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-
- Silicon Times Report
-
- The Original Independent OnLine Magazine"
- (Since 1987)
-
- November 29, 1996 No.1248
-
- Silicon Times Report International OnLine Magazine
- Post Office Box 6672
- Jacksonville, Florida 32221-6155
-
- R.F. Mariano, Editor
- STR Publishing, Inc.
- Voice: 1-904-292-9222 10am-5pm EST
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- 11/29/96 STR 1248 The Original Independent OnLine Magazine!
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- - CPU Industry Report - Corel News - AWE 64 INFO
- - Diamond Monster 3D - USR Update Info - Kids Do the Web
- - AOL Settles Dispute - SAIC buys BellCore - Excite AOL Searcher
- - GEMvelop 2.96 - People Talking - Dana Reporting
-
- MUSTANG IN TROUBLE?
- CONFIRMED! WOW TO GO!
- BELARUS WEB SITE DESTROYED!
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- STReport International OnLine Magazine
- Featuring Weekly
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- Current Events, Original Articles, Tips, Rumors, and Information
- Hardware - Software - Corporate - R & D - Imports
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- IMPORTANT NOTICE
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- STReport, with its policy of not accepting any input relative to
- content from paid advertisers, has over the years developed the
- reputation of "saying it like it really is". When it comes to
- our editorials, product evaluations, reviews and over-views, we
- shall always keep our readers interests first and foremost. With
- the user in mind, STReport further pledges to maintain the reader
- confidence that has been developed over the years and to continue
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- arduously endeavor to meet and further develop the high standards
- of straight forwardness our readers have come to expect in each
- and every issue.
- The Publisher, Staff & Editors
-
- Florida Lotto - LottoMan v1.35
- Results: 11/23/96: 2 of 6 numbers, no matches
-
-
- From the Editor's Desk...
-
- It's a nice.. Long weekend! Feels good to know there'll be
- peace and quiet for the next few days. Except perhaps for the
- screams and hoots coming from either Diablo, LinksLS or any of
- the other new, superb entertainment goodies that are available.
- With the new hardware that's on the market like the Matrox super
- high power graphics card and of course, the Monster 3d card from
- Diamond the eye candy is unbeatable. Now couple all this with
- the AWE32 or 64, and you've got darn near virtual reality on a
- monitor.
-
- The new goodies are fantastic and its only going to get
- better. In all fairness, I must admit I used to get the very
- same feelings a long time ago on another platform. I was always
- so proud to think I was on the "cutting edge" back then. And
- when it all dulled I was broken hearted. Compared to then, I'm
- skateboarding on the sharp edge of a self sharpening razor blade
- today. Its neat to see it all happening again and again on a
- regular basis. It was only yesterday I remarked to a friend of
- mine; "its amazing. when I stop and think of all the hours of
- sheer enjoyment this computer has afforded me." its absolutely
- amazing.
-
- I'll waste no more time.. one more item, next week there
- will be some info about a great new capture, snap it grab it and
- go program called HyperSnap. Don't miss it because you'll want
- this program.
-
-
- Of Special Note:
- http//www.streport.com
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- STReport is now ready to offer much more in the way of serving
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- STReport's managing editors DEDICATED TO SERVING
- YOU!
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- Ralph F. Mariano, Publisher - Editor
- Dana P. Jacobson, Editor, Current Affairs
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- Section Editors
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- PC Section Mac Section Special Events Section
- R.F. Mariano J. Deegan Lloyd E. Pulley
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- Gaming & Entertainment Kid's Computing Corner
- Dana P. Jacobson Frank Sereno
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- STReport Staff Editors
- Michael Arthur John Deegan Brad Martin
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- Doyle Helms John Duckworth Jeff Coe
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- Contributing Correspondents
- D. J. Fontana Norman Boucher Daniel Stidham
- David H. Mann Angelo Marasco Donna Lines
- Ed Westhusing Glenwood Drake Vernon W.Smith
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- STReport Headline News
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- LATE BREAKING INDUSTRY-WIDE NEWS
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- Weekly Happenings in the Computer World
-
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
- Technology Eases Wayfaring Strangers' Journeys
-
- BURBANK, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1996 NOV 27 (Newsbytes) -- By Linda
- Dailey Paulson. Thanksgiving week is traditionally the busiest
- travel period of the year at United States airports as harried
- travelers attempt to catch flights over the rivers and woods to
- Grandmother's house. This year, air travelers will find
- technology, in many forms, designed to ease their
- journeys.
-
- There's nothing worse than checking in early for a flight and
- sitting and waiting interminably. To while away that time for
- travelers of all ages, Nintendo and Southwest Airlines are
- offering passengers at the Burbank Airport GameBoy hand-held
- video games to play while waiting for their flight. Nintendo will
- be at the Southwest Airlines check in counter between 10 am and 2
- pm Wednesday.
-
- Meanwhile, business travelers have found ATCOM/INFO's pyramid-
- shaped Internet kiosks useful on their travels. The San Diego-
- based company has plans to eventually install more than 1,000
- Internet kiosks in airports, hotels, and convention centers
- across the US. With GTE, a cellular telephone service provider,
- ATCOM/INFO installed 10 kiosks in Dallas-Fort Worth
- International Airport in August and September, 1996. The company
- will be installing kiosks in terminals at the Bradley
- International Airport in Connecticut, some time in January 1997.
- At least two other airports may also join the growing list of
- locations in early 1997.
-
- "In the relatively short time the GTE kiosks have been
- operational, those kiosks have really played to what I call 'rave
- reviews,' from both business travelers and airport patrons
- alike," says Joe Dealey, Jr., D-FW International Airport
- spokesperson. "Admittedly the GTE kiosks represent a first for D-
- FW ... but I think it is highly likely improved versions and
- competing versions of this technology will show up at other
- airports, hotels, convention centers ... just about everywhere
- large numbers of people congregate for business or for pleasure."
-
- The cost of using the public access kiosk averages about $20 per
- hour. Typical users log on briefly at a cost less than $3; 70
- percent of people using the system do so to retrieve e-mail. "I
- can deal with a lot of business in 15 minutes by reviewing e-mail
- messages," says Peter Van Horne, president of ATCOM/INFO. "By
- responding to e-mail, I can respond and prioritize my time rather
- than being dependent on other people's priorities."
-
- One of the first technologies to find its way into airports was
- the in-flight telephone. Most major airlines carriers have some
- sort of telephone available to be accessed with a major credit
- card or telephone company calling card.
-
- These phones are as convenient as they are practical. A young
- mother on her way from Nashville to Sacramento was able to check
- on her infant son who had a doctor's appointment - - and talk to
- the doctor directly while somewhere over Nevada. Too, late
- flights necessitate a call to hold a reservation or connect
- with that person picking you up from the airport. "Just as
- technology has moved the in-flight telephone from the bulkhead to
- the seat back," says Dealey, "it also has made it very
- affordable to let someone know your flight is running late or
- you're OK, but you forgot something. It's an added a measure of
- convenience. "The advances in technology here and globally have
- really made the shrinking world cliches an operating fact of
- life. That you can get online and check e-mail or go into your
- company's network and transact business ... has really made
- business travel and holiday travel as well, a rather enjoyable
- experience," says Dealey.
-
- AOL Settles Price Complaint
-
- Because of a settlement with Washington state's attorney general,
- America Online now will give users nationwide more time and more
- information with which to consider a new pricing plan. Reporting
- from Olympia, Washington, Associated Press writer Hal Spencer
- says the agreement follows negotiations over AOL's plan to
- automatically switch subscribers to a new $19.95 flat rate on
- Dec. 1 unless they advised the company they preferred to stick
- with the current basic plan -- $9.95 a month for five hours and
- $2.95 an hour thereafter.
-
- State Attorney General Christine Gregoire complained that AOL's
- plan, announced last month, violated the state's consumer-
- protection law. Under the new agreement, AOL will notify its
- subscribers with an electronic message when they log onto the
- service. The message is expected to start of next week.
- "Customers automatically switched to the new plan on Dec. 1 will
- be able to change back to the original plan through March 31 and
- get a refund for the price difference," AP says. "The new choices
- are: a standard monthly plan offering unlimited use of America
- Online and the Internet for $19.95; a rate of $9.95 for unlimited
- access to America Online for those who already have an Internet
- connection; three hours of the service per month for $4.95, with
- additional time priced at $2.50 per hour." Attorneys general in
- 17 other states also are examining AOL's marketing practices,
- Gregoire told the wire service.
-
- Clinton Rejects New Taxes on Net
-
- The Clinton administration says it has no plans to try to impose
- new federal taxes on the Internet. Of course, the key word,
- though, is "new." The White House's 46-page policy paper,
- released yesterday, indicates the administration is looking for
- thoughts on how to apply existing taxes to electronic commerce.
- And, says Associated Press writer Dave Skidmore, "The answers
- have interstate and international ramifications and are not
- always obvious."
-
- About the Clinton position on new taxes, Glen A. Kohl, deputy
- assistant treasury secretary, told the wire service, "We think
- electronic commerce is to be encouraged and we want to make sure
- the tax system doesn't get in the way. We don't think electronic
- commerce justifies new taxes." But on the matter of existing
- taxes, AP notes the most vexing question is if a transaction
- occurs in cyberspace, where does it occur for tax purposes?
-
- "In the pre-Internet world," says Skidmore, "two principles have
- covered assessment of income taxes: the location of the source
- of the income and the residence of the person receiving the
- income. But, if an Australian offers services to U.S. customers
- from a computer in Canada, what is the location of the source of
- the income?" In its new paper, the U.S. Treasury Department
- says the rise of electronic commerce likely will lessen the
- importance of source-based taxation and emphasize residence-
- based taxation, but it offers no definitive answers.
-
- Kohl said his department is seeking to open a discussion, rather
- than issue policy pronouncements, adding the goal is to develop
- rules and international agreements that prevent double taxation
- and provide certainty. "Another issue," says Skidmore, "concerns
- whether a tangible product, such as a book or photograph or
- musical recording, is converted into anintangible product when it
- is digitized and transmitted over the Internet. How should the
- transaction be taxed?"
-
- The Treasury report also does not address the applicability of
- state taxes to the Internet, an issue that has bothered the
- industry more than the international issues. As reported earlier,
- several states, including Massachusetts and Florida, have
- examined applying taxes designed for telephone service to
- Internet service. The new Treasury paper has been posted on the
- department's World Wide Web site (http://www.ustreas.gov).
-
- WOW's Fate Worries Industry
-
- Industry observers and financial analysts are wondering this
- morning if the closing of CompuServe's WOW service is a
- harbinger of problems to come for similar general-interest, flat-
- rate projects online. "WOW's experience may be a precursor to
- what's going to happen to America Online, Microsoft and others,"
- Vice President Peter Krasilovsky of Arlen Communications Inc.
- research firm told reporters Jared Sandberg and James P. Miller
- of The Wall Street Journal this morning. "Because of their new
- flat-rate pricing, it may quickly become uneconomical."
-
- CompuServe says it will shut down the family-oriented WOW service
- by Jan. 31, freeing the company to focus on the business users
- and experienced online computerists who have always been its
- primary market. WOW used a flat-fee approach, charging $17.95
- for unlimited access, "but," says the Journal, "the low pricing
- appealed more to sophisticated heavy users who went online for
- hours at a time, driving up the company's costs."
-
- CompuServe Vice President Scott Kauffman told the paper, "It's
- not a particularly profitable business for us," adding he thinks
- online services aren't ready for the mass market. "It's still an
- early-adopter business," Kauffman said. On this, the Journal
- commented, "The collapse of WOW may provide a sobering lesson to
- other online services that hope to appeal to mainstream users and
- that use flat-rate fees." (Currently, CompuServe charges
- users$9.95 a month for five free hours and $2.95 for each
- additional hour.)
-
- CompuServe officials told the Journal the company will launch new
- services aimed at businesses and small offices early next year.
- "This is a back-to-basics strategy," said Kauffman, who noted
- that 45 percent of the company's 2.2 million domestic subscribers
- are business users and 60 percent of the company's 826,000
- European subscribers use the service
- primarily for business. "It's a more profitable segment of the
- market."
-
- Lycos Licenses Tools to CompuServe
-
- Lycos Inc. says its search technology and proprietary content
- will be used to enhance the offerings of CompuServe Inc.'s
- online services. The licensing deal will allow CompuServe will
- provide a CompuServe-rebranded set of customized search tools for
- its suite of services, giving members powerful, fast and flexible
- search capabilities both within CompuServe content and on the
- World Wide Web.
-
- Lycos says the agreement is a reflection of its two- pronged
- business strategy to pursue advertising revenue while
- aggressively initiating licensing partnerships that seed the
- market with Lycos content and technology. "Through CompuServe,
- the number of people using Lycos Web products is boosted by
- millions," says Bob Davis, Lycos' president and CEO. "This
- reinforces our position as leaders in effectively providing
- powerful products for mainstream use, whether directly through
- Lycos or through our partners."
-
- Babbage, Software Etc. Sale OK'd
-
- Sale of Babbage's and Software Etc. to one of the original
- founders -- instead of to the stores' biggest competitor in
- malls nationwide, Electronics Boutique -- has been approved by a
- Dallas bankruptcy court judge. Writing in The Dallas Morning
- News, reporter Maria Halkias notes a group of investors led by
- Leonard Riggio -- a founder of Software Etc. and the chairman and
- principal stockholder of the Barnes & Noble bookstore chain --
- was the successful bidder in an auction conducted during three
- days of court hearings.
-
- Says Halkias, "The decision by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven A.
- Felsenthal leaves as competitors the two biggest boutique
- sellers of video games and software in malls. It also preserves
- the headquarters operation in Dallas." The paper says Riggio's
- group will pay $58.5 million for the video game and software
- boutiques, whose parent company, NeoStar Retail Group, has been
- operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection since mid-
- September.
