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- Silicon Times Report
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- The Original Independent OnLine Magazine"
- (Since 1987)
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- July 19, 1996 No. 1229
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- Silicon Times Report International OnLine Magazine
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- Jacksonville, Florida 32221-6155
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- 07/19/96 STR 1229 The Original Independent OnLine Magazine!
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- - CPU Industry Report - Hayes CUTS Prices - Corel Office Pro 7
- - SysOp Sues Ohio Sheriff - Gov't Oks Encryption - PBell MMedia
- - Seagate makes Jaz Carts - CompuServe 3.0 - FCC Rejects Telsat
- - AT&T Cell-Net Phone - People Talking - Jagwire
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- MSNBC Goes Live Today
- Block to Sell CompuServe Stock
- House Vote to Move Against RSI
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- Florida Lotto - LottoMan v1.35
- Results: 7/13/96: 1 of 6 numbers
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-
- From the Editor's Desk...
-
- Its sad to see the Summer Olympics associated with the horror of TWA's
- flight 800. Or, is it? Perhaps, its going to take just such images of
- horror to kick Pena's Department of Transportation and the FAA in the pants
- and wake them up. Its fairly obvious that these agencies of the Federal
- Government has forgotten their real purpose and reason for being in
- existence. Plainly put, its to protect the US Constitution and loyally serve
- the Citizens and Taxpayers of the United States of America. While there are
- other agencies equally if not more negligent. the FAA has indirectly
- become responsible for more deaths in the last two years than most State
- Crime Rates. There.. its been said and its been needing to be said for quite
- some time. The major press organizations in the USA have, in recent times,
- become really lame in associating the causes and effects of major problems.
- Who or, better yet.. what are they afraid of? The FAA, FDA, EPA, DOA, DOE to
- name but a few have truly become LAME DUCK Agencies who are in desperate need
- of complete overhaul from the very top to the very bottom. These agencies
- are costing far too many lives.
-
- From Flight Controller Morale, Aircraft Maintenance and Inspection to Up
- to Date Airport Explosive Detection Devices the FAA has exhibited severe
- dereliction of duty and responsibility. Its fairly obvious the FAA has been
- loyal ONLY to BIG Business and not the Citizens and Taxpayers.
-
- For example;
- · why is it the maintenance and procedural problems of a cutthroat airline
- were not sufficient to ground them? Perhaps because the FAA was concerned
- they'd have to ground too many other, fine upstanding airlines for the very
- same problems.
- · why is it all the major European Airports.. all gateways to the world
- and the USA, have the very latest in high tech bomb and explosive detection
- equipment which incidentally, is designed and made in the USA and the USA's
- major Airports; Kennedy, LaGuardia, O'Hare etc.. do not?
- · why is it that even after the Laws were passed several years ago
- requiring the very latest in bomb detection devices be installed in all major
- US Airports it has not been complied with?
-
- The FAA is charged with enforcing all of the above. Its fairly obvious,
- by the constant procession of tragedy upon tragedy, they have not done their
- job. Instead, the FAA offers lame excuses of having made the effort through
- spending of millions of dollars testing the detection devices at few and
- select Airports. They concluded that the detection devices created undo
- delays and were "unreliable". Seems they (the detection devices made in the
- USA) work rather well in the European Airports. Could it be that BIG
- BUSINESS, the US Airline Industry, is being catered to rather than the US
- Citizens whose safety is the SOLE Responsibility of the FAA?? It's time the
- FAA was made fully aware that the majority of the US population are not
- easily fooled any longer and that the FAA's double talk time is up. The FAA
- must be completely re-organized and mandated to serve the US Citizen's
- interests.. not the Airports, Airlines or any other lobbied, money making
- enterprise.
-
- Since the relaxation of inspection and enforcement procedures of ALL the
- Federal Safety Agencies began, during the Reagan Administration and been
- taken to the profit oriented extreme through the Bush Administration and now
- with the lopsided, heavily Republican Congress and Senate, US Citizens have
- been subjected to indescribably horrific hazards in the name of free
- enterprise and profit.
-
- For example;
- · Flaming GM Trucks, Bad Chrysler Door Latches, Flaming Ford Ignition
- Switches, etc..
- · Poisonous Food, Hamburgers killing Children, Raspberries from South
- America, Chicken, Beef loaded with antibodies and growth hormones..
- · Contaminated Drinking Water in almost every State in the Union.
- · Cereals and Grains for sale on the shelves of the Nation's supermarkets
- with "USDA allowable" contamination of insect body parts, rodent traces hair,
- feces, etc..
- · Processed meat products contain ground up animal parts never thought of
- being edible also "USDA allowable"
- · fresh produce permeated with all sorts of preservative chemicals, color
- dye enhancements and plant growth stimulants on sale all across the country.
- · Atomic waste dumps and hazardous waste sites still exist and more are
- allowed every year.
- · gasoline seepage from leaking storage tanks in gas stations all across
- the nation are leaking their poisons into the ground and water tables.
- Ultimately, finding its way into the food chain.
- · sewage and caustic chemical dumping into the open ocean in the New York
- - New Jersey area. often called "The Stain" or Acid Waters by local
- fishermen. Stunned acid filled baitfish provide easy forage for Bluefish
- which the fishermen catch and either bring to market or home for dinner.
-
- These are but a few of the more serious examples of just how the various
- US Agencies charged with keeping the citizens of the USA safe from harm have
- not served the taxpayers and citizens. Instead they have dutifully served
- big business and big business interests.
-
- Are you upset yet?? If not you should be. In fact, enough to write or
- call your congressional rep your senate rep and the white house.. Let these
- "representatives of the people" know we want them to represent us not resent
- us!
- Ralph...
-
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- LATE BREAKING INDUSTRY-WIDE NEWS
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- Weekly Happenings in the Computer World
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- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
- MSNBC Goes Live Today (July 15)
- This is the launch day for MSNBC, the NBC-Microsoft Corp. 24-hour, all-news
- cable network that also is wedded to the Internet's World Wide Web. Going up
- against Ted Turner's 16-year-old Cable News Network, MSNBC will air 14 hours
- of original programming, including a prime-time newscast anchored by NBC's
- chief White House correspondent Brian Williams and "InterNight," a news-talk
- show with NBC News stars as alternate hosts.
-
- Television writer Scott Williams of The Associated Press notes President
- Clinton is the first guest of "InterNight," interviewed by NBC News anchor
- Tom Brokaw and answering questions from callers on a toll- free phone, and
- from e-mail sent to the MSNBC Net site (reached at Web address
- http://msnbc.com).
-
- "As of late Friday," says Williams, "more than 52,000 'hits' had contacted
- the site to post questions, a network spokesman said. Visitors got to point-
- and-click on their highest priority of six 'issues' -- crime, healthcare,
- presidential character, etc. -- and frame an e-mail question in 20 words or
- less." MSNBC officials say text, graphics, downloadable video segments and
- instantaneous links to other web sites will supplement the TV information
- and eventually technology will permit real-time video and high-fidelity
- sound.
-
- AP says MSNBC is expected to debut in 22.5 million homes "and on the Web in
- uncounted numbers," entering a competition which Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.
- vows to enter this year. Is there money to be made by marrying TV and the
- Net? "You'll look back in five years," says media analyst Larry Gerbrandt of
- Paul KaganAssociates in Carmel, California, "and say either they were way too
- far ahead of their time, or they were extraordinarily prescient."
-
- Meanwhile, Martin Wolk of the Reuter News Service notes that for Microsoft,
- "the interest is not so much television as news, seen as a crucial component
- of the emerging Internet world, in which content is king." Bill Bass of
- Forrester Research told Reuters, "Having an all-news channel to feed a web
- site is pretty dang close to being essential if you're not The New York
- Times or the Wall Street Journal."
-
- And it will be interesting to see how NBC and Microsoft work together. "At
- the very least," says Wolk, "there is a vast cultural gap between the button-
- downed journalists in NBC's humming New Jersey newsroom and the more casually
- dressed Webmasters ensconced on Microsoft's carefully groomed suburban campus
- near Seattle." Adds Mark Mooradian of Jupiter Communications, "The potential
- is certainly there for conflict. It's the entertainment world vs. the
- technology world, and all of those relationships have never gone swimmingly."
-
- Clinton Encryption Plan Outlined
- A White House proposal aimed at encouraging use of strong data-scrambling
- software is drawing fire from some computer executives who criticize it for
- not going far enough. Reporting from Washington, Scott Ritter of the Dow
- Jones news service quotes Clinton administration officials as saying the move
- aims to let U.S. computer companies better compete in the international
- marketplace. Current U.S. policy, much maligned by domestic technology
- companies, prohibits the export of strong encryption technology.
-
- However, as Associated Press writer Jeannine Aversa points out, the proposal
- to liberalize export rules for high-tech coding devices that keep phone calls
- and computer messages private still comes with an important condition: The
- exporters must assure the U.S. government that it has a system in which a
- third party - perhaps a bank or insurance company -- would hold an electronic
- "key" to unlock the secure communications.
-
- Says a White House statement, "The framework will ensure that everyone who
- communicates or stores information electronically can protect his or her
- privacy from prying eyes and ears as well as theft of, or tampering with,
- their data." But, says Phil Zimmermann, the creator of a widely used e-mail
- encryption software called Pretty Good Privacy, "This is warmed-over
- Clipper. It's a Faustian deal."
-
- (The so-called Clipper Chip was a 1993 Clinton proposal that was met with
- widespread opposition from the industry and privacy rights advocates. The
- Clipper, and later versions of the policy, sought to put the code- cracking
- key in the hands of a third party.) Notes DJ's Ritter, "The idea is to allow
- law enforcement officials access to scrambled data if they suspect
- wrongdoing. Indeed, law enforcement and national security concerns have been
- the basis for limiting the export of strong encryption technology. The latest
- proposal keeps the key escrow system intact."
-
- Says the White House statement, "Trusted private sector parties will verify
- digital signatures and also will hold spare keys to confidential data."
- Aversa note many computer industry groups oppose any form of "key" proposal,
- saying that anything short of an outright lifting of export restrictions will
- do little to help American companies that are losing billions each year in
- potential sales abroad. Zimmermann told AP, "The industry is real desperate
- to get the export controls lifted. So the government is using that to sell"
- its proposal. "These are the same policies we have seen before, with new
- spin."
-
- GOP presidential hopeful Bob Dole also criticized the proposal, saying the
- White House is "trying to play catch up" with his longtime calls for
- liberalizing export controls on encrypted products. "Today's announcement is
- nothing but politics," he told AP. Under the new White House proposal, a
- company still would have to obtain a license to export encryption
- technology, except the company would get permission from the Commerce
- Department instead of the State Department, which now exercises primary
- control.
-
- "Current policy permits companies to export encryption devices with
- electronic key lengths of up to 40 bits," Aversa notes. "Devices with a high
- number of bits are stronger and harder to decode." Vice President Al Gore
- said administration officials will continue to work with the industry to
- refine the policy before making a recommendation to Clinton this fall.
- Gore's aides said that if Clinton approves, much of the policy can be
- implemented by the administration on its own, though Congress would have to
- approve another provision under consideration -- creating civil and criminal
- penalties for individuals or companies that misuse the electronic "key."
-
- Feds OK Netscape Encryption
- The federal government has approved Netscape Communications Corp.'s plan to
- distribute its most powerful encryption software to-date to U.S. citizens
- over the Internet. Writing in The Wall Street Journal this morning,
- reporter Joan Indiana Rigdon says Netscape will "automatically check the
- country and Internet address of everyone who wants to download the software
- so it can deny downloads to people from other countries."
-
- In addition, she reports, Netscape "will use a database to help verify the
- names and addresses of people who want to download the software and ask them
- to sign affidavits affirming that they are U.S. citizens." The Journal says
- the State Department wants Netscape to screen requests because it fears
- foreign terrorists or criminals could use the software to threaten national
- security.
-
- Of course, Netscape concedes that even with this screening, foreign nationals
- could find away to download the software. Says Jeff Treuhaft, Netscape's
- director of security, "We're not saying (the screening) is guaranteed or
- perfect. We're saying we have written approval from the government" to
- distribute the software using these precautions.
-
- He added this is the first step toward getting approval to export the
- software to anyone, including foreigners. As reported, Netscape previously
- could send the powerful, 128-bit version to customers only by mail. "U.S.
- citizens who wanted to download the software over the Internet had to settle
- for the same version that foreignnationals could get, a weaker 40-bit
- version, which has been cracked by hackers," Rigdon writes. The Journal says
- the 128-bit encryption software is based on technology from RSA Data Security
- Inc. and "requires 309 septillion more times computing power to break the
- encryption code than Netscape's 40-bit version."
-
- Privacy Rating System Unveiled
- A voluntary privacy rating system for the World Wide Web has been unveiled by
- a group of companies doing business on the Internet and the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation. The non-profit group, called eTrust (reached at Web
- address http:/www.etrust.org), will license logos to Web sites designating
- how much privacy an individual surrenders on a particular site.
-
- Aaron Pressman of the Reuter News Service says the group also is considering
- hiring an auditor who would monitor sites carrying the logos to prevent the
- illicit collection of private data. Pressman comments, "Mounting privacy
- concerns about the Internet, where an individual's movements across the Web
- can be tracked, catalogued and used for potentially invasive market
- research, may be stifling the development of online commerce."
-
- EFF Director Lori Fena says, "The eTrust project is an effort to increase the
- level of trust between merchants and consumers in public networks, and
- especially on the Internet. We are not making a judgment about the need or
- desire to collect information. Rather, we are promoting full disclosure to
- individuals about how and where that information will be used."
-
- Firms involved in the effort "are very anxious to begin to address the trust
- issue online and to up the standards of business practices and security in
- our industry and in our market," said Charles Jennings, president of
- Portland Software. "Once we do raise the standards, we'll have a way of
- quickly communicating our practices to the consumer."
-
- Reuters notes whenever an individual uses software such as Netscape
- Communications Corp.'s Navigator to visit a Web site, the site can collect
- information about the individual, including where else on the Web that
- individual has visited. Meanwhile, some Web users have developed other means
- of preserving the privacy of web surfers. For instance, at a site called
- Anonymizer (http:/www.anonymizer.com), Web users can block the inadvertent
- transmission of information from their browsing software by first visiting
- the group's Web site. "The site includes a page that reads and displays from
- each Web surfer some of the specific information about that surfer that can
- be inadvertently transmitted," Pressman says.
-
- Clinton Favors TV Proposal
- Word is the Clinton Administration's technology advisors are siding with
- broadcasters and consumer electronics makers over major computer companies
- in endorsing the broadcasters' preferred technology format as the standard
- for the next generation of television. According to the Dow Jones news
- service, Clinton officials have rejected arguments by Microsoft Corp., Apple
- Computer Inc. and other companies -- including Compaq Computer Corp., Dell
- Computer Corp. and Intel Corp. -- that contend the standard favored by
- broadcasters and manufacturers embraces technology that is already outdated.
-
- The wire service notes the companies also say government approval will
- inhibit innovation and drive up costs to consumers, as the distinction
- between personal computers and TV sets blurs. Meanwhile, The New York Times
- this morning quoted letters to the chairman of the Federal Communications
- Commission and to the White House's Office of Science and Technology Policy
- in which a senior Commerce Department expert argued for quick adoption of
- the standard favored by the alliance of broadcasters and manufacturers.
-
- Students Claim E-Mail Fraud
- A student in China contends she lost an $18,000 scholarship to the University
- of Michigan because her roommate sent an electronic mail response rejecting
- the grant. Reporting from Beijing, United Press International says Xue
- Yange maintains she missed a "chance-of-a-lifetime opportunity" to study in
- the U.S., and so she has filed "an unprecedented suit alleging 'e-mail abuse'"
- against Zhang Nan, who denied the accusation.
-
- UPI reports Xue, a psychology student seeking a master's degree at Beijing
- University, told the Haidian District People's Court the university
- subsequently awarded the money to another candidate. Both Xue and Zhang are
- due to graduate this summer and use the same e-mail address as Zhang's tutor.
- Says UPI, "During the court hearing reported by the official Xinhua news
- agency, Xue said she received an e-mail message in early April informing her
- she had been selected for the coveted scholarship. While waiting for a formal
- notice, Xue said she was informed April 27 that an e-mail in her name had
- been sent to the school declining the scholarship in order to attend another
- university."
-
- Xue, who asked the court for $1,807 in compensation for her "spiritual loss
- and suffering," told the court the University of Michigan was the only
- American college that promised her a scholarship. UPI quotes Xue as saying
- she immediately suspected Zhang of composing the rejection because the
- grammar markedly resembled Zhang's. "Zhang admitted she sent three e-mails
- from the university laboratory April 12," the wire service says. "Although
- one of them was sent to a friend four minutes before the e-mail to the
- university, Zhang insisted she did not write or send the message rejecting
- the scholarship. She read one of the letters to the court in an attempt to
- show there was no similarity in the grammar." Meanwhile, Zhang told Xinhua
- she plans to file a suit against Xue for "defaming my reputation by making
- the allegations." The court has not yet reached a verdict in the case.
-
- Ohio BBS Users Sue Sheriff
- A $60 million civil rights class action has been brought against the
- Cincinnati, Ohio, sheriff and a crime task force by some 6,000 subscribers
- to a local computer bulletin board system. Lawyer Scott Greenwood has told
- United Press International the suit against Hamilton County Sheriff Simon
- Leis and the Regional ComputerCrimes Task Force is the nation's "first-ever
- class that's been certified in a computer-related case."
