home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1997-02-28 | 121.6 KB | 2,355 lines |
-
- Silicon Times Report
-
- "The Original Independent OnLine Magazine"
- (Since 1987)
-
-
-
- February 28, 1997 No.1309
-
- 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
- FAX: 904-268-2237 24hrs
- STReport WebSite http://www.streport.com
-
- STR Publishing's FTP Support Server
- 10gb - Back Issues - Patches - Support Files
- (Continually Under Construction)
- ftp.streport.com
- Anonymous Login ok - Use your Email Address as a Password
-
- STReport published with MS Office 97 & Adobe Acrobat Pro v3
- Featuring a Full Service Web Site
- http://www.streport.com
- Voted TOP TEN Ultimate WebSite
- Join STReport's Subscriber List receive STR through Internet
-
- Toad Hall BBS 1-617-567-8642
-
- 02/28/97 STR 1309 The Original Independent OnLine Magazine!
-
- - CPU Industry Report - Croatian Hackers? - McAfee Updates
- - Senate Nixes Net Fees - Corel NewsWire - CIS wins Suit
- - Borland Lays Off 300 - SyQuest SyJet Ships - SmartSuite 97 Ships
- - Modem Wars Heat Up - People Talking - Classics & Gaming
-
- 3Com, U.S. Robotics To Merge
- HP to Acquire Symantec Unit
- Feds Crack $2.8M Internet Scam
-
- STReport International OnLine Magazine
- Featuring Weekly
- "Accurate UP-TO-DATE News and Information"
- Current Events, Original Articles, Tips, Rumors, and Information
- Hardware - Software - Corporate - R & D - Imports
-
- STReport's BBS - The Bounty International BBS, invites all BBS systems,
- worldwide, to participate in the provision and distribution of STReport for
- their members. Please obtain the latest issue from either our Web Site or
- FTP Site. Enjoy the wonder and excitement of exchanging all types of
- useful information relative to all computer types, worldwide, through the
- use of the Internet. All computer enthusiasts, hobbyist or commercial, on
- all platforms and BBS systems are invited to participate.
-
- IMPORTANT NOTICE
-
- 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 "living up to such". All we ask is that our readers
- make certain the manufacturers, publishers etc., know exactly where the
- information about their products appeared. In closing, we shall 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
-
-
- STReport's Tenth Anniversary
-
- 1987-1997
-
- Florida Lotto - LottoMan v1.35
- Results: 02/22/97: 3 of 6 numbers, 1 two number match
-
-
- From the Editor's Desk...
-
- Not much going on this week. It seems like the whole world is waiting
- to see Spring have a happening. STReport is now being done with Acrobat 3
- instead of 2.1. We are producing the magazine in Microsoft's Office 97
- Pro. The computing community is gearing up for Spring Comdex, so its
- reasonable to expect a lull before the new products and updates begin to
- hit.
-
- I had a unique experience this past week. I decided to see how well a
- consumer would fare in trying to obtain a new motherboard via the major
- mass marketers. You know, like Comp USA and Computer City for example.
- Much to my chagrin, both of these "joints" are a disgrace. They're
- supposed to be the biggest and the best. They're a joke! I asked the "so-
- called" guru at Comp USA and was promptly told "we only offer one type of
- motherboard." I replied ok, tell me about it what are its specifications?
- It's a Pentium motherboard and costs two hundred dollars and that's all the
- information I have. Computer City (owned and operated by Radio Shack) was
- worse! I was told they do not carry or offer motherboards. These big
- chains sure do advertise a lot but really are nothing more than glorified
- technology supermarkets that have nothing to offer in the way of real
- service. I thought you'd like to hear of my experiences with the "big
- boys". Why don't you tell us about your experiences in regard to shopping
- for computers, parts, components and software. Good or whatever, we'd like
- to hear from you.
-
-
-
- Of Special Note:
- http://www.streport.com
- ftp.streport.com
-
- STReport is now ready to offer much more in the way of serving the
- Networks, Online Services and Internet's vast, fast growing site list and
- userbase. We now have our very own WEB/NewsGroup/FTP Site and although it
- is in its early stages of construction, do stop by and have a look see.
- Since We've received numerous requests to receive STReport from a wide
- variety of Internet addressees, we were compelled to put together an
- Internet distribution/mailing list for those who wished to receive STReport
- on a regular basis, the file is ZIPPED, then UUENCODED. Unfortunately,
- we've also received a number of opinions that the UUENCODING was a real
- pain to deal with. So, as of October 01, 1995, you'll be able to download
- STReport directly from our very own SERVER & WEB Site. While there, be
- sure to join our STR AutoMailer list.
-
- STReport's managing editors DEDICATED TO SERVING YOU!
-
- Ralph F. Mariano, Publisher - Editor
- Dana P. Jacobson, Editor, Current Affairs
-
- Section Editors
-
- PC Section Mac Section Shareware Listings
- R.F. Mariano Help Wanted Lloyd E. Pulley
-
- Classics & Gaming Kid's Computing Corner
- Dana P. Jacobson Frank Sereno
-
- STReport Staff Editors
- Michael R. Burkley Joseph Mirando Victor Mariano
- Allen Harkleroad Vincent P. O'Hara Glenwood Drake
-
- Contributing Correspondents
- Jason Sereno Jeremy Sereno Daniel Stidham
- David H. Mann Angelo Marasco Donna Lines
- Brian Boucher Ron Satchwill Robert Satchwill
- Leonard Worzala
-
- Please submit ALL letters, rebuttals, articles, reviews, etc., via E-Mail
- w/attachment to:
-
- Internet rmariano@streport.com
- STR FTP ftp.streport.com
- WebSite http://www.streport.com
-
-
-
-
- STReport Headline News
-
- LATE BREAKING INDUSTRY-WIDE NEWS
-
- Weekly Happenings in the Computer World
-
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Junk E-Mail Soon to Get Boost
-
- Expect more junk e-mail in your future.
-
- Officials with Cyber Promotions Inc. -- the Philadelphia firm that has done
- battle with all the major online services -- say the controversial mass
- e-mailer next month will launch the nation's first bulk e-mail friendly
- Internet provider. "It will allow computer users to send millions of
- commercial ads - also known as 'spam' -- for a single monthly fee,"
- reports Associated Press writer Jennifer Brown. Of course, most other
- Internet providers now prohibit customers from sending unsolicited bulk
- e-mail and will cancel a person's account if they are caught.