-
- Riggio told the paper the new entity will be called Babbage's,
- Etc. He also named his new management team, picking R. Richard
- "Dick" Fontaine (formerly CEO of Software Etc. during its
- expansion in the late 1980s and early 1990s) to be CEO of the new
- company. Another Software Etc. executive, Dan DeMatteo, was
- named president and chief operating officer of the company.
-
- Belarus Web Site Destroyed
-
- Word from Minsk is that a site on the Internet's World Wide Web
- providing news about the opposition to Belarus' hard-line
- president has been destroyed. Site editor Vladimir Korvatsky has
- told The Associated Press the Web page was destroyed just after
- posting photos and information from a Nov. 17 rally at which riot
- police beat several protesters. "We just wanted to give out
- unbiased information," Korvatsky said. "What good did it do to
- destroy a free information service for the whole world?"
-
- He added there have been more than 5,000 attempts to visit the
- site since it was cut off. Those trying to visit it see only a
- notice saying "Sorry! The Enemies of Democracy Have Destroyed
- Our Server." Korvatsky said the group hopes to reopen the site
- this week. AP quotes the New York-based Committee to Protect
- Journalists as saying the site is one of the few sources of
- independent news out of Belarus, adding it has been carrying news
- of the legislative and judicial branches' attempts to resist a
- crackdown by President Alexander Lukashenko.
-
- Lukashenko has cracked down on political opposition and shut down
- independent newspapers and radio stations, AP notes. Critics say
- the result was one-sided information that crippled voters' choice
- in a referendum last weekend that expanded Lukashenko's powers.
-
- Germans Track Chip Counterfeits
-
- An international gang suspected of counterfeiting computer
- components has been cracked in Germany and nine other countries,
- authorities in Munich say. According to the Reuter News
- Service, more than 2,000 law enforcement officials raided
- locations in France, Italy and Belgium. "Police in Bavaria
- carted away truckloads of counterfeit components and files,"
- Reuters says. "They issued arrest warrants for at least 24 Asians
- of Chinese descent on charges of counterfeiting, fraud, money
- laundering, and receiving stolen goods."
-
- Reuters quotes police as saying they believe the gang smuggled
- counterfeit components and sold them at market prices, causing
- about 500 million marks in damage. Several individuals were
- arrested, but police withheld further details for the time being.
- Intel Corp. officials says the chip giant is cooperating with
- the authorities and that the gang may have counterfeited its
- computer chips. An Intel spokesman in Munich told the wire
- service, "We are supporting theinvestigation but we don't know if
- or how many of our chips were counterfeited or sold."
-
- Neal Boudette of Reuters' Bonn newsroom reports, "The raids were
- the culmination of a three-year investigation that began in
- 1993, centering on a Chinese businessman who held a Laotian
- passport, whose computer company was allegedly involved in tax
- evasion and money laundering."
-
- Be Inc. Deals with Clone Maker
-
- Be Inc. -- a privately held start-up lately linked by rumors with
- Apple Computer Inc. -- has licensed its operating-system
- software to Power Computing Corp., maker of clones of Apple's
- Macintosh computer. Writing in The Wall Street Journal this
- morning, reporter Lee Gomes says Be's talks with Apple itself
- have hung up over price, adding the deal with Power Computing
- had been long planned, "and is unrelated to acquisition
- discussions between Apple and Be."
-
- Adds Gomes, "Those talks have bogged down over how much Apple is
- willing to pay for the Mountain View, Calif., start-up." The
- new agreement calls for all Power Computing's machines shipped
- after January to come equipped with both the Macintosh and Be
- operating systems. "While the Be operating system has been
- praised by technical reviewers," says the Journal, "it is still
- new, and thus has few application programs yet written for it.
- The Power Computing announcement is aimed mainly at
- sophisticated users, the sort who enjoy testing out major new
- pieces of software."
-
- Meanwhile, insiders say Apple is offering about $100 million in
- cash and stock for Be, which has a staff of 50, but that Be is
- seeking nearly quadruple that figure, "arguing," says Gomes,
- "that the company and its software would be the major component
- of any long-term turnaround at Apple." Be, founded in 1990 by
- former Apple research director Jean-Louis Gassee, is of interest
- to the Cupertino, Calif., computer makers because Apple's planned
- "Copland" operating system, which it had expected to use as its
- next-generation operation system, is years behind schedule,
- Gomes says.
-
- As reported, Apple has acknowledged it is looking outside for a
- new operating system, but it has never publicly confirmed that
- it is talking to Be. Still, notes the Journal, it has done
- nothing to discourage rumors of the talks, which "has resulted in
- a number of enthusiastic articles in the Apple trade press about
- a deal that has yet to be consummated." Nonetheless, says Gomes,
- Apple officials recently pointed out they have alternatives to
- purchasing Gassee's company. For instance, at last week's Comdex
- trade show, Ellen Hancock, Apple's chief technology officer,
- warned reporters that "not everyone we are talking to is talking
- to you."
-
- Mustang Software Struggles
-
- Once on top of the world as the leading provider of stand-alone
- bulletin board system software, Mustang Software Inc. now is
- struggling, slashing its staff from the top down as it tries to
- make a place for itself on the Internet. Described by
- Computergram International as "badly ailing," Mustang's stock is
- selling for less than 10 percent of what it was worth a year ago
- and now major executives -- including Vice President/Chief
- Operating Officer Richard Heming and Sales/Marketing Vice
- President Brett Martin - have stepped down.
-
- Taking over the jobs, President/CEO James Harrer, a co-founder of
- the firm, told CI he is similarly consolidating other tasks
- throughout the company, while the total extent of the layoffs is
- still being worked out. Notes the newsletter, "Mustang is
- struggling to convert its Wildcat! 5 bulletin board software,
- once a best seller in the dial-up market, into a full-fledged
- Internet offering. Among other things it's designed to instantly
- convert bulletin board operators into Webmeisters."
-
- Adds CI, "The first disaster was in writing the new version,
- which slipped a half year before being released. The second was
- the discovery that Internet servers don't sell well off-the-
- shelf, virtually the only channel Mustang used to sell its
- bulletin board programs." Share prices have fallen from as high
- as $11.50 a year ago to as low as $1 earlier this month,
- recovering a bit to the $2 range last week.
-
- (Editor Note) Mustang Software's Wildcat Five suffers from a
- MAJOR problem. It has been a lack of an affordable FRONT END
- Mailer and Tosser for use with private networks like Fido and ITC
- etc.. The only one available was so high priced it literally
- KILLED Wildcat Five Sales to Sysops using Wildcat Four along with
- running mailer/tossers. They refused to make the change and
- suffer the excessive costs of the only compatible front end.
- Once again, "a quick score" has practically killed a marvelous
- product and a great company. Wildcat Five and Mustang Software.
- Jim H. ought to BLOW the market OPEN to Wildcat Five by either
- buying up the Front End Mailer that's available but excessively
- expensive to the new consumer/upgrader or, provide one for use
- with WC5 for Mustang's loyal consumer base thus neutralizing the
- "high priced spread". This would be an effective move to boost
- WC5 sales dramatically.
-
- Two Valley Firms Lay Off Hundreds
-
- Hundreds of Silicon Valley employees are being laid off by two
- firms because of either factory or production line shutdowns.
- In the San Jose, California, Mercury News, business writer Janet
- Rae-Dupree reports:
-
- · VLSI Technology Inc. says it plans to shut down its San Jose
- chip plant, idling 300 workers. Based in San Jose, the firm says
- its chip plant was a victim of the rapid changes in the
- semiconductor industry.
- · Seagate Technology Inc. says it will shut down an obsolete
- media production line which employs 290 people. Its Recording
- Media group, which employs 2,000 people in both Milpitas and
- Fremont, says its production line's obsolete technology is not
- suitable to making the recording media used inside today's hard
- drives.
-
- Computers Enable Beatles Film
-
- Computer technology will be used to turn still photographs by
- former Beatle Paul McCartney and his wife Linda into moving
- pictures, enabling the creation of a new film about the
- legendary British rock group. In London, Beatles spokesman
- Geoff Baker announced the project on the eve of the opening of an
- exhibition of Linda McCartney's photographs in the northern
- English city of Bradford.
-
- Said Baker, "Paul and Linda are currently editing through some
- 4,000 of Linda's pictures of the Beatles -- all of which have
- never been seen -- in order to make the new style of movie,
- which they call a photofilm." The Reuter News Service notes
- Linda McCartney took the photographs behind closed doors between
- meeting her husband in 1967 and the break-up of the Beatles in
- 1970.
-
- "The new Beatles film follows a critically acclaimed 'photofilm'
- by Paul McCartney last year," the wire service notes. "He
- selected two rolls of Linda's pictures of veteran West Coast
- rockers The Grateful Dead and made the still photographs move
- with the aid of computer technology." In a statement, Baker
- said the Beatles film, not expected to be completed before the
- end of 1997, would reveal "what is believed to be the richest and
- most intimate photographic archive of the Beatles." Also
- expected is a soundtrack of songs by the group that have never
- been released. They are on tapes of a secret jam session the
- Beatles recorded at the Roundhouse in London's Camden Town in
- 1968.
-
- Clinton Wins APEC Victory
-
- A major victory on the trade front is being claimed by the
- Clinton Administration today as Pacific Rim leaders have
- accepted the year 2000 as a deadline for cutting tariffs on
- information technology. Calling it "a big deal" and a boost for
- jobs in the U.S. information technology industry, which has
- exports worth $100 billion a year, President Clinton said,
- "Imagine if we went to zero tariffs in the entire world, what
- that would mean to America and for exports in higher-paying
- jobs."
-
- Associated Press writer David Thurber, in Subic Bay, Philippines,
- to cover the talks, quotes Clinton in remarks to U.S. Embassy
- staff as adding information technology is "to the 21st century
- what highways and railroads were to the 19th century." Thurber
- says a communique ending the 18-government summit went beyond
- the language accepted last week to partially meet U.S. demands
- for freeing global trade in computers, semiconductors, software
- andtelecommunications.
-
- "But," he added, "it hedged by speaking of 'flexibility' and of
- 'substantially' eliminating tariffs -- caveats meant to appease
- poorer nations which fear their high-tech industries will be
- swamped by cheaper imports if all trade barriers come down at
- once." AP says this will enable opponents like Prime Minister
- Mahathir Mohamad of Malaysia to say they have kept their options
- open and haven't caved in to U.S. pressure.
-
- The statement read by Philippines President Fidel Ramos called
- for "an information technology agreement" by the World Trade
- Organization that would "substantially eliminate tariffs by the
- year 2000." The wire service notes the U.S. -- backed by Japan,
- Canada and Australia -- had wanted all tariffs on computers,
- software, semiconductors and telecommunications abolished by the
- year 2000. Malaysia led the objectors.
-
- "When Washington failed to get its way in pre-summit talks last
- week, U.S. negotiators insisted they were satisfied with the
- wording adopted," says Thurber. "But Clinton, who arrived in
- Manila on Saturday, clearly wasn't. According to U.S. officials,
- he warned Ramos, this year's host of the Asia-Pacific Economic
- Cooperation summit, that the meeting would be judged a failure
- unless it took a stronger line on information technology." U.S.
- officials told the wire service Ramos, along with Japanese Prime
- Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto and South Korean President Kim Young-
- sam, also came to Clinton's support.
-
- Alleged Net Hate Site Probed
-
- An unprecedented investigation has been launched by Canadian
- officials into an Internet site run by history revisionist Ernst
- Zundel of Toronto whom many accuse of distributing hate
- materials. Reporting from Ottawa, the French Agence France-Press
- International News Service says the Canadian commission on
- personal rights opened its investigation Friday, adding, "The
- group has the power to shut down sites on the international
- computer network even though the server unit for the material is
- based in California." Zundel is known for his works denying the
- Holocaust took place during World War II.
-
- Max Yalden, head of the commission, told AFP that Canadian laws
- gives his group jurisdiction over telephone communications,
- including links between Internet sites made via telephone.
- Yalden said the commission intends to close down the site and
- defended the action saying it was not a case of censorship.
- Said Yalden, "I don't think Zundel's engaged in free debate, I
- think he's engaged in trying to incite people against Jews."
-
- Nazi Symbols Halt Corel Sales
-
- The top-selling Corel Draw computer program has been pulled from
- the shelves in Germany by its Canadian publisher because the
- software turns out to include four banned Nazi symbols. Corel
- spokesman Thomas Layer told the Reuter News Service his employer
- will remove three drawings of Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler and one
- swastika symbol from future versions of its popular software.
- Meanwhile, he said, Corel also is distributing warning labels for
- computer shops to stick on their current stocks to be able to
- resume selling them.
-
- Reuters says the label warns the "improper use of digital images
- and symbols" found in the programs Corel Draw 4.0, 5.0 and 6.0
- is prohibited in Germany, which bans public displays of Nazi
- symbols. In Munich, the state prosecutor launched an
- investigation into the software Oct. 2 after learning someone
- had used the banned images to print business cards for a neo-Nazi
- group, the wire service says. German sales of Corel Draw --
- which provides more than 24,000 "clipart" drawings and symbols
- that computer users can copy into newsletters and
- other documents -- was suspended last Tuesday, Reuters reports.
-
-
-
- USRobotics Update News STR Infofile
-
-
- Sportster 33.6k Upgrade
- If you own a Sportster V.FC or Sportster V.34 modem, you can
- upgrade to 33.6k! Order the 33.6k Upgrade Kit, which includes a
- user-installable e-prom chip, or send your modem in and we can
- install it for you. To place your order, call either of the
- numbers below. Be sure to have your modem's serial number ready
- when you call.
-
- Call:
- Voice: 847/982-5151
- BBS: 847/982-5092
-
- Pricing:
- 33.6k upgrade Kit $24.95
- Installation of Upgrade Kit (option l) $20.00
- Shipping and Handling $ 5.00
-
-
- Ordering through the BBS:
- To place your order through the BBS, dial the number listed
- above. Once logged into the system, type SPV34 at the main
- prompt and the system will prompt you along. Please have your
- credit card information ready.