-
- Greenwood said he is in the process of notifying subscribers to the
- Cincinnati Computer Connection by electronic mail, postal mail and through
- an Internet World Wide Web home page. UPI says the suit claims Leis and
- other task force officials violated First Amendment rights to free speech and
- Fourth Amendment rights to freedom from unreasonable seizure last year when
- computers and peripheral equipment -- including hard drives containing
- personal mail - were confiscated from the home of bulletin board operator Bob
- Emerson in Batavia, Ohio.
-
- The lawyer compared the raid to seizing all the mail at a post office in an
- effort to locate one allegedly illegal package, adding, "It is not a
- cyberporn case (although) Mr. Leis thinks it is." As reported earlier, the
- task force took 25 computers from Emerson's home as part of its investigation
- into the transmission of computer pornography. The task force is comprised of
- officers from Leis' office and officials from the Cincinnati and Kenton
- County, Ky., police departments. UPI says the suit is expected to go to
- trial next spring.
-
- Chinese Student Stands by Suit
- Despite assurance from the U.S. university that the offer still stands, a
- Chinese student is declining to drop a suit against her roommate for
- allegedly sending an e-mail in her name declining a U.S. scholarship. In
- Beijing, attorney Chen Qiang, representing student Xue Yange, told United
- Press International that China's first court case involving the Internet "is
- a good example" of how it can be abused.
-
- As reported earlier, Xue contended she lost an $18,000 scholarship to the
- University of Michigan because her roommate sent an electronic mail response
- rejecting the grant. Now through her attorney she tells UPI's Ruth
- Youngblood she is elated the University of Michigan still is granting her the
- scholarship, but hopeful others won't suffer similar ordeals in cyberspace.
-
- Attorney Chen told the wire service, "A verdict is expected any day, and
- we're confident of winning the case." As noted, the 29-year-old Xue told the
- Haidian District People's Court she received an e-mail message from the
- University of Michigan in early April notifying her she had won the
- scholarship. But, while waiting for a formal notice, Xue said she learned on
- April 27 the university had subsequently received a message saying she was
- declining the scholarship to attend another school.
-
- She shared the same e-mail address as her roommate Zhang Nan and Zhang's
- tutor and filed suit accusing 25- year-old Zhang of sending the e-mail
- rejection. "Zhang denied rejecting the scholarship," UPI reports, "although
- she did admit sending three e-mails to friends on April 12, one of which went
- out four minutes before the e-mail to the university. Zhang said she would
- file a countersuit for defamation she has suffered in connection with the
- case."
-
- Canon Alleges Patent Infringement
- Canon Computer Systems and its parent companies have launched a patent
- infringement suit against Nu-kote International Inc. of Dallas, a company
- that makes replacement printer cartridges. The suit, filed in the U.S.
- District Court for the Central District of California, charges Nu-kote with
- infringement of Canon's recently issued U.S. Patent No. 5,509,140, based on
- Nu-kote's sale of replaceable ink cartridges for Canon's BJC-600 series of
- Bubble Jet printers. The Canon companies are seeking a preliminary and
- permanent injunction, and recovery of Canon's lost profits due to Nu-kote's
- infringement. This is the second lawsuit between the parties. In the first
- suit, Canon charged Nu-Kote with infringement of Canon's trademarks and
- infringement of five other patents. The first suit is scheduled to go to
- trial in December.
-
- House Vote to Move Against RSI
- In what is being characterized as a surprise setback to the Republicans' anti-
- regulatory agenda, the House of Representatives has voted to let the
- government move against repetitive stress injuries, a frequent affliction
- among computer users. In a 216-205 roll call yesterday "that pitted the
- interests of labor against business," says Associated Press writer Alan
- Fram, the House voted to delete GOP-written language that would have
- prevented the Occupational Safety and Health Administration from gathering
- information about RSI injuries or writing guidelines to prevent them."
-
- Thirty-five Republicans, largely from Northern states with active labor
- unions, joined 180 Democrats and one independent in voting to erase the
- provision, which was part of a huge social spending bill for fiscal 1997.
- The provision had been included in a measure providing $65.7 billion for
- labor, health, education and other domestic programs for fiscal 1997, which
- begins Oct. 1.
-
- "Nonetheless," says Fram, "the bill faces a veto threat from President
- Clinton because it provides $7.8 billion less than he wants and eliminates
- some programs he strongly supports, including the Goals 2000 education reform
- program. The Senate has yet to write its version of the bill. But that
- chamber tends to be more moderate than the House, and is expected to provide
- some extra money for many programs." Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who led
- the effort to strip the provision, said repetitive stress injuries have grown
- sevenfold over the last decade. She said they cost business $20 billion a
- year and involve 2.7 million accepted workers' compensation claims per year.
-
- AT&T Unveils Cell-Net Phone
- AT&T Wireless Services has unveiled a combination cellular telephone and
- Internet access appliance. The Kirkland, Washington-based operation says
- its PocketNet Phone will provide people on the go with fast and convenient
- access to Internet information and two-way messaging services. Slated for
- commercial availability later this year, the AT&T PocketNet Phone is the
- first wireless device of its kind to enable both users and corporations to
- capitalize on the content and messaging power of the Internet. Business
- services, such as two-way messaging, airline flight information and financial
- information, will be joined by personal services, including sports scores,
- local movie listings and lottery results, says AT&T Wireless.
-
- Additionally, notes AT&T Wireless, corporate and independent Web developers
- will be able to program the PocketNet Phone for remote, wireless information
- access to intranet networks and two-way messaging applications that
- effectively transform the device into a mobile e-mail terminal. "The device
- makes a surgical strike into the Internet to extract the precise information
- you want, when you want it," says Kendra VanderMeulen, vice president and
- general manager of AT&T Wireless' data division.
-
- At the heart of the AT&T PocketNet Phone, says VanderMeulen, is a specialized
- browser that's configured to send and retrieve only text-based information.
- With this approach, the browser optimizes the cellular phone's compact
- display size, memory footprint and wireless connectivity for information
- services. "This technology changes the mobile paradigm," says Iain Gillott,
- director of wireless and broadband networking at market researcher IDC/LINK.
- "At last, we can describe a wireless data solution as elegant, simple and
- convenient, and really mean it. With the PocketNet Phone, I think we will
- finally see wireless data enter the mainstream. And the notion of accessing
- time-critical information to make fast but informed decisions will be a
- reality rather than a promise." AT&T says it will make the phone available
- for around $500. Specific content services and rate plans will be announced
- when commercial service becomes available.
-
- Seagate to Make Jaz Cartridges
- Iomega Corp. has announced that Seagate Technology Inc. will manufacture
- removable disc cartridges for Iomega's line of Jaz drives. According to
- Iomega, Seagate has begun production and shipment of the Jaz disc cartridges
- and expects to reach volume manufacturing by fall. Iomega says Seagate is
- providing it with "world-class product ramp capability and access to its high
- quality components." The removable cartridges will use Seagate media and
- media from other suppliers designed for use with proximity thin-film
- recording heads like those used in Jaz drives.
-
- "With a proven manufacturer like Seagate backing the Jaz technology, the
- real winners will be present and future Jaz owners," says Kim Edwards, CEO
- and president of Iomega. "Seagate will enable us to supply large quantities
- of Jaz discs, a much needed asset as Jaz emerges as a new standard throughout
- the high-end removable storage market." Priced at $499 for the external
- version and as low as $399 for the internal version, the Jaz drive stores up
- to 1GB of information on each cartridge.
-
- Claris Updates Organizer
- Claris Corp. has announced a major upgrade of it's all-in- one personal
- information manager (PIM), Claris Organizer 2.0 for Macintosh and Power
- Macintosh. "Claris Organizer is now Internet savvy with e-mail and Web links
- providing instant access to the World Wide Web and is a leading product in
- our strategy to Internet- enable the entire Claris product line," says
- Guerrino de Luca, Claris' president.
-
- According to Claris, the software's revised streamlined design includes a
- contact card that's more readable than other PIMs, looking much like a
- business card. Other new features include Instant Find, Instant
- Filters,Memorizable Views, an Instant Organizer menu, the Gripper, Birthday
- Minder and Decors. Claris Organizer 2.0 for Macintosh and Power Macintosh
- will be available this summer for an estimated street price of $69. A Windows
- 95 version of the product is scheduled to ship next year.
-
- Harvard Presenter's Pack Ships
- Software Publishing Corp. has announced the availability of the Harvard
- Graphics Presenter's Pack, a Windows - compatible product that aims to give
- users a single-package solution for preparing business presentations. The
- Harvard Graphics Presenter's Pack offers tools for drawing, scanning,
- painting, charting, graphing, enhancing and presenting text and images. The
- product includes Harvard Graphics 2.0, Harvard ChartXL 1.0, Harvard
- Spotlight 1.0, Flamingo Plus 1.2 and a 10,000 piece clip-art collection.
- "There has never been a more comprehensive, professional set of award-
- winning, brand-name presentation tools offered with such a strong price-to-
- value solution," says Joe Szczepaniak, vice president of Software
- Publishing's North American sales and marketing unit.
-
- Hayes Cuts Business Modem Prices
- Hayes Microcomputer Products Inc. says it has cut prices by up to 50 percent
- on its OPTIMA Business Modem line. The biggest reduction affects the
- Macintosh model, which now sells for $299, down from $599. The PC version
- now costs $299, down from $579. Hayes has also added AutoSyncII, Delrina
- TalkWorks compatibility and Microsoft Windows 95 logo compliance, with
- UnimodemV support, to the modems. Hayes AutoSyncII allows 28.8K bps
- synchronous connectivity to mini and mainframe computers without the need for
- additional hardware. Microsoft UnimodemV and the "Designed for Windows 95"
- are designed to assure seamless data, fax and voice operation in Windows 95
- and Windows 95-compliant communications packages. Delrina TalkWorks software
- provides answer phone capabilities in Delrina's CommSuite95 software. Hayes
- customers who already own Hayes OPTIMA 288 Business Modems will be able to
- download the new features via Flash ROM within 30 days from Hayes' in-house
- bulletin board.
-
- Dell Says Strategy is Working
- Dell Computer Corp. CEO Michael Dell is crediting the firm's business-to-
- business strategy and its direct sales model as the keys to the most
- successful year in its history. "The strategy is working," Dell told
- shareholders at the computer maker's annual meeting. "Dell grew 52 percent
- last year while increasing net income 82 percent and generating $175 million
- in cash to create one of the strongest balance sheets in the industry and
- deliver a handsome return to Dell shareholders."
-
- Dell shares have appreciated approximately 300 percent over the past two and
- a half years, the largest share gain of any major computer company, noted
- Dell. Dell also observed that the company strengthened its market share and
- channel momentum in 1995, edging out IBM Corp. and Hewlett Packard Co. to
- become the second largest PC manufacturer to corporate America in terms of
- revenues.
-
- Packard Bell Has Multimedia PCs
- Packard Bell Electronics Inc. has launched a new line of Platinum Series
- multimedia PCs with built-in personal communications features. The
- Sacramento, California-based company says it is the first computer maker to
- offer video conferencing and Internet phone capabilities preinstalled in its
- PCs. The PCs also offer an integrated communications system, three-
- dimensional arcade-like video graphics and high-definition sound.
-
- The Platinum Series PCs are outfitted with VDO Phone, a video conferencing
- software application from VDOnet Inc., and Internet PHONE Internet audio
- software from VocalTec Inc. When a VCR is connected to the PC, users can
- even play back and share movies with anyone using VDO Phone software. A pull-
- down menu gives users additional information on usage patterns, including an
- event log that lists conference calls in case callers need to remember to
- whom they talked and when; a conversation timer that can be tracked against
- phone or client billing; and a network analyzer that reports the speed of
- transmission for customers who want to check how efficiently their systems
- are transmitting data.
-
- "This system lets consumers share memorable information with family and
- friends across the world -- from baby's first steps to how to stuff the
- turkey -- in a timely, cost- effective manner," says Mal Ransom, Packard
- Bell's vice president of marketing. Packard Bell says the new PCs are
- available in more than 15,000 retail
- outlets worldwide, with pricing established by individual retailers.
-
- Packard Bell, NEC Fulfill Merger
- Computer makers Packard Bell Electronics Inc. and Japan's NEC Corp. have
- completed the merger of their personal-computer lines outside of Japan and
- China. Reporting from Packard Bell's Sacramento, California, headquarters,
- The Wall Street Journal says this morning the merger, announced last month,
- involves the transfer of some $300 million of NEC's assets to Packard Bell.
- "In return," adds the paper, "NEC's share of both voting and nonvoting
- Packard Bell shares will grow to between 35 percent and 40 percent from 20
- percent."
-
- Block to Sell CompuServe Stock
- H&R Block Inc. says it will spin off its remaining 80 percent stake in
- CompuServe Inc. to shareholders by early November, completing a separation
- of the tax preparation company and the online provider begun in April. As
- reported, Block said in February it would sell up to 20 percent of
- CompuServe's stock in an initial public offering, which was completed April
- 19 with the sale of more than 18 million shares.
-
- According to The Associated Press, the remaining 74 million shares are to be
- distributed tax-free to H&R Block shareholders, who will receive about seven
- shares of CompuServe for each 10 shares of Block common stock. The
- distribution must be approved by Block shareholders at the annual meeting in
- September and by the Internal Revenue Service.
-
- CompuServe 3.0 Honored at Comdex
- The Computer Paper, Canada's largest computer monthly, honored CompuServe
- Inc.'s new interface product, CompuServe 3.0, with the editors' choice award
- for Best Online Software at Comdex Canada last week. CompuServe 3.0,
- scheduled for release later this summer, offers a host of new features that
- are designed to make the CompuServe more valuable and efficient to members
- and provide simple, direct access to the Internet.Among the new features are:
-
- · A redesigned multimedia interface that's easy to navigate and
- graphically rich, and allows automatic viewing of files such as charts,
- photos and other multimedia files.
- · An integrated Web browser that provides complete, easy access to the
- Internet through the Microsoft Internet Explorer browser.
- · Multi-tasking capability, which allows members to save time by
- performing multiple tasks simultaneously.
- · Time-saving organizing tools that allow users to track where they've
- been online, schedule tasks such as downloads at convenient times and change
- the order in which information is presented according to personal
- preferences.
- CompuServe members can preview CompuServe 3.0 and pre - order a free copy
- online (GO CISSOFT). A free copy can also be pre-ordered from the CompuServe
- Web site at http://www.compuserve.com.
-
- Germany's Escom Files Bankruptcy
- German computer group Escom AG, which soared to second place in the German
- computer market in just 10 years, now says it will seek bankruptcy.
- Reporting from Frankfurt, Germany, the French Agence France- Press
- International News Service says Escom has sought judicial protection after
- reporting losses of $120 million for 1995. "It had failed to reach
- agreement with its financial partners and creditors on a rescue package," AFP
- added. Escom, which employs 4,400 people, gave no indication about the
- future of the group's distribution network, which has 450 stores across
- Europe. The news service says judicial administrator Berhnard Hemback was
- quoted in the economic newsletter Platow Brief as saying the company's
- operational activities had "a good chance" of being preserved within another
- distribution company.
-
- CyberHome Contest Begins
- ComputerLife magazine and Acer America Corp. are looking for America's most
- technically advanced home, teaming up to offer big prizes to the person who
- has outfitted his or her home with entertainment, computer, home automation
- or communications products and technologies in a creative and meaningful way.
- People are invited to share stories of how they've turned their own homes
- into a CyberHome -- from setting up the perfect gaming center to connecting
- to grandparents far away to controlling appliances with a PC. The judges
- will select the winners who have creatively used technology in their homes
- to make the most significant impact on their lives.
-
- The grand prize winner will receive an Acer Aspire multimedia PC. The first
- prize winner will receive a "Welcome to our CyberHome" gift basket of
- software selected by ComputerLife's editors with a value of $500. Second-
- and third-place winners will receive a selection of ComputerLife Gear caps
- and T-shirts. The contest is being conducted in conjunction with the
- opening of the 1996 CyberHome, a demonstration project sponsored by
- ComputerLife magazine and West Venture Homes. The 1996 CyberHome, located in
- the Los Angeles suburb of Chino Hills, California, is a showcase home that
- demonstrates the latest in home automation and home computing and
- entertainment products. The showcase CyberHome will be open through the end
- of October.
-
- "The 1996 CyberHome will give visitors lots of ideas about how they can do
- more with computer technology in their homes," says Maggie Canon, editor-in-
- chief of ComputerLife. "However, we, want to find out how people have used
- computer technology in their homes to improve the way they live, work and
- have fun." Entries for the Ultimate CyberHome contest can include written
- descriptions, photographs and videos, and will be judged on the creative use
- of technology, its appropriateness and the impact it has made on contestants'
- lives. Entry forms, rules and directions are available in ComputerLife Forum
- (GO LIFE) on ZD Net.
-
- Gates Trying to 'Control' Net?
- Are Bill Gates and Microsoft Corp. trying to control many of the basic
- technical specifications of the Internet? That's what Microsoft critics are
- quoted as saying in The New York Times this morning, contending the result
- could be a rapid end to the fast pace of entrepreneurial innovation that has
- marked the Net in recent years. "Microsoft's Windows software has been
- similarly blamed for limiting technical innovations in personal computing,"
- comments the Reuter News Service.
