACY CASE SETTLED
Microsoft and Novell have reached a settlement with the computer hacker who
ran the Assassins' Guild BBS, which served as the headquarters for two
groups that distributed illegal copies of commercial software. The BBS
operator will pay $70,300 and forfeit $40,000 worth of computer equipment in
the settlement. (Investor's Business Daily 15 Jan 96 A7)
WINDOWS 95 SALES RAISE CONCERNS
Software companies that bet on phenomenal sales of Microsoft Windows 95 are
reporting disappointing financial results. The problem is that fewer
companies are switching over to the new operating system than anticipated,
instead waiting until they buy newer, more powerful computers better suited
to the Windows 95 environment. "It is still the largest software product
done in the industry to this point," says an analyst at Computer
Intelligence Infocorp. "We're estimating that they've got something on the
order of 17-million units out there already, and that's not chicken feed."
But "it's not becoming the corporate desktop, and that has some people
worried." (St. Petersburg Times 15 Jan 96 p8)
ACADEMIC NETWORKING ASSESSMENT
Syracuse University is conducting a 15-month study, financed by the U.S.
Dept. of Education, to determine how computer networking contributes to
teaching and learning. The main product of the $143,000 effort, a manual
entitled "Assessing the Academic Networked Environment: Strategies and
Options," is almost finished, and provides a summary of networking issues
that colleges and universities should address, along with an extensive
questionnaire to elicit information, with the goal of intelligently
assessing the cost/benefit issues of networking in higher ed. The
assessments are key in planning for future technology: "There are more
bells and whistles out there than we could ever afford to buy, and the
university has to make some really tough decisions about which applications
to use, what kinds of systems to support, and so on," says chief researcher
Charles McClure. (Chronicle of Higher Education 19 Jan 96)
CAL TECH BENEFITS FROM INTEL LARGESSE
The California Institute of Technology will receive a gift of about $700,000
worth of computer gear from Intel Corp. The new lab, which will house Cal
Tech's electrical engineering department, the Center for Neuromorphic
Systems Engineering, and an NSF engineering research center, will be named
in honor of Intel co-founder Gordon Moore and his wife Betty. Moore is an
alumnus of Cal Tech, as are several other Intel executives. (Investor's
Business Daily 15 Jan 96 A6)
FRANCE TELECOM GEARS UP FOR INTERNET ACCESS
France Telecom is beefing up its network infrastructure in preparation for
offering its customers local Internet access. The move is seen as
significant, because in order to bring its population up to speed, the
utility will be forced to undermine its $1.33-billion Minitel business.
France Telecom has signed an agreement to distribute Netscape software to
its users, and is developing Wanadoo, a search engine and classification
system for information on the Web. The company also plans "France En
Ligne," a closed service similar to America Online. (Wall Street Journal 15
Jan 96 A7B)
INTERNET DOMAIN POLICY
Network Solutions Inc. (NSI), which issues Internet domain names to U.S.
companies and organizations, has a new domain-name registration policy which
will "protect the ability of companies to extend their corporate identity
into the Internet." The policy requires applicants to warrant that the
requested name will not infringe any intellectual property of any third
party and will not be used for any lawful purpose. < http://www.shsl.com >
======================================================
CREDIT CARD SOFTWARE FOR INTERNET
Portland Software has come up with a solution for would-be Internet shoppers
who aren't comfortable sending their credit card information over the Net.
The software allows the customer's PC to dial the credit card network for
transaction approval, and supplies a code needed to receive the merchandise.
"Customers are much more willing to use this than to use a standard Web
server," says one satisfied Portland Software customer. Today's servers
"may be secure, but the perception is, they're not." (Wall Street Journal
15 Jan 96 B3)
CISCO BUYS CABLE MODEM MAKER
Cisco Systems, known for its computer network equipment, has acquired an
equity stake in Terayon Corp., a manufacturer of cable modems. The two
companies will collaborate on developing technology to capitalize on the
transmission speed possible through cable-linked networks, which can operate
hundreds of times faster than those that rely on telephone lines.
(Investor's Business Daily 16 Jan 96 A9)
IBM IS NUMBER ONE PATENT WINNER
IBM has topped the list of U.S. patent winners for the third straight year,
with 1,383 patents awarded for 1995. The patents will be used in developing
new IBM products, generating license fee income, and helping IBM barter for
cross-licensing arrangements. Other big patent winners were Canon,
Motorola, Eastman Kodak, Mitsubishi Electric, Toshiba, Hitachi, Matsushita
Electric Industrial Co., and General Electric. (Investor's Business Daily
15 Jan 96 A6)
MICROSOFT TO ACQUIRE VERMEER TECHNOLOGIES
Microsoft is planning to buy small Cambridge, Mass.-based Vermeer
Technologies Inc. and to incorporate into the "Microsoft Office" software
suite Vermeer's "Front Page" program, which helps people without complicated
programming skills to develop pages for the World Wide Web. (New York Times
16 Jan 96 C9)
SPY AGENCY WARNS OF CORPORATE SPIES
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service warns that companies eager to do
business in competitive global markets must be vigilant about foreign
companies trying to acquire information through less-than-legal means,
particularly when it becomes economic espionage sponsored by foreign
governments. Since 1992, CSIS has investigated security concerns at about
500 companies and found economic espionage in about 70% of the cases.
(Toronto Star 15 Jan 96 E2)
ASIAN TV NETWORK FROM NBC
The National Broadcasting Company has begun offering from Hong Kong a
24-hour English-language cable service providing global and Asian news
intended for a target audience of Asian business professionals and their
families, expatriates and travelers. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 16 Jan
96 E3)
PIRATE CHIPS
One of Canada's top computer "crac