-
- Upgrading your Sportster Vi Modem:
- The upgrade to 33.6k for the Sportster Vi is free. There are
- only two Sportster Vi modems that qualify for the upgrade. Look
- at your 16 digit serial number. If it starts with 00027900 or
- 00028202 then it can be upgraded. You need to call or fax(847-
- 676-7314) in the following information to receive the upgrade:
-
- * First and last name
- * Complete phone number
- * Shipping address(street, city, state, zip)
- * Your modems 16 digit serial number
- * If faxing in request, state that you are requesting
- the Sportster Vi 33.6k upgrade chip.
-
-
- Upgrading the Winmodem:
- To receive the Winmodem upgrade from 28.8k to 33.6k, download the
- appropriate file from the list below.
-
- WINM336.EXE 555808 06-21-96 Full install files for all
- | Sportster Winmodem models.
- | This version supports 33.6k
- | connections. Extract these files
- | to floppy disk to install.
- | Uninstall previous Winmodem
- | software before installing this
- | version.
-
- WM336UPG.EXE 959614 06-21-96 Sportster Winmodem 33.6k
- upgrade.
- | To upgrade your Winmodem, run
- this
- | file from within Windows. Under
- | Windows 95, click on Start then
- Run.
- | Under Windows 3.x in Program
- | Manager, click on File then Run.
-
- These files can be downloaded from our BBS(847-982-5092), FTP
- Site(ftp.usr.com), or our Web Site(www.usr.com).
-
- Keating Technologies:
- Information for Canadian Customers
-
- U.S. Robotics has a service company in Canada, specifically to
- take care of our Canadian customers. They will take care of
- your Service Repair Order(SRO) authorizations, technical
- questions, and orders. Below is their address and contact
- information.
-
-
- Keating Technologies
- 25 Royal Crest Court
- Suite 200
- Markham, Ontario
- L3R 9X4
-
- phone: 905-479-0231
- fax: 905-479-0232
- email: support@keating.com
- Web: www.keating.com
-
-
- Flash Upgrading your Courier using X-ModemNote: The code of your
- Courier must be at least 4/29/96 to support the X-Modem flash
- update feature. To check your code date, open up a terminal
- program and type ATI7<enter>. Look at the supervisor date line
- on the ATI7 screen. If the code date is older than 4/29/96, you
- will have to use the current DOS USRSDL.EXE file to flash your
- modem
- up to code that supports this feature.
-
-
- Using X-Modem to update your Courier on a Macintosh:
-
- 1. Download USRSDL.XMD from our FTP site at ftp.usr.com, or our
- Web Site at www.usr.com. This can be done on a PC or Macintosh
- if your Macintosh can read PC disks.
- 2. Copy USRSDL.XMD onto the Macintosh.
- 3. Go into a communications terminal software program such as
- MacComCenter, and make sure MacBinary is disabled(in
- MacComCenter, go under Setup | File Transfer | MacBinary Options,
- and select "Never MacBinary").
- 4. Go to a terminal window(in MacComCenter go under Data and
- select On-Line). In the terminal window type AT~X! and enter,
- and you will get "SDL X-Modem file transfer - (Y)es (N)o (T)est
- >". Type 'Y'. You will then get the message "Begin X-Modem file
- transfer now."
- 5. Start an X-Modem send of USRSDL.XMD(in MacComCenter go under
- Data | Send File | X- Mmodem CRC, and select USRSDL.XMD).
- 6. The flash ROM of your modem will then be erased and re-
- flashed with the code contained in the USRSDL.XMD file.
-
-
- Using X-Modem to update your Courier on other operating systems:
-
- 1. Copy USRSDL.XMD onto the hard disk.
- 2. Go into your communications terminal software.
- 3. In terminal, type AT~X!. This will bring up the prompt "SDL
- X-Modem file transfer - (Y)es (N)o (T)est >". Type 'Y'. This
- will bring up the message "Begin X-Modem file transfer now."
- 4. Start an X-Modem send of the file USRSDL.XMD.
- 5. The flash ROM of your modem will then be erased and re-
- flashed with the code contained in the USRSDL.XMD file.
-
-
- If any errors or problems occur, please contact U.S. Robotics
- Courier Support at (800)550-7800.
-
-
- U.S. Robotics Corporation And Subsidiaries
- Consolidated Statement of Earnings
- (In thousands, except earnings per share data)
- (UNAUDITED)
-
- Quarter Ended 9/29/96
- ----------------------------
- Including Excluding
- In Process In Process
- Technology Technology Quarter
- Charge Charge % Ended
- --------- ----------------- 10/1/95 %
- -----------------
- Net sales $ 611,410 $ 611,410 100.0 $ 293,397 100.0
- Cost of goods sold 355,238 355,238 58.1 170,365 58.1
- --------- --------- ----------
- Gross profit 256,172 256,172 41.9 123,032 41.9
-
- Operating expenses
- Selling & marketing 92,706 92,706 15.2 40,755 13.9
- General &
- administrative 26,768 26,768 4.4 13,844 4.7
- Research &
- development 28,945 28,945 4.7 17,416 5.9
- Purchased in pro-
- cess technology 54,000 - - - -
- --------- --------- ----------
- 202,419 148,419 24.3 72,015 24.5
- --------- --------- ----------
- Operating profit 53,753 107,753 17.6 51,017 17.4
-
- Interest income 1,155 1,155 0.2 3,307 1.1
- Interest expense 1,663 1,663 0.3 1,173 0.4
- Other income
- (expense) (147) (147) 0.0 91 -
- -------- ---------- ----------
- Earnings before
- income taxes 53,098 107,098 17.5 53,242 18.1
- Income tax expense 39,626 39,626 6.5 19,023 6.4
- --------- ---------- ----------
- Net earnings $ 13,472 $ 67,472 11.0 $ 34,219 11.7
- ========= ========== ----------
-
- Net earnings per
- share $ 0.14 $ 0.71 $ 0.37
- ========= ========== ==========
-
- Shares used in per
- share calculation 95,681 95,681 91,717
- ========= ========== ==========
-
- All share and earnings per share data have been adjusted to reflect the
- two-for-one stock splits in the form of 100% stock dividends paid on
- September 8, 1995 and May 10, 1996.
-
- U.S. Robotics Corporation And Subsidiaries
- Consolidated Statement of Earnings
- (In thousands, except earnings per share data)
- (UNAUDITED)
-
-
- Fiscal Year Ended
- 9/29/96
- ------------------------------
- Including Excluding
- In Process In Process
- Technology Technology
- Charge Charge %
- ---------- ------------------
- Net sales $1,977,512 $1,977,512 100.0
- Cost of goods sold 1,149,446 1,149,446 58.1
- --------- ---------
- Gross profit 828,066 828,066 41.9
-
- Operating expenses
- Selling & marketing 271,585 271,585 13.7
- General &
- administrative 93,717 93,717 4.7
- Research &
- development 109,437 109,437 5.6
- Purchased in pro-
- cess technology 54,000 - -
- Non-recurring
- merger costs - - -
- --------- ---------
- 528,739 474,739 24.0
- --------- ---------
- Operating profit 299,327 353,327 17.9
-
- Interest income 8,424 8,424 0.4
- Interest expense 4,995 4,995 0.3
- Other income(expense) (866) (866) 0.0
- --------- ---------
- Earnings before
- income taxes 301,890 355,890 18.0
- Income tax expense 131,870 131,870 6.7
- --------- ---------
- Net earnings $ 170,020 $ 224,020 11.3
- ========= =========
-
- Net earnings per
- share $ 1.79 $ 2.36
- ========= =========
-
- Shares used in per
- share calculation 94,932 94,932
- ========= =========
-
- All share and earnings per share data have been
- adjusted to reflect the two-for-one stock splits in
- the form of 100% stock dividends paid on September 8,
- 1995 and May 10, 1996.
-
- U.S. Robotics Corporation And Subsidiaries
- Consolidated Statement of Earnings
- (In thousands, except earnings per share data)
- (UNAUDITED)
-
-
- Fiscal Year Ended 10/1/95
-
-
- Including Excluding
- Merger Merger
- costs costs %
-
- Net sales $ 889,347 $ 889,347 100.0
- Cost of goods sold 521,159 521,159 58.6
- -------- --------
- Gross profit 368,188 368,188 41.4
-
- Operating expenses
- Selling & marketing 136,585 136,585 15.4
- General &
- administrative 42,614 42,614 4.8
- Research &
- development 52,478 52,478 5.9
- Purchased in pro-
- cess technology - - -
- Non-recurring
- merger costs 29,449 - -
- -------- --------
- 261,126 231,677 26.1
- -------- --------
- Operating profit 107,062 136,511 15.3
-
- Interest income 7,700 7,700 0.9
- Interest expense 5,465 5,465 0.6
- Other income(expense) (377) (377) -
-
- Earnings before
- income taxes 108,920 138,369 15.6
- Income tax expense 42,969 49,215 5.6
-
- Net earnings $ 65,951 $ 89,154 10.0
-
-
- Net earnings per
- share $ 0.77 $ 1.05
-
-
- Shares used in per
- share calculation 85,304 85,304
-
-
- All share and earnings per share data have been
- adjusted to reflect the two-for-one stock splits in
- the form of 100% stock dividends paid on September
- 8, 1995 and May 10, 1996.
-
- U.S. Robotics Corporation And Subsidiaries
- Consolidated Balance Sheet
- (In thousands)
- (UNAUDITED)
-
- September 29, October 1,
- 1996 1995
-
-
- ASSETS
- CURRENT ASSETS
- Cash and marketable securities $ 16,814 $ 232,803
- Accounts receivable, net 490,040 168,365
- Inventories 185,855 103,032
- Deferred income taxes 45,493 22,373
- Prepaid expenses and other 7,739
- current assets 12,407
-
- Total current assets 750,609 534,312
-
- PROPERTY, PLANT & EQUIPMENT- NET 276,591 117,156
-
- OTHER ASSETS 40,083 8,155
-
- $ 1,067,283 $ 659,623
-
-
- LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
-
- CURRENT LIABILITIES
- Current maturities of long-term
- obligations 12,174 249
- Revolving credit borrowings 32,500 -
- Accounts payable 130,959 78,386
- Accrued liabilities 138,747 78,171
- Income taxes payable 19,324 9,525
-
- Total current liabilities 333,704 166,331
-
- LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS 54,044 65,651
-
- DEFERRED INCOME TAXES 7,665 3,246
-
- STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
- Common stock 881 422
- Additional contributed capital 356,266 273,939
- Retained earnings 312,492 148,617
- ------------ -----------
- 669,639 422,978
- Cumulative translation adjustment 2,231 1,417
- and other
- Total stockholders' equity 671,870 424,395
-
- $ 1,067,283 $ 659,623
-
-
-
-
- A T T E N T I O N-A T T E N T I O N-A T T E N T I O N
-
- LEXMARK OPTRA C
- COLOR
- LASER PRINTER
-
- For a limited time only; If you wish to have a FREE sample
- printout sent to you that demonstrates LEXMARK Optra C SUPERIOR
- QUALITY 600 dpi Laser Color Output, please send a Self Addressed
- Stamped Envelope [SASE] (business sized envelope please) to:
-
- STReport's LEXMARK Printout Offer
- P.O. Box 6672
- Jacksonville, Florida 32205-6155
-
- Folks, the LEXMARK Optra C has to be the very best yet in its
- price range. It is far superior to anything we've seen or used
- as of yet. It is said that ONE Picture is worth a thousand
- words. The out put from the Lexmark Optra C is worth ten
- thousand words! Send for the free sample now. (For a sample
- that's suitable for framing, see below) Guaranteed. you will be
- amazed at the superb quality. (Please.. allow at least a two week
- turn-around).
-
- If you would like a sample printout that's suitable for framing.
- Yes that's right! Suitable for Framing. Order this package.
- It'll be on special stock and be of superb quality. We obtained
- a mint copy of a 1927 COLOR ENGRAVER'S YEAR BOOK. Our Scanner is
- doing "double duty"! The results will absolutely blow you away.
- If you want this high quality sample package please include a
- check or money order in the amount of $6.95 (Exp, S&H only)
- Please, make checks or money orders payable to; Ralph Mariano.
- Be sure to include your full return address and telephone number
- . The sample will be sent to you protected, not folded in a 9x12
- envelope. Don't hesitate.. you will not be disappointed. This
- "stuff" is gorgeous!
-
- A T T E N T I O N-A T T E N T I O N-A T T E N T I O N
-
-
-
- EDUPAGE STR Focus Keeping the users informed
-
-
- Edupage
- Contents
-
- CompuServe Drops WOW!,Retrenches After Loss
- IBM's New Mainframe
- San Diego Supercomputing Center Warns of Unix Flaw
- Finding Images In A Database
- SAIC Buys Bellcore
- AudioNet's Hoop Dreams
- Big Screen Laptops Steal The Show
- Year 2000 Problem Will Cause Lawsuits, Bankruptcies
- The Net's Impact On Voter Decisions
- Tapscott On The "N-Gen" (Net Generation) World
- Hello? Is This A Computer? Do I Place It Near My Face?
- Digital TV Accord ReachedAPEC
- Support (More Or Less) For Info Tech Free TradePower To Be
- FCC Does "Two-Step" Dance Against International Pricing Cartel
- Excite Takes Over As AOL Search Engine
- Intranets Are Lifeline For Some Companies
- New Borland Chief Executive
- Life After Bellcore
- Computer Attacks Show New Patterns
-
- COMPUSERVE DROPS WOW!, RETRENCHES AFTER LOSS
- After posting a $24.5-million loss, CompuServe announced it will
- pull the plug on Wow!, its novice- and family-oriented service
- launched eight months ago in an effort to compete with America
- Online's similar service. Early next year CompuServe will offer
- a separate service for business customers, who typically
- generate 30% to 50% more revenue than the home user market.
