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Subject: Edupage 1/29/96
X-Listprocessor-Version: 7.1 -- ListProcessor by CREN
*******************************************************************
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
Time Warner Expands Its Cable Holdings
Clinton Favors Broadcaster Fees
U.S./China Copyright Talks Falter
Software Alliance Launches Pirating Lawsuits
Billions Parked On The Info-Highway
Satellite Blow-Up Impacts Turner's Asian TV Plans
ALSO
Internet May Prove Risky Business In China
Advertisers Balk At AOL Rates
Computer Ads Get Cool
Phone/Cable Battle For Convergence
Overseas Manufacturers Like Warp
Windows 95 To Use Spyglass Mosaic
CA Eyes Multimedia
Kobe Earthquake Affects Laptop Production
Testbed For "CNN At Work"
Call-Forward Plumbing
TIME WARNER EXPANDS ITS CABLE HOLDINGS
By acquiring a Houston-based cable business for $2.3 billion, Time Warner
will up its total subscriber base to 10 million customers. (TCI, the
largest U.S. cable operation, has 11.1 million.) The move will make it
easier for Time Warner to offer telephone services and pay-per-view
services. (New York Times 1/28/95 p.17)
CLINTON FAVORS BROADCASTER FEES
Hoping to raise $5 billion in revenue over five years, the Clinton
Administration is planning to propose new fees on TV companies and other
broadcasters that have, up till now, never had to pay for use of the radio
spectrum. An industry analyst gives the proposal little chance of
acceptance -- especially at a time when Congress is trying to encourage
competition in the telecommunications industry. (Atlanta
Journal-Constitution 1/28/95 B1)
U.S./CHINA COPYRIGHT TALKS FALTER
U.S. trade sanctions against China are likely because of China's slowness
to crack down on the pirating of U.S. computer software and other
copyrighted products. In Beijing, it is possible to buy an illegal copy of
American software worth $10,000 for only $100. (New York Times 1/29/95 p.1)
SOFTWARE ALLIANCE LAUNCHES PIRATING LAWSUITS
The Canadian Alliance Against Software Theft launched copyright
infringement suits against a major software dealer and two computer
retailers. (Toronto Financial Post 1/28/95 p. 9)
BILLIONS PARKED ON THE INFO-HIGHWAY
Rep. Jack Fields (R-Texas), Chairman of the Subcommittee on
Telecommunications and Finance, thinks industry will respond to telecom
reform with billions of dollars in investment: "I'm convinced that the
people we talked with have tens of billions of dollars parked on the side
of information superhighway waiting for us to pass a piece of legislation
to give definition and certainty." (BNA Daily Report for Executives 1/23/95
A11)
SATELLITE BLOW-UP IMPACTS TURNER'S ASIAN TV PLANS
Plans for expanding Turner Broadcasting's Asian TNT/Cartoon channel were
slowed down when an Apstar-2 satellite exploded on lift-off -- the second
such accident in three months. The satellite would have beamed Turner
programming to Australia and India. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 1/27/95
C3)
==========================================================================
INTERNET MAY PROVE RISKY BUSINESS IN CHINA
China's plan to build a nationwide computer system linking university
campuses to the Internet may have an unintended impact -- it could provide
an electronic avenue for dissent among the intellectual group that was the
center of political dissatisfaction before the Tienamen Square crackdown in
1989. Since then, even access to fax machines has been restricted. (Wall
Street Journal 1/27/95 A6)
ADVERTISERS BALK AT AOL RATES
Advertising Age (Jan. 23) reports that potential advertisers aren't
flocking to America Online's offer of a one-year, $300,000 marketing
package that nets them a slot in AOL's Marketplace section, including
multimedia, research and transactional capabilities, and a separate WWW
home page. In contrast, Prodigy charges $100,000 or less for its commercial
listing. Advertisers complain AOL's price is too high for an "unproven"
medium. (Investor's Business Daily 1/27/95 A3)
COMPUTER ADS GET COOL
IBM's new commercial featuring nuns on the net is catching the eye of other
computer makers, with Digital Equipment Corp. and Microsoft funding MTV-like
ads of their own. "Across the board, you see a change in the way that
computer companies want to be perceived by the public," says an industry
analyst. The question now is, does cool sell computers? (Business Week
1/30/95 p.39)
PHONE/CABLE BATTLE FOR CONVERGENCE
Cable operator Rogers Communications urged Canada's Bureau of Competition
Policy to break up the Stentor alliance of phone companies, charging that the
cartel has become an insurmountable competitive challenge to
convergence. (Toronto Financial Post 1/27/95 p. 2) In other news, the
Friends of Canadian Broadcasting and seniors' advocacy group One Voice
urged the federal Cabinet to overturn a CRTC decision approving the
takeover of Maclean Hunter by Rogers Communications, arguing that the
takeover will give Rogers too much control over the success of Canadian
specialty channels. (Ottawa Citizen 1/28/95 D4)
OVERSEAS MANUFACTURERS LIKE WARP
Although IBM's OS/2 Warp has been slow to capture the hearts and
pocketbooks of U.S. computer manufacturers, it's doing quite well in
Australia, where Osborne Computers -- which claims to have shipped the most
PCs in Australia last year -- just announced its intention to ship machines
preloaded with the new operating software. A number of other overseas
manufacturers have also signed licensing deals with IBM, including Vobis of
Germany. (Information Week 1/30/95 p.24)
WINDOWS 95 TO USE SPYGLASS MOSAIC
Microsoft will use the Spyglass Inc. version of Mosaic in its Windows 95
operating system, leading an organizer of the World Wide Web Consortium to
comment that now "there's less likelihood that Microsoft will develop its
own proprietary standard." Consortium members are working to develop
standards for the Web. The deal allows Microsoft to use the conventional
"NCSA Mosaic," and also the commercial version called "Enhanced NCSA
Mosaic." The University of Illinois' National Center for Supercomputing
Applications receives a portion of all royalties on Mosaic licenses.
(Chronicle of Higher Education 1/27/95 A25)
CA EYES MULTIMEDIA
Computer Associates International, which up till now has concentrated on
sensible software for mainframes and midrange computers, wants to be sexy,
and is positioning itself as provider of the software that will run
interactive-TV systems planned by cable and phone companies. CA reportedly
is cutting a deal with Cablevision Systems Corp. to use CA software in
Cablevision's interactive-cable highway. (Wall Street Journal 1/27/95 B1)
KOBE EARTHQUAKE AFFECTS LAPTOP PRODUCTION
Since almost all active-matrix displays used in laptop computers are made
in the Kobe area of Japan, the earthquake is likely to result in inventory
shortages affecting IBM, Apple, and other vendors. (New York Times 1/29/95
Sec.3 p.6)
GEORGIA TECH TESTBED FOR "CNN AT WORK"
Georgia Tech's Graphics, Visualization & Usability Center will be the
testbed for the Intel/CNN-developed "CNN At Work" that allows CNN
programming to be distributed to personal computers. The test will make use
of the Tech campus's FutureNet to deliver the programs to staff and faculty
via a high-speed network that carries voice, data and video. Georgia Tech
researchers will experiment with hyperlinking CNN material
to other print and video material available on line. (Atlanta
Journal-Constitution 1/27/95 C3)
CALL-FORWARD PLUMBING
A Pennsylvania plumber tried to expand his business by ordering
call-forwarding service for his rivals and h