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Subject: Edupage, 9 November 1995
*****************************************************************
Edupage, 9 Nov 95. 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
Opposition To Administration's Encryption Stand
Oracle Eyes Newton System
PBS Online
Newspapers Focus On Spyglass
Learning Company Prefers Broderbund To Softkey
Compuserve Settles Copyright Infringement Suit
Electronic Copyright Standards Group Formed
Bell vs. Internet Providers
ALSO
Smarter DRAMs
HDTV One Step Closer
Watch Football, Cruise The Web
Teleglobe Asks An End To Its Monopoly
Internet Filter For K-12
MCI To Acquire SHL Systemhouse
Microsoft Pricing Challenged In U.K.
But Can I Still Read "The Star" At The Checkout Counter?
OPPOSITION TO ADMINISTRATION'S ENCRYPTION STAND
A coalition of 37 major U.S. technology companies has rejected the Clinton
Administration's proposed standard for data encryption, saying that they
found Administration officials unwilling to compromise. The government
wants an encryption plan that will allow it to gather intelligence overseas,
through the use of a key escrow encryption system. The high-tech companies
want an encryption standard that would ensure privacy for both domestic and
overseas users. (New York Times 8 Nov 95 C3) Their opposition to the
Administration's plan has been joined by 12 conservative organizations who
call it anti-consumer, anti-marketplace, and anti-progress. (New York Times
9 Nov 95 C3)
ORACLE EYES NEWTON SYSTEM
Oracle Corp. is negotiating a license to use Apple's Newton operating system
in Oracle's future Internet terminals. One person close to the deal said
Oracle has even discussed buying the entire Newton division, including
hardware and software, but those talks had stalled as of last week. The two
companies have already collaborated on a set-top cable converter that uses
the Macintosh operating system and at a conference last month, Oracle CEO
Larry Ellison noted, "I would use Apple to build a next-generation computer
which I think is a network appliance." (Wall Street Journal 8 Nov 95 B13)
PBS ONLINE
The Public Broadcasting Service plans to build 200 Web sites linking its 347
television stations by next March. PBS will provide space on its national
server for all stations, but each station is developing its own Internet
strategy, and individual stations have the option of using their own on-site
computers and in-house staff to produce Web pages. About 56 stations
currently have their own home pages. (Broadcasting & Cable 6 Nov 95 p114)
NEWSPAPERS FOCUS ON SPYGLASS
InfiNet, a joint venture between Knight Ridder Inc. and Landmark
Communications Inc., has licensed Spyglass's Web browser, which it will
offer as part of its service helping other media companies to establish
their own Web sites and sell Internet access to their subscribers. (Wall
Street Journal 9 Nov 95 B5)
LEARNING COMPANY PREFERS BRODERBUND TO SOFTKEY
The Learning Company has accepted a new merger offer from Broderbund,
rejecting a rival offer from Softkey, the Cambridge, Mass.-based company
that has little regard for the Learning Company's management. A top
Broderbund executive says, "We believe that the management of the Learning
Company is one of its key assets. We're looking at a merger with a
successful company that is doing a lot of things right. The last thing we
want to do is alter that chemistry." (New York Times 9 Nov 95 C3)
COMPUSERVE SETTLES COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT SUIT
CompuServe has settled a class-action lawsuit brought against the company on
behalf of the National Music Publishers Association, and will pay a rights
fee to the organization for offering music online that could be downloaded
and played by subscribers. In addition to the settlement, CompuServe will
help outside content providers to electronically license rights to music
from NMPA. (Wall Street Journal 8 Nov 95 B11)
ELECTRONIC COPYRIGHT STANDARDS GROUP FORMED
Some 20 companies and organizations are working together to ensure that
whatever methods eventually are adopted for selling copyrighted material
online are compatible with each other. The Electronic Rights Management
Group hopes to enlist the support of hundreds of software developers,
entertainment companies and publishers in their efforts to protect
copyrighted material from unauthorized retransmission and provide a way for
copyright holders to collect payments for material distributed
electronically. (Chronicle of Higher Education 10 Nov 95 A23)
BELL VS. INTERNET PROVIDERS
Bell Canada plants to increase line rate charges for Internet service
providers by as much as 400%, saying the higher charge is necessary because
those providers use lines for 55 to 60 minutes every hour compared with
voice usage on a Centrex line of about 10 minutes. The service providers
say the move aims to eliminate competition for Bell when it introduces its
Worldlinx Internet access by the end of this year. (Montreal Gazette 9 Nov
95 D7)
=======================================================
SMARTER DRAMS
San Jose, Calif.-based Solidas Corp. has developed a way to soup up DRAM
(dynamic random-access memory) chips, squeezing 6 to 10 times more
information into the memory-chip cells. These ZRAM chips achieve their
capacity through a multi-level storage technology made possible by more
sensitive cells that can distinguish tiny variations in voltages -- up to
1,000 increments from zero to five volts. The new technology could cut the
cost of a DRAM chip by two-thirds or more, says the chip's inventor.
Solidas is negotiating with five major DRAM makers who want to license the
technology. (Business Week 13 Nov 95 p95)
HDTV ONE STEP CLOSER
The results are in -- after eight years of squabbling over competing HDTV
standards, the Grand Alliance Higher Definition Television system has
completed a testing phase, and the results have been accepted by the FCC.
The tests demonstrated that the performance of the Grand Alliance system was
superior to the best of the previous four proponents' systems. A final
technical summary of the GA MPEG-2 transport stream is available on the WWW
at: < http://www.atsc.org/ >. (Online@NAB 8 Nov 95)
WATCH FOOTBALL, CRUISE THE WEB
3Com Corp., new sponsor of 3Com Park (previously Candlestick Park) in San
Francisco, is adding a new twist to live sports events. While fans are
lining up for hot dogs during half-time, they also have the opportunity to
sidle up to one of the eight "Internet kiosks" recently installed by the
Santa Clara, Calif.-based computer company. The kiosks (high-end
workstations encased in beer-proof shells) enable sports fans to cruise the
Web to view selected sites. About 350 people tried out the new gadgets
over last weekend, mostly taking a spin while waiting for the 49ers game to
start. (Investor's Business Daily 8 Nov 95 A8)
TELEGLOBE ASKS AN END TO ITS MONOPOLY
Teleglobe Inc., Canada's only carrier of overseas phone calls, asked federal
regulator CRTC to end its monopoly, but, in exchange for embracing
competition, the company wants the federal government to remove restrictions
on its ownership structure and to negotiate new agreements with the United
States and Mexico to help it compete globally. (Toronto Financial Post 9
Nov 95 p6)
INTERNET FILTER FOR K-12
NetCast, the educational data service for Grand Rapids, Mich.-based SieCom,
has teamed with West Michigan Public Broadcasting to offer a product that
filters the Internet to provide only "educationally appropriate" content to
K-12 schools, which receive the service via satellite (info: oatesr@siecom.com).
MCI TO ACQUIRE SHL SY