- CompuServe currently claims 3.3 million subscribers, compared
- with AOL's 7 million customers. (Investor's Business Daily 22
- Nov 96 A17)
-
- IBM'S NEW MAINFRAME
- The new version of the IBM System 390 mainframe computer that
- will be introduced this week is expected to process information
- up to 10% faster than current versions. Apparently the company
- will be able to manufacture only a limited number of the new
- machines, because of inadequate supplies of the microprocessor
- chips needed to produce them. (New York Times 23 Nov 96 p21)
-
- SAN DIEGO SUPERCOMPUTING CENTER WARNS
- ABOUT UNIX FLAW
- The San Diego Supercomputing Center has issued a warning to
- system administrators that a flaw in software associated with
- Unix operating systems can be exploited by crackers, allowing
- them to gain "root access" to the computer, making it possible to
- alter or destroy data residing on the server. The flaw is in
- the "rpc.statd" part of the software that works with
- the "Network File System." For more information, check out:
- <http://www.sdsc.edu/Security/public_bulletins/96.03.rpc.statd ?\
- >. (Chronicle of Higher Education 22 Nov 96 A23)
-
- FINDING IMAGES IN A DATABASE
- Software from Virage can compare images with a kind of visual
- template, in much the same way that the human brain functions.
- The Virage software reduces the essence of each image into a 1-
- kilobyte file called a feature vector, based on shapes, textures,
- colors and placement. (Forbes 2 Dec 96 p240) See <
- http://www.virage.com > for demo.
-
- SAIC BUYS BELLCORE
- Bellcore, the research group owned jointly by the seven Baby
- Bells, has been acquired by Science Applications International
- Corp., a government contractor that provides consulting, systems-
- integration, national-security, transportation and health-care
- services. Executives familiar with the deal have estimated the
- cost of the acquisition at about $700 million. (Wall
- Street Journal 22 Nov 96 B6)
-
- AUDIONET'S HOOP DREAMS
- AudioNet has been granted the rights to Internet carriage of
- radio broadcasts of the NCAA Men's College Basketball Tournament
- through 2001. The company, which received a total of $9 million
- in support from Motorola and Premiere Radio Networks in
- September, hopes to have 500 radio stations online by the end of
- next year: "It dawned on us that this was a tremendous way to
- reach a national audience. What we've done with AudioNet is to
- turn it into the third broadcast medium," says AudioNet's
- president. The company drew 9,000 listeners last month when it
- broadcast the first game of the American League Championship
- Series. (Broadcasting & Cable 18 Nov 96 p76)
-
- BIG SCREEN LAPTOPS STEAL THE SHOW
- One of the big hits at the Comdex show last week were the "big
- screen" laptop computers, sporting flat-panel LCDs measuring
- 13.3- to 14-inches. Digital Equipment Corp., NEC Computer
- Systems, Compaq Computer, Toshiba, Sharp and Samsung all have
- plans to roll out the larger screen models in the early part of
- 1997, resulting in significantly lower prices for the smaller-
- screen laptops. "My forecast for 1997 is that you'll see a
- significant increase in sales of laptops as they gain the larger
- screens and can compete more functionally with desktops," says a
- computer consultant. "And then you'll see the price of existing
- laptops go way down." (InfoWorld Electric 18 Nov 96)
-
- YEAR 2000 PROBLEM WILL CAUSE
- LAWSUITS, BANKRUPTCIES
- At a recent meeting sponsored by the Electronic Banking Economics
- Society, one speaker predicted that a bankruptcy rate of between
- 1% and 5% could result directly from costs related to fixing the
- notorious "Year 2000 Problem." "If you have not yet begun a Year
- 2000 conversion today, you will not be able to convert by 2000,"
- he said, noting that there are only 150 weekends left to work on
- systems affected by the problem. If companies choose to ignore
- the problem, they'll be liable for millions in lawsuits brought
- by shareholders when company stock prices begin to plummet.
- Only one third of U.S. companies are addressing the problem,
- with another third entering the preliminary discussion phase, and
- the other third doing nothing. Still, that's better than the
- rest of the world: "Britain is three steps behind the United
- States on this issue, Europe about 10 steps behind the United
- States on the issue, and Japan is about 15 steps behind the
- United States on the issue," the consultant said. (BNA Daily
- Report for Executives 20 Nov 96 A16)
-
- THE NET'S IMPACT ON VOTER DECISIONS
- An Election Day telephone poll of 1,030 voters contacted by
- Worthlin Worldwide, a political consulting group, found that
- about 9% of voters in the recent elections said that the Internet
- influenced their choice of candidates. (Atlanta Journal-
- Constitution 22 Nov 96 F2)
-
- TAPSCOTT ON THE "N-GEN" (NET GENERATION) WORLD
- Don Tapscott ("The Digital Economy") says that the importance of
- brand names is the Catch- 22 of the culture shared by the
- generation that has grown up the new digital media, especially
- the Internet. "The contradiction is formed in the gradual shift
- from broadcast dictatorship to interactivedemocracy. The brand
- appears important for now as they still have the need to belong
- to the familiar, but the axis of belonging is shifting. In
- sales, as it is in education, increased interactivity equals
- increased individualization. In the future you won't be cool
- because you wear Gap jeans. You'll be cool if you wear jeans
- I've never heard of" (Advertising Age 14 Oct 96 p31)
-
- HELLO? IS THIS A COMPUTER?
- DO I PLACE IT NEAR MY FACE?
- Hudson Institute Fellow Mark Helprin thinks not. "Terrified lest
- their children be computer illiterate, lemming parents have
- pushed the schools into a computer frenzy in which they spend
- years learning to use Windows and WordPerfect. This much like
- 'Sesame Street,' which, instead of waiting until a child is five
- and teaching him to count in an afternoon, devotes thousands of
- hours drumming it into him during his underdeveloped infancy. But
- while numbers will remain the same, fifth-graders will, when
- they get to graduate school, have no contact with Windows 95.
- The 'teaching' of computer in the schools may be likened to a
- business academy in the 1920s founded for the purpose of teaching
- the telephone: 'When you hear the bell, pick up the receiver,
- place it thusly near your face, and say 'Hello?'" (Forbes ASAP 2
- Dec 96 p15)
-
- DIGITAL TV ACCORD REACHED
- The television and computer industries have reached a compromise
- on technical standards for the new generation of digital TV
- sets, smoothing the way for a transition to nationwide digital
- TV service. The agreement failed to specify a video format, one
- of the sticking points between the two industries, but instead
- lets companies choose formats they think will best suit
- consumers' needs. The agreement was hailed as a success by FCC
- Chairman Reed Hundt who said it "eliminates needless government
- regulation on technical issues better left to the marketplace."
- Television makers have said the new sets could be in stores
- within two years, priced at $1,500 to $3,000 each. (Wall Street
- Journal 26 Nov 96 B10)
-
- APEC SUPPORT (MORE OR LESS)
- FOR INFO TECH FREE TRADE
- At the conclusion of the APEC summit, the leaders of the APEC
- (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation) countries have agreed to
- support free trade for computers and other information
- technology products, substantially reducing tariffs by the year
- 2000. President Clinton described the agreement as "a big deal,"
- but Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong of Singapore said the APEC
- members can interpret it as "anything they want it to be" and
- Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad of Malaysia said the year 2000
- deadline has no binding force. (Financial Times 26 Nov 96)
-
- POWER TO BE
- Power Computing, the largest maker of Macintosh clones, will
- license the fast, simple operating system developed by Be, Inc.,
- the Silicon Valley start-up company created by former Apple
- executive Jean-Louis Gassee. Beginning in 1997 all Power
- computers will be shipped with the BeOS operating system in
- addition to the Mac operating system. This development will not
- affect ongoing discussions between Apple and Be regarding a
- possible acquisition or some other form of alliance with Be.
- (New York Times 26 Nov 96 C4)
-
- FCC DOES "TWO-STEP" DANCE
- AGAINST PRICING CARTEL
- The Federal Communications Commission will issue an order
- intended to bring international phone rates closer to actual
- phone-company costs. Foreign telephone companies currently
- charge U.S. phone companies fees, which on average are 50% higher
- than cost. The FCC plans to let American companies negotiate
- fees with foreign carriers rather than rely on the present system
- of government tariff agreements -- but permission to negotiate
- will be granted only if the FCC determines that the foreign
- carrier's country is open to competition. FCC Chairman Reed
- Hundt says the order is "the first step in a two-step dance we're
- doing that we hope will celebrate the end of the international
- telephone pricing cartel." Next month the Commission plans to
- set "benchmark" limits on what U.S. companies will pay foreign
- carriers to complete calls. (Washington Post 26 Nov 96)
-
- EXCITE TAKES OVER AS AOL SEARCH ENGINE
- Excite Inc. will buy America Online's Internet directory for
- about $15 million in stock, securing its position as AOL's only
- search engine and acquiring an instant audience of more than 7
- million. The move will give Excite's service the second largest
- exposure on the Internet, after Netscape, according to PC-Meter,
- an Internet measurement service. (Investor's Business Daily 26
- Nov 96 A9)
-
- INTRANETS ARE LIFELINE FOR SOME COMPANIES
- Just a year or so after companies started using Web technology to
- exchange information internally, intranets have taken hold, and
- are transforming their organizations. Rockwell International
- has created home pages for the plant's computer-controlled
- machine tools and linked them to the company's intranet.
- Quality-control managers can check the status of any machine by
- calling up that page and seeing how many pieces the machine made
- that day, what percentage of an order that represents, and how
- the machine is performing. Human Genome Sciences, a genetic
- research firm, uses its company intranet to process and transfer
- information on DNA sequencing. "All the lab equipment is
- connected to the network," says Mike Fannon, director of
- bioinformatics. "We use the whole computational structure as a
- research tool." (Information Week 18 Nov 96 p106)
-
- NEW BORLAND CHIEF EXECUTIVE
- Former Apple and Tektronix executive Delbert Yocam is the new
- chairman and CEO of Borland International, the Scotts Valley,
- California, company that became 3rd-largest software company by
- selling spreadsheet, database, and other applications programs,
- before refocusing two years ago on its software development tools
- and database software for large organizations. The company has
- been hurt by the increasing interest by programmers in Sun's
- Java programming language, but Yocam says that "there are still
- a lot of people enamored of Borland products." (New York Times
- 26 Nov 96 C1)
-
- LIFE AFTER BELLCORE
- Some industry watchers are wondering who'll take over the
- standards-setting fun admirably executed by Bellcore all these
- years, once it's acquired by SAIC. If nobody picks up the
- reins, the nation's network could deteriorate over the next few
- years, says a manager at Shiva Corp. "When you call California
- and North Dakota answers the phone, there will be lots of
- complaints." Although most observers think things won't get
- quite that bad, there is general concern over the situation, and
- some Bellcore insiders are hoping they'll be allowed to continue
- their tradition as standards-setter for the industry: "If you
- don't have someone writing standards, it's a problem, but that
- problem is a business opportunity for us." (tele.com Nov 96 p26)
-
- COMPUTER ATTACKS SHOW NEW PATTERNS
- The major trends in computer break-ins involve denial of service
- and data-driven attacks, says a Department of Justice lawyer.
- Denial of service occurs when an attacker "bombs" an Internet
- service provider with so many e-mail messages that the server
- becomes overloaded and shuts down. Data-driven attacks occur
- when a virus program is disguised as a data-only file. The file
- can be hidden in a Java program on a Web page, and when a visitor
- clicks on the site, he or she unwittingly downloads the virus.
- A computer crime consultant with SAIC warns that these attacks
- can be launched on an innocent party's Web server, but once that
- happens, the server can become the subject of a wiretap and a
- search warrant. "The title of your computer vests with the
- government as soon as a hacker uses it to commit a crime," he
- says . (BNA Daily Report for Executives 25 Nov 96 A20)
-
- 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.
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-
-
- Creative Technology NEWS STR Focus
-
- Creative's New Sound Blaster AWE64 Line
- Takes PC Audio Standard to the Next Level
- New Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold Delivers Uncompromised Performance
- For Professional-Quality PC Audio
-
- COMDEX, Las Vegas, NV -- November 18, 1996 -- In line with its
- strategy to continue offering solutions that raise the standard
- for PC audio, Creative Technology Ltd. (Nasdaq: CREAF), today
- introduced Sound Blasterr AWE64 GoldT, and Sound Blaster AWE64T -
- - two new audio cards designed to dramatically increase the audio
- performance of PCs. Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold is targeted at music
- and audio enthusiasts, high-end gamers and consumers who demand
- superior audio. Sound Blaster AWE64 is an advanced, value-priced
- solution targeted at a broader base of home PC and corporate
- users. The Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold, and Sound Blaster AWE64,
- are priced at US$249, and US$199 respectively. They will be
- available in January through Creative's extensive network of
- retailers and distributors.
-
- Sound Blaster AWE64 and AWE64 Gold
-
- The new Sound Blasters deliver a powerful combination of audio
- technology that provides a more flexible, professional-quality
- audio solution while maintaining compatibility with all of the
- previous Sound Blaster products -- Sound Blaster, Sound Blaster
- Pro, Sound Blaster 16, Sound Blaster 32 and Sound Blaster AWE32.
- Creative is committed to ensuring compatibility with all of its
- Sound Blaster products for the broadest possible software and
- hardware support. Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold and AWE64 incorporate
- 64-note polyphony; professional-quality advanced wave-table from
- E-mu Systems; SondiusT WaveGuide technology; SoundFont
- technology; and 3D Positional Audio all combined to offer a
- dynamic and more expressive audio experience. With the new AWE64
- line, users and developers alike have a complete, richer, more
- flexible suite of hardware and software for audio playback,
- recording, composing and editing. The user is no longer limited
- in their pursuit of uncompromised quality for the creation and
- playback of audio that rivals what is produced in professional
- recording studios.