-
- About the Net and Microsoft's activities, lawyer Gary Reback, who has battled
- Microsoft in court and before the Justice Department on behalf of its
- competitors, told the Times, "There are societal consequences to Microsoft's
- strategy. Here is a new technology and a whole new wave of commerce, and
- Microsoft wants to suck it into the operating system to maintain its
- monopoly." Reuters says the spotlight has focused on Microsoft's attempt to
- catch up with Internet rival, such as Netscape Communications Corp. and Sun
- Microsystems Inc.
-
- "But Microsoft also is battling within industry groups that set little-known
- technical specifications that determine whether and how well various makes
- and models of hardware and software can work together on the Internet,"
- Reuters says. "It is on those fronts where Microsoft may be in the best
- position to use its market power to influence technology's future." The Times
- notes, "Rather than merely embrace and extend the Internet, the company's
- critics now fear, Microsoft intends to engulf it" by absorbing more and more
- of the Internet's basic technology in Windows. Meanwhile, Microsoft
- executives said the company planned to cooperate with Internet standards
- groups.
-
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- For Immediate Release
-
- Corel Announces New Licensing
- and
- Development Agreement with JavaSoft
-
- Ottawa, Canada - July 18, 1996 - Corel Corporation, an award-winning
- developer and marketer of productivity applications, graphics and multimedia
- software, announced today that it has entered into a new licensing and
- development agreement with the world's premier software developer. Corel has
- licensed JavaT source code from JavaSoft and will soon include the Java
- Virtual MachineT into Corel VENTURAT, CorelDRAWT 7 and future versions of
- Corelr WordPerfectr. This will allow users to run Java applets in any of
- these yet to be released products.
-
- In addition, Corel will develop a Java-applet viewer that will allow users to
- view Java applets in any application. Corel will provide this technology to
- JavaSoft for its own use and for redistribution to other third-party
- licensees in order that they may incorporate it into their applications.
-
- "Java is definitely the platform of the future and we've embraced that vision
- at Corel wholeheartedly," said Dr. Michael Cowpland, president and chief
- executive officer of Corel Corporation. "This agreement also shows the faith
- that JavaSoft has in our ability to develop premium technology for the Java
- platform."
-
- "Corel has made an impressive commitment to the Java platform and has done
- some ground-breaking work in WordPerfect and Quattro Pro for Java," said Jon
- Kannegaard, vice president of products for JavaSoft. "This agreement signals
- an even stronger relationship between Corel and JavaSoft, and we look forward
- to seeing the further contribution Corel will make to the Java industry."
-
- JavaSoft
- JavaSoft, headquartered in Cupertino, CA, is an operating company of Sun
- Microsystems, Inc. The company's mission is to develop, market and support
- the Java technology and products based on it. Java supports networked
- applications and enables developers to write applications once that will run
- on any machine. JavaSoft develops applications, tools and systems platforms
- to further enhance Java as the programming standard for complex networks such
- as the Internet and corporate intranets.
-
-
- Corel and Time Line Solutions Announces Corel Time Line
- Project Management Software
-
- New Software To Be Incorporated Into Corel Office Professional 7
-
- Ottawa, Canada - July 15, 1996 - Corel Corporation and Time Line Solutions
- Corporation (TLSC) today announced Corelr Time Liner, a PC-based project
- management system that will be included in Corel's newest suite, Corelr
- Office Professional 7. Corel Time Line features powerful multi-project
- management tools specifically tailored to the needs of today's corporate
- managers.
-
- Based on TLSC's award winning Time Line 6.5, Corel Time Line allows users to
- plan projects around real-life situations and anticipate actual results by
- tracking required tasks, resources, dependencies and cost. By building every
- imaginable scenario into a particular plan, managers can create various "what
- if" scenarios and manage projects effectively as they change and develop.
-
- Because Corel Time Line is intended for use by managers and professionals who
- might not be familiar with project management software, a number of features
- have been added to facilitate ease-of-use including an assortment of
- templates for different types of projects ranging from developing business
- plans and creating publications to orchestrating an office move or even
- building an addition to a home. The software also includes a direct link to
- an Internet help page that provides the most up-to-date information related
- to the product.
-
- "Corel's goal is to provide customers with a collection of the best business
- software in the industry," said Dr. Michael Cowpland, president and chief
- executive officer of Corel Corporation. "Time Line is a well established
- leader in its market, and we are extremely pleased to be able to leverage
- Time Line's expertise in our new office suite."
-
- "TLSC believes Corel Office Professional 7 will be extremely successful in
- the market because it truly addresses customer needs," said Mike Webb,
- president and chief executive officer of Time Line. "Corel's advantage over
- the competition is its ability to incorporate best-of-breed technology in all
- business software categories. Now aligning your project data and business
- applications has never been easier."
-
- Built on an ODBC-compliant, SQL relational database, Corel Time Line offers
- enterprise-wide connectivity, centralized databases and sophisticated
- resource management capabilities. It gives users the power to integrate
- project planning into their business processes, along with the ability to
- fully customize every aspect of a project. Whether users are relatively new
- to project management or have years of experience behind them, they will find
- that this application effectively pulls together all aspects of a project
- throughout its duration.
-
- Time Line Solutions Corporation
- Time Line Solutions Corporation, headquartered in Novato, California,
- provides a complete range of PC-based project management products and
- services, including a unique system of training, consulting, and dedicated
- support to build customized project management systems for the individual,
- workgroup or enterprise. A leading developer of project management software
- for more than 10 years as a division of Symantec Corporation, Time Line
- Solutions Corporation became an independent company in November 1995. The
- company's products are available through a worldwide network of distributors
- and retailers. For more information call 1-800-222-TLSC, or contact Time
- Line Solutions via the Internet at info@tlsolutions.com.
-
-
-
- Corel Launches Corelr $1,000,000 Channel Contest
-
- Ottawa, Canada - July 15, 1996 - Corel Corporation announced today the launch
- of the Corelr $1,000,000 Channel Contest, a worldwide contest open to anyone
- who promotes and sells Corel's WordPerfectr and graphics products. All
- eligible individuals in the retail (store and mail order), corporate,
- distribution and academic sales fields are invited to enter. All fields
- include both inbound and outbound sales.
-
- Using any version or platform of Corel WordPerfect, eligible contestants are
- asked to list five top selling features for the new Corel WordPerfect suites
- or Corel graphics products in any of the following eight categories: Corelr
- WordPerfectr, Corelr WordPerfectr Suite, Corelr Office Professional, Corelr
- Quattror Pro, Corelr PresentationsT, Corelr Print HouseT, Corelr Graphics
- Pack and CorelDRAWT. They must also explain how each feature benefits the
- customer, thereby demonstrating their knowledge of the product and their
- ability to effectively sell it to the business user.
-
- "The Corel $1,000,000 Channel Contest is our chance to thank our channel
- partners for their outstanding sales ability and the support they continually
- show for all Corel products," said Dr. Michael Cowpland, president and chief
- executive officer of Corel Corporation.
-
- The contest runs from July 15, 1996 to September 15, 1996, with each entrant
- receiving Corel software worth over $600.* One grand prize valued at
- approximately $10,000 will be awarded in each of the above categories.
- Winning entries may be used by Corel for future testimonials and advertising
- purposes.
-
- How to Enter
- For faxed information including contest rules and an official entry form,
- interested parties can call 1-613-728-0826 x3080 Document #1133. All entries
- must be created using any version or platform of Corel WordPerfect, and all
- entries must be accompanied by a completed and signed entry form. Only
- original signatures will be accepted.
-
- Corel Launches Corel Office Professional 7 for Windowsr 95
-
- OTTAWA, Canada - July 15, 1996 - Corel Corporation and its subsidiaries
- today launched Corelr Office Professional 7. This 32-bit office suite
- includes many of the features of Corelr WordPerfect Suite 7 for Windowsr 95,
- plus a host of additional features which offer ease-of-use, OLE
- functionality, open network integration and Internet connectivity. Corel's
- new BaristaT technology, included in all three core applications, makes this
- software package the only one that enables users to publish documents
- directly to the JavaT Language. Corel Office Professional 7 carries a
- suggested list price of $695 U.S. for the CD-ROM version with upgrades
- available for a suggested list price of $295 U.S.
-
- "Corel Office Professional 7 represents unbeatable value and goes far beyond
- any other standard or professional office suite," said Dr. Michael Cowpland,
- president and chief executive officer of Corel Corporation. "With incredible
- integration, powerful graphics, award-winning programs and our Barista
- technology, Corel Office Professional 7 is the most comprehensive office
- suite on the market."
-
- Corel Office Professional 7 provides users all the tools they require to get
- ahead, stay organized, make the most of Windows 95 and harness the power of
- the on-line world.
-
- Core applications included in Corel Office Professional 7 differ from those
- in Corel WordPerfect Suite 7 in that they include Corel's new Barista
- technology. The core applications include:
-
- Corelr WordPerfectr 7: Innovative, new and key features such as Guidelines,
- Quick Spots, Make It FitT and Spell-As-You-GoT as well as Internet
- capabilities, continue to make this the word processor of choice. Corel
- WordPerfect 7 also offers full SGML support.
-
- Corelr Quattror Pro 7: This award-winning spreadsheet contains new chart
- styles, a new mapping feature, QuickTemplates, Internet connectivity, and
- right mouse-button support for fast access to formatting options. Features
- such as Fit As You Go, which automatically widens columns when calculations
- become too large, make this application stand out above the competition.
-
- Corelr PresentationsT 7: This presentations graphics program includes the
- ability to move from a slide to an Internet site or to other slides with a
- single click and the option to combine multiple backgrounds, graphics, text,
- video and sound within one presentation.
-
- Corel Office Professional 7 also offers full cross-application scripting
- abilities across all three of the core applications.
-
- Corel Office Professional 7 offers the following features:
-
- Corelr BaristaT: A core technology developed by Corel that will allow users
- of Corelr WordPerfectr 7, Corelr Quattror Pro and Corelr PresentationsT 7 to
- create documents based entirely on the Java Language, without any programming
- requirements. Corel Barista documents are platform independent and work with
- any Java-compatible browser.
-
- CorelDRAWT 6 (illustration module): This award-winning and comprehensive
- vector-based drawing application includes such full features as the polygon,
- knife, panning and spiral tools, roll-up customization, improved layer
- control and seamless texture fills.
-
- Netscape NavigatorT 2.01 Personal Edition Software: Surf the Internet with
- this leading, best-of-breed Internet client software. This edition contains
- a wizard that allows users to select and set up an Internet provider, should
- they not already have one.
-
- InfoCentralT 7: An intelligent personal information manager for the user who
- wants a highly customizable and dynamic system to manage information. One of
- InfoCentral 7's strongest features is that it enables users to connect
- information with other applications and related files such as documents,
- faxes, calls and e-mails.
-
- Borland's Paradoxr 7: A world-renowned relational database with the data-
- handling power for many enterprise-wide tasks, building applications and
- managing large amounts of business information.
-
- Corelr Time Liner: A professional project management system based on Time
- Line Solutions' Time Liner 6.5. Corel Time Line features powerful multi-
- project management tools for planning, managing and communicating, including
- interdependency resolution and resource allocation. This is a 16-bit product
- that runs under Windows 95.
-
- GroupWiseT 4.1 Client License: An excellent tool for information sharing with
- internal/external e-mail and scheduling capabilities which enable users to
- assign tasks, write notes and keep track of phone messages. No actual
- software or documentation is included in the box.
-
- VisualDTD: Helps users create a Document Type Definition file for use with
- SGML documents and assists in the visual layout of essentially all document
- structure.
-
- Corelr A to Z: A comprehensive on-line reference library which includes a
- dictionary, an encyclopedia and more.
-
- 1,000 fonts: 850 more than Corel WordPerfect Suite 7.
-
- Other key features include:
-
- EnvoyT 7: The perfect workgroup electronic publishing tool for CD-ROM and the
- Internet. All on-line documentation for Corel Office Professional 7
- applications are in Envoy format. These documents can be viewed
- electronically or printed.
-
- CorelFLOWT 3: Powerful business graphics.
-
- Starfish Software's SidekickT 95: The most popular personal information
- manager and scheduler for the user who wants an easy-to-use, intuitive way to
- manage contacts, expenses and other personal information.
-
- Starfish Software's DashboardT 95: Integrated application and task-automated
- launcher, as well as a Windows 95 system performance monitor.
-
- DADT (Desktop Application Director): This customizable system palette gives
- users the ability to launch Corel Office Professional 7 applications from the
- Task Bar, quickly perform file searches and access on-line services in record
- time.
-
- Quick View Plusr: View over 200 file formats quickly and easily.
-
- IBMr VoiceTypeT Control: Use a microphone and your voice to navigate and
- activate each core application's graphic user interface.
-
- 10,000+ clip art images with full color reference guide.
-
- Corel Office Professional 7 for Windows 95 makes the most of 32-bit power
- with more core application integration (Corel WordPerfect 7, Corel Quattro
- Pro 7, and Corel Presentations 7) than any other office suite. The following
- powerful features shared across the core applications provide for exceptional
- ease-of-use:
-
- QuickFinderT finds any file from anywhere the user specifies.
-
- A consistent user interface and common tools such as Speller, Thesaurus and
- File Manager.
-
- OLE support including powerful in-place editing.
-
- Automate work with pre-defined or customized QuickTasksT and perform complex
- tasks right from the desktop.
-
- View files and graphics before opening.
-
- System Requirements
-
- Corel Office Professional 7 for Windows 95 requires a 486/25 processor
- (486/66 recommended), 8 MB of RAM (16 recommended), CD-ROM drive (2x
- recommended) and a VGA monitor or above. Hard disk space required for
- minimum installation is 53 MB. Typical install is 157 MB. There is a
- separate install for Paradox, with minimum install of 9 MB. Value-added
- applications require additional space.
-
- Corel Corporation
-
- Incorporated in 1985, Corel Corporation is recognized internationally as an
- award-winning developer and marketer of productivity applications, graphics
- and multimedia software. Corel's product line includes CorelDRAWT, the
- Corelr WordPerfectr Suite, Corelr Office Professional, CorelVIDEOT and over
- 30 multimedia software titles. Corel's products run on most operating
- systems, including: Windows, Macintosh, UNIX, MS-DOS and OS/2 and are
- consistently rated among the strongest in the industry. The company ships
- its products in over 17 languages through a network of more than 160
- distributors in 70 countries worldwide. Corel is traded on the Toronto Stock
- Exchange (symbol: COS) and the NASDAQ - National Market System (symbol:
- COSFF). For more information visit Corel's home page on the Internet at
- http://www.corel.com.
-
- Corel and WordPerfect are registered trademarks and CorelVIDEO and CorelDRAW
- are trademarks of Corel Corporation or Corel Corporation Limited. Java and
- other Java-based names are trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. and refer to
- Sun's Java technologies. All products mentioned are trademarks or registered
- trademarks of their respective companies.
-
-
-
- EDUPAGE STR Focus Keeping the users informed
-
-
- Edupage
- Contents
-
- Strong Encryption Raises Strong Debate
- @Home Plans @Work Service
- AT&T Hangs Up Proprietary Messaging System
- E-Mail Virus Scare
- Intel Cancels Scheduled Price Cuts
- Computer Has "Turned Aesthetics On Its Head"
- Move Over, CD-ROM
- Telesat Wins American Political Support For Satellite Deal
- World Wide Wasting Of Time
- FCC Rejects Telesat Bid
- Microsoft Targets Local News Markets
- Pfeiffer's Grand Vision
- U.S. Gov't Approves Online Encryption Tool Distribution
- Clinton Administration Backs Digital TV
- MacOS Upgrade Available Now
- Finding Friends On The Net
- Cable's Billion-Dollar Gift
- "New Thinking"
- FTC Okays Time Warner Merger With Turner
- "Orchid Club" Indictments For Pornography On Internet
- Intel, Microsoft Cross-License Agreement
- Net Results On "Reinventing America"
- Wireless LAN Standards Boost Market
- Pippin At Play
- Teleglobe Wins Right To Expand
- IBM Warns European On Conversion To Single Currency
- Edupage, Innovation ... And Hip Hop
-
-
-
- STRONG ENCRYPTION RAISES STRONG DEBATE
- Despite opposition from the computer industry and civil libertarians, the
- Clinton Administration continues to insist that data encryption technology
- be based on a "key escrow" technique in which the large numbers ("keys")
- used to decode data each be divided into two parts -- with each part held in
- escrow by a third party, so that encrypted communications could be monitored
- by law enforcement officials who've obtained court orders. The government
- says it will drop restrictions on the export of strong cryptography systems
- if industry will go along with the key escrow approach. That seems
- unlikely, however; Netscape CEO James Barksdale's response was: "We are
- furious. This is a proposal that doesn't do anything to solve the immediate
- needs of industry jobs." Gore advisor Greg Simon argued that "the President
- and Vice President took an oath to protect our national security. They feel
- they have to err on the side of protecting national security." (New York
- Times 13 Jul 96)
-
- @HOME PLANS @WORK SERVICE
- @Home, an Internet cable access service now being tested in California, plans
- to add work-at-home services to its product mix, through a new unit called
- @Work. That division will provide both home telecommuting and business
- Internet-access services, as well as intranetworking connections for business-
- to-business communications. "This is clearly a very important initiative for
- us to work with corporations for telecommuting and LAN access to employees
- over HFC networks," says an @Home senior VP. Services are currently "in the
- alpha stage" with 12,000 homes connected to two-way plant in Orange County.