-
- Says Cyber Promotion founder Sanford Wallace, "What people are doing is
- jumping around from one (Internet provider) to another, and they don't
- have a secure home. We're going to give them a home." Wallace's new bulk
- e-mail friendly network, to be launched March 17, will have local dial-up
- numbers in the Philadelphia area and 800 numbers for use around the
- country and, says Brown, "customers will pay about $50 a month to send
- unlimited amounts of mass unsolicited commercial e-mails."
-
- AP notes critics contend junk e-mail costs recipients money to transmit,
- store and read, unlike regular junk mail or phone sales that only use up a
- recipient's time, quoting Ram Avrahami of Private Citizen, an anti-junk
- mail group based in Naperville, Ill., as saying, "This is just an online
- version of how your private life is being sold. And if it gets out of
- control, the Internet will soon become worse than what our post office
- boxes have become."
-
- However, Cyber Promotions contends the service may encourage more
- responsible spamming. Wallace says, "Our goal is to legitimize the bulk
- e-mail industry and not abuse it," adding all Cyber Promotions network
- customers must honor requests to remove a consumer's name from receiving
- such ads. Cyber Promotions is an extension of the Internet advertising
- service Wallace started in 1994. The company now sends up to 4 million
- e-mail ads a day.
-
- Nevada May Ban Unsolicited E-Mail
-
- A bill now pending in the state legislature may make Nevada the first state
- to bar unsolicited electronic mail advertising. Presented yesterday to the
- state senate's judiciary committee, the bill would make it a misdemeanor
- to send unsolicited ads directly to e-mail accounts, says The Associated
- Press in a report from Carson City. Majority leader Bill Raggio told the
- wire service, "Most e-mail users pay for their service, so unsolicited
- e-mail is like receiving direct mail with postage due," adding the bill was
- modeled on a previous measure that prohibits unsolicited advertising over
- fax machines.
-
- AP says that while Nevada is the closest to passing the bill, California,
- Virginia and Connecticut are all considering similar e-mail advertising
- bans. Testified in favor of the bill, Internet lawyer David Kramer of
- Palo Alto, California, said the measure should apply only to individual
- e-mail accounts and not to e-mail bulletin boards with multiple users. AP
- adds, "The judiciary committee is considering proposed revisions of the
- bill and has not set a timetable for a vote."
-
- FTC Wins Order in Alleged Scam
-
- The Federal Trade Commission has won a court order ending what it contends
- is an Internet scam that lured customers with the promise of erotic
- photographs and cost them thousands of dollars in overseas phone charges.
- As reported here earlier this month, authorities in Canada first warned the
- public about the operation, after complaints of excessive phone charges
- that appeared after some computerists accessed such a World Wide Web site.
-
- Now Associated Press writer Eun-Kyung Kim reports Net visitors to at least
- three Web sites were told they could access erotic photographs by
- downloading a free software program. "Unknown to the customers," adds AP,
- "the program cut them off from local Internet providers and reconnected
- them to a number assigned to Moldova, an eastern European country that
- borders Romania. The calls then were routed to a Canadian site that charged
- the much higher Moldova phone rates while the photos were transferred to
- the user's computer.
-
- Phone charges, up to $3 a minute, continued to mount until the computer was
- turned off." Jodie Bernstein, director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer
- Protection, told the wire service, "It's a high-tech scam. The defendants
- in this case are using software to hijack the computer's modem," adding
- computer users didn't find out about the scam until their phone bills came,
- "and then it was too late."
-
- AT&T customers who were victimized are expected to pay their bills, which
- reached several hundred dollars in some cases, company security manager
- Richard Petillo told AP, saying, "The subscribers actually made the calls
- and it would be unfair to other subscribers to offer those people the
- option of not paying the charges."
-
- And Eileen Harrington of the FTC's consumer protection bureau said a treaty
- governing international phone systems requires AT&T to pay the Moldova
- phone company for all calls made to the country. The treaty does not
- distinguish calls made under fraudulent circumstances. AP says a temporary
- restraining order shutting down the operation was issued under seal last
- week by a federal judge in New York. It was made
- public yesterday.
-
- An FTC lawsuit on the matter accuses three people and two companies --
- Promo Line Inc. and Audiotex Connection -- of false and deceptive
- advertising, failing to disclose information about the computer program
- and misrepresenting long-distance phone billing. The Reuter News Service
- identifies the individuals as Anna Grella, William Gannon and David Zeng,
- adding that the companies list addresses on Long Island near New York
- City.
-
- Defense attorney Joel Dichter told AP his clients voluntarily pulled their
- Internet services at the end of January, several weeks before the FTC
- action, adding accurate disclaimers were provided on each Web page. FTC
- officials say the companies received part of the proceeds from the phone
- company in Moldova and that the case came to the FTC's attention when AT&T
- workers noticed an increase in calls to Moldova.
-
- Writer David Lawsky of Reuters reports the FTC can bring only civil
- charges, but that the agency's Bernstein said the matter may be referred
- for criminal prosecution. Bernstein also told Reuters that for all the
- problems it created, the scam was shut down in record time, lasting only
- from mid-December to early February. She credited AT&T with helping track
- down operators of the sites which included "www.beavisbutthead.com,"
- "www.sexygirls.com" and "www.1adult.com."
-
- Feds Crack $2.8M Internet Scam
-
- Some $2.8 million that was wired to West Indian bank accounts as part of
- allegedly fraudulent marketing scheme on the Internet has been recovered
- by the U.S. Justice Department. In Washington today, federal officials
- sai return of the money is part of a settlement in a case against the
- Fortuna Alliance, a Washington state-based company that, according to
- United Press International, "promised consumers in more than 60 countries
- profits of more than $5,000 a month if they paid an 'enrollment fee' of
- $500."
-
- The Justice Department says that when the company received the money from
- Internet users it immediately wired it to offshore trust accounts in the
- Swiss American Bank Ltd. in St. John's, Antigua. Last May, the Federal
- Trade Commission filed a suit against Fortuna in Seattle, and obtained a
- court order forbidding the company from promoting the scheme over the
- Internet. Acting on behalf of the FTC, says UPI, the Justice Department
- then obtained an order from the High Court of Antigua freezing the funds.