-
- The Technology
-
- Creative's charter is to take very high-end audio technology and
- make it accessible to the general consumer. The new cards build
- on Creative's Sound Blaster audio standard and represent over a
- decade of research and development from Creative and E-mu Systems
- -- Creative's U.S. subsidiary known for its high-end professional
- synthesizers. Creative is also the first company to take Sondius
- WaveGuide technology -- a technology used in very high-end
- professional products -- and deliver it in solutions for the
- consumer PC market. Based on Acoustic Physical Modeling,
- WaveGuide technology is a technique for efficiently simulating
- the behavior of musical instruments. WaveGuide technology allows
- instrument sounds to be reproduced with a precision that is more
- natural and expressive.
-
- "At Creative we're focused on making the PC a dynamic and ever-
- more expressive tool capable of truly captivating the user and
- enhancing creativity," said Dave Rossum, chief scientist at
- Creative Technology. "With the AWE64 Gold, we pulled out all the
- stops and designed a very powerful and easy to use audio card
- that gives the user a phenomenal audio experience!"
-
- Features and Benefits
-
- The Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold and AWE64 incorporate Creative's
- latest audio features and technologies:
-
- · 64-note polyphony from a single MIDI device for more
- sophisticated compositions Upgradeable with up to 28MB of
- additional memory for adding SoundFont banks
- · Advanced Wave Effects Synthesis with a patented multi-point
- interpolation algorithm for smoother reproduction and minimal
- distortion
- · SondiusT WaveGuide for precise mathematical modeling
- resulting in highly expressive sound reproduction
- · Creative WaveSynth for software-based wave synthesis
- · 3D Positional Audio and spatialization for a more immersive
- audio experience
- · Real-time digital effects and SoundFont downloadable samples
- for flexibility and personalization of the audio experience
- · Full-duplex capability for Internet communications and
- simultaneous playback and recording.
-
- The Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold includes the following additional
- features and benefits:
-
- · 4MB of RAM standard on the card for better quality MIDI
- playback
- · 2MB, 3.5MB and 4MB General MIDI SoundFont banks for
- expressivity and customization True digital output via a SPDIF
- connector for the highest possible recording quality, digital
- audio and MIDI
- · Gold plated RCA connectors for superior line level output
- · High-quality sound with the highest signal-to-noise ratio
- and lowest total harmonic distortion of any Sound Blaster.
-
- "The Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold is a result of Creative's pursuit
- for uncompromised audio fidelity," said Sim Wong Hoo, chairman
- and CEO of Creative Technology Ltd. "With these new products, and
- more to come, we expect a paradigm shift in the music creation,
- publishing and distribution industry that will result in a
- larger, expanded market."
-
- The Complete Solution
-
- The Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold, and Sound Blaster AWE64 include a
- microphone and a complete suite of applications that provide
- tools for recording, playback and customization. Creative also
- includes a powerful combination of Internet applications for
- browsing, streaming audio, Internet phone calls and conferencing.
- These applications include Microsoft's Internet Explorer and
- NetMeeting, Creative WebPhone and Progressive Network's RealAudio
- Player. In addition, bundled in are two new titles that take
- advantage of Creative's technology: Accolade's Eradicator, and
- EA/Bullfrog's Magic Carpet 2.
-
- AWE 64 FAQ
-
-
- What is the Sound Blaster AWE64?
- The Sound Blaster AWE64 is the next generation of the Sound
- Blaster audio card providing 64 voice, true instrument
- reproductions with new WaveSynth/WG and advanced wave-table
- synthesis technology. With full-duplex hardware audio and 16-bit,
- CD quality stereo recording and playback, your multimedia
- experience has never been better. In addition to realistic
- instrument sounds amplifying from your PC, you get 512K of
- onboard memory for SoundFont and E-mu 3D positional audio
- support. All this in an easy to install plug-n-play card and
- exciting Internet software to surf and communicate on the World
- Wide Web. The AWE64 is targeted at gamers, multimedia enthusiasts
- and consumers who are looking for the latest technology and Sound
- Blaster compatibility.
-
- Is the AWE64 truly a 64 voice Sound Card?
- The AWE64 achieves the 64 voice count through the combination of
- E-mu's synthesizer (EMU8000) and the Creative WaveSynth/WG
- synthesizer. Thus, 32 voices are hardware and 32 voices are
- software. There are two perspectives to answering this question;
- from a typical multimedia user's point of view and the musicians'
- perspective:
-
- For the typical users, one must first understand that it is not
- possible to:
-
- 1. Play back a 64 voice MIDI file on a single sound board as
- most of them can only handle 32 notes.
- 2. Even if combining a sound board with a daughter board such
- Wave Blaster, a 64 voice file may only be played back on a MIDI
- sequencer and not on a regular MIDI player such as the Creative
- Ensemble MIDI player.
-
- Multimedia / Typical User
- With the AWE64, users can seamlessly create or listen to a 64
- voice MIDI file using any Windows MIDI player (in addition to a
- sequencer). During installation, the AWE64 installs a unique
- driver that empowers the regular MIDI player with this
- capability. Users need only assign the various instrument patches
- to their favorite synthesizer in the Creative MIDI instrument
- mapper to make this happen.
-
- Musician
- Today, a musician wanting to create a 64 voice music file can
- only do so if he outputs his music through two separate
- synthesizers using two MIDI ports. With the AWE64, the musician
- need not buy two synthesizers to achieve a 64 voice count. The
- AWE64 lets the musician allocate voices in one of two ways:
-
- 1. Allocate voices to specific MIDI channels using two seperate
- MIDI ports or
- 2. Assign voices by MIDI patches (when mapped to a synthesizer
- in the Creative MIDI Instrument Mapper)
-
- What is Creative WaveSynth/WG?
- Is it comparable to hardware Wave-table? Creative WaveSynth/WG
- is a software-based wave-table synthesizer that is incorporated
- into the Sound Blaster AWE64 family of sound cards. Like its
- hardware counterpart, Creative WaveSynth/WG also produces high
- quality music for Windows multimedia applications and games.
- WaveSynth/WG is not only a software implementation of wave-table
- synthesis. Creative WaveSynth/WG also includes another technology
- called WaveGuide that makes its instruments more expressive than
- those found in wave-table synthesizers. This technology uses a
- new method of music reproduction called physical modeling.
- Physical modeling builds mathematical models simulating actual
- instruments, while taking into consideration the physics of sound
- in that instrument. In doing so, the AWE64 offers instruments
- that let musicians express themselves as if they are playing the
- real instrument. The AWE64 family combines the best synthesizer
- technologies today to achieve accuracy and fluency, and takes
- advantage of these features where they are most appropriate.
-
- While the Creative WaveSynth/WG is capable of producing quality
- equivalent to some competitive wave-table cards, it can be
- computationally intensive and memory hungry, like other software
- wave-table synthesizers. Its playback can be effected when the
- system's resources are occupied with processing of other similar
- resource-hungry applications. This is not a problem given the CPU
- power of PCs today and the very affordability of Pentium
- computers.
-
- The regular AWE (EMU8000) synthesizer, combined with Creative
- WaveSynth/WG makes the AWE64 stand out in terms of quality,
- expressive sound and sets the standard for 64 voice polyphony.
-
- What is the CPU utilization when using WaveSynth/WG on the AWE64,
- on say, a Pentium 133 or, will there be a noticeable slowdown
- when playing a file with a large voice count?
- Like all software wave-table synthesizer, several factors will
- determine if there is a slow down:
-
- 1. Maximum polyphony at one time
- 2. Whether WaveGuide voices are involved (the more WaveGuide
- instrument used, the more the CPU utilization)
- 3. Whether reverb is turned on
- 4. Whether the musician does real-time pitch-shifting using
- pitch bend
-
- To better manage the system's resources, the AWE64 comes with a
- WaveSynth applet that lets you dynamically allocate memory to the
- sound samples according to the required need. It is also tightly
- integrated with the Windows Memory Manager to maximize the memory
- size and manage the memory usage more effectively.
-
- On average, usually 10-15% of the CPU power is used if a
- moderately complicated MIDI file is played.
-
- How is AWE64 comparable to AWE32+Creative WaveSynth/WG? What's
- the difference? Or is the AWE64 a repackaged AWE32?
- While the AWE64 may seem to look like a combination of an AWE32
- and Creative WaveSynth/WG (since both has a 1 MByte ROM and
- 512KByte DRAM), the opposite is true. The AWE64 and the AWE32 are
- two different boards in terms of design and architecture. Efforts
- were made to improve the signal-to-noise ratio on the AWE64 to
- enhance the audio quality. Another notable feature is that AWE64
- no longer uses SIMM sockets but uses memory headers. The memory
- modules will be available from Creative.
-
- Why upgrade to AWE64?
- Wave-table sound cards offer better quality MIDI music. Most
- games and windows applications use MIDI (Musical Instrument
- Digital Interface) to produce music that is played back by the
- built-in synthesizer on a sound card. The quality of this built-
- in synthesizer determines the quality of the MIDI music you hear.
- Unlike regular cards which artificially create the sound of
- instruments, wave-table cards use wave-table synthesis to record
- the actual wave sample of real instruments which are then used to
- generate high quality music.
-
- The overall result is that the background music (and to a certain
- extent, sound effects) that accompanies CD-ROM applications and
- games sound much more pleasant and realistic.
-
- The AWE64 and Windows 95
-
- The AWE64, like its predecessor, offers features that other sound
- cards do not offer. While it supports DirectSound, the AWE64 in
- addition, allows the user to modify their General MIDI
- synthesizer settings. General MIDI defines an instrument map of
- 128 instruments which all General MIDI devices comply to.
-
- In simple terms, the AWE64 lets the user modify the synthesizer
- to add more reverb and chorus effects. With the bundled editor
- called Vienna SF studio, the instrument sounds can be tweaked to
- add more flavor. Or even change it! If the user is tired of
- hearing the same old sounds in Windows 95 games, new sounds can
- be created with the synthesizer that consists of their favorite
- instruments (that conforms to the GM standard).
-
- The AWE64 also supports an important technology called SoundFont.
- SoundFont basically allows the user to create or play back any
- sample and turn it into a MIDI instrument. The result? Record
- virtually anything and turn it into a musical instrument (or what
- is called a SoundFont). The technology of SoundFont are flexible
- when it is used in games or applications. For example, if a Win
- 95 game uses a SoundFont instrument that is a "Scream", there is
- the flexibility of replacing the "Scream" with a different sound
- of the user's choice.
-
- Can I upgrade the AWE64 with additional RAM? What type of RAM
- does it require?
- Like the AWE32, the family of AWE64 cards can be upgraded with
- additional RAM for downloading SoundFonts. Instead of using 30
- pin SIMM's, the AWE64 requires memory modules that are available
- from Creative.
-
- Sound Blaster is a registered trademark and AWE32, AWE64, AWE64
- Gold and Blaster are trademarks of Creative Technology Ltd. E-mu
- is a registered trademark of E-mu Systems, Inc. Microsoft,
- Windows and MS-DOS are either registered trademarks or trademarks
- of Microsoft Corp. in the United States and/or other countries.
- All other products mentioned herein are trademarks of their
- respective owners and are hereby recognized as such. Sondiusr
- Sound Synthesis made under license from the Board of Trustees of
- the Leland Stanford Junior University. "Sondiusr and the Sondiusr
- symbol are trademarks of the Board of Trustees of the Leland
- Stanford Junior University. This product contains one or more
- programs under international and U.S. copyright laws as
- unpublished works. They are confidential and proprietary to the
- Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. There
- reproduction or disclosure, in whole or in part, or the
- production of derivative works therefrom without the express
- written permission of the Board of Trustees of the Leland
- Stanford Junior University is prohibited. Copyright 1992, 1993,
- 1994, 1995, 1996 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford
- Junior University. All rights reserved.
-
-
- Apple/Mac Section
- John Deegan, Editor
-
-
-
- Little Red Riding Hood
- (Updated, Politically Correct, Lawyer
- Polluted, Nineties Version)
-
- There once was a young person named Little Red Riding Hood who
- lived on the edge of a large forest full of endangered owls and
- rare plants that would probably provide a cure for cancer if
- only Congress would appropriate the money to study them.
-
- Red Riding Hood lived with a nurture giver whom she sometimes
- referred to as "mother," although she didn't mean to imply by
- this term that she would have thought less of the person if a
- close biological link did not in fact exist.
-
- Nor did she intend to denigrate the equal value of nontraditional
- households, although
- she was sorry if this was the impression conveyed.
-
- One day her mother asked her to take a basket of organically
- grown
- fruit and mineral water to her grandmother's house.
-
- "But mother, won't this be stealing work from the unionized
- people who have struggled for years to earn the right to carry
- all packages between various people in the woods?"
-
- Red Riding Hood's mother assured her that she had called the
- union boss and gotten a special compassionate mission exemption
- form.
-
- "But mother, aren't you oppressing me by ordering me to do this?"
- Red Riding Hood's mother pointed out that it was impossible for
- women to oppress each other, since all women were equally
- oppressed until all women were free.
-
- "But mother, then shouldn't you have my brother carry the basket,
- since he's an oppressor, and should learn what it's like to be
- oppressed?"
-
- And Red Riding Hood's mother explained that her brother was
- attending a special rally for animal rights, and besides, this
- wasn't stereotypical women's work, but an empowering deed that
- would help engender a feeling of community.
-
- "But won't I be oppressing Grandma, by implying that she's sick
- and hence unable to independently further her own selfhood?"
-
- Red Riding Hood's mother explained that her grandmother wasn't
- actually sick or incapacitated or mentally handicapped in any
- way, although that was not to imply that any of these conditions
- were inferior to what some people called "health".
-
- Thus Red Riding Hood felt that she could get behind the idea
- of delivering the basket to her grandmother, and so she set off.
-
- Many people believed that the forest was a foreboding and
- dangerous place, but Red Riding Hood knew that this was an
- irrational fear based on cultural paradigms instilled by a
- patriarchal society that regarded the natural world as an
- exploitable resource, and hence believed that natural predators
- were in fact intolerable competitors.
-
- Other people avoided the woods for fear of thieves and deviants,
- but Red Riding Hood
- felt that in a truly classless society all marginalized peoples
- would be able to "come out" of the woods and be accepted as
- valid lifestyle role models.