- A full launch is planned by the end of this year. @Home is a partnership
- between TCI Technology Ventures and venture capital firm Kleiner, Perkins,
- Caufield & Byers. (Multichannel News Digest 8 Jul 96)
-
- AT&T HANGS UP PROPRIETARY MESSAGING SYSTEM
- Citing competition from the Internet, AT&T has folded its PersonaLink online
- service that enabled users to shop and send messages via hand-held wireless
- "personal communicators" made by Motorola and Sony. The company had poured
- some $100 million into the venture, which used its own proprietary software.
- In its place, AT&T will launch a new cellular-phone Internet access service
- called PocketNet Phone, that uses a hybrid cell- data phone made by
- Mitsubishi Wireless Communications and Cirrus Logic. Software for the new
- venture is made by Unwired Planet Inc., a startup company in which AT&T
- holds an unspecified stake. (Wall Street Journal 12 July 96 B3)
-
- E-MAIL VIRUS SCARE
- Experts say that fears of e-mail-borne viruses appear to be overblown, and
- are urging network users to stop their misguided efforts to warn others of
- the "non-existent" threat. Panic over unfounded rumors causes another very
- real problem -- floods of e-mail warnings that can slow Internet traffic to a
- crawl. Security specialists say that plain electronic mail cannot carry a
- virus, and that users can best protect themselves by not opening attachments
- unless they have a good idea of what's inside. (Chronicle of Higher
- Education 12 Jul 96 A19) Meanwhile, to be on the safe side, Trend Micro
- Inc. offers a way to protect network servers from nasty surprises. Its
- InterScan E-Mail VirusWall intercepts each e-mail message and attachment,
- scanning them for any suspicious-looking code. If an infection is detected,
- the message recipient and network manager are alerted to the problem before
- it goes any further. The company claims it works with all popular e-mail
- systems. (Investor's Business Daily 15 Jul 96 A6)
-
- INTEL CANCELS SCHEDULED PRICE CUTS
- Intel is just saying no to the cutthroat price slashing that has
- characterized the PC market the last few years, and plans to cancel price
- cuts scheduled for this November on its Pentium microprocessors. The world's
- biggest chip maker has a long history of aggressively reducing its prices
- every quarter. The new strategy, which will maintain the company's $380
- price for its Pentium 166 chip through February, is intended to even out
- customer demand during the key Christmas buying season. Many customers wait
- until December to buy computers to take advantage of the November price cut.
- (Wall Street Journal 12 July 96 B3)
-
- COMPUTER HAS "TURNED AESTHETICS ON ITS HEAD"
- Author Nicholas von Hoffman says that "for the time being, at least, what the
- computer can do in art and design has turned aesthetics on its head." Noting
- that in just a few decades "our strange species has broken out of a
- millennium of sensory deprivation to live in a condition of perpetual
- overload," von Hoffman says that "in time, art critics and the wider public
- may develop an aesthetic standard for judging the new imagery. For now, it
- is enough to recognize the electronic look to the wild visuals ever
- presenting themselves to our blinking eyes... With the computer, things are
- not so much created as they are produced, with the producer-director becoming
- the star and the controlling force of much that was in other hands at other
- times." (Architectural Digest Jul 96 p58)
-
- MOVE OVER, CD-ROM
- Now that most computer manufacturers have made CD-ROM drives a standard
- component of their design, DVD-ROMs are poised to take their place. The
- DVD, or digital videodisc, looks about the same as a standard CD-ROM but
- can hold about eight times the data, or about 4.8 gigabytes. Eventually DVD-
- ROMs will store up to 17 gigabytes. The first ones are expected to hit the
- market this fall, priced at $300 to $500, and will be able to play all your
- old CD-ROMs, as well as new software, such as full-length movies. (Popular
- Science Jul 96 p25)
-
- TELESAT WINS AMERICAN POLITICAL
- SUPPORT FOR SATELLITE DEAL
- Telesat Canada won support from a Democrat congressman for its plan to share
- Canada's direct-broadcast satellite parking slots with two American
- companies. John Dingell, the ranking Democrat on the House of
- Representatives Commerce Committee, expressed his support for Telesat's
- ambitious plan and criticized U.S. officials for elevating the matter into a
- trade dispute by complaining about Canadian restrictions on American
- direct-to-home satellite companies. (Toronto Globe & Mail 12 Jul 96 B3)
-
- WORLD WIDE WASTING OF TIME
- Sci-Fi author William Gibson, who coined the word "cyberspace," says the
- World Wide Web "offers us the opportunity to waste time, to wander
- aimlessly, to daydream about the countless other lives, the other people, on
- the far sides of however many monitors in that postgeorgraphical meta-country
- we increasingly call home." Gibson describes the Web as "a procrastinator's
- dream," which offers the added advantage that "people who see you doing it
- might even imagine you're working." (New York Times Magazine 14 Jul 96 p31)
-
- FCC REJECTS TELESAT BID
- The Federal Communications Commission rejected applications by American cable
- companies Tele- Communications Inc. and Telquest Ventures to use satellites
- owned by Ontario-based Telesat Canada to beam TV programming into the United
- States. Although the denial of the applications was based on a technicality,
- the FCC also raised questions about restrictions that Canada puts on American
- satellite services and TV programming. (New York Times 16 Jul C5)
-
- MICROSOFT TARGETS LOCAL NEWS MARKETS
- Microsoft's CityScape project is targeting traditional local news markets
- where up till now city newspapers and magazines have dominated, offering
- restaurant reviews, local event listings, etc. The software company, which
- envisions a nationwide network of online community guides, is making offers
- to publishers across the country to provide news and information content in
- return for a piece of the revenue pie. Microsoft is in talks with a half-
- dozen publications, and some are saying its terms are irresistible: "The
- smart publishers are going to team up with Microsoft," says the CEO of Media
- News Group. "You can't ignore them. If publishers won't play ball with
- them, they'll do it on their own." Knight Ridder's marketing VP has another
- view, however: "To make an alliance based on fear doesn't make anysense.
- I would look long and hard before I gave them any of our product." Microsoft
- plans to launch CityScape in New York, San Francisco and San Diego early
- next year, and eventually cover the rest of the country's large markets.
- (Wall Street Journal 15 Jul 96 B1)
-
- PFEIFFER'S GRAND VISION
- Compaq CEO Eckhard Pfeiffer is eyeing fast growing consumer markets, and
- yesterday launched its new line of home PCs and laptops. But Pfeiffer's
- vision goes beyond the P-in-every-room scenario; he thinks one of the biggest
- future opportunities for his company will be in "home automation" -- using
- computers to control air conditioning, heating and security systems. Compaq
- is already bankrolling startup Intellon Corp., which is developing chips for
- controlling household appliances -- from stereos to refrigerators -- using a
- PC. The company is also working with Mattel's Fisher Price unit to produce
- PC add-ons for tots, and an alliance with Thomson Consumer Electronics will
- produce new hybrid computer/consumer electronics products. (Business Week
- 22 Jul 96 p70)
-
- U.S. GOV'T APPROVES ONLINE ENCRYPTION TOOL DISTRIBUTION
- The U.S. government has okayed Netscape Communications' plan to distribute
- its powerful 128-bit encryption software via the Internet, as long as it's
- sent only to U.S. citizens. Currently, the company has to ship the software
- via snail mail. Under the government's terms, Netscape must use a database to
- verify the names and addresses of people who want to download the software
- and ask them to sign affidavits stating they are U.S. citizens. Netscape
- says its 128-bit encryption software requires 309 septillion more times
- computing power to break the encryption code than its 40-bit version. (Wall
- Street Journal 16 Jul 96 B2)
-
- CLINTON ADMINISTRATION BACKS BROADCASTERS' DIGITAL TV
- In letters to FCC Chairman Reed Hundt, the White House Office of Science and
- Technology Policy and the U.S. Commerce Department have endorsed digital TV
- format standards proposed by a "grand alliance" of TV broadcasters and
- consumer electronics manufacturers, in spite of objections from the computer
- industry that the proposed standards are already obsolete. A Microsoft
- spokesman commented: "Ideally, we'd like to see no standard at all. But if
- there is a standard, we think it should be a minimal one to minimize the real
- risk of perpetuating obsolete technology... The public debate on this is far
- from over." (New York Times 16 Jul 96)
-
- MAC OS UPGRADE AVAILABLE NOW
- A mini-upgrade of the aging MacOS System 7.5 version is available now,
- offering a bundle of all the various patches that Apple has released over
- the past few months to fix bugs in 7.5. The 7.5.3 upgrade also offers some
- new network communications and Internet access capabilities, as well as
- better system stability and integration of Apple's QuickTime technology for
- multimedia and OpenDoc technology for file management and linking. Another
- interim upgrade, Harmony, is due out in the first half of next year.
- (Information Week 8 Jul 96 p84)
-
- FINDING FRIENDS ON THE NET
- It's getting easier to locate your friend's home page on the Web, thanks to a
- small California company called WhoWhere?. WhoWhere? has catalogued more
- than 100,000 personal home page addresses, which are organized based on
- hobbies, jobs, schools and other criteria. The directory will be added to
- WhoWhere?'s PeopleSearch service, which is available through Netscape's
- Netsearch service and Infoseek's search engine. (Investor's Business Daily
- 16 Jul 96 A8)
-
- CABLE'S BILLION-DOLLAR GIFT
- Canada's cable industry received a "billion-dollar bonus" from federal
- regulators yesterday by "administrative fiat without any public input or
- participation by the federal government." CRTC commissioners announced cable
- companies will no longer have to demonstrate significant public benefits such
- as improvement of infrastructure when they buy control of another cable
- concern or merge operations. (Toronto Globe & Mail 16 Jul 96 B1)
-
- "NEW THINKING"
- Irish consultant /columnist Gerry McGovern says e-mail will change the world
- more than the phone did because it can be one-to-one, one-to-many, or many-
- to-many: "With regard to many-to-many, e-mail becomes a foundation upon
- which the massively parallel society can be built, as it networks many minds
- to address complex problems." Send mail to newthinking-request@nua.ie with
- the word "subscribe" in the body of the message, for free subscription.
- (Washington Times 15 Jul 96)
-
- FTC OKAYS TIME WARNER MERGER WITH TURNER
- The Federal Trade Commission has indicated it will approve Time Warner's $7.5
- billion purchase of the Turner Broadcasting System, which will create the
- world's largest media and entertainment conglomerate. The final settlement
- apparently will limit the financial interest that John Malone's Tele-
- Communications Inc. (TCI) can take in Time Warner, severely reduce various
- concessions that would have been made to TCI, and would forbid Time Warner
- from discriminating against competitors in the cable industry. (Washington
- Post 18 Jul 96)
-
- "ORCHID CLUB" INDICTMENTS FOR PORNOGRAPHY ON INTERNET
- A federal grand jury in San Jose, California, has indicted 16 people from the
- U.S. and abroad for their participation in a child pornography ring called
- the "Orchid Club," whose members used the Internet to share sexual pictures
- and conduct online chat during a child molestation. A U.S. attorney says
- there are no free speech issues involved: "The thing that ups the ante in
- this case is that allegations of distribution of pornography are coupled with
- serious allegations of child molestation. It's an issue relating to the
- protection of children, not to the First Amendment." (New York Times 17 Jul
- 96 A8)
-
- INTEL, MICROSOFT CROSS-LICENSE AGREEMENT
- Intel Corp. and Microsoft Corp. have agreed to cross-license their Internet
- communications technology in an effort to pursue Internet-based telephone
- and videoconferencing business opportunities. The alliance, which will
- exploit Intel's Proshare videoconferencing technology and Microsoft's
- NetMeeting and ActiveX software, will also develop technology to allow users
- to find other people to talk with on the Internet via a User Location
- Service. (Investor's Business Daily 18 Jul 96 A9)
-
- NET RESULTS ON "REINVENTING AMERICA"
- The "Reinventing America" online budget simulation game -- co-developed and
- sponsored by a grant from The Markle Foundation and Crossover Technologies -
- - allowed Internet users over the past six months to participate in news and
- discussion groups on the federal budget, and ultimately to vote on
- recommendations contained in a draft budget bill presented last week. The
- participants' recommendations, not surprisingly, included more funding for
- technology and research. Other recommendations included less funding for the
- military, redirecting drug interdiction funding toward education and
- rehabilitation, drastically cutting foreign aid, reforming numerous poverty
- assistance and pension programs, and ending affirmative action. Crossover's
- president says there were 3.5 million hits, with about 3,390 "core" visitors
- who participated regularly. He says that although the discussions indicated
- a strong libertarian streak early on, they moved toward the political
- center over time. (Broadcasting & Cable 15 Jul 96 p53)
-
- WIRELESS LAN STANDARDS BOOST MARKET
- Two rivals in the wireless LAN market, Symbol Technologies and Telxon Corp.,
- have agreed to develop interoperable technology based on a proposed industry
- standard, the IEEE 802.11. A Yankee Group analyst calls the decision to
- cooperate "an important step toward opening up wireless LANs to users." The
- Yankee Group estimates North American sales of wireless LANs rising to $300
- million by the year 2000, up from $90 million last year. (Information Week
- 8 Jul 96 p76)
-
- PIPPIN AT PLAY
- Bandai's new @World Internet device is based on Apple's Pippin technology,
- packing much of the company's Macintosh hardware and software into a compact
- box designed to hook up to a TV or computer monitor. @World comes with a
- modem for accessing the Internet and a CD player for CD-ROMs. (Popular
- Science Aug 96 p11)
-
- TELEGLOBE WINS RIGHT TO EXPAND
- A subsidiary of Teleglobe Canada will expand into the massive American
- telecommunications market, after winning FCC approval to sell international
- switched services and international private lines in the United States. The
- company also will provide international phone resale services to the United
- Kingdom and Sweden. (Toronto Globe & Mail 17 Jul 96 B3)
-
- IBM WARNS EUROPEAN ON CONVERSION TO SINGLE CURRENCY
- IBM is urging European businesses to delay implementation of a common
- European currency beyond its planned introduction in 1999, warning that
- there will be computer chaos caused by a severe shortage of skills needed to
- cope with such a transition. Many businesses, however, remain skeptical, and
- think that computing groups are simply seeking business. (Financial Times 18
- Jul 96)
-
- EDUPAGE, INNOVATION ... AND HIP HOP
- Describing the newsletter you're now reading as "the single best thing I've
- found on the Internet," journalist Gerry McGovern says that Edupage and
- Innovation (both written by the same people) are "a bit like hip hop and
- dance music, which could not have existed without a certain critical mass of
- old music being already created. Once that was in place, it could take riffs
- from old musical pieces and make them new by placing them in different
- environment." If you'd like a free (hip hop) six-week trial subscription to
- Innovation, send mail to innovation-trial@newsscan.com, and in the subject
- line type the word: subscribe. Or you can go to
- < http://www.newsscan.com >. (Hot Press Magazine Jul 96)
-
- Edupage is written by John Gehl (gehl@educom.edu) & Suzanne Douglas
- (douglas@educom.edu).
- Voice: 404-371-1853, Fax: 404-371-8057.
-
- Technical support is provided by the Office of Information Technology,
- University of North Carolina.
-
- EDUPAGE is what you've just finished reading. To subscribe to Edupage: send
- a message to: listproc@educom.unc.edu and in the body of the message type:
- subscribe edupage Marvin Minsky (assuming that your name is Marvin Minsky;
- if it's not, substitute your own name). ... To cancel, send a message to:
- listproc@educom.unc.edu and in the body of the message type: unsubscribe
- edupage... Subscription problems: educom@educom.unc.edu.
-
- EDUCOM REVIEW is our bimonthly print magazine on learning, communications,
- and information technology. Subscriptions are $18 a year in the U.S.; send
- mail to offer@educom.edu. When you do, we'll ring a little bell, because
- we'll be so happy! Choice of bell is yours: a small dome with a button,
- like the one on the counter at the dry cleaners with the sign "Ring bell for
- service"; or a small hand bell; or a cathedral bell; or a door bell; or a
- chime; or a glockenspiel. Your choice. But ring it!
-
- EDUCOM UPDATE is our twice-a-month electronic summary of organizational news
- and events. To subscribe to the Update: send a message to:
- listproc@educom.unc.edu and in the body of the message type: subscribe
- update John McCarthy (assuming that your name is John McCarthy; if it's
- not, substitute your own name).
-
- INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CONFERENCE
- The CAUSE organization's annual conference on information technology in
- higher education is scheduled for the end of this month in New Orleans. The
- conference will bring together administrators, academicians and other
- managers of information resources. For full conference information check out
- <http://cause-www.colorado.edu > or send e-mail to conf@cause.colorado.edu.
-
- ARCHIVES & TRANSLATIONS. For archive copies of Edupage or Update, ftp or
- gopher to educom.edu or see URL: < http://www.educom.edu/>. For the French
- edition of Edupage, send mail to edupage-fr@ijs.com with the subject
- "subscribe"; or see < http://www.ijs.com >. For the Hebrew edition, send
- mail to listserv@kinetica.co.il containing : SUBSCRIBE Leketnet-Word6 <name>
- or see < http://www.kinetica.co.il/ newsletters/leketnet/ >. For the
- Hungarian edition, send mail to: send mail to subs.edupage@hungary.com. An
- Italian edition is available on Agora' Telematica; connection and/or free
- subscription via BT-Tymnet and Sprint (login: <agora) or via telnet
- <agora.stm.it; mail: <b.parrella@agora.stm.it for info. For the Portuguese
- edition, contact edunews@nc-rj.rnp.br with the message SUB EDUPAGE-P Seu
- Primeiro Nome Seu Sobrenome. For the Spanish edition, send mail edunews@nc-
- rj.rnp.br with the message SUB EDUPAGE-E Su Primer Nombre, Su Apellido.