-
- Also named in the action were Augie and Monique Delgado, Libby Welch and
- Donald Grant, who the Justice Department said ran the operation from
- Bellevue, Wash. Justice Department officials say the recovered money is
- being put into a fund to reimburse victims as they are identified, adding
- the Fortuna case is the 12th Internet fraud investigation they have
- pursued.
-
- Senate Opposes Net Fees
-
- Proposals that would require the Federal Communications Commission to levy
- charges on firms that provide access to the Internet are being opposed by
- the head of the Senate Commerce Committee. "The cure for telephone network
- congestion isn't putting more toll booths on the Information Superhighway,"
- Sen. John McCain, an Arizona Republican, said in a statement.
-
- The Reuter News Service notes the FCC itself, as part of its proposal to
- reform the complex set of charges that long-distance carriers pay to hook
- up to local phone networks, has tentatively concluded against imposing such
- fees on Internet service providers. On the other side of the question,
- local carriers cite congestion on their networks from Internet traffic as a
- reason for the FCC to impose the fees.
-
- However, says McCain, "The solution is to provide incentives to telephone
- comanies to install new data-friendly digital switches that will not only
- alleviate congestion but also provide PC users with much higher-speed
- access to the Internet."
-
- Nebraska E-Mail Campaign Fails
-
- Intent on swaying Nebraska state legislators against trying to regulate the
- Internet, an electronic mail campaign may have backfired. Reporting from
- Lincoln, United Press International says computer users fired off a
- barrage of e-mail to other lawmakers seeking support for an anti-regulation
- bill proposed by state Sen. Jerome Warner. However, says the wire service,
- "a number of senators whose e-mail accounts were buried under hundreds of
- messages say the mail campaign shows exactly why regulation is needed."
-
- Sen. Owen Elmer told reporters the storm of anti-regulatory e-mail "just
- completely jammed up the works." UPI says some senators received 64
- letters in one day from the same person, and that the peak volume hit 300
- messages per day. Speaking with The Omaha World-Herald, Sen. Gerald Matzke
- termed the campaign "harassment," saying the practice -- sometimes called
- "spamming" -- denied other constituents the benefits of contacting
- lawmakers electronically. A hearing on Warner's bill is set for this week.
-
- Croatians Accused of Hacking
-
- Investigators say three Croatian teen-agers may have broken Pentagon
- protection codes and copied highly classified files from U.S. military
- bases. Checking in from Zagreb, writer Laura Lui of the Reuter News
- Service says the local press is reporting the three high school students,
- surfing the Internet on their home computer, broke into several U.S.
- military installations' databases, including those of the Anderson nuclear
- installation and an unnamed satellite research center.
-
- However, Pentagon spokeswoman Lt-Col. Donna Boltz, told Lui, "There is no
- way that anybody can tap into classified files via the Internet," adding
- such files are almost always on closed systems without outside access.
- Still, she acknowledged, invaders traveling the Net may be able to access
- personal e-mail or other sensitive files. Lui says that following a report
- in the Zagreb daily Vecernji List, local reporters flocked to the high
- school in the Adriatic port of Zadar where the three teen-age hackers, aged
- 15 and 16, specialize in mathematics and information technology.
-
- Adds Reuters, "One of the teenagers, identified only as V.M., told the
- state news agency HINA he accessed the Pentagon database while surfing the
- Net on Jan. 2. Despite a warning that he was not allowed to proceed, he
- continued to browse the site until data fro the Anderson base were
- displayed on the screen, HINA said." V.M. told the agency, "The data are
- compressed and need to be extracted, so I don't really know everything they
- contained, but it sure was very interesting," adding he was unaware of any
- possible consequences.
-
- Meanwhile, assistant Interior Minister Zeljko Sacic told state radio that
- invaders broke into the U.S. Defence Department computer system of the
- airbase on Guam island and several other bases. Vecernji List says the
- U.S. Defense Department had contacted Croatian police through Interpol to
- demand an investigation while local police searched the youngsters' flats
- and confiscated their computer equipment. Adds Reuters, "Computer-hacking
- is not illegal in Croatia, but the three may be banned for life from
- accessing the Internet under the current Croatian penal code."
-
- U.S. Says Vandals Got No Secrets
-
- A report this week that high school computer users in Croatia had broken
- Pentagon protection codes and copied highly classified files from U.S.
- military bases has been flatly denied by the U.S. Defense Department. As
- reported, Zagreb press is reporting the three students, surfing the
- Internet on their home computer, broke into several U.S. military
- installations' databases, including those of the Anderson nuclear
- installation and an unnamed satellite research center. The papers say the
- trio broke codes and copied highly classified files.
-
- "They did not," Defense Department spokesman Ken Bacon told reporters in
- Washington. "The Croatian newspaper was in error on that issue. They did
- apparently get into some computers at Anderson Air Force Base in Guam. But
- to the best of my knowledge, they did not get into any classified files. It
- was entirely unclassified territory." Reporting for the Reuter News
- Service, writer Charles Aldinger quotes Bacon as saying the matter is being
- investigated by the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, but
- "I'm not aware that action has been taken against these fellows, whom I
- believe are teen-agers, at ths time."
-
- U.S. defense officials say there is no way classified files could be broken
- into via the Internet. They said such files were almost always on closed
- systems without outside access, but that personal e-mail or other sensitive
- files might be invaded by hackers on the Internet.
-
- Malaysia's Web Hack-Attacked
-
- Hacked twice this week by online vandals, Malaysia's site on the World Wide
- Web has been taken down temporarily by the country's national
- telecommunications company. Reporting from Kuala Lumpur, the Reuter News
- Service quotes officials with Telekom Malaysia Bhd as saying its TMnet home
- page was struck on Tuesday by someone who did not sabotage any data on the
- site, but left a message on the page saying: "This site has been
- hacked!!!"
-
- Then on Thursday, the message, "This site has been hacked again!!!," was
- seen on the TMnet page. Reuters says the perpetrator in the first
- incident has been identified following an investigation, though Telekom has
- note named the person. However, the second vandal "has used much more
- sophisticated methods to bypass the log-in procedure and exploit what is
- obviously a security vulnerability," a company statement said.
-
- Web Virus Seeker Launched
-
- An artificially intelligent software snoop called "Bloodhound" that
- searches the Internet's World Wide Web for new and unknown viruses has been
- introduced by Symantec Corp. In Cupertino, California, the Dow Jones news
- service quotes the company as saying Bloodhound is based on two of its
- advanced anti-virus technologies, the Symantec Seeker system and the new
- Symantec AntiVirus Research Center Heuristic Scanner.