-
- On her way to Grandma's house, Red Riding Hood passed a
- woodchopper, and wandered
- off the path, in order to examine some flowers.She was startled
- to find herself standing before a Wolf, who asked her what was in
- her basket.Red Riding Hood's teacher had warned her never to talk
- to strangers, but she was confident in taking control of her own
- budding sexuality, and chose to dialogue with the Wolf.
-
- She replied, "I am taking my Grandmother some healthful snacks in
- a gesture of solidarity."
-
- The Wolf said, "You know, my dear, it isn't safe for a little
- girl
- to walk through these woods alone."Red Riding Hood said, "I find
- your sexist remark offensive in the extreme, but I will ignore it
- because of your traditional status as an outcast from society,
- the stress of which has caused you to develop an alternative and
- yet entirely valid world view.
- Now, if you'll excuse me, I would prefer to be on my way."Red
- Riding Hood returned to the main path, and proceeded towards her
- Grandmother's house.
-
- But because his status outside society had freed him from slavish
- adherence to linear, Western- style thought, the Wolf knew of a
- quicker route to Grandma's house.
-
- He burst into the house and ate Grandma, a course of action
- affirmative of his nature as a predator.
-
- Then, unhampered by rigid, traditionalist gender role notions, he
- put on Grandma's nightclothes, crawled under the bedclothes, and
- awaited developments.
-
- Red Riding Hood entered the cottage and said, "Grandma, I have
- brought you some cruelty free snacks to salute you in your role
- of wise and nurturing matriarch."
-
- The Wolf said softly, "Come closer, child, so that I might see
- you."
- Red Riding Hood said, "Goodness! Grandma, what big eyes you
- have!"
- "You forget that I am optically challenged."
- "And Grandma, what an enormous, fine nose you have."
- "Naturally, I could have had it fixed to help my acting career,
- but I didn't give in
- to such societal pressures, my child."
-
- "And Grandma, what very big, sharp teeth you have!"
- The Wolf could not take any more of these slurs, and, in a
- reaction appropriate for his accustomed milieu, he leaped out of
- bed, grabbed Little Red Riding Hood, and opened his jaws so wide
- that she could see her poor Grandmother cowering in his belly.
-
- "Aren't you forgetting something?" Red Riding Hood bravely
- shouted.
- "You must request my permission before proceeding to a new level
- of intimacy!"The Wolf was so startled by this statement that he
- loosened his grasp on her.At the same time, the woodchopper burst
- into the cottage, brandishing an ax.
-
- "Hands off!" cried the woodchopper.
- "And what do you think you're doing?" cried Little Red Riding
- Hood.
- "If I let you help me now, I would be expressing a lack of
- confidence in my own abilities, which would lead to poor self
- esteem and lower achievement scores on college entrance exams."
-
- "Last chance, sister! Get your hands off that endangered species!
- This is an FBI sting!" screamed the woodchopper, and when Little
- Red Riding Hood nonetheless made a sudden motion, he sliced off
- her head.
-
- "Thank goodness you got here in time," said the Wolf.
- "The brat and her grandmother lured me in here. I thought I was
- a goner.""No, I think I'm the real victim, here," said the
- woodchopper.
- "I've been dealing with my anger ever since I saw her picking
- those protected flowers earlier. And now I'm going to have such
- a trauma. Do you have any aspirin?"
-
- "Sure," said the Wolf.
-
- "Thanks."
-
- "I feel your pain," said the Wolf, and he patted the woodchopper
- on his firm, well padded back, gave a little belch, and said,
- "Do you have any Maalox?"
-
-
-
-
- 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
-
- 7th Level Announces New Subsidiary
-
- Dallas, TX - 7th Level announces the creation of Kids' World,
- Inc., a subsidiary that will focus on educational products. This
- will include 7th Level's current educational software lines
- including the Great AdventureT series, the Virgil RealityT series
- and the new Kids' WorldT Online service.
-
- Kids' World Online will feature online games and interactive
- educational cartoons. You can preview the site by visiting
- http:www.kidsworld.com today.
-
- Adobe Press Introduces `Kids Do the Web'
-
- A new book from Adobe Press teaches children, parents and
- teachers how children can get the most educational benefit from
- browsing the Web and by creating their own Web pages. Kids Do
- the Web also includes a list of cool sites to visit. It features
- intricate details on how students created many award-winning
- websites that are sure to spark creativity and interest in many
- children.
-
- Kids Do the Web is distributed by Macmillan Computer Publishing
- USA at a retail cost of $25. For more information you can check
- their website at http://www.mcp.com. For more information about
- Adobe Systems Incorporated, you can browse their homepage at
- http://www.adobe.com.
-
- Davidson and Associates Ships Reading Blaster 2000
-
- Reading BlasterT 2000 is the latest addition to the Blaster
- series of educational software programs. It is designed for
- children ages 6 to 9 and provides progressive challenges in
- reading comprehension, vocabulary building and phonics. The
- Blaster characters have been encouraging children to participate
- in learning activities for over a decade.
-
- The program features six activities, more than 2000 words, nine
- levels of difficulty and 100 pages of challenging reading.
- Arcade games provide a fun and enticing learning experience that
- will keep kids coming back for more. Parents will appreciate the
- Parents Tips and the program's parents options that allow the
- tracking of the child's progress and allows emphasis to be placed
- on building a particular reading skill.
-
- Reading Blaster T 2000 is available now with an approximate
- street price of $35 on a hybrid format CD-ROM for both Windows
- and Macintosh computers. Consumers can call 1-800-545-7677 for
- more information.
-
- Reading BlasterT Jr. Brings Science to Youngsters
-
- Davidson & Associates Inc. has just released Reading BlasterT
- 2000 to aid children in their never-ending quest to answer the
- question "Why?" It features games, 3D graphics, animation, music
- and humor to make an entertaining quest. The program also
- features open-ended exploration activities that will allow
- children to see the effects of certain actions.
-
- The program has a space theme and the activities involve
- collecting and sorting the discoveries made during a rocket
- voyage. Reading BlasterT 2000 features progressive difficulty
- levels, original music and a print kit. The program is available
- now on a hybrid format CD-ROM for Windows and Macintosh systems
- and has an estimated street price of $35.
-
- New Online Shopping Center for Children's Software and Toys
-
- Kids Universe has created a new website that features the latest
- and greatest in children's educational toys and software. It
- even allows customers to create a Web page online. Visit
- http://www.kidsuniverse.com for more details.
-
- Reader Rabbit's Reading Development Library 4
- Hybrid CD-ROM
- Ages 5-8
- $29.95
-
- The Learning Company
- 6493 Kaiser Drive
- Fremont, CA 94555
-
- Program Requirements
- IBM Macintosh
- OS: Windows 3.1, Windows 95 OS: System
- 7.0.1
- CPU: 386SX/33 CPU: 68030/25
- HD Space: ? HD Space:
- ?
- Memory: 4 MB, 8 MB for Win95 Memory: 4 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 card
- Other: mouse
-
- reviewed by Angelo Marasco
-
-
- Well, it looks to me like The Learning Company has done it again.
- Their latest addition to the age-sequenced Reader Rabbit series
- is one great piece of software. Reader Rabbit's Reading
- Development Library 4 is colorful, detailed, action-packed and
- full of features.
- Reading Development Library 4 is two feature-packed storybooks
- with moving pictures that go along with the stories. The
- storybooks feature two classic stories: King Midas and The Ugly
- Duckling. When I first started this program, I was a little
- disappointed that there are only two storybooks in it. That was
- until I found out that each story is presented from three
- different perspectives. One is the "classic version." The other
- two are told from the perspectives of two of the characters in
- the story. Together that gives you six different stories. The
- stories told by the two characters are really quite different
- while still being the same basic story. Children will learn how
- perspective can change a story.
-
- After selecting which version of the story you want, you can
- choose whether you want to read the story with the storyteller or
- have it read to you. Choose to have it read to you and the story
- unfolds continuously without any need to intervene. The
- animation above the text plays out in synch with the story as it
- is read. The reader pauses in appropriate places and the
- animation carries the story for a while, but the animation
- doesn't just freeze while the storyteller reads. The animation
- remains in action but the characters don't say anything. Choose
- to read the story yourself and the program gives you two special
- "extras" to reward your courage. The first is "Story Map." Here
- you can put pieces of the story together in the order they belong
- in, something like a puzzle made out of pieces of story. Another
- option in Story Map is to match up the names with items that
- appear in the story.
-
- The second extra is "Express It." Here you will help Sam the
- Lion, one of the storytellers, to write a letter to one of the
- main characters in the story. To write the letter you fill the
- blank in each sentence with one of three choices. The choice you
- make will determine which of several sentences the program will
- choose to use next. By doing this the program does a really good
- job of keeping the theme of the letter from wandering all over
- the place. Plus, each letter you help Sam to write is different
- from the last. I tried writing several letters in a row and they
- were never the same.
-
- What I found really surprising and delightful is that after Sam
- mails the letter, he gets a letter back from the character he
- wrote to! They're wonderful letters, too. This program is just
- full of surprises.
-
- Graphics are sharp and colorful. The text is highlighted as the
- storyteller reads the story and that helps younger children to
- keep track of what is being read to them. The words are
- highlighted while the words are spoken which helps to give
- children a feel for cadence and emphasis.
-
- Just as in other programs I have reviewed by The Learning
- Company, the mouths of the characters form the sounds they are
- speaking. I really appreciate the great amount of work that it
- must take to accomplish this. The drawback is that the animation
- sometimes lagged behind the sounds. This was disappointing.
- Maybe it's because I tested this software on a 486SX/33.
- Hopefully, things sync up better on faster machines.
-
- The graphics are cartoon-like in their quality. I don't know if
- this is good or bad, but it surely is impressive. Combine that
- with a lack of delays and you come up with a program that is
- really delightful to watch. Sounds are all of the highest
- quality. The music is pleasant. The voices are well done,
- clear, easy to understand and full of life.
-
- Interface is excellent. You maneuver through the entire program
- with single clicks of the mouse button. All selections are large
- and easy to target. "POP," the Program Options Pad, is always
- available for going back to the sign-in screen or changing
- settings (although it is seldom needed). Play value is also
- excellent. Getting caught up in Reading Development Library 4 is
- very easy for anyone because there is so much to do. You can
- read, play games or write letters. There is a lot to do here.
-
- Educational value is also excellent. This program will help kids
- learn how to read while also teaching a myriad of other things
- such as story structure, cadences, perspective, vocabulary, etc.
- Each story begins with a list of words that the reader will come
- across in the story. Those readers that are interested can watch
- for those words to come up. I simply cannot list all the reading
- skills this program teaches young readers.
-
- The retail price of Reading Development Library 4 is $29.95. I'm
- sure you can find it for a bit less than that, but even at $29.95
- I am comfortable recommending this program. It is packed with
- features and options that make it well worth the price.
-
- Overall, Reading Development Library 4 is a real winner. I'm
- glad to have it in my collection and it will make an excellent
- addition to yours.
-
-
-
-
- Special Notice!! STR Infofile File format for Articles
-
-
- File Format for STReport
-
- All articles submitted to STReport for publication must be
- sent in the following format. Please use the format requested.
- Any files received that do not conform will not be used. The
- article must be in an importable word processor format for Word
- 7.0.. The margins are .05" left and 1.0" Monospaced fonts are not
- to be used. Please use proportional fonting only and at eleven
- points.
-
- · No Indenting on any paragraphs!!
- · No Indenting of any lines or "special gimmickery"
- · No underlining!
- · Columns shall be achieved through the use of tabs only. Or,
- columns in Word format. Do NOT use the space bar.
- · No ASCII "ART"!!
- · There is no limits as to size, articles may be split into
- two if lengthy
- · Actual Artwork should be in GIF, PCX, JPG, TIF, BMP, WMF
- file formats
- · Artwork (pictures, graphs, charts, etc.)should be sent along
- with the article separately
- · Please use a single font only in an article. TTF CG Times
- 12pt. is preferred. (VERY Strong Hint)
-
- If there are any questions please use either E-Mail or call.
- On another note. the ASCII version of STReport is fast
- approaching the "end of the line" As the major Online Services
- move away from ASCII.. So shall STReport. All in the name of
- progress and improved readability. The amount of reader mail
- expressing a preference for our Adobe PDF enhanced issue is
- running approximately 15 to 1 over the ASCII edition. Besides,
- STReport will not be caught in the old, worn out "downward
- compatibility dodge" we must move forward. However, if the ASCII
- readership remains as high, rest assured. ASCII will stay. Right
- now, since STReport is offered on a number of closed major
- corporate networks as "required" Monday Morning reading.. Our
- ascii readers have nothing to worry themselves about.
-
- Many grateful thanks in advance for your enthusiastic co-
- operation and input.
-
- Ralph F. Mariano, Editor
- STReport International Online Magazine
-
-
-
- Monster 3D STR Focus Diamond Multimedia does it again!
-
- Arcade games?
- Dedicated game consoles?
- Who needs them!
-
- Monster 3D brings the arcade into your PC with blistering, in-
- your-face 3D graphics. 3D graphics for games and games only.
- Based on the state-of-the-art 3Dfx Voodoo 3D accelerator, Diamond
- Multimedia's Monster 3D works with your existing graphics card to
- transform your ordinary, unassuming computer into a monstrous
- gaming machine. Monster 3D will transform any Direct 3D game for
- Windows 95 into a reality all its own.
-
- Using the supplied pass through cable, Monster 3D patiently waits
- for your normal VGA card to finish it's boring word processor
- jobs. Then, when you are ready for a heart pounding adrenaline
- rush, start a Direct 3D game or a DOS game accelerated for 3Dfx,
- and your PC roars to life in a blitz of color, motion and depth.
- Monster 3D is THE fastest 3D accelerator available!