-
- Educom -- Transforming Education Through Information Technology
-
-
-
-
- Kids Computing Corner
- Frank Sereno, Editor
-
- The Kids' Computing Corner
- Computer news and software reviews
- from a parent's point of view
-
- In the News
-
- New Encyclopedia from The Learning Company
-
- On July 15th, The Learning Company announced the release of Ultimate
- Children's EncyclopediaT. This complete reference guide is based on the
- Kingfisher series of children's books. This multimedia CD-ROM includes
- Children's Encyclopedia, Illustrated Dictionary, Illustrated Thesaurus, Book
- of Words and Great Lives, and an atlas and historical timeline as well. The
- disc contains more than 24,000 articles, 3000 photos and illustrations, 100
- movies and more than 1700 sound clips.
-
- Ultimate Children's EncyclopediaT was designed for children ages 7 to 12.
- Its easy interface includes a friendly on-screen helper named Zak. Zak
- instructs children on how to navigate the program and offers advice and ideas
- on best using the program's information. The program was designed to
- complement The Learning Company's line of Interactive Writing Tools, a line
- of age appropriate word processors. It is also useful as a research tool for
- use with other word processor or publishing programs.
-
- Ultimate Children's EncyclopediaT has a suggested retail price of $50. The
- Learning Company can be contacted by phone at 800-227-5609 and you can visit
- their website at http://www.learningco.com.
-
- NewView Announces Specs for Kids
-
- Specs for Kids 2.0 is now available. It is a next generation Internet
- filtering program goes beyond basic blocking. It adds inclusive content
- filtering, access to ratings provided by a permanent staff, multiple user
- profiles and claims to have the largest directory of children's sites on the
- Internet.
-
- NewView's staff reviews sites at the document level and categorizes them
- against 15 filtering categories and 35 index categories. Specs for Kids
- filters all types of Internet applications including the Web, Telnet, e-mail,
- IRC chat, FTP and Usenet news. You can customize the program for multiple
- user profiles, time controls, dictionary screening, password logons, tamper
- protection and more. You can use Specs on a single PC or in a direct-access
- network.
-
- Specs for Kids is available for Windows 3.1 and Apple Macintosh. NewView
- will add Windows 95 support within the next 45 days. This program is now
- available for a FREE TRIAL by downloading the software from the NewView
- website at http://www.newview.com.
-
-
- MECC Launches Word Munchers Deluxe
-
- MECC, a subsidiary of SoftKey International Inc. announces the newest member
- of its Munchers software line, Word MunchersT Deluxe. Designed for ages six
- to eleven, this CD-ROM program for Macintosh and Windows teaches children
- grammar, reading, rhyming and phonics. Word MunchersT Deluxe will retail for
- about $25.
-
- Apple Sponsors New School Promotion
-
- Apple Computer, Inc. recently announced a new back-to-school promotion called
- "Cool Cash Back + Cool Tools for Schools." Families making qualifying
- Macintosh Performa and printer purchases between July 13 and October 6 will
- receive a mail-in cash rebate and earn points for their local schools.
-
- Parents will receive a $100 cash rebate by purchasing a qualifying Macintosh
- Performa computer and Apple printer at the same time. Any purchase of a
- Performa computer or Apple printer qualifies for school reward points. The
- more expensive the system purchased, the more points for the school of your
- choice. For example, the purchase of a Mac Performa 6320 qualifies for 300
- points. Schools can redeem 50 points for an educational software program,
- 200 points for an Apple Internet Connection Kit or 4500 points for Apple
- Color LaserWriter 12/600PS.
-
- More details on this promotion are available by calling Apple's fax-back
- number at 1-800-262-0329 or you can visit the Apple website at
- http://www.apple.com/promo/coolcash/.
-
-
- PrintPaks Magnet Kit
- Windows/Macintosh CD-ROM
- $19.95
- ages 6 and up
- PrintPaks Inc
- 513 NW 13th Avenue, Suite 202
- Portland, OR 97209
- 503-295-6564
- http://www.printpaks.com
-
- Program Requirements
- IBM Macintosh
- OS: Windows 3.1, Windows 95 OS: System 7.1
- CPU: 386 CPU: 68020
- HD Space: 10 MB HD Space: 10 MB
- Memory: 8 MB Memory: 8 MB
- Graphics: 640 by 480 with 256 colors Graphics: 256 colors, 13" monitor
- CD-ROM: Double-speed CD-ROM: Double-speed
- Audio: 8-bit Windows compatible sound card
- Other: mouse, inkjet printer Other: mouse, inkjet printer
-
- reviewed by Frank Sereno
-
- Have you been looking for a fun, computer-related activity that you can share
- with your whole family? Do you have an inkjet printer? If the answer is yes
- to both questions, then I have a great program for you! PrintPaks Magnet Kit
- is not only great fun, but it makes attractive, useful magnets.
-
- The kit provides special glossy paper for printing your designs. You design
- four magnets on each sheet. After printing, carefully place the paper on the
- adhesive-faced magnet material and then cut it into individual magnets. Max,
- a lovable dog wearing a propeller beanie, guides you through each step of the
- process. Any time you need help, just click on his nose and he will announce
- all your options.
-
- I have a few concerns about the program. Magnet Kit includes about 50
- graphics. This is offset by the fact that you can import images in TIFF and
- BMP format so you can put any image you can scan, draw or download into the
- graphics library. Another problem could be the cost of raw materials. Kids
- will have so much fun that they will want to make magnets often. Refill kits
- to make twelve more magnets cost $9.95 each. I also think that more magnets
- could be placed on a sheet because there is a lot of scrap when you finish
- the trimming process. The large area between magnets was probably designed
- to make cutting easier for younger children.
-
- The magnets are great fun to make. I had a blast designing magnets with my
- sons. I can also see many uses for these magnets. They can be great gifts
- at a cost of about $1.00 each. You could make some with your children's
- photos and give them to your friends and family instead of snapshots. You
- can make diet reminders to place on your refrigerator. You can make gag
- gifts for friends. PrintPaks Magnet Kit even includes an option for making
- phone lists of emergency numbers. Wouldn't that be a handy item to give to
- your child care provider or baby-sitter? This is more fun (and much more
- useful) than a barrel of monkeys.
-
- PrintPaks Magnet Kit is designed for children ages 6 and older, but I
- recommend adult supervision for kids under 10. The process involves loading
- the paper correctly into your printer and choosing the correct printer
- options. These tasks may prove difficult for younger children This is a
- fast and fun way to get your family involved in computing. It's simple and
- the whole family can do it. I highly recommend PrintPaks Magnet Kit.
-
- Two of our greatest testers!! Are Frank's sons, Jerry & Tim Thanks guys
-
-
-
- Portable Computers Section
- Marty Mankins, Editor
-
-
-
-
- STR Editor's Mail Call "...a place for the readers to be heard"
-
-
- Editor's MailBag
-
-
- Messages * NOT EDITED * for content
-
-
-
-
- Subject: Politics & Constitution - Msg Number: 116237
- From: Steve Watkins 74241,3001
- To: Ralph @ STReport 70007,4454
- Date: 14-Jul-96 8:08
-
- Ralph,
-
- Are you seriously considering this as a weekly/monthly on-line 'zine?
-
- My two cents:
- · It would be nice to see another source of information to combat the
- insanity of the (overboard) liberal mass media and I surely would give it a
- read
-
- · I don't think it would have an impact, other than being interesting
- reading for many. Why?
-
- America - and the media that feeds it - is mainly brain dead these days.
- It's already probably too late to save us. The discontent and anger from
- the 1994 elections (in which not a single republican encumb. was defeated)
- is already washed away among the tide of garbage being spewed by the Spin
- Doctors and the Media that laps it up. The machine is so completely broken -
- and every part is so out of control - that I doubt it can be fixed.
-
- Though this will sound elitist... Too many completely clueless people have
- the right to vote. There ought to be a test you have to take to vote. So
- many people have NO CLUE about any issues at all - yet they THINK they do,
- because they saw some Spin Doctor advertisement or because someone told them
- "all about it." People vote on such amazingly important (massive sarcasm)
- as : age, looks and which politicians "care" the most. <HINT: NONE OF THEM
- GIVE A DAMN>
-
- First proposal: If you watch Carnie, Tempest, Geraldo, Maury, Rikkkki, etc.,
- etc., etc. - you CANT VOTE.
- Second proposal: Free psychiatric evaluations for those that believe
- anything James Carvel (aka Serpent Head, as named by his own wife <G>) - the
- talk show darling, Republican basher - says. :)
-
- Exiting Soap Box. :)
-
- Steve
-
- Steve,
- Hopefully, there is an impact. Judging from the mail we've received
- there is more than a casual interest in the political editorials we've
- presented from time to time. Also, it would appear that doing two magazines
- would prove to be counter-productive. so, for the time being, we shall carry
- the presentations in our current humble publication. Thanks for the
- interest and for reading.
- Ralph
-
-
-
-
- Atari: Jaguar/Computer Section
- Dana Jacobson, Editor
-
-
- From the Atari Editor's Desk "Saying it like it is!"
-
-
- Every once in awhile, I feel compelled to take an introspective view of the
- things that we're trying to accomplish within the Atari section of STReport.
- Occasionally, and more often than not lately, I ponder what our goals are,
- and whether or not we are achieving them. To be perfectly honest, I'm my
- worst critic.
-
- Are we, or more specifically, am I, providing you, as readers (hopefully,
- Atari readers), the best possible source for current and informative news
- regarding Atari computers and game machines? The answer is "I don't believe
- so." Putting together an online magazine every single week is not an easy
- task. STReport has been around since June of 1987 - longer than any other
- Atari publication to-date! Over the years, it has meant the devotion and
- hard work of many groups and individuals to maintain this endeavor. And, it
- has been you, the readers of STReport, who have provided us with the stamina
- to continue doing so.
-
- But, our numbers continue to dwindle - both in staff and readership, and
- Atari users in general (at least in terms of downloads in Atari areas).
- This is to be expected because of the changes in focus of Atari itself over
- the past years; and, it's also due to the growth of the PC market. There's
- no denying that the PC world has had a negative effect on the rest of the
- computing world. However, this growth does not mean that we, as Atari
- computer users, need to roll over and play dead!
-
- Are you still with me? Good. I'm looking for your expertise and help. For
- the majority of you reading this, you're devoted Atari users like I am.
- STReport has always depended on the users, and readers, for contributions to
- our magazine to make it a well-rounded publication. Two or three of us
- cannot accomplish our goals without your help and continue to maintain what
- we hope will be one that you look forward to reading every single week. And
- I refuse to kid myself that every week's issue will contain an abundance of
- news and information even with your support. But, I do realize that there is
- a lot of potential out there for new information, and articles based on your
- experiences, past and present. We need to hear from you.
-
- I'm not asking for a full-time commitment nor a pre-requisite that you join
- our Atari staff here at STReport. If that is something you'd consider -
- fine. But experience has taught me that most people do not have the time and
- energy these days to make such a commitment. And I also realize how
- difficult it is these days to be motivated enough to write something about
- Atari-related topics. I also realize that most of you still find enjoyment
- and success through your use of Atari products - computers and games. And
- yes, many of us also find frustration.
-
- But remember something that I have always found to be a common factor among
- most Atari users: the meaning of being part of the Atari community. No
- other platform can make such a claim. Need some help with a particular
- problem dealing with a particular program, game, or hardware? Just one
- question posted on your favorite online service, BBS, or Usenet group and
- you'll receive dozens of helpful replies. You've seen it happen, and likely
- you've been a benefactor of the answers yourself - even if it wasn't you who
- initiated the question.
-
- This is the essence of my involvement with the Atari portion of STReport.
- This community spirit that has made using Atari computers and other
- peripherals enjoyable. Wouldn't it be interesting to "harness" a little bit
- of that community spirit and share it with our fellow-Atarians?
-
- You may be wondering, and asking yourself: "What can I do to help?" There
- are a number of things that you can do. In all likelihood, you're online
- sometime, somewhere. If you see an interesting article related to Atari
- computing or gaming - pass it along to us or point it out in such a way that
- we can locate it easily. Has someone recently posed a question on [name
- your favorite online Atari source here] and had it be answered - a topic
- that you feel would be of interest to many? Capture it/them and forward the
- item(s) to us. Have a favorite experience, go to an interesting Atari show,
- find a new program or game, know some Atari trivia, and
- the list is endless? Write about it and send it along.
-
- Remember, the computing world has expanded greatly. An article that appears
- in an Atari forum on CompuServe may never reach the users on Delphi or GEnie.
- And, something that appears on the Internet or Usenet may never appear on
- any of the online services. And your favorite local BBS may be another
- singular supply of information. Take the culmination of all these interests
- and bits of news and information - sort through it - put it all together -
- and organize it into one central source of informative and entertaining
- reporting. And then have it appear on a weekly basis in STReport.
-
- So, white think? Please, all feedback (pro and/or con) should be sent to me
- at the online addresses listed below. If you have some ideas that you feel
- would be of benefit, pass them along. If you have a regular mailing list for
- Atari-related products, add me to it. If you have an idea for an article but
- not sure how to go about organizing or writing it, let me know. Your
- interests are my interests - I want to hear from you all.
-
- Drop me a line at any of the following online addresses:
-
- Delphi - DPJ (dpj@delphi.com)
- CompuServe - 71051,3327 (71051.3327@compuserve.com)
- GEnie - D.JACOBSON2 (d.jacobson2@genie.com)
- Toad Hall BBS - 617-567-8642 or 617-569-2489
-
- Until next time...
-
- New Atari Newsgroups Proposed! STR Focus
-
-
- Atari Binaries - Inaugural Message
-
- This message inaugurates both alt.binaries.atari and alt.binaries.atari.d
-
- CHARTER:
-
- alt.binaries.atari is for distribution of freeware, Public Domain, and
- shareware patches, programs, etcetera, intended for Atari and compatible
- computers. alt.binaries.atari.d is for discussion of the content of
- alt.binaries.atari and should never contain binary files.
-
- The following are explicitly inappropriate for posting to either
- alt.binaries.atari or alt.binaries.atari.d:
-
- · Copyrighted software without the EXPLICIT permission of the copyright
- holder to post the software.
-
- · "Chain letters," "get rich quick" schemes, for sale messages, or
- commercial solicitations of any kind.
-
- · "My computer is better than your computer" messages, or discussions of
- the relative merits of any computer system. These discussions properly
- belong in the various .advocacy groups (or alt.flames in some cases).
-
- · Any posting whatsoever by Peter Sinclair-Day; he does not own an Atari
- or compatible computer, does not use an Atari or compatible computer, and
- does not hold the copyright to any known software.
-
- Very large binaries (e.g., in excess of 500k) should be uploaded to an ftp
- site (or several) first, and the availability (with full path) announced in
- a.b.a; only in the case of a specific request by a user who has no ftp
- access should such large binaries be posted to the newsgroup.
-
- It is suggested that a short text message be posted in a.b.a immediately
- before posting a binary, explaining the purpose of the binary, the copyright
- status and distribution policy pertaining to the binary, system requirements
- for use of the binary, and any special information which may assist in
- determining the desirability or undesirability of downloading the binary.
-
- This is an unmoderated group. However, it will be closely watched by the
- undersigned, and any blatant violation of copyright law will be immediately
- reported to the violator's postmaster and the copyright holder. Violations
- of netiquette will be referred to the appropriate
- postmaster if it is deemed necessary.
-
- There has been some online activity regarding Syquest's recent price
- reduction announcements of their EZ135 removable hard drive system. The
- debate has been on whether or not Syquest has discontinued this item in favor
- of the EZ230. While the decision hasn't been firmly made yet, it appears
- from the following item from one of our readers that there's a good chance
- that the EZ135 will be discontinued later this year.
-
- Below is the exact text clipped from the SyQuest Corporation form S-3 filed
- with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on July 1, 1996.
- You can inspect the document for yourself to confirm the information at
- site: http://www.sec.gov and then select Search Edgar Datebase and use
- "Syquest" as your search word. You want the 7/1/96 S-3 filing.
-
-
- INTRODUCTION OF EZ135 AND EZ230.
-
- The Company's EZ135 products accounted for 16% of the Company's sales in the
- last quarter of fiscal 1995, 42% in the first quarter of fiscal 1996 and 46%
- in the second quarter of fiscal 1996. The Company expects that sales of the
- EZ135 products will account for a less significant percentage of its sales
- for the balance of the 1996 fiscal year. The Company's EZ135 products
- commenced commercial shipment in September 1995. Although sales of EZ135
- products contributed significantly to the Company's revenue during the last
- quarter of the 1995 fiscal year and the first half of fiscal year 1996, the
- Company lost money on the EZ135 due to design- related issues impacting the
- cost of manufacturing the product (which could not be corrected as the
- Company originally anticipated), and due to competitive pressures requiring
- the price to be lower than cost. The Company presently expects to cease
- selling the EZ135 by October 1996.
-
- The Company introduced its EZ Flyer 230 on June 3, 1996. Commercial
- shipments of the EZ230 commenced on June 1, 1996. There can be no assurance
- that the EZ230 will be accepted in the marketplace or achieve significant
- sales (see "Risk Factors-Uncertainty of Market Acceptance of Products") or
- that the Company will be able to sell the EZ230 at a price in excess of the
- cost of manufacturing the EZ230.