-
- Southwestern Bell to Wire Schools
-
- Southwestern Bell says it is launching a massive campaign called "Operation
- SchoolNet" to wire nearly 6,200 classrooms in Texas, Missouri, Oklahoma,
- Arkansas and Kansas for Internet access. The Baby Bell says it will rely
- on the participation by as many as 5,000 members of the Southwestern Bell
- Pioneers, one of the nation's largest volunteer organizations, and other
- Southwestern Bell employee groups. Lucent Technologies Inc. is donating
- equipment that will be necessary for schools to connect to the Internet.
- The cabling kits include wiring, computer connectors and a central
- connecting block.
-
- "Southwestern Bell has a long tradition of leadership and investing in the
- communities we serve, especially in the area of education," says Edward E.
- Whitacre Jr., chairman and CEO of SBC Communications Inc., Southwestern
- Bell's parent company. "We believe our children should have access to this
- great educational resource to learn more about the world around them,
- expanding their knowledge and encouraging their thirst for learning." Only
- 14 percent of the nation's 55 milion school children currently have
- Internet access in their classrooms, according to the latest government
- statistics.
-
- HP to Acquire Symantec Unit
-
- Hewlett-Packard Co. and Symantec Corp. have signed a non- binding letter of
- intent for HP to purchase the assets of Symantec's networking business
- unit and incorporate it into its OpenView system and network management
- business. The deal's terms weren't disclosed. The companies say the move
- will strengthen HP's position as a provider of information-technology (IT)
- management software and services and allow Symantec to focus on its core
- competencies in productivity and security software.
-
- Symantec's networking business unit is responsible for Norton Administrator
- Suite, which includes Norton Administrator for Networks, the Expose
- server-management solution and Norton Desktop Administrator. These products
- are designed to allow IT administrators to increase productivity and reduce
- the total cost of ownership of networked PCs and servers. "Symantec has
- achieved great success with its networked PC-management solutions," says
- Olivier Helleboid, general manager of HP's network and system management
- division. "The incorporation of Symantec products into OpenView will help
- customers implement a well-managed environment, the secret to reducing the
- total cost of ownership of networked computer systems. HP OpenView is
- critical to HP's strategy to help customers successfully manage their
- enterprise networked systems."
-
- "In HP, we found a strong partner that could provide customers with the
- best combination of management tools, services and support," says Mark
- Bailey, senior vice president of business development and emerging
- businesses for Symantec. "This move allows us to focus our strengths in
- software applications that improve the reliability and productivity of
- computers. The Norton Administrator product line complements HP's OpenView
- system and network-management strategy, and the combination will bring even
- more value to our mutual customers."
-
- 3Com, U.S. Robotics Announce Merger
-
- Computer networking specialist 3Com Corp. and modem maker U.S. Robotics
- Corp. have announced a definitive agreement to enter into the largest
- merger in the history of the data networking industry. The combined
- company, which will bear the 3Com name, will be a communications industry
- powerhouse with more than $5 billion in annual revenues and over 12,000
- employees in approximately 130 countries. The companies note that the
- combined firm will have leading positions in each of its core markets and
- an installed base of more customer connections to corporate intranets and
- the Internet than any other company.
-
- Under the agreement's terms, each share of U.S. Robotics stock will be
- exchanged for 1.75 shares of 3Com stock. The transaction will be accounted
- for as a pooling of interests. Based on the closing price of 3Com stock
- Tuesday, the deal is valued at $6.6 billion. Subject to several conditions,
- including regulatory approvals and approval of both companies'
- shareholders, the transaction is expected to close this summer. There will
- be a one-time charge against earnings during the quarter in which the deal
- closes.
-
- Eric Benhamou, 3Com's chairman and CEO will retain his posts after the
- merger. U.S. Robotics' chairman and CEO, will join 3Com's board as vice
- chairman. "The combination of 3Com and U.S. Robotics dramatically alters
- the networking landscape with the industry's broadest set of innovative,
- feature-rich network access solutions," says Benhamou. "Together, with an
- installed base of over 100 million network connections, we can offer
- network users the fastest access to their local and wide area networks.
- The leadership and momentum we have will continue to define the next
- dimension of networking. This combination will be good for customers, good
- for shareholders, and good for our employees."
-
- "3Com and U.S. Robotics share a common vision," adds Cowell. "By providing
- faster, more intelligent and easier-to-use products for connecting the
- broadest array of users to local and wide area networks, we can accelerate
- the deployment of networking worldwide. The combination of 3Com and U.S.
- Robotics' technology, products, brands and global distribution will allow
- us to bring the power of networking to the widest possible range of
- customers, including large enterprises, small businesses, telephone
- carriers, network and Internet service providers and consumers."
-
- Borland to Lay Off 300 Workers
-
- Some 300 jobs -- or nearly 30 percent of its work force -- will be cut by
- software publisher Borland International Inc. as part of a global
- restructuring program aimed at restoring the company to profitability.
- Reporting from Sotts Valley, California, the Reuter News Service quotes
- officials with the firm as saying the restructuring plan involved
- significant reductions in operational expenses, as well as the
- implementation of new programs aimed at raising the company's revenues.
-
- Borland Chairman Delbert Yocam said the restructuring is "the beginning of
- a plan to grow Borland into a thriving company known for the value it
- provides to organizations building client/server and Internet/intranet
- applications. We plan to leverage Borland's rich heritage of high-quality
- and high-performance software development tools to expand our business into
- new markets."
-
- Reuters says that after the restructuring, Borland will employ about 700
- full-time employees worldwide. In addition, Borland says it aims to
- achieve cost reductions through new marketing and support programs that
- will replace programs that no longerfit its core business or strategic
- focus.
-
- Apple Dismisses Layoff Talk
-
- A report that Apple Computer Inc. will lay off 40 percent of its workforce
- when it announces a restructuring in late March is being dismissed by the
- computer makers as speculation. Published on MSNBC's World Wide Web site,
- the report yesterday cited "a well-placed Apple executive" as telling the
- television net Apple will cut 4,400 of its 11,000 full-time employees and
- take a charge for severance benefits of $300 to $350 million. However,
- Apple spokeswoman Katie Cotton told the Reuter News Service, "Those numbers
- are based on speculation, because we have not determined what the final
- numbers will be."