-
- Finally, Arcade quality performance for your PC. Diamond
- Multimedia brings it to you with Diamond Monster 3D. Based on
- the on 3Dfx VooDoo Graphics chipset, Diamond Monster 3D sets the
- new standard for affordable, real-time, full screen 3D rendering
- on personal computers. Designed for compatiblity and
- flexibility, Diamond Monster 3D, it works with your current VGA
- accelerator. Using pass-through technology, the PCI bus based
- Diamond Monster 3D, provides outstanding 3D without the need to
- replace your current 2D graphics solution.
-
- Monster 3D is the fastest performing Microsoft Windows '95
- Direct3D accelerator available with equally high-performance 3D
- in DOS. Full-featured 3D graphics brings games to life at over 30
- frames per second, with action so real that, if you don't watch
- out the Monster `3D' will get you!!!
-
- · Works with Your Existing Graphics Card
- · Accelerates all Direct3D Games
- · Provides state-of-the-art 3D Features
- · Easy Pass-through Installation
-
- PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS:
- Controller:
- 3Dfx Interactive Voodoo Graphics
- Bus Type:
- PCI 2.1 Compliant
-
- Memory Configuration:
- · 4mb EDO DRAM
- 1. 2MB Frame Buffer for additonal resolutions and Z-buffer
- 2. 2MB for Texture Memory
-
- Horizontal Sync Signals:
- · 31.5kHz - 81.5kHz
-
- Vertical Refresh:
- · 43.5Hz - 120Hz
-
- Maximum Dot Clock Rate:
- · 135MHz Standard
-
- Connectors:
- · DB-15 with DDC support
- · VGA DB-15 pass through connector
-
- MINIMUM SYSTEM CONFIGURATION:
- · Pentium PCI based system
- · PCI 2.1 compliant motherboard and available slot.
- · VGA display adapter (Windows accelerator recommended)
- · MS-DOS 5.0 or later.
- · CD-ROM Drive
- · 8Mb System Memory
-
- RECOMMENDED SYSTEM CONFIGURATION:
- · Pentium-Class Processor, with PCI System Bus
- · 16Mb or More System Memory
-
- SOFTWARE DRIVERS AVAILABLE:
- · Windowsr 95
-
- All trade names referenced are the service mark, trademark, or
- registered trademarks of their respective manufacturers. Diamond
- reserves the right to change specifications without notice.
-
- Microsoft, Direct3D, Windows NT and Windows are either registered
- trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. in the US and/or
- other countries. Monster 3D and NetCommander are trademarks of
- Diamond Multimedia Systems, Inc., and Supra is a registered
- trademark of Diamond Multimedia Systems, Inc. All other
- trademarks referenced are the service mark, trademark, or
- registered trademark of their respective manufacturers. The
- statements made herein regarding the availability of the Monster
- 3D are forward looking statements and actual results could
- differ materially due to successful delivery of board components
- and completion of quality assurance testing.
-
-
-
- Gaming & Entertainment Section
- with Atari User Support
- Editor Dana P. Jacobson
-
- From the Atari Editor's Desk "Saying it like it is!"
-
- Burp!
-
- Excuse me, but I really needed that! I've opened up a few
- notches on the belt and I'm getting ready to stretch out and
- relax. Hope you all had a great Thanksgiving holiday; I know
- that I did. The in-laws are long gone and I started picking at
- the leftovers already! That second slab of pumpkin pie was
- delicious, but I'm starting to burst at the seams...
-
- What a great holiday. It's really a great time to sit back and
- contemplate all of the good things we all have to be grateful.
- Our family and loved ones, friends, our health, and much more.
- For me personally, all of the above. Plus, I'm really glad that
- I still have my friends who still enjoy similar interests,
- including working with Atari computers. I know, it sounds crazy;
- but this is an Atari column after all! Whatever else you may
- say, Atari computers are still fun to use and useful for many
- things. There are also the memories.
-
- I could go on, but you all know what I'm talking about. It's
- been a short week and a lot of activity getting prepared for the
- holiday. So, in order to give you, and me, another opportunity
- to raid the fridge for some more leftovers, we'll make it short
- this week.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
- GEMvelope 2.96 STR Infofile
-
- From: Jeffrey Krzystow <cysco@tyrell.net>
-
-
- GEMvelope 2.96
-
- Finally, quick and easy printing of envelopes on your printer!
- GEMvelope allows you to print envelopes on almost any printer.
- Laser (and most other) printers will not feed an envelope so that
- you may print across it. GEMvelope solves this problem allowing
- you to print even legal size envelopes on virtually all laser
- printers and dot matrix printers. GEMvelope was developed to
- work hand in hand with most word processors and databases to
- provide a complete solution.
-
- GEMvelope Features:
-
- · Import allows extracting an address from a letter in almost
- any work processor format (or from the GEM/Atari clipboard).
- · Mail merge/browse allows printing one or many envelopes with
- an address imported from a database file such as CardFile by
- Gribnif Software.
- · Adjustable positioning for different size envelopes.
- · Load-able and save-able addresses and configurations.
- · POSTNET bar code printing for speeding your mail. (Will also
- save two cents per letter on the future according to the United
- States Post Office).
- · A desk accessory version ideal for using from within program
- like Tracker/ST.
- · GEMvelope uses GDOS and includes FontGDOS with drivers for
- the following printers: Atari SLM804/605, HP Laserjet
- compatibles, HP DeskJet, Epson FX80/LX compatible 9 pin,
- Epson/Panasonic compatible 24 pin, NX1000, Okimate 20.
- · Includes Swiss, Dutch, and Typewriter fonts. Fully
- compatible with scalable and bit-mapped GDOS fonts.
- · Compatible with all Atari ST(e)/Mega ST(e)/TT/Falcon030
- computers with 1 megabyte of RAM. Atari SLM laser printers
- require 2 megabytes of RAM.
-
- Purchasing and Upgrade information:
- New owners: $30.00 plus $3.00 shipping and handling.
- CardFile 4 owners: $20.00 plus $3.00 shipping and handling.
- Please send original CardFile 4 disk. The disk will be returned
- with your GEMvelope package.
- From previous versions: $5.00 plus $1.00 shipping and handling.
- This includes versions by Synergy Software.
- Please include your original disk.
- If you would like a printed manual add $5.00 plus $2.00 shipping
- and handling.
-
- BRiSK Software
- 8702 Switzer Road
- Overland Park, KS 66214-1924
- (913) 541-0311 phone/fax
- Internet Email: cysco@tyrell.net -or- J.KRZYSZTOW@genie.com
- GEnie Email: J.KRZYSZTOW
- World Wide Web: http://www.tyrell.net/~cysco/brisk.htm?z
- (C) 1996 BRiSK Software
-
- List of new features and problems corrected in GEMvelope 2.96
- 1) Under Geneva, it is now possible to get to the other windows
- as well as GEMvelope's menu.
- 2) When pasting from the clipboard, if the last line doesn't
- end with the carriage-return line-feed sequence, the last
- character will no longer be entered twice.
- 3) Can now be setup with the Install Application feature of
- most Desktops (including Atari's built-in Desktops). The
- extension to use for the desktop should be GLP. Please consult
- your user manual for the Desktop you are using for instructions
- on how to Install Application.
- 4) With Cursor to Address selected, the cursor will go to the
- first line of the address instead of the Return Address. This
- feature is saved into the GLP file, so you must load, set the
- option, and save any GEMvelope GLP you wish this option to be
- enabled for.
- 5) Added a Clear button to clear the address or the return
- address. If the cursor is in the return address, it is cleared,
- and the cursor goes to the first line of the return address. If
- the cursor is in the address, it is cleared, and the cursor goes
- to the first line of the address.
- 6) When deselecting Print Return Address, if the cursor is in
- the return address it will be moved to the first line of the
- address. If the cursor is already in the address, it will not
- move.
- 7) Changed all the arrows used to change the various offsets to
- either a plus or a minus, depending on whether the value will
- increment (+) or decrement (-).
- 8) Added a communication protocol for other programs to
- communicate with GEMvelope. This has been added to Gribnif's
- CardFile as of version 4.08.
- 9) When pasting, GEMvelope will paste in the return address, if
- the cursor is in the return address, or it will paste in the
- address, if the cursor is in the address.
- 10) All menu items under Edit are now functional.
-
- · Copy will copy either the return address or the address
- based on the cursor position, to the clipboard. This makes it
- possible to get addresses out of GEMvelope.
- · Cut will copy either the return address or the address
- based on the cursor position, to the clipboard. This makes it
- possible to get addresses out of GEMvelope. Then, whatever was
- copied to the clipboard will be cleared and the cursor will be
- placed on the first line.
- · Paste will paste in the return address if the cursor is in
- the return address or it will paste in the address if the cursor
- is in the address. This works like the Paste button.
- · Delete will clear the address or the return address. If the
- cursor is in the return address, it is cleared, and the cursor
- goes to the first line of the return address. If the cursor is in
- the address, it is cleared, and the cursor goes to the first
- line of the address. This works like the Clear button.
-
- TRADEMARKS: ATARI ST, MEGA, STE, TT, and TOS are trademarks of
- registered trademarks of Atari Corporation. GEM and GEM Desktop
- are trademarks of registered trademarks of Digital Research Inc.
- All other brand and product names mentioned are trademarks of
- their respective holders and are acknowledged.
-
- Entertainment Section
-
- Nintendo News! Bubsy 3D!
- Tobal 1 Does Battle!
- And more....
-
- From the Editor's Controller - Playin' it like it is!
-
- I talked enough turkey above so I'll dispense with more. It's
- been a fairly quiet news week. The bit of Jaguar news out there
- tells us that Breakout 2000 and Towers II are delayed a few more
- days before they'll start shipping. Jaguar owners having to face
- delays? Gee, what a novel occurrence!
-
- My impression is that these games are going to be short on
- supply. It's still a battle to get a review copy of each from
- Telegames word is that there are few eeproms available. It's my
- guess that we'll have to wait for production copies - if I read
- between the lines from my latest communications from Telegames.
- I should have better news sometime next week.
-
- Meanwhile, the "official" holiday shopping season starts today
- and there should be plenty of games, for other systems other than
- the Jaguar and Nintendo 64, to go around. Enjoy them.
-
- Until the next time...
-
- Industry News STR Game Console News The Latest Gaming News!
-
- Nintendo Says US Dominance Regained
-
- TOKYO, JAPAN, 1996 NOV 22 (Newsbytes) -- By Martyn Williams.
- Despite launching a next generation games console a year after
- its competitors, and extra competition in the video console
- market, Nintendo said it has attained a 62 percent share of the
- next generation games console market in the United States. The
- data, which the company admits is based on its own data, covers
- the first six weeks during which the Nintendo 64 was on sale.
-
- During the period sales of the system were strong due to its long
- awaited appearance. While not enough to support a claim of market
- dominance in the long term, it shows the company has proved many
- of its critics wrong who said the delays in launch would mean low
- sales for the company.
-
- The company sold 750,000 units in the United States since it
- launched the Nintendo 64 on September 30, over a year after Sony
- launched its PlayStation on September 9, 1995. First to market in
- the US, and Japan, was Sega which launched its Saturn system in
- May 1995.
-
- In total the company said it has sold 2 million units in Japan
- and the US. This makes Japanese sales of 1,250,000 units since
- it's June launch. To keep up demand Nintendo is now concentrating
- on offering new software titles for the system. Over 40 new games
- are currently on show at "Shoshinkai," a Tokyo exhibition of
- Nintendo related software and hardware.
-
- The company also said Time Magazine had named the Nintendo 64 its
- "1996 Machine of the Year," a category that covers the entire
- consumer electronics industry. Nintendo said the magazine judged
- its console, "has done to video-gaming what the 707 did to air
- travel."
-
- Move Over 2D Arcade Games, Bubsy's Back in 3D!
-
- SAN JOSE, CALIF. (Nov. 25) BUSINESS WIRE -Nov. 25, 1996--Jump,
- fly, climb,run, warp, swim and glide as Bubsy Bobcat, Accolade's
- wise-cracking star of the Bubsy series, returns in his latest
- adventure, Bubsy 3D. Bubsy 3D, which starts shipping this week,
- is the first and only true 3D action platform game on the
- PlayStation.
-
- "Bubsy 3D has more levels, environments, puzzles, animations,
- characters, moves, and gameplay experiences than any other game
- of its kind," said Jim Barnett, CEO of Accolade. "With over 80
- hours of gameplay, it's certain to be a favorite for the holiday
- season." Bubsy 3D takes place on the planet Rayon to which
- Bubsy has been abducted. In order to finish the game, Bubsy must
- travel through six worlds and 16 huge levels filled with 24
- challenging enemies, while collecting his lost rocket parts!
- Bubsy runs, jumps, swims, flies and soars through a variety of
- land, air and sea levels, all in true 3D. There are 64 hidden
- areas,six bonus levels and four bosses for players to encounter
- along the way.
-
- Bubsy 3D offers a cartoon-rich, "go anywhere" 3D environment with
- unlimited camera angles. All of Bubsy 3D's enemies are also
- rendered in true 3D. Not available in any other PlayStation
- platform game, Bubsy 3D offers a one-of-a-kind, first-ever two-
- player experience. By using a "deathmatch" style of play,
- players can compete against one another in five speciallevels.
- Bubsy 3D will be available this week for the Sony PlayStation
- game console at an estimated street price of $59.95.
-
- Mad Catz Receives Sony License for Its
- Analog Steering Wheel for PlayStation
-
- San Diego, CA, November 1996- Mad Catz, Inc. announces Sony
- Computer Entertainment has officially licensed the Mad Catz
- Analog Steering Wheel for the Sony PlayStation. The Mad Catz
- Analog Steering Wheel is the only true analog steering wheel
- designed with a circular rotating range of 270 degrees. For an
- incredible driving experience, the Mad Catz Steering Wheel
- includes True Analog Brake and Accelerator pedals, 8 Activator
- Buttons, a Stick Shift for action moves and a Directional pad.
- Rubber Feet on the base of the steering wheel and the foot petals
- prevent sliding. For aggressive players the Analog Steering
- Wheel includes suction cups too.