-
-
-
- 4 Years On
-
- From: Phillip White <flibbet@zip.com.au>
-
- Some years ago I used to be the editor for "Inside Info", the disk magazine
- for ACE, the Atari Computer Enthusiasts user group in Sydney Australia. Just
- before the release of the Falcon in this country I wrote an article
- speculating on the future of this machine. While I don't profess to be
- totally factual It is interesting to read this now a few years later after I
- wrote it (in late 1992).
-
- Note that prices are in Australian dollars at that time about .70 US$ and
- Australia was in a severe economic recession. I was doing a cleanup on my PC
- (I also have a Mac) and came across heap of text files I saved when I sold
- my ST.
-
- ATARI and the Falcon
-
- By Phillip White (ACE Editor)
-
- Previous issues of Inside Info have looked at some of the problems associated
- with Atari, ranging from gross mismanagement, to conspiracy theories. Even
- amongst dedicated supporters of Atari, there is a high level of cynicism
- regarding the ability of this company to promote its product.
-
- The Big news in recent months has been the Falcon 030, the successor to the
- ST and savior of Atari. After an initial flurry of news regarding the
- specifications and capabilities of this machine, it appears that it will be
- quite some time before they are going to be available.
-
- A company such as Atari which is making a loss, has a low consumer profile
- and a diminished market share, is not in a good position to launch a new
- product in a saturated computer market. The perception of the company is that
- of an arcade machine manufacturer that also makes "home computers". In spite
- of the efforts of Atari enthusiasts this attitude still persists, and at
- times has been reinforced by Atari themselves.
-
- The Atari ST when it was first introduced, was in a good position to be
- considered by the home computer user. It was much cheaper than the Apple
- Macintosh and used a similar graphics interface which gave it an edge over
- the unwieldy MS-DOS machines. The low price of the ST was possible through
- some ingenious cost cutting measures and allowed Atari to promote the ST as
- the "Power without the Price" computer.
-
- Atari was to enjoy a period of success with the ST and many new computer
- users as well as existing Atari owners were attracted to the new model. The
- inclusion of MIDI ports on the ST meant that Atari had a sizeable
- representation in the music industry, a position it still holds today. Atari
- however, was slow to respond to trends in the computer industry and customer
- expectations which placed ever increasing demands on the performance of
- personal computers.
-
- Limitations in the flexibility of the ST's design meant that it was difficult
- to upgrade the operating system, as well as incorporate features such as
- extra memory and enhanced graphics capabilities. When the ST was released
- however, such features were seen as luxuries and what the ST had to offer in
- terms of performance and price was more than enough for the home user.
-
- An attempt was made to rectify some of the design problems with the release
- of the STe series with an operating system upgrade, easier memory expansion
- and extended colour palette. The improvements however were largely
- inconsequential and the STe also came with several curious bugs, as well as
- Atari's strange policy of soldering in the RAM to disallow user memory
- expansion.
-
- At the time of the STe release, Atari announced that a 68030 computer known
- as the TT would be available as a high end Atari platform. Along with the
- TT, Atari produced the Mega STe which essentially was a high performance STe
- but without the extra features of the TT. When these impressive machines
- were finally available in Australia, there were virtually no retailers left
- who stocked Atari products and very little software which took advantage of
- the features these computers had to offer.
-
- Atari adopted a minimal promotion strategy for the ST and subsequent
- products, in the belief that retailers and existing users would attract new
- customers to the platform. The legacy of this strategy can be seen with the
- almost total lack of retail outlets for Atari computers and software in
- Australia. Also, countries like Germany, which showed promising sales
- figures, received special attention from Atari while their market in the rest
- of the world was neglected.
-
- A major consequence of this has been the steady departure of 3rd party
- software and hardware developers from the Atari platform. Many developers
- who initially were attracted to the ST, anticipating that Atari would get
- behind their product and improve on it, have abandoned Atari altogether.
- There is little incentive in developing an application for a computer that
- is not selling very well and most developers have switched platforms so that
- they don't starve.
-
- A side effect of this has been software piracy, by no means exclusive to
- Atari, which has discouraged developers even more. Sadly, many users resort
- to piracy because of the lack of software available locally. Few users are
- willing to risk purchasing applications from overseas without evaluation.
- Many dedicated users who ordered from overseas and demonstrated their
- purchases at user group meetings, have changed platforms, thus depriving many
- ST owners the opportunity of reviewing the latest software.
-
- The Plague
-
- Even without the lack of promotion, Atari would still be having a hard time
- of it along with Commodore, Apple and IBM. The computer market has been
- saturated with MS DOS compatibles which are sold at extraordinarily low
- prices, partly because of the recession and partly because of the sheer
- volume of units. For under $1500, a 386SX PC can be purchased with 2 Meg of
- RAM, 85Meg hard disk, Super VGA monitor, mouse and windows. Even better
- deals are available if one is prepared to shop around.
-
- The early success of the PC relied on its ability to be configured any way
- the user desired, ranging from that of real estate management to EPROM
- burning. The command line interface of the MS-DOS operating system although
- inherently powerful, is not easy to master and tends to discourage multi-
- application use. This meant that most PC's tended to be used in the
- workplace in dedicated roles and were generally not considered to be a good
- choice as a home computer.
-
- Steady improvements have been made to the PC in the form of increased speed,
- memory expansion, graphics enhancement and an easier user interface in the
- form of Windows 3. Although the PC is still difficult to configure, these
- improvements, together with the current low cost, have made the PC attractive
- to home buyers as well as businesses. The vast number of applications
- available at reasonable cost has also helped sales of the PC. Many home users
- can now use the same software at home as they do at work, a situation
- generally not possible with the ST, due to the lack of compatible
- applications. For an ST owner who is lamenting the demise of quality
- software, the PC is a very attractive proposition.
-
- Along with cheaper PC's, the other computer companies have reduced prices and
- introduced new models. The Apple Macintosh, while still expensive compared to
- any Atari or a base model PC, is more affordable than ever and worth
- considering for the features on offer. Soon to come from Apple are even
- cheaper models. Commodore, while almost in the same boat as Atari, will soon
- release the low cost Amiga 600 with internal hard drive and the 68040 Amiga
- 4000.
-
- The impact of all this on Atari can not be underestimated. With virtually no
- advertising, retailers, software, and customer support in this country, there
- is little incentive for a prospective buyer to purchase an Atari computer
- considering what is on offer elsewhere. Many existing ST owners have become
- disillusioned with Atari as local support for the platform steadily
- diminishes. Long time supporters continue to abandon the ST and purchase PC's
- and Mac's.
-
- And so it is that Atari, which is in a dismal position brought about by its
- own mismanagement and economic factors beyond its control, is seeking to
- restore its fortunes with the introduction of the Falcon 030. If their past
- performance is anything to go by then the demise of Atari will be assured.
- Atari is taking an enormous gamble with the Falcon and it is entirely
- possible that it may be too late to save this once great company. The fact
- remains that Atari do make very good computers, but the world is not going to
- buy them if they make it difficult to do so.
-
- On A Wing and a Prayer
-
- The Falcon is by all accounts an impressive machine and has features which
- would significantly add to the cost if included on other computers. The
- digital signal processor, video and graphic modes, audio processing and
- networking capabilities would conceivably consist of several thousand
- dollars worth of plug in cards if they were to be implemented on a PC or
- Macintosh. Yet the Falcon in its most basic configuration will sell for
- approx AU$1000 (converting from announced US prices). Add a cheapie monitor
- and Hard Disk and the one Megabyte Falcon weighs in at around $2000.
-
- Atari have indicated that this will be their "low end" computer, with the
- implication that other more powerful models are planned along the same lines
- as the Falcon. There are some interesting questions as to what the new Atari
- range will consist of as there will be an overlap of computers with varying
- features and prices. Atari can ill afford to spread its budget to include
- all models in its catalogue.
-
- It is entirely possible that Atari would be in a less precarious position
- today if they had concentrated on improving the ST range, instead of
- diverting resources into projects such as the ATW, Hotz Box, STacey, ST Pad,
- and ST book. Atari wasted much time, energy and money with these products
- which in some cases never eventuated or were unmarketable. In attempting to
- cover all bases, Atari failed to appreciate that the ST was and is the
- computer of choice for many users simply because of its excellent
- performance, ease of use and price.
-
- Atari have now returned to the power without the price concept with the
- Falcon. A departure from the past can be seen in the options available in
- terms of freedom of choice and acceptance of industry standards. No longer
- is the buyer forced to accept an Atari monitor or a hard disk with custom
- host adapter. Any industry standard VGA monitor and SCSI hard disk can be
- connected if so desired. The operating system is now largely disk based,
- making TOS upgrades much easier than before. Memory expansion with the Falcon
- however, is a worry, instead of commonly available SIMMS, Atari have devised
- propriety memory modules. It is expected that 3rd party modules will be
- available as an alternative.
-
- Atari intends to focus attention on the multimedia features of the Falcon.
- This rather nebulous term means different things to different people and can
- be as diverse as quicktime movies on the Mac', 24 bit color Opalvision for
- the Amiga and a slideshow with sound on a PC. A loose definition of a
- multimedia system is one that can record and play, digitally processed image
- and sound for entertainment and educational
- purposes.
-
- This is something that most computers, including the ST, are capable of in
- some form but is generally accepted that to be viable, multimedia must be
- able to record video and sound, process it and replay it at near broadcast
- quality. There are many variables associated with this ideal, but the Falcon
- would appear to be the only computer that has this function built in. Most
- other comparable multimedia systems are either expensive dedicated
- workstations or pricey plug in cards for the high end Macs, Amigas and PC's.
-
- Atari is almost certainly going to face an uphill struggle in marketing the
- Falcon. Its multimedia capabilities will no doubt result in rave reviews of
- the machine, but there is limited demand for this capability at the present
- time. Most computers are purchased for the less esoteric tasks, of word
- processing, maintaining databases/spreadsheets and a bit of DTP. For these
- jobs, a cheap PC will do.
-
- Speculation Corner
-
- In the tight economic climate, the Falcon may well be seen as too frivolous,
- rather like Commodores CDTV. There is however a push within the computer
- industry to accept Quicktime as the standard for multimedia presentations. It
- is anticipated that most computers will be able to replay Quicktime, but
- recording movies requires relatively expensive video processing hardware. If
- quicktime is adopted for the Falcon it could well find a niche as a creator
- of Quicktime presentations.
-
- With Desktop Video, The Falcon is certainly light years ahead of anything
- Atari has had to offer before. Atari is also light years behind in this area,
- with the clear leader being the Commodore Amiga. Both the Amiga, Mac and PC's
- can be fitted with Video cards which offer Desktop Video at varying budgets.
- As impressive as the colour and video capabilities of the Falcon are, Atari
- has made a grave mistake by not providing slots for graphics cards. Paint,
- animation and modelling software has lagged behind with Atari and it is
- unlikely that established videomakers will switch over to the Falcon unless
- the applications exist. It is possible that as an interim measure, software
- will be ported over from other platforms to fill the gap.
-
- Probably the most astounding feature of the Falcon, which will guarantee
- sales is the audio processing capabilities. The inclusion of 16 bit CD
- quality 8 track direct to disk recording is amazing. To have it in a computer
- for a thousand dollars is revolutionary. True, a big hard disk is required,
- and appropriate software, but for under $3000 a musician can have the
- recording quality and creative control of systems in the $10000 to $15000
- range. Unlike MIDI which appealed to electronic musicians, hard disk
- recording is also of value to acoustic musicians thus opening up a large
- market for the Falcon.
-
- There are many possible uses for the Falcon, based on the capabilities of the
- DSP chip. Some of these are useful, some are not. The notion of plugging
- one into a phone line as a fax machine will either be extremely handy or
- just plain silly. Wild speculation on what the Falcon is capable of, will do
- nothing but foster suspicion and until the Falcon is readily available, it
- is too early to say how it will perform and whether it will prove to be the
- amazing machine that Atari wants us to believe it is. Atari not only has to
- attract new customers, but has to bring back those enthusiasts who have left
- the fold.
-
- Jaguar Section
-
- The "Telegames" List
- The Underground Jaguar "Shareware"
- Effort A Great Innovative Idea, or A Wrong Choice in the Works??
-
-
- From the Editor's Controller - Playin' it like it is!
-
-
- It never ceases to amaze me that when Atari falters, a number of individuals
- band together in unity to move forward in a manner to continue the life cycle
- of "discontinued" Atari products. We have seen this happen with the Atari
- 8cbit machines through the Falcon computer. It continues to occur now that
- the Jaguar has been all but abandoned.
-
- There's currently a drive, as mentioned in past issues, to petition Telegames
- to publish some of the games that have been finished but never published by
- Atari. The impression that we've seen is that if there are enough
- "signatures" (i.e. interest and potential buyers), Telegames will consider
- publishing some of those games. There are currently almost 400 signatures,
- but many more are needed.
-
- Personally, I like to see this kind of enthusiasm. It may turn out to be a
- fruitless cause, but at least people are making an effort to try and convince
- 3rd party publishers that the Jaguar userbase is still interested in new
- games. If you're interested and haven't already signed the petition, do so.
- If you'd like, send me your name and/or online address and I'll pass it along
- to the proper people.
-
- Another potential plus for the Jaguar userbase lies with the ongoing efforts
- of a small group of people that formed the "Underground". While I don't
- profess to fully understand their plans, it is my understanding that they are
- trying ways to bring new games to the userbase by alternate means (non-
- traditional).
-
- The "traditional" method for getting a Jaguar game published is to develop a
- game, get it approved by Atari, encrypted by Atari, and then have it
- published. I'm sure there's more to it than that, but the generalization
- holds true.
-
- However, my initial concerns, as evidenced from the online message activity
- and recent interview by the staff at GameWire (see below), are that there may
- be steps taken in this effort that appear on the surface to be inappropriate,
- or illegal. As you'll see below, there has been no contact with Atari with
- regard to the Underground's plans - something that would seem a logical step
- to take before any effort was undertaken. This strikes me as a backwards way
- of doing such a project. They have stated, however, that they intend to
- follow through with Atari's blessing. But, without all of the details of the
- Underground's efforts from their point of view, my imagination can really go
- wild and lead me with the idea that these efforts could be bordering on
- impropriety.
-
- I have recently left a message with questions for two of the members of the
- Underground pertaining to my concerns, and of others. As of my deadline, I
- have just received a response but will not have time to include it in this
- week's issue; it will appear next week. As I learn more, I will bring that
- information to you in subsequent issues of STReport. As mentioned in my
- opening remarks, the idea of seeing new games published for the Jaguar is
- terrific. However, I hope that this will bear fruit in a manner that is
- proper. In the meantime, I'll leave you to make up your own minds.
-
- On the Atari/JTS merger front, I just learned (Thursday evening) that the SEC
- has approved the proposed merger. All that remains for this merger to occur
- is for a stockholders vote, a legal formality. Sources at Atari have
- remarked that the outcome of that vote will be successful. If you're
- interested in attending, I have advance information that the stockholders'
- meeting/vote will be held on July 30th, at 9:00 a.m., at the law office of
- Wilson Sonsini in Palo Alto (CA).
-
- The question remains, now that the merger is all but official: What will
- become of Atari Corporation? What will the focus of JTS Corporation be and
- what will they do with the Atari portion of the new company, if anything? It
- will probably be some time before we learn just what those plans might be.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
- Industry News STR Game Console NewsFile - The Latest Gaming News!
-
-
-
- Sega of America Names New CEO
-
- Shoichiro Irimajiri has been appointed the new chairman/CEO of Sega of
- America Inc., replacing Tom Kalinske who says he is leaving Sega after six
- years to join Education Technology LLC. From Sega's Redwood City, Calif.,
- headquarters, The Associated Press reports Kalinske will remain at Sega until
- Sept. 30, and will remain a member of the corporation's board of directors.
- Before joining Sega Enterprises, Irimajiri served almost 30 years at Honda
- Motor Corp.
-
-
-
- Jaguar Online STR InfoFile Online Users Growl & Purr!
-
-
- From CompuServe's Atari Gaming Forums, member Randy Baer comments about the
- recent MiST show last weekend:
-
- I attended the MIST Atarifest show here in Indy on Saturday and got to look
- at TWO new, unreleased Jag games. The first was the incredible
- Battlesphere. To all the doubters out there on this one: it lives up to
- the hype. The variety of ships is incredible, the gameplay is great, the
- graphics (especially the ship selection screen!), and music are phenomenal.
- It LOOKED finished, although Tom Harker at ICD said they wanted to implement
- a few more features before releasing it. To all those who have called this
- game "BS", and I'm not talking about an abbreviation of the title...you'll
- soon see how wrong you are.
-
- Also, I was finally able to see the final version of Breakout 2000; I had
- tested early versions but never the final. Again, wow! The gameplay on
- this one is SOOOO good...anyone who has even a passing interest in Breakout
- would really enjoy this one. Right at the end of the show, a little kid
- (about 10 or so, I would guess) came up to Mario Perdue (one of B2K's
- programmers) and said, "I think this is the best Jag game I've seen." I
- think it brought a smile to Mario's face, as well it should have.
-
- BTW, they also had the petition there to Telegames; perhaps Atari will get on
- the ball and RELEASE BREAKOUT 2000 NOW!!!!
-
- All in all, a really good show; I picked up (finally!) Paperboy, Warbirds,
- and Ms. Pac for the Lynx, as well as Myst for the Jag CD ($25!). Now if I
- could just get B2K and Battlesphere life would be complete!