-
- As reported, Apple early this month announced a plan to consolidate its
- marketing and development units into fewer groups to cut costs and
- concentrate on key computer market. However, specifics of the plan --
- including layoffs and possible charges -- won't be announced until next
- month, Apple has said.
-
- CompuServe KOs Infringement Suit
-
- CompuServe has won in a patent infringement case brought against it by Elk
- Industries Inc. in U.S. District Court in Florida. Frm its Columbus, Ohio,
- headquarters, CompuServe released a statement noting Elk sued it in early
- 1996, alleging infringement of a patent entitled "Audio Storage and
- Distribution System." Elk alleged CompuServe was liable for infringement
- when CompuServe subscribers retrieved audio files from its service or from
- the Internet. CompuServe denied liability and filed a counterclaim seeking
- attorneys fees.
-
- Now Elk Industries has agreed to withdraw its suit and CompuServe has
- agreed to withdraw its counterclaim and request for attorneys fees. To
- avoid potential disputes between Elk and CompuServe, CompuServe obtained a
- license under Elk's other patents for a nominal fee of $7,500. The parties
- will finalize the dismissal and license in the near future. The Dow Jones
- news service notes Elk had filed suit against Netscape Communications
- Corp., alleging that company's Internet browser software also infringed the
- patent. Elk is closely held by inventor Robin Elkins.
-
- Robotics Delays Modem Shipment
-
- U.S. Robotics Corp. hopes to ship its new high-speed modems by the end of
- the week. This is about a week later than some retailers had expected,
- notes the Reuter News Service, which quotes a company spokeswoman in
- Skokie, Illinois, as saying, "We're shooting for either later today or
- tomorrow, but I can't guarantee that at this point."
-
- The wire service notes retailers had been expecting the new modems, which
- can download information from the Internet at a rate of 56 kilobits a
- second, in stores last weekend. "Though the company did inform retailers
- of the delay, one retailer was unable to pull an advertising circular
- featuring the new modems," Reuters says. The spokeswoman added, "We're
- working with them to make sure everybody's happy."
-
- The U.S. Robotics spokeswoman downplayed the delay, saying, "We feel a few
- days one way or another is not going to make a difference," the spokeswoman
- said. Meanwhile, Motorola Inc. has said it has formed an alliance with
- Rockwell International Corp. to develop a 56-kilobit modem it expects to
- introduce early next month.
-
- U.S. Robotics Begins x2 Shipments
-
- U.S. Robotics Inc. reports that it has begun shipping its x2 56K bps
- modems. The Skokie, Illinois, company notes that x2 is a breakthrough in
- modem technology that provides Internet and online connections, over
- standard telephone lines, at speeds nearly twice as fast as 28.8 Kbps
- modems. "x2 is here now and consumers will be thrilled when they begin to
- use this high-speed technology to connect to their online service provider
- and the World Wide Web," says Casey Cowell, chairman and CEO of U.S.
- Robotics. "We're delivering the technology that will enable online users
- to download all the Web's complicated graphics faster than ever before."
-
- Lotus Ships SmartSuite 97
-
- Lotus Development Corp. has begun shipping SmartSuite 97 Edition for Windws
- 95 and Windows NT 4.0, the latest version of its personal productivity
- software suite. SmartSuite 97 features new collaborative tools and
- enhanced Internet integration, including customized delivery of Net-based
- information such as news, weather and stock quotes from the Web, or
- company news from the corporate intranet. The package also provides 1-2-3
- 97 Edition, an updated version of the venerable spreadsheet program.
-
- Other features include new editions of the Word Pro word processor,
- Freelance Graphics presentation application, Approach database, Organizer
- personal information manager, ScreenCam multimedia tool and the SmartCenter
- command center. "In what is becoming a two-player, $5 billion office suite
- market, we're number two, so we try harder when it comes to delivering
- better value for business users," says Lotus President Jeff Papows.
- SmartSuite 97 is priced at $399. Current users will be able to upgrade for
- $149.
-
- ClarisWorks for Kids Readied
-
- Claris Corp. will target younger computer users with ClarisWorks for Kids,
- a productivity software package designed specifically for kids in grades
- K-5. The all-in-one product incorporates writing, painting, graphing,
- list-making and educational software. Users can also create graphs, slide
- shows and pictures or form a thematically-organized collection of clip art
- images, sounds, movies and templates that mirror what they're learning in
- school. The software is compatible with ClarisWorks 4.0.
-
- ClarisWorks for Kids is scheduled to become available this summer for Mac
- OS and later this year for Windows 95. It will sell for about $49. A free,
- time-limited beta test Mac OS version will be available for downloading
- from the new ClarisWorks for Kids Web site (www.claris.com/kids) this
- spring. "There is a great need for an integrated software solution for
- younger kids," says Richard Zwetchkenbaum, director of consumer computing
- and educational markets for market researcher IDC/LINK. "ClarisWorks for
- Kids provides the tools younger kids can relate to and enjoyusing, helping
- them learn and excel."
-
- New Aptiva Offers Remote Control
-
- IBM Corp. is offering a remote control designed for Web surfing on its
- upgraded Aptiva S line. The company notes that the device allows users to
- browse the Internet as well as launch programs at the touch of a button.
- The remote control also lets users navigate around the desktop, eliminating
- the need to sit directly in front of the computer and click on icons, pull
- down menus and open folders with a mouse.
-
- "IBM will continue to meet the growing demands of Aptiva customers for
- quick and easy access to the Web. Simple buttons on the remote control
- make it easier to perform a variety of functions, including specialized
- Aptiva telephony functions and Internet access," says Elaine Lack, director
- of marketing, operations and services for IBM's consumer desktop systems
- group. "With the remote control, consumers have a new and unique way to
- interact with their IBM Aptivas and the Internet."
-
- SyQuest Ships Hard Disk Drives
-
- SyQuest Technology Inc.'s new SyJet removable cartridge hard drive, with a
- storage capacity of 1.5 gigabytes, are now being shipped. Reporting from
- Fremont, California, the Reuter News Service quotes the company as saying
- it already has a company record $26 million backlog of orders for the new
- product. Also, Syquest now is shipping its EZFlyer 230 drives and
- cartridges, as well as the SyJet drives, to Chinese computer distributor
- Legend Group.
-
- CyberMalls Discontinued
-
- The firm incorporated last year to prepare, develop and sell virtual
- shopping malls on the Internet has been discontinued. The CyberMalls
- subsidiary of CyberAmerica Corp. has folded because it "had large
- unanticipated start up costs and its revenues did not meet projections,"
- says the Reuter News Service in a report from Salt Lake City. Reuters
- notes CyberMalls President Nathan Tippetts resigned on Feb 7, but the
- company said he would remain with CyberAmerica as an independent consultant
- while CyberAmerica focuses its operations primarily on its real estate and
- financial consulting divisions. The wire service says Cyberalls also was
- developing the product-specific Internet search engine called WebSafari.
-
- Feds Worry About Year 2000
-
- A congressional investigator has warned that some U.S. government computer
- systems failures are likely when the year 2000 begins. Speaking yesterday
- before a House of Representatives Government Reform Committee hearing, Joel
- Willemssen, the General Accounting Office's director of information
- resources management, said, "I think there is a high probability that
- there will be some failures," adding, "Every government program that
- provides benefits in any way is subject to these problems, from Social
- Security and veterans' benefits to student loans and subsidized housing.
- This is not simply a government issue, it is something that will touch us
- all."
-
- Robert Green of the Reuter News Service notes the problem would occur when
- the date changes from Dec. 31, 1999 to Jan. 1, 2000. As reported, many
- computers that only use the last two digits of a year will read the date as
- 1900. Willemssen told Congress the problem could be corrected but would
- need major action by all departments and agencies because the government
- uses a wide variety of computer systems, many with computer languages that
- are old or obsolete. "It will take long, hard effort, but it can and must
- be done," he said.
-
- And the GAO's Keith Rhodes says some problems already are happening. He
- said a three-year defense contract awarded last month for completion in
- January, 2000 caused a computer to issue a 97-year delinquency notice to
- the contractor.
-
- Digital Camera Boom Steadfast
-
- Dataquest Inc. is forecasting that the worldwide digital still camera
- market will reach 5.9 million units by the year 2000. But the San Jose,
- California, market research firm warns that while the market will show
- positive growth, it's not likely to become the consumer bonanza that many
- manufacturers anticipate before the end of the century. "Digital cameras
- will be used primarily as a computer peripheral for at least the next three
- years," says Jonathan Cassel, a Dataquest analyst.
-
- According to Cassell, a major reason why these cameras won't replace
- traditional film cameras by the year 2000 is price. He says consumer
- purchases will increase when the camera's price drops into a more
- affordable price range. The average selling price (ASP) for manufacturers
- of digital still cameras was $315 in 1995. Dataquest forecasts the
- manufacturers' ASP of digital still cameras will drop to $177 by the year
- 2000. "Because of their digital nature and large semiconductor
- content,digital still cameras will settle into a price dynamic similar to
- that found in the PC market, with features steadily improving at fixed
- price points,"
- says Cassell.
-
- IBM Sells Used PCs on the Web
-
- IBM Credit Corp. has started selling used PCs over the Internet with the
- debut of the IBM Refurbished Computer Warehouse
- (http://mer.shop.ibm.com/shopping/ibmcredit.) The company says the site
- offers visitors the opportunity to purchase refurbished IBM PCs
- electronically with a credit card. It notes that card transactions are
- secured by encryption/decryption software. Customers will also be able to
- place orders via e-mail or an 800 number.
-
- According to IBM Credit, U.S. customers can order a wide variety of PCs
- from low-end '486 machines up through PCs with Pentium processors. The
- availability of systems and models changes routinely. Once a PC is
- ordered, it will be shipped to a U.S. site within 48 hours. Each system
- comes with a seven-day money back guarantee and a 90-day quality
- guarantee.
-
- Study Finds Workforce Shortage
-
- The Information Technology Association of America says its new "Help
- Wanted" survey finds a labor shortage of over 190,000 technically-skilled
- jobs in mid- and large-sized U.S. companies -- firms both inside and
- outside the information technology industry. The actual number of openings
- is thought to be even larger because the organization's random survey of
- 2,000 respondents doesn't include small companies, not-for-profit
- organizations or government agencies - all highly dependent on such
- workers.
-
- "The `Help Wanted' study is a wake up call to the nation," says ITAA
- President Harris Miller. "We can no longer take our leadership in high
- tech markets for granted. For many years, our industry has been concerned
- about the declining erollments in computer science departments and the
- difficulty employers have in finding appropriately skilled IT workers. Now,
- for the first time, we have the systematically generated data to
- substantiate these concerns and to demonstrate that `business as usual'
- solutions are not getting the job done."
-
- Among the study's other major findings:
-
- · One in ten information technology job openings goes unfilled.
- · Eighty-two percent of respondents expect to increase the number of IT
- workers.
- · Seventy-one percent of respondents see a greater demand for IT workers
- than for other types of skilled employees.
- · Sixty-eight percent of respondents see the labor shortage as a barrier
- to growth.
- · Increased recruiting and training remain partial solutions.
- · Universities are not doing an adequate job of graduating appropriately
- skilled students in sufficient numbers.
- · Labor shortages will slow economic growth as companies curtail plans
- to meet implementation realities.
-
- A report summary is available on the ITAA Web site at www.itaa.org/helpwanted.htm.
-
-
-
-
-
- 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
- (Costs 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
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- For Immediate Release
-
- Corel Develops Corel WordPerfect Suite 7
- Construction Edition
-
- OTTAWA, Canada -- February, 1997 -- Corel Corporation has released a new
- and innovative version of its Corel WordPerfect Suite -- the Construction
- Edition for Windows 95. This edition provides companies in the
- construction business with a complete and fully integrated package of
- office programs. This specially designed suite includes such applications
- as Corel WordPerfect 7, Corel Visual CADD 2.04, Corel Quattro Pro 7, Corel
- Presentations 7, Corel Time Line and InfoCentral 7. The Construction
- Edition delivers all the software that a builder, architect, engineer or
- other professional in the construction business requires.
-
- "Corel recognizes that professionals on the cutting edge of the
- construction industry require a CAD program as well as a Word processor,
- spreadsheet and scheduling program," said Dr. Michael Cowpland, president
- and chief executive officer of Corel Corporation. "Corel WordPerfect Suite
- 7 - Construction Edition offers some of the world's most innovative CAD and
- business software in a new integrated environment at an affordable price."
-
- Corel WordPerfect Suite 7 - Construction Edition includes the following
- applications:
-
- · Intuitive, task oriented Wizards which link all of the programs and
- features.
- · Corelr WordPerfectr 7: Innovative key features such as Guidelines,
- Make It FitT and
- · Spell-As-You-GoT as well as Internet capabilities, continue to make
- this the word processor of choice.
- · Corelr Visual CADDT 2.04: A professional design and drafting program
- that allows both new and experienced users to complete any project quickly
- and efficiently. Includes powerful drawing and editing tools, multiple
- line and dimension types, Symbol Manager and on-screen Wizards.
- · Corelr Quattror Pro 7: This award-winning spreadsheet contains new
- chart styles, a new mapping feature, QuickTemplates, Internet connectivity,
- and right mouse-button support for fast access to formatting options.
- · Corelr PresentationsT 7: This presentations graphics program includes
- the ability to move from a slide to an Internet site or to other slides
- with a single click, as well as the ability to convert slide shows to HTML
- format, and the option to combine multiple backgrounds, graphics, text,
- video and sound within one presentation.
- · Corelr Time Liner: Makes staying on top of work effortless, allows
- users to manage multiple projects simultaneously by creating a network of
- related projects.
- · InfoCentralTM 7: A powerful database information manager.
- · EnvoyT 7: The perfect workgroup electronic publishing tool for CD-ROM
- and the Internet.
- · Netscape NavigatorT 2.01 Internet Browser: Obtain access to the
- Internet through a
- · best-of-breed Internet browser.
- · CorelFLOWT 3: Powerful business graphics.
- · Starfish Software's SidekickT 95: The most popular personal
- information manager and scheduler
- · DAD: Desktop Application Director
- · 150 top quality fonts
- · 10,000+ clip art images
- · 400+ house plans in VCD format, 350+ house plans from HDA in bitmap
- format
- · 7,000 CAD symbols
- · Construction forms
- · Building specifications with macros that automate standard editing
- procedures
-
- Unique Integration
-
- The task oriented Wizards integrate the many programs and features in the
- package. Included are wizards which sort the house plans by user specified
- criteria and make it easy for users to extract information from a Visual
- CAD drawing into Corel WordPerfect or Corel Quattro Pro. Using Corel
- QuickTasks makes it possible to automatically complete entire projects in
- several applications.
-
- Putting the Internet to Work
-
- Make the most of full Internet connectivity by converting core application
- files to and from HTML in a single step. Other features include:
-
- · Link information directly to Corel WordPerfect Suite 7 documents
- through URL cell support.
- · Import and export to and from HTML in Corel WordPerfect 7 and Corel
- Quattro Pro 7.
- · EnvoyT 7 electronic publishing solution for sharing Internet documents
- with all fonts, graphics and formatting intact.
- · QuickConnectT instantly connects users to Bookmarks in Netscape
- NavigatorT 2.01 or favorite places in America Onliner, CompuServer or
- Microsoftr Network.
- · Envoy 7 document viewing directly from Internet browser.
- · Create web-ready Corel WordPerfect documents that can be directly
- exported to HTML.
- · Link InfoCentral records to Internet sites using URL fields.
-
- System Requirements and Pricing
-
- The minimum system requirements for Corel WordPerfect Suite 7 -
- Construction Edition are a PC 486/25 processor, Windows 95 or Windows NT
- 4.0, at least 8 MB of RAM (16 recommended), 200 MB of hard disk space (for
- a typical installation) a VGA monitor, and a double-speed CD-ROM drive.
- The Corel WordPerfect Suite - Construction Edition will ship for a
- suggested retail price of $449 U.S., with upgrades available for $229 U.S.
- (Dealers may sell for less.)
-
- Corel Corporation
-
- Incorporated in 1985, Corel Corporation is recognized internationally as an
- award-winning developer and marketer of productivity applications, graphics
- and multimedia software. Corel's product line includes CorelDRAWT, Corelr
- WordPerfectr Suite, Corelr Office Professional, CorelVIDEOT, CorelCADT and
- over 30 multimedia software titles. Corel's products run on most operating
- systems, including: Windows, Macintoshr, UNIX, MS-DOS and OS/2 and are
- consistently rated among the strongest in the industry. Corel is traded on
- the Toronto Stock Exchange (symbol: COS) and on NASDAQ-National Market
- System (symbol:COSFF). For more information visit Corel's home page on the
- Internet at http://www.corel.com. Corel and WordPerfect are registered
- trademarks and CorelDRAW, CorelVIDEO and CorelCAD are trademarks of Corel
- Corporation or Corel Corporation Limited. All products mentioned are
- trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.
-
-
-
- EDUPAGE STR Focus Keeping the users informed
-
-
- Edupage
- Contents
-
-
- Borland Cuts Staff, Changes Focus
- CompuServe Pares Down To Get Ready For Spinoff
- High-Speed Wireless Communications
- Back To The Future With Paper Post-It Notes
- Password-Sharing Thwarts Web Revenues
- Gov't Committee Chair Calls For Duty-Free Internet Trade Zone
- Discovery Invests In New Photo Technology
- Nerve-Wracking Demo News From U.S. State Department
- Russians Buy IBM Supercomputer Through Middleman
- AOL Sued Over Accounting Practices
- Modem Wars Escalate
- Rupert's Reach For The Sky
- Jobs On Top Of Things At Apple
- Academics Challenge Indecency Law
- Auctioning Off Extra Ad Space On Web
- IBM & NTT Collaborate On Network Project
- C-Cube's Decoder Chip Could Mean Cheaper DVD Players
- Virtual Intranet
- 3Com Acquires U.S. Robotics
- AOL And Tel-Save Strike Big Marketing Deal
- AT&T Unveils Wireless Link To Long-Distance Network
- Scholars Propose Strengthening Peer Review Electronically
- Silicon Graphics Sold Supercomputers To Chinese
- AT&T Ends Free WorldNet Service
- SEC Settles Internet Fraud Case
- Net Hate
- Taxing The Net
- Drucker Says "Universities Won't Survive
-
- BORLAND CUTS STAFF, CHANGES FOCUS
-
- Reducing its staff by 30% (to 700 people), Borland International, the
- company now best known for its Delphi, dBase and Turbo products, is
- refocusing its efforts on helping organizations build client-server
- applications and Intranet applications. Some industry analysts believe the
- company is reorganizing itself for sale to the highest bidder. (New York
- Times 21 Feb 97)
-
- COMPUSERVE PARES DOWN TO GET READY FOR SPINOFF
-
- Several days after the resignation of its chief executive, CompuServe has
- cut 14% of its workforce through resignations and other voluntary means.
- The online service provider is hoping that the cuts will allow it to
- become profitable enough to allow parent company H&R Block to spin off its
- remaining 80% stake in CompuServe to shareholders. (USA Today 21 Feb 97)
-
- HIGH-SPEED WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS
-
- Israel-based New Media Communications has licensed its high-speed wireless
- modems to CellularVision Technology & Telecommunications, which plans a
- commercial rollout of its wireless communications service in Manhattan in
- about six months. The modems, which are linked to little 6-inch-by-6-inch
- antennas, can download at speeds up to 54 megabits per second, although
- users won't be able to take advantage of those speeds right away. Most of
- today's PCs can handle only about 10 megabits per second, but as technology
- improves, the higher capacity will come in handy, say CellularVision execs.
- The modems use local multipoint distribution service technology to provide
- connectivity. (Business Week 24 Feb 97)
-
- BACK TO THE FUTURE WITH PAPER POST-IT NOTES
-
- 3M's ubiquitous little paper Post-it Notes changed the way offices
- communicate 20 years ago, and recently the company issued an electronic
- version that allows you to attach notes to electronic files. But 3M's Post-
- it Software Notes 1.5 for Windows now lets you print out your electronic
- Post-its, insert a date and time stamp, and even personalize them with
- clip art. "We don't have paperless offices," says a 3M software
- specialist. "Customers want tools to bridge the two environments."
- (Information Week 10 Feb 97)
-
- PASSWORD-SHARING THWARTS WEB REVENUES
-
- Web entrepreneurs who charge subscription fees for accessing their Web
- sites are finding their customers are passing along their passwords to
- friends, relatives, etc., thus diminishing Web operators' potential for
- making their venture pay off. "Everybody on the Internet who sell
- subscriptions has this problem to one degree or another," says a producer
- for SportsZone. A technical fix is possible, but Web site operators are
- reluctant to make things more difficult for legitimate subscribers to log
- on. Meanwhile, Internet Billing offers software that allows Web sites to
- limit how many times the same password may be used each day -- a solution
- that would probably keep some of the piracy down, but runs the risk of
- alienating paying customers who just want to log on a lot. (Wall Street
- Journal 21 Feb 97)
-
- GOV'T COMMITTEE CHAIR CALLS FOR
- DUTY-FREE INTERNET TRADE ZONE
-
- In a statement entitled "A Global Free Trade Zone on the Internet,"
- Representative Christopher Cox (R- Calif.) advocates a duty-free Internet
- trade zone, noting that "the idea, if implemented, would benefit the
- Internet, the United States, and the cause of free trade everywhere... by
- creating a comparative advantage for people and firms that produce
- competitive, high-quality services and goods that will be in demand without
- protective tariffs." Cox chairs a House Policy Committee now examining
- Internet taxation issues. (BNA Daily Report for Executives 19 Feb 97)
-
- DISCOVERY INVESTS IN NEW PHOTO TECHNOLOGY
-
- Discovery Communications has bought a multi-million dollar stake in
- Omniview Inc., which has developed a technology that enables Web site
- designers to create 360-degree photo images of environments that can be
- explored online in real time. Discovery used the technology when it
- explored the remains of the Titanic last August, and plans to incorporate
- it when it previews its Planet Explorer CD-ROM on Istanbul. "It will help
- us bring down the cost of field production," says the VP for Discovery
- Online. "And we can create these wonderfully engaging and immersive
- environments." (Broadcasting & Cable 17 Feb 97)
-
- NERVE-WRACKING DEMO NEWS FROM
- U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT
-
- Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was positioned at her terminal in the
- American Library in Moscow, ready to chat via the Internet with high
- school students in 48 countries, when the screen appeared to freeze up.
- While waiting for technicians to resolve the problem, she chatted live with
- on-site reporters about the degree of her personal technological
- readiness. "I do know how to type. I am not good at the mouse. People of
- a certain age do not have very good eye-hand coordination." When a new
- terminal was brought in, the chat session resumed, and the Secretary
- answered a few questions about such things as the weather in Moscow and
- what she had for dinner. (Washington Post 20 Feb 97)
-
- RUSSIANS BUY IBM SUPERCOMPUTER THROUGH MIDDLEMAN
-
- To conduct computer simulations of nuclear tests, Russia's Ministry of
- Atomic Energy Affairs has paid a European middleman $7 million for an IBM
- RS/6000 SP supercomputer capable of performing 10 billion calculations per
- second. Last year, the U.S. government rejected requests by IBM and
- Hewlett-Packard to sell supercomputers to the Russians, and a senior
- American official says: "We have made a policy decision not to assist the
- Russians in their stockpile stewardship program. Even though relations
- with the Russians are good, we are potentially a target for their nuclear
- forces if relations change." (New York Times 25 Feb 97)
-
- AOL SUED OVER ACCOUNTING PRACTICES
-
- Unhappy shareholders have filed a lawsuit against America Online, alleging
- that directors and outside accountants violated federal securities laws
- when the company took a $385 million charge for marketing expenses last
- October. The suit claims the write-off "instantly eliminated in its
- entirety the largest single asset on its balance sheet (capitalized
- subscriber acquisition costs), reduced its shareholders' equity by 80% and
- wiped out by five times over the total pre-tax net income it had ever
- reported... It is now clear that AOL had never earned any profits and, in
- fact, had been incurring huge operating losses in prior years rather than
- the profits it had claimed." The plaintiffs, who are seeking class-action
- status for their lawsuit, have also named Ernst & Young, AOL's
- accountants, and 18 AOL insiders in their suit, claiming that top execs
- "took advantage of the artificial inflation in AOL's stock... to pocket
- $95 million in illegal insider trading profits." An AOL spokeswoman says,
- "We're confident that we acted in full compliance with all applicable
- securities laws." (Wall Street Journal 25 Feb 97)
-
- MODEM WARS ESCALATE
-
- The race between Motorola and U.S. Robotics to get the first 56-Kbps modems
- to market is heating up, in the wake of U.S. Robotics' acknowledgment that
- it couldn't meet its shipping deadline last week. Because the products
- from the two companies will not be compatible until a world standard is set
- sometime in 1998, pressures are mounting on both sides to sell as many
- devices as possible in the hope of establishing a de facto standard via
- the market. (Tampa Tribune 24 Feb 97) U.S. Robotics announced it has now
- shipped the first of