-
- The Analog Steering Wheel adds a new dimension of control and
- realism to PlayStation racing and flight games. The present list
- of games that recognize the analog wheel are: Ridge Racer, Ridge
- Racer Revolution, Ridge Rave, Need for Speed, Wipeout, Wipeout
- XL,Cyber Sled, Air Combat, Formula 1, Monster Truck, Andretti,
- Die Hard Trilogy, Destruction Derby 2, Hardcore 4*4, Starblade
- Alpha, NASCAR racing. ....More on the way.
-
- The suggested retail price is $69.99 and is available at all fine
- retail stores throughout the U.S. Mad Catz's goal is to design
- and manufacture the highest quality products while remaining the
- low price leader.
-
- www.madcatz.com
- for sales: sales@madcatz.com
- for technical: tech@madcatz.com
-
- PlayStation Competition Brings "Tobal No. 1"
-
- FOSTER CITY, CALIF. (Nov. 27) BUSINESS WIRE -Nov. 27,
- 1996-PlayStation goes head to head with World Championship
- Wrestling in national tournament. Savage skills, brute
- strength, hand-to-hand combat requiring monster power and agility
- -- prowess in the fighting arena where only the strongest
- survive. Is this an in-your-face brawl between World
- Championship Wrestling superstars like Hulk Hogan and Randy
- "Macho Man" Savage, or is it a match from "Tobal No. 1," the new
- 3-D fighting game created by Squaresoft exclusively for the
- PlayStation game console? Actually, it's both.
-
- Sony Computer Entertainment America and WCW are teaming up in an
- exciting competitive promotion titled, "WCW/PlayStation
- Tournament of Champions," which features "Tobal No. 1," the new
- brawler for the PlayStation game console. "At the core of the
- promotion is a nationwide sweepstakes in which consumers will
- have the opportunity to compete in the ultimate
- PlayStation/Tobal No. 1 challenge," said Jeffrey Fox, senior
- director, public relations and promotions, Sony Computer
- Entertainment America. "At the 'Tournament of Champions,'
- contestants will engage their fellow finalists in virtual combat
- to determine the ultimate victor in 'Tobal No. 1'."
-
- Interested participants will have the opportunity to enter the
- drawing for the "WCW PlayStation Tournament of Champions" by
- submitting entry forms at local WCW wrestling events where
- PlayStation game console kiosks will offer hands-on sampling of
- the "Tobal No. 1" game. Consumers can also enter by watching
- participating Turner Broadcast networks for information on how to
- write-in and win, or by entering either through the WCW Web site
- at www.wcwwrestling.com or the PlayStation Web site at
- www.sony.com.
-
- Ten lucky winners and their guests, drawn at random from a
- national pool of entries, will be flown to San Francisco for the
- WCW SuperBrawl event on Feb. 23, 1997. In addition to the all-
- expense paid trip, each national dinner will receive a
- PlayStation game console, plus PlayStation and WCW branded
- premiums. The grand prize winner will receive a Sony camcorder,
- a library of 10 PlayStation titles and a private lunch with a
- member of the world famous WCW team.
-
- "Tobal No. 1" is one of the most complex winner-takes-all
- fighting games in the video game arena. This title marks
- Squaresoft's first venture into the "fighting" world. "Tobal No.
- 1" features a full 360-degree movement Battle System which allows
- gamers to have absolute control within a 3-D environment,
- offering a full range of motions and the ability to attack
- opponents from all angles. The game's unique Grappling technique
- redefines the meaning ofhand-to-hand combat that enhances the
- tournament's physical nature, as competitors head-butt, body slam
- and knee bash their way to the championship title.
-
- 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, I did it again this year...
- I gorged myself on turkey and all the trimmings (I just love
- turkey! The trimmings you kind of have to eat to keep from
- hurting anyone's feelings <grin>) and now I sit here feeling like
- I'm going to explode. Oh well, I'll feel better tomorrow. Then I
- can start on cold turkey sandwiches and turkey soup and hot open-
- faced turkey sandwiches (or just 'turkey-face' sandwiches, as my
- youngest sister used to call them when she was younger)... and,
- well, you get the idea.
-
- I hope that your Thanksgiving Day was special or, at least, safe.
- It seems that every year during the holidays I see more and more
- people on the road that really shouldn't be. I'm not talking
- about people who are driving under te influence of alcohol or
- some psycho-active chemical, I'm talking about people just plain
- not paying attention to what they, or anyone else, are doing.
- Please, please, please, for the next four weeks or so pay
- attention not only to what you are doing, but to what the other
- guy is doing as well. We'll all be a lot happier if you do.
-
- Well, I'll jump down off of my soapbox now and get to all the
- news, hints, tips, and info available every week right here on
- CompuServe.
-
-
- From the Atari Computing Forums
-
- Gene Douglass asks for tech info:
- "I have an Atari 8 bit system, and I want to upgrade my monitor
- and set up a Pentium system to run next to it, are there any
- high quality SVGA Monitors that can also hook up separated video
- Chroma-Lumina, sound to it as well as the Pentium, I want to run
- both systems on the same monitor with just the flick of a
- switch. Thanks very much. I have no room on my desk for another
- monitor. I plan on getting a Tower Pentium to go under my desk."
-
- Albert Dayes tells Gene:
- "The only monitors I can think of are the multi-media type which
- accept composite video as input in addition to RGB. They usually
- cost quite a bit and usually only support 640 x 480 resolution
- on the computer side which is usually not acceptable in most
- situations. You look at multi-media monitors from Sony,
- Panasonic, Mitsubishi, Philips, for those type of features. The
- other issue is these monitors are usually are very high
- priced...Another method you might consider is a TV/card for the
- PC which can accept composite video as input. Then you can run
- composite video in a window on your PC."
-
- Last week, Mark Showalter asked:
- " Two other questions:
- 1: How do I set up LOGIN.SCR for TYMNET? This under the LOGIN VIA
- on the config set-up screen. I treid this before w/o this
- option, but couldn't find any way to make the necessary modem
- changes, as in 8/n/1 from 7/e/1 from accessing TYMNET.
-
- 2: Is there a particular editor to use for the editor option? I
- would like to be able to write all my e-mail & post messages
- offf-line, then let ol' QUICKCIS do it's stuff. Is this
- possible?"
-
- Our friend Myles Cohen tells Mark:
- "I am unable to answer [about TYMNET] since I have never had the
- need...I was under the impression that this was covered in the
- program docs...but if not...suggest that you contact Jim Ness
- again... Particular editor? Absolutely...Right now I use
- EDITPLUS 3.13 which was formerly known as EDHAK in previous
- versions...and a usable (with QuickCIS) demo can be downloaded
- from CIS...Look for EDITPLUS or EDHAK... Another program that
- improves the ease of use of QCIS is QCMSG 2.41a. It is another
- program that can be downloaded from these LIBS on CIS... If you
- are not using version 1.72 Beta 3 of QuickCIS...I suggest you
- download and use that..."
-
- Alvin Baligad tells Myles:
- "Thank you for the info...Is this in the library now? Does it
- allow graphic interface with CServe that the other guys have?
- Or is it still ASCII? Sorry for all the Q's, but this is the
- first time I"ve heard of this and I am very interested.... Is
- the ATari Web browser in the library, too?"
-
- Myles tells Alvin:
- "Yes...But since CIS adopted new protocols, it takes a few work
- arounds to get it working up to snuff...For instance: I have to
- load in a special MAIL.CNF file with just one Section in it
- (MAIL)...because once it visits MAIL, QuickCis will just hang
- there and not go on to the other sections in the CNF file...the
- nice thing is that QCIS allows you to load in different CNF
- files...You may not know what I am talking about but perhaps this
- clue might be of help to others who are having the problem...
- Another work-around that I have to sometimes do when there are
- files to be downloaded that have those long names...is to load
- the FILES.LST into a word processor after I have chosen the ones
- I want and type the names in correctly and then save it back to
- my SUPPORT file before I try to download...else I get the unable-
- to-find message... Still only ASCII but it does do that
- beautifully...
-
- Web Browser? I think so...but I don't know if it is perfected
- yet...I think my very good friend, Joe Mirando, has been fooling
- around with that...and can tell you more...I'm sure he'll be
- reading this and will give you a reply... What I do know is
- that there seems to be a new version coming out every six
- minutes and that the configuration is a royal pain..."
-
- You know, Thanksgiving has always been a special holiday for me.
- It's the holiday when you get to see old friends and relatives.
- It is especially fitting then that Myles' post appears in this
- issue, since I consider him one of my best online friends. I do,
- as Myles said, find the message and reply:
-
- "...You are quite correct about the current incarnations of the
- web browsers available right now... they are a royal pain. In
- the first place, none of them now support a PPP connection, and
- a PPP connection is exactly what you need to surf the web
- CompuServe-style. One of them does allow a workaround, but you
- must use MiNTnet instead of TOS. This is a first- class pain to
- use and slows the system down by a noticeable amount. In short,
- none of the currently available browsers is a really good bet
- right now. The program you mentioned that seems to have a new
- configuration coming out every six minutes is CAB (Crystal Atari
- Browser).. I can only assume that they picked the name because,
- if you don't handle it just right, it'll shatter! <grin>
-
- There is one bright spot however. Oxo Concept of Switzerland is
- now promoting their program, WebMaster, which is supposed to
- work on any Atari ST(e)/TT/Falcon with one meg or more of
- memory. There is a demo available, but it is compiled for 68030
- processors only (TT and Falcon). This move didn't make sense to
- me, so I sent email to the authors to ask why the put out a demo
- for 68030s instead of 68000 CPUs. The TT and Falcon would be able
- to make use of the same 68000 version that would enable the rest
- of us to check it out. I've received no answer from them yet,
- and to be honest, I don't expect to. I've sent them several
- pieces of email since they announced WebMaster and have not
- received a reply to any of them.
-
- If anyone else would like to check out the demo I can upload it
- here, or if you have access to the web elsewhere you can get it
- from the CNAM.FR FTP site (FTP.CNAM.FR). Their web address is:
- http://www.oxo.ch The primary page is in french, but there is a
- link to take you to an english version burried in the "products"
- page. I _will_ keep everyone informed of any progress that I
- hear about, so if you don't hear from me and wonder if you missed
- it, drop me email and ask!
-
- There are also one or two north american developers that I've
- tried to interest in disigning a web browser for the ST, but
- it's a huge undertaking and very few developers have the
- manpower to put into a project like this... But I'm still
- hammering at them anyway! <grin>"
-
- Jonathan Moberly asks for internet/Atari help:
- "We are trying to get a Mega4 running with some basic internet
- software. The problem is, we have no way of getting even basic
- COMMS software into the machine except via floppy disc. We can
- get the COMMS software from the internet. But we can only access
- the internet to do this via a MAC or a PC. So we want to
- download the Mega4-ST compatible COMMS software from the
- internet onto the MAC or PC and then transfer it via floppy disc
- to the Mega4. This means EITHER the Mega4 should read MAC or PC
- floppies, OR the MAC or PC should be able to format and write to
- ST-TOS format. We do not think that the Mega4 will read MAC or
- PC (although we are still testing this - maybe there is a way
- built into the OS??). So... does anyone here know of any
- software for the MAC or PC that can read/write/format for the
- ST???"
-
- Myles Cohen tells Jonathan:
- 1. Format a 720K disk on your PC...
- 2. Copy the files to that disk..
- 3. Now use that disk to move files between your PC and your
- Atari..."
-
- That's right folks, it's as simple as that.
-
- Now Jack Hughes asks for info on file transfer errors:
- "Attempts to d/l a rather large file today have consistently been
- plagued with CRC errors. Four on the ~ 700000 byte file. And
- of course it would not unzip! Am I correct in assuming that it
- is phone line noise that is the problem? or is it a problem with
- the file? The errors do not occur at the same place in the
- file. For the record it is the CAB file, WWW130.ZIP @ 700416
- bytes. My understanding of error correction is that the modem
- did that. Maybe not. I have a Cardinal 14.4 which I think
- supports V.42."
-
- Albert Dayes asks Jack:
- " I assume you are using STZIP v2.06 to unzip the file? What
- protocol are you using? I assume compuserve B+?"
-
- Jack tells Albert:
- "I am using STZIP v2.06, but Y-modem. Have to do some study to
- get B+ going. Is it faster?"
-
- Albert replies:
- "I have found CIS B protocol to be more reliable than the others
- on Compuserve. It seems very fast for what I need it for. I
- have not compared the different protocols except for ones that
- did not cause me too many errors. I have not had any problems
- except for minor ones that
- were user error."
-
- Sysop Jim Ness adds this bit about error correction:
- "The modem does error correction, but only if your modem and
- CompuServe's agree to do so. Sometimes, noise is bad enough
- that the modem's can't negotiate properly. Depending on your
- modem's command set, there is usually a command that requires
- error correction, or no connection. That's the way mine is set
- up. In my case, I would put \N2 in the init or dial string."
-
- Dan Parrish tells Jack:
- "If I am not mistaken (from what I remember) using CIS B+ with
- Stalker is the easiest thing in the world. It is built into
- Stalker (for all practical purposes that is). I believe you just
- need to click on CIS B+ and Z-modem. and the rest is
- automatic. Also, I believe for the CIS B+ download it will
- automatically set your on-line session at 8N1 if you aren't using
- that configuration already. But switch over to CIS B+ and try
- again. Also the Stalker manual is quite good with explaining
- those things."
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. I think I'm going to
- hit the kitchen and see if there's anything to eat like
- maybe....TURKEY! <grin> C'mon back next week, same time, same
- station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL QUICKIES
-
- IT'S THE HOLIDAY SEASON. USE A DESIGNATED DRIVER!
- THEY REALLY ARE LIFESAVERS!!
-
- STReport International OnLine Magazine
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-
- STReport "YOUR INDEPENDENT NEWS SOURCE" November 29, 1996
- Since 1987 Copyrightc1996 All Rights Reserved Issue No. 1248
-