-
- Randy
-
-
- Jaguar Shareware - A Legitimate Effort
- or, A Misdirected Pipedream?
-
- From CompuServe's Atari Gaming Forum and GameWire's Web Page:
-
- [Editor's note: content edited (spelling) for clarity]
-
- Sb: Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: Joshua P. Arnold 102073,1613
- To: all
-
- Hello all,
-
- Shareware on the Jaguar is definitely a possibility that we can't ignore.
- Atari has obviously given up on the Jaguar at this time (and haven't shown
- one lick of marketing experience), so the underground feels that it's about
- time that the gamers took things into their own hands. Yes, the format would
- be CD, which would be possible to produce and distribute via the Net if the
- encoding could be broken (which is almost finished). Previously, the
- underground has wanted to remain anonymous due to possible legal problems,
- but now they are "spilling their guts" to us here at GameWire. We'll have an
- exclusive interview online later this week!
-
- I ask all of you to read the interview before posting any discussion against
- the Jaguar and the Underground. Oh yes, and be sure to sign the Telegames
- petition while you're visiting. You can find the Jaguar report in the center
- stage section of GameWire's Web site. Our URL is:
- http://www.gamepen.com/gamewire/.
-
- Thank you,
- Joshua Arnold
- GameWire Editor-in-Chief
-
-
- Sb: #115895-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: Joshua P. Arnold 102073,1613
- To: Don Thomas 75300,1267
-
- Ok, about the encoding; they are using the "Jaguar Server," a cheap version
- of the Atari development kit. And I recently found out that they are able to
- publish on CD-Rom and on cart.
-
- The Underground is publishing their own games; they are in no way pirating
- any existing ones. I suggest reading the material, and then possibly
- emailing the Underground.
-
- Joshua Arnold
- GameWire Editor-in-Chief
-
- Sb: #116302-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: Joshua P. Arnold 102073,1613
- To: Don Thomas 75300,1267 (X)
-
- Hello again,
-
- The interview with the Underground is now up at our Web site
- (http://www.gamepen.com/gamewire/). I'd like to stress the point that
- GameWire is in no means involved with this movement, and that we are not
- promoting piracy, simply covering the ONLY Jaguar news at the moment.
- According to the underground, they will not go into final stages without
- Atari's blessing, and have no intention to break any laws. And, this is not
- Piracy (stupid comment), it is programming games for a system, not selling
- illegal copies. If you have any questions, I suggest following the
- instructions on the report/interview, not going through GameWire.
-
- Also, the petition to Telegames has more than 200 people on it already, with
- more coming every day. Atari has obviously given up on the Jag, and a lot of
- people in the community feel "let down" because of this. I don't think Atari
- is in the position to refuse an offer like this if they want the Jaguar to
- live.
-
- Thank you,
- Joshua Arnold
- GameWire Editor-in-Chief
-
-
- Sb: #116311-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: Don Thomas 75300,1267
- To: Joshua P. Arnold 102073,1613
-
- Joshua,
-
- >>Ok, about the encoding; they are using the "Jaguar Server," a cheap
- >>version of the Atari development kit. And I recently found out that
- >>they are able to publish on CD-Rom and on cart.
-
- Atari has protected their right to license developers through an encryption
- process. Atari has to be involved with that and no one at Atari has been
- approached about it as far as I know.
-
- >>The Underground is publishing their own games; they are in no way
- >>pirating any existing ones.
-
- It doesn't matter what they publish, if it's done without proper licensing,
- it's pirating. They would have to steal Atari's encryption process if they
- don't go through Atari to publish the software.
-
- I'm all for them doing it, as long as it's legal.
-
- --Don Thomas
- Atari Corporation
-
-
- Sb: #116310-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: Don Thomas 75300,1267
- To: Joshua P. Arnold 102073,1613
-
- Joshua,
-
- >>The interview with the Underground is now up at our Web site
- >>(http://www.gamepen.com/gamewire/). I'd like to stress the point
- >>that GameWire is in no means involved with this movement,
- >>and that we are not promoting piracy, simply covering the ONLY
- >>Jaguar news at the moment.
-
- Understood AND I'm glad you are. Thanks.
-
- >>According to the underground, they will not go into final stages
- >>without Atari's blessing, and have no intention to break any laws.
-
- That's what confuses me because I've checked and I can find NO one at Atari
- that knows anything about this except what I have brought up. What confuses
- me is why someone would go so far to work on such a project and/or announce
- it publicly without contacting the company that must be involved to license
- them to do such a thing. Unless, of course, they intend to violate
- technological proprietary rights through some reverse engineering process and
- they have no intentions to include Atari in their plans at all. Also, why
- would they need to reverse engineer if they are responsibly working with
- Atari on the project?
-
- I hope, as responsible editorial people, GameWire is asking these obvious
- questions and including the answers with any reports they make on the
- subject. Otherwise, in my opinion, GameWire _is_ involved with this movement
- by simply reporting the information which is advantageous to the illegal
- developers. In other words, if GAMEWIRE is freely publishing what amounts to
- promotional data about a piracy ring without a balanced reporting effort to
- expose the illegal nature of the ring, I think that's as being involved as it
- would be to do the reverse engineering yourself.
-
- >>Also, the petition to Telegames has more than 200 people on it already,
- >>with more coming every day. Atari has obviously given up on the Jag,
- >>and a lot of people in the community feel "let down" because of this.
- >>I don't think Atari is in the position
- >>to refuse an offer like this if they want the Jaguar to live.
-
- Atari has every right to do with the Jaguar and licensing for it as they
- please. I understand people feel "let down". Many of those same people felt
- let down with Coleco when out of business or when the TI/994a was
- discontinued, or when Mattel abandoned the Intellivision, or that Nintendo
- doesn't do much with their original NES system, or when the Vectrex bit the
- dust. Soon a lot of people will likely feel "let down" by Sega I suspect and
- lord knows how many times Nintendo has promised the U64 with nothing to show
- for it yet. I know the U64 is coming, but people felt convinced the CD-ROM
- for the SNES was coming too.
-
- Atari never was a charity. We never pretended to be and I dare anyone to find
- a company that is willing to develop, manufacturer and distribute
- sophisticated video game equipment without the primary object being to make
- money doing it. I understand Atari has withstood and continues to withstand
- criticism on how they went about things, but that none of that ever takes
- away their right to negotiate, sell, retain or dispose of the properties they
- own in a manner most advantageous to them and the shareholders.
-
- I don't what the Telegames petition is all about, but I can tell you in an
- industry where tens to hundreds of thousands of something have to be made
- and sold to make the investments in it worthwhile, 200 does not seem to me to
- be a very long list to convince a company to make any large investments.
-
- Don't get me wrong, I am NOT saying that no one cares, but I don't think it's
- irrational to expect that a company must find a way to care in a way that
- makes them money. I don't know of too many pharmaceutical companies making
- insulin available to diabetics for free.
-
-
- --Don Thomas
- Atari Corporation
-
-
- Sb: #116314-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: [ICD, Inc.] 76004,1600
- To: Don Thomas 75300,1267
-
- >>Ok, about the encoding; they are using the "Jaguar Server," a cheap
- >>version of the Atari development kit. And I recently found out that
- >>they are able to publish on CD-Rom and on cart.
-
- >Atari has protected their right to license developers through an
- >encryption process. Atari has to be involved with that and no one at
- >Atari has been approached about it as far as I know.
-
- Don, Since you have been following the history of the market, perhaps you
- could comment on the lawsuit that Atari had with Nintendo over Nintendo's
- right to do just that by controlling who published what for their 8-bit game
- system. I wasn't following the game market that closely at the time but I
- believe that it was over a lockout type chip that was required to make
- cartridges run on a stock Nintendo system. Atari reverse engineered it thus
- breaking their encryption.
-
- I completely agree that developers should approach Atari and work with them
- on encryption which is what we have done and are planning for BattleSphere.
- But there will always be the fringe developer groups out there... the
- hackers... like Dave Small and Magic Sac... people who find ways around the
- lockouts while remaining legal or at least at the fringes of legality.
-
- >>The Underground is publishing their own games; they are in no way
- pirating any existing ones.<<
-
- That is very good to hear.
-
- >It doesn't matter what they publish, if it's done without proper
- >licensing, it's pirating. They would have to steal Atari's encryption
- >process if they don't go through Atari to publish the software.
-
- Respectfully, this is where I really don't agree. It is only pirating if
- they have stolen and/or are using Atari's code.
-
- >I'm all for them doing it, as long as it's legal.<
-
- I think that we all agree on this one. Let's have more Jaguar games!
-
- - TOM -
-
-
- Sb: #116313-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: [ICD, Inc.] 76004,1600
- To: Don Thomas 75300,1267
-
- >>I hope, as responsible editorial people, GameWire is asking these
- obvious questions and including the answers with any reports they make
- on the subject. Otherwise, in my opinion, GameWire _is_ involved with
- this movement by simply reporting the information which is advantageous
- to the illegal developers. In other words, if GAMEWIRE is freely
- publishing what amounts to promotional data about a piracy ring without
- a balanced reporting effort to expose the illegal nature of the ring, I
- think that's as being involved as it would be to do the reverse
- engineering yourself.<<
-
- It is a good thing that Gamewire has the first amendment to protect them. :-
- )
-
- Respectfully Don, I get upset with most of the news coverage in the world
- these days. Much of it is unbalanced. But that doesn't make the news media
- partners in crime. When BET was reporting about the OJ trial, I didn't
- think that they were guilty of murdering Nicole.
-
- I don't know what these shareware guys are up to and it is probably just a
- pipe dream on their part but I will give them a chance to do their work and
- rally the user base. You can always sue them when you feel they are doing
- something illegal.
-
- The Telegames petition is falling short of the 10,000 signatures they
- want/need/expect but at least they are trying to generate interest.
-
- Remember the Atari Revolution? :-)
-
- - TOM -
-
-
- Sb: #116331-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: Don Thomas 75300,1267
- To: [ICD, Inc.] 76004,1600
- Tom,
-
- >>Don, Since you have been following the history of the market, perhaps
- >>you could comment on the lawsuit that Atari had with Nintendo over
- >>Nintendo's right to do just that by controlling who published what for
- >>their 8-bit game system.
-
- As I recall, that was related to Tengen Games which was (is) a division of
- Atari Games (now owned by Williams) and pretty much unrelated to us at Atari
- Corporation other than how the decision sets a precedent for other issues
- later.
-
- >>I wasn't following the game market that closely at the time but I
- >>believe that it was over a lockout type chip that was required to make
- >>cartridges run on a stock Nintendo system. Atari reverse engineered it
- >>thus breaking their encryption.
-
- It sounds like you did follow it pretty well. Nintendo sued Atari Games over
- the issue and Atari Games lost the fight.
-
- >>I completely agree that developers should approach Atari and work with
- >>them on encryption which is what we have done and are planning for
- >>BattleSphere. But there will always be the fringe developer groups out
- >>there... the hackers... like Dave Small and Magic Sac... people who find
- >>ways around the lockouts while remaining legal or at least at the
- >>fringes of legality.
-
- I realize that. There are also fringe groups that sell T-Shirts with
- unlicensed copies of Disney characters on them too. When they become known,
- they are dealt with. I believe very strongly in the rights of companies to
- protect their rights to make money on technologies they design. It's not
- right that I would design some technology, protect it's design in every
- legally appropriate manner and have someone else exploit it for profit and
- finding ways to cut me out of it. As I understand it, many of the emulators
- out there (not being an attorney, I dare not be specific) were 100% illegal,
- however, there's also the issue of being practical to sue someone who does
- so little business, there's nothing to gain.
-
- Also, many of the emulators out there were (are) legal because the boards
- they developed include the essential chips purchased legitimately. I think
- if anyone has any questions on theses issues, they should contact an
- attorney to make sure they conform to the law. Doing something against the
- law simply because they don't like it does not justify what they do.
-
- >>Respectfully, this is where I really don't agree. It is only pirating
- >>if they have stolen and/or are using Atari's code.
-
- Which they will have done if they sell something that runs on the Jaguar that
- has not been properly licensed. The encryption process will require the
- purchase or theft of specific proprietary codes to accomplish that.
-
- >>I think that we all agree on this one. Let's have more Jaguar games!
-
- ditto.
-
- --Don Thomas
- Atari Corporation
-
-
- Sb: #116333-Shareware on the Jag?!?!
- Fm: Don Thomas 75300,1267
- To: [ICD, Inc.] 76004,1600
-
- Tom,
-
- >>It is a good thing that Gamewire has the first amendment to protect them.
- :-)
- >>Respectfully Don, I get upset with most of the news coverage in the
- >>world these days. Much of it is unbalanced. But that doesn't make the
- >>news media partners in crime. When BET was reporting about the OJ
- >>trial, I didn't think that they were guilty of murdering Nicole.
-
- Many issues of moral responsibility are not addressed by written law. While
- your argument may have legal protection, it doesn't change my opinion that a
- publication showing inferred endorsement of a product or service by
- providing it a lot of coverage, but purposely ignoring other pertinent issues
- makes them morally responsible.
-
- If I make and sell clothing and ask the press to print my press releases,
- what should the press do if they find out the clothing is made in child
- detention sweat shops? Are they legally wrong not to report it if they know
- it? Probably not. But, in my opinion, they have a moral responsibility to
- reveal what they have discovered.
-
- >>I don't know what these shareware guys are up to and it is probably
- >>just a pipe dream on their part but I will give them a chance to do
- >>their work and rally the user base. You can always sue them when you
- >>feel they are doing something illegal.
-
- I have no desire to sue them at all. I do think if they are telling the
- public what they are doing and making it sound like they have Atari's
- blessing, support, endorsement or otherwise, it's my responsibility to point
- out that we officially know nothing about it and no one has contacted us
- with what they have in mind. I also still think it's silly not to consult an
- attorney or, at least Atari, with what their plans are before
- spending/investing a lot of resources doing something they may likely not be
- able to use or implement. To me, that's just common sense. Now, if they are
- doing it just for personal fun, then why are they trying to raise everyone's
- hopes that that they're doing will benefit them?
-
- >>Remember the Atari Revolution? :-)
-
- Yes, and I also recall being in touch with Atari with everything I did. In
- fact, when I was hired by Atari, I was asked to sign a document primarily
- designed to protect them from any potential I would steal trade secrets. I
- appended the document to include protections for me and Artisan Software as
- well. I also became a legitimate developer before marketing Artisan Software
- products although that scenario was different and I really didn't have to.
-
- I know you go out of your way to do things right with ICD also. I've seen you
- do it over and over.
-
- I don't think you and I really disagree on this, but I am obligated to have
- at least 51% of my feet planted on the side of protecting Atari's interests
- first. You on the other hand, while I know you don't want to take unjust
- advantage of Atari, probably don't view our interests with the same priority
- as your own. Hopefully you have at least 51% preferred interest in ICD. <g>
- I know if the Underground was finding ways to embed crucial Battlesphere
- code into a project they were working on behind your back, your ears would
- probably perk up? No?
-
- --Don Thomas
- Atari Corporation
-
-
- Interview:
- Rhine Stacken and Steve Scavone/The Underground
-
- Conducted by: Brian C Bessemer
-
- [Courtesy of the GameWire Web Page]
-
- As everyone involved in the video game industry knows, in the past 6 months,
- Atari has basically screwed all its loyal customer's by failing to support
- the 64-bit Jaguar. Luckily for those same consumers, the Atari community has
- no intentions of letting this system die. During the past many months, an
- organization of hackers and programmers from around the world have been busy
- trying to learn the secrets of this machine. The Underground is now in a
- position to consider the possibility of programming and marketing options for
- `shareware' on the Atari Jaguar. In recent weeks I have been in contact with
- members of The Underground, and have recently conducted an interview with 2
- of its main members, Rhine Stacken and Steve Scavone.
-
- An interview with "The Underground"
-
- GameWire: First of all, for those people who don't already know, what is The
- Underground?
-
- Steve: A thought mostly in my mind and pretty much based on the fact that the
- Jaguar Server exists. Roine Stenberg created the Server originally to allow
- us hackers out here to play around with 64 bits of power. I hope to move it
- into a shareware movement.
-
- Roine: The underground is a group of people all over the world that are
- interested in programming the Jaguar without spending money on Atari
- development tools. Programming the Jaguar without Atari's tools are possible
- with a cheap development system called "The Jaguar Server".
-
- GameWire: Which people are most responsible for this organization?
-
- Steve: Roine, Nat!, Kluas, Sven (not Christian Svensson), and myself.
-
- Roine: I would not call it an organization, as it only consists of people
- around the world hacking the Jaguar. But key people are myself (Jaguar
- Server development system), Nat! (Jaguar underground technical docs),
- and Steve Scavone (initiated the Shareware concept.)
-
- GameWire: How many people are currently involved?
-
- Roine: I would guess that the Underground consist of about 20 active at the
- moment.
-
- GameWire: Are they all coding games, or are some mainly involved in graphics,
- sound, etc.?
-
- Roine: The majority are just hacking around at the moment, as there currently
- no special project that we are working on.
-
- GameWire: How long has this been developing (how 'old' is The Underground?)
-
- Steve: Almost a year maybe even less. It is more a hope than a reality at
- this point. If I see the interest grow like it has been, it will be more
- than real. Trust me on that one.
-
- GameWire: What state, or stage, is The Underground in right now?
-
- Roine: Hacking into the Jaguar and at some point hopefully having some
- shareware releases for it. There are currently two games by people out. A
- Tetris and a Quix clone.
-
- GameWire: So, from what I understand, The Underground is currently dependent
- on the Jaguar Server. Which came first... did the formation of The
- Underground necessitate the Jaguar Server, or did the existence
- of the Server spawn the creation of The Underground?
-
- Roine: The Jaguar Server was first. It inspired the ugd-jag mailing list, and
- now with the aid of Steve Scavone, is beginning to open up a shareware
- market.
-
- Steve: The server inspired me to get info out to Jag owners to let them know
- us Server Underground folks are out here and would love to see their support
- of us. SO I guess Roine is the ultimate guy to thank here.
-
- GameWire: For those unfamiliar with the Jaguar Server, could you offer a
- brief description?
-
- Roine: The Jaguar Server project started my me in August '94. The goal was to
- make a cheap developer kit for anyone that wanted to program for the Jaguar.
- Atari's own developer kit was $5500 and that was WAY to much if you just
- wanted to hack and program the Jaguar just for the fun of it.
-
- The very first prototype was built around the Atari Mega ST's 'MegaBus' All
- of it was hand wired together using a total of 21 IC's. I can tell you that
- this board had VERY little empty space on it... the prototype was soon
- scrapped as I began working on the "Rev A board," using a different approach
- this time. It was built for the cartridge port and could then be used on all
- Atari computers not just the ones having a 'MegaBus'. To keep the cost down,
- I also decided to use the Jaguar's 2MB main memory and not include any
- expensive RAM chips in the Jaguar Server hardware.
-
- The Rev A board was up and running with very simple software in February '95.
- As the Rev A board had some small flaws, I made some changes to the layout
- and came up with the Rev B board. More serious work now began on the
- Software - The Shell running on the Atari computer and the JagOS - Running on
- the Jaguar. With this solution, it's possible to upload and download
- programs and files between the computer and the Jag.
-
- Steve: Only Atari ST/STE/TT030/F030/Mega2/4 e (are currently compatible,
- though) PC versions are being seriously considered. The server is a
- modification to your Jag that includes a card that plugs into the Atari
- computer and then into the modified Jag. You use a compiler on the host to
- write code for the Jag which gets uploaded and ran.
-
- GameWire: Are the people involved with The Underground the same people on the
- JagServer list?
-
- Steve: Mostly.
-
- GameWire: Where can people find more information concerning the JagServer?
-
- Roine: All information needed, including how to order, can be found at the
- Jaguar Server Page:
- http://www.edu.isy.liu.se/~z94patsa/jsdata/jserver.html
-
- GameWire: If someone is interested in writing games for the Jag, who should
- they contact and what do they need to do?
-
- Steve: Have them email Roine for a server.
-
- Roine: They should buy the Jaguar Server Development kit , then develop
- whatever they want and release it in any way they want.
-
- GameWire: Roughly how many titles are being developed, or are planned for
- development at this point?
-
- Steve: Unknown.
-
- GameWire: Which types of games? (you can leave you names, just give a few
- descriptions)
-
- Steve: Various stuff is in the works. You will have no such premature
- promises from this group.
-
- GameWire: What major milestones and/or limitations have you encountered so
- far?
-
- Roine: Milestones are definitely Nat's Underground documentation on
- programming the Jaguar. They are very good, getting better every week.
- Another milestone is Klaus RISCY assembler, for the Jaguar DSP and GPU risc
- processors. No debugger is available, and that's a limitation for finding
- complex bugs.
-
- Steve: That is a whole other interview. ;)
-
- GameWire: I know legal procedures are an issue. Have you asked for
- cooperation from Atari or any other companies yet? If so, have you gotten
- any favorable responses?
-
- Steve: We haven't even gotten that far. I hope Atari will work with us. We
- would rather they cooperate with us as much as possible. We just want games
- for the Jag and since they are no longer willing, someone needs to
- take over.
-
- This can ultimately be another consumer program exchange prospect for the Big
- Fuji. :) The old C.P.Ex. was an excellent deal. I believe Star Raiders was
- born from that setup.
-
- GameWire: Designing a successful medium for 'shareware' on a console is a
- little tricky. Do you have any idea how you'll be able to do it?
-
- Steve: We are working hard on that now. We will fill you in as things
- progress.
-
- GameWire: Are you planning on cartridge development or CD development, or
- which would you prefer to do?
-
- Steve: Anything is possible at this point.
-
- Roine: At the moment a Jaguar Server is a must, however discussions continue
- of how to make the best format available to Jaguar owners.
-
- GameWire: If cartridges and CDs can't be done, would it ever be conceivable
- to produce a less expensive JagServer package for purposes of simply playing
- these titles?
-
- Roine: No, I don't think so. The design are rather simple and straightforward
- and that makes it hard to be any cheaper than it is.
-
- GameWire: Could it be possible to setup download areas where consumers could
- obtain the shareware versions of these titles?
-
- Roine: Yes, there are already two games to download from the Jaguar Server
- WWW pages.
-
- Steve: We are not at all looking to violate anyone's rights. WE simply want
- more games for the Jaguar than Atari has given us. I do know there is a
- version of Tetris you can play on your Jaguar. It's pretty good too! WE may
- develope a cart( with Atari's blessing) that would allow any computer with a
- parallel port to upload and download games to and from there Jaguars. The
- cart would have its own parallel port so a simple cable between host and Jag
- would do it. The cart may have extra ram(possibly expandable) and a small OS
- for uploading and downloading. Who knows? We may finally see that web
- browser after all. :)
-
- GameWire: When do you think the soonest game can be completed (any estimate
- will do?)
-
- Steve: Your guess is as good as mine. We have very little info about the
- Jaguar's chipset and are in the deciphering stages now.
-
-
- Gamer would like to thank Steve and Roine for taking their time to answer
- these questions. 'Best of luck to The Underground.
-
-
-
-
- ONLINE WEEKLY STReport OnLine The wires are a hummin'!
-
-
-
-
- PEOPLE... ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- On CompuServe
-
- compiled by
- Joe Mirando
- CIS ID: 73637,2262
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Well, in one fell swoop (what exactly does
- that mean, anyway?) I got my Portfolio and STacy up and running again, so
- I'm a happy camper right now! Isn't it amazing how easily we take things for
- granted? I've been using my STacy and Portfolio for years. I used them
- almost every day until they broke down. It wasn't until that moment that I
- realized how much I had come to rely on them. My wife even made fun of me,
- saying that the way I was moping around, I looked like I'd just lost a best
- friend. I tried to tell her that she was crazy, but I lost my train of
- thought when I put my hand down in the spot where the STacy normally sits
- and got all choked up. <grin>
-
- Anyway, they're both back from the "inactive bin", so everything is great.
- I'm on vacation this coming week, so I'll have plenty of time for getting re-
- acquainted with my old friends. I'll also finally have the time to write to
- those friends and neighbors who have been wondering why I haven't replied to
- their email lately. Have faith folks. I haven't forgotten, I've just been
- working insane hours.
-
- I've also just received Suzy B's 2 CDRom library. This thing is incredible!
- There are things on these CD's that I had never seen before. I've been
- online for almost 9 years and have, at one time or another, downloaded lots
- and lots of things yet somehow I missed lots of "STuff". I haven't added
- them all up yet, but the cover says that there is more than a gigabyte on
- the two CDs. I think I'll take their word for it. <grin> If you've got a
- CDRom player, take my advice and get this CD set. It's well worth the cost!
- If you don't have a CDRom player, get one!
-
- Well, let's get to the reason for this column: All the great news, hints,
- tips, and info available every week right here on CompuServe.
-
-
- From the Atari Computing Forums
-
- Don Whitton asks about the availability of a networking device for Atari
- computers:
- "Does anyone know the availability of a mega talk board?"
-
- Albert Dayes of Atari Explorer Online Magazine tells Don:
- "Your only choice for Mega Talk is find a used one. Since the company that
- made them is no longer around."
-
- Don tells Albert:
- "Thanks for your help. [I'm] hoping to find a used one. If you know [of]
- any... please advise."
-
- Albert replies to Don:
- "You might contact an Atari dealer and see if they know of anyone who might
- be interested in selling a Mega Talk."
-
- Rob Rasmussen asks for help with his modem and terminal program:
- "I had installed Stalker on my ST, and in the program 19200 bps was the
- highest setting. On the ST I know I can't use higher than that anyway. I was
- alarmed prematurely though, because when I installed it on the Falcon today,
- all of a sudden 153600 bps is available. My new Supra 28K faxmodem is
- connected to the Falcon, so it looks like this will work! Can anyone tell
- me if it costs any more to connect at 28800 bps than 14400 and lower if I
- have the super value billing method? I seem to recall something about 14400
- and lower all being the same price when rates went down a few years ago, but
- don't know if 28K still costs more per hour."
-
- Albert Dayes tells Rob:
- "It should be the same cost for any baud rate up to 28800. The only price is
- for time."
-
- Sysop Jim Ness adds:
- "[It's the] same price for anything up to and including 57.6 (ISDN)
- nowadays."
-
- Albert Dayes mirrors my own thoughts:
- "Wow .... 57K!"
-
- While we're on the subject of telecommunication programs, Michael Robillard
- asks for info:
- "I've tried the following tell me if I'm wasting my time I run Storm connect
- to my local internet provider.I then exit stornm without hanging up.I then
- run CAB.APP.When I try to load an URL I end up seeing the wwwcache directory
- I created for CAB.APP.Do I have to use STIK in order to use CAB?"
-
- David James tells Michael:
- "As far as I am aware it is necessary to use either STIK or Mint/Mint Net to
- get CAB to work."
-
- Every once in a while I get a thought that won't let go of me. I then
- proceed to make myself crazy trying to get whatever it is to work. This has
- been the case with using a Web browser on an Atari ST connected to CIS.
- Finally, I ask:
- "Assuming that one of the available PPP-enabled browsers was capable of
- accessing the Web via CIS, would someone be able to post a list of the
- necessary settings (node#/name, domain, and all the miscellaneous things)
- that are necessary to get a browser to work on CIS? I've tried to get
- OASIS205 to work and, so far, it'll dial the number and realize that there
- is a carrier present, but after that it just hangs there like a two dollar
- picture frame on a motel room wall. (nice image, huh?)
-
- I'm sure that I'm missing or mis-using at least a few of the necessary names
- and numbers, but I'm still trying. Perhaps one of our Internet-literate
- Sysops could provide a quick primer on what these settings are and what they
- mean? (Sorry for the extra work guys but, let's face it, you love it!
- <grin>)"
-
- Sysop Jim Ness tells me:
- "First of all, you need to log in either manually, or via a script, and O
- PPPCONNECT. That's the area in which PPP is supported; a set of Web servers
- at CIS. Once you arrive there, CIS begins to try to confirm a PPP session
- with your browser. I am not sure what your browser needs. The network
- protocol supported is TCP/IP, and there are several host DNS numbers
- supported by CIS. I tell my browser to look for 149.174.211.5 as primary
- and 149.174.213.5 as the fall back. The IP number is assigned by CIS upon
- login."
-
- Michel Vanhamme adds:
- "There probably is a logon script to be edited somewhere in Oasis...
- Basically, my logon procesure (on my Mac) is as follows (discard the
- quotes):
-
- -Send a [CR] (= carriage return)
- -Wait for 'Name:'
- -Send 'CIS'+[CR]
- -Wait for 'ID:'
- -Send 'your user id/GO:PPPCONNECT'+[CR]
- -Wait for 'word:'
- -Send 'your password'+[CR]
- -Wait for: 'PPP'
-
- From then on, a little bit of negotiating occurs, and after a few seconds,
- you should have a PPP connection."
-
- I tell Michel and Jim:
- "Thanks for the help! I noticed that a lot of folks have had problems with
- errors in the PPP "packets". I've also noticed that there are several
- options within OASIS for PPP packet size... 512, 1024, and 3'something'. Is
- there a specific packet size that CIS requires? I'm really hoping that
- someone comes out with a browser that actually _works_ with a minimum setup
- and without having to use anything other than TOS.
-
- One nice feature Oasis has is that it will run on a 1 meg machine... Of
- course you have to run a special program that switches between the browser
- and the dialer/mail program for you, but heck, it'll still run on a 1 meg
- machine! Now, if we can only get it to run on a 1 meg machine connected to
- CIS! <grin>"
-
- Sysop Jim tells me:
- "CIS will adjust to whatever packet size your end says it supports. So, you
- might as well go for the largest."
-
- Richard Lawson posts:
- "I've managed to get it to connect to CIS and everything but I'm not too sure
- what it does after then. Compuserve's IP address is 0.0.0.0 You get
- allocated a dynamic IP address, so there's no need to specify one. ICE
- seems to work, but it doesn't do anything after it's connected. I'm probably
- not waiting long enough; I've only got a 2400 modem :-) If anyone wants
- more info on my setup or has any tips, mail me."
-
- Status update, folks: No luck yet on getting my computer to talk HTML to
- CompuServe... I'll keep you informed though.
-
- Scott Graham posts:
- "A friend of mine is using an Atari 1040ST. I recently gave him a modem. I
- found several telecommunications program here but here's the question: how
- can I transfer the files to him? Can an Atari 1040ST read a dos formatted
- disk?"
-
- John Raymond tells Scott:
- "Yes an atari can read dos formatted disks provided that they are double
- density (that is not HD high density disks) but of course the atari can only
- use Atari telecom programmes."
-
- Clay Moore posts:
- "I forgot how to determine the version of TOS in my MEGA 4. is version 1.4
- the first tos version to cycle the colors through the logo? Ie 'Rainbow
- TOS'?"
-
- David James tells Clay:
- "There are a number of programs which will identify the TOS version. Two that
- come to mind are GEMBENCH and PROFILE. I dob't know if either are in the
- file area on CICS but it could be worth having a look."
-
- Jack Hughes adds:
- "A freeware program from The Netherlands called, appropriately, "Sysinfo"
- will tell you more about your system than you really want to know. I do not
- know if it is the Library here, but I will u/l it if not and it is desired.
- The author is, H. W. A. M. deBeer. As an aside, I just looked at it and
- discovered the source of the 4-6-89 date I keep getting reset too after
- logging on to CIS. It is the date of my TOS v1.4!!! Now if I could just
- find out why the date gets reset, sigh."
-
- Matthew Beasley asks:
- "How do you get [a file with] the lzh extension to work?"
-
- I jump in and tell Matthew:
- "LZH is a method of compression that can also combine several files together
- into an 'archive'. Before these files can be used, you must decompress (or
- unLZH them). In library 4 (Utilities) there is a self-extracting file called
- ARCLZH.PRG. Download and run this program. It will extract into ARC version
- 6.02, LZH version 2.01L and ARCSHELL version 3.1.
-
- The last is a shell program which allows you to easily manipulate the ARC and
- LZH compression/Decompression programs. After this is done, you can run
- ArcShell, choose the LZH option, select the LZH archive you want to
- decompress, and sit back for a moment while the programs do the work.
- If you have any problems or questions, feel free to ask... the folks in this
- forum are the best!"
-
- Tom Harker of ICD posts:
- "If you have been putting off getting a hard drive for your Atari computer,
- you might want to look at the Syquest EZ135 SCSI drives that are being blown
- out right now.
-
- Toad is selling them for about $129 which includes the drive in a nice
- compact case with power supply. These drives use removable 3.5 inch
- cartridges which each hold about 135 megabytes and are nearly as fast as a
- high quality fixed SCSI drive. They are also being sold at Best Buy, some
- of the Office Depot and Office Max stores, Computer City, Comp USA and other
- computer stores for similar prices.
-
- The EZ135 uses a standard SCSI connector on the back of the case and an ICD
- Link 1 or Link 2 works just fine as the interface to an ST computer or plug
- directly in to a TT or Falcon. Syquest is closing them out in favor of
- their new 230 MB drive which costs $300 but I expect carts to be available
- for many years. Carts cost about $30 each."
-
- Julian Church asks Tom:
- "You wouldn't happen to know if they're banging these out worldwide, or just
- in the US? I'm in the UK and a cheap removable SCSI drive would be ace for
- my sampler."
-
- Tom tells Julian:
- "Try System Solutions/Atari Workshop in the UK. I talked with them recently
- and they were planning a promotion on EZ Drives. They have been able to
- secure them at the lower price. In the USA it has been reported that Comp
- USA is offering the external SCSI EZ 135 for $129 with a $30 rebate ($99 end
- cost)."
-
- Julian replies:
- "$99! I know you can't really translate prices directly using exchange rates
- (especially with any kind of technology - the market is so much smaller
- here), but that's about L60 ie just silly. The EZ drives are going for
- about L130 normally which is more than reasonable so I'm looking forward to
- finding out what the new prices are going to be. I'll guess it's going to be
- about 80 or 90 pounds once all the tedious mucking about in customs and
- stuff has added to the cost.
-
- Anyway I've got SS's number at home so I'll try them tomorrow or something.
-
- Albert Dayes of Atari Explorer Online Magazine tells Julian:
- "Iomega just lowered the price of the JAZ drive (1 gigabyte removable) to
- $399 (for internal scsi version) so I am sure that puts a great amount of
- pressure on smaller sizes such as ZIP and Syquest EZ-135 megabyte drives."
-
- Well folks, that's about it for this week. Tune in again next week, same
- time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they're saying when....
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- In solemn Remembrance of TWA Flight 800
- May They Rest In Peace
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- STR OnLine! "YOUR INDEPENDENT NEWS SOURCE" July 19, 1996
- Since 1987 Copyrightc1996 All Rights Reserved Issue No. 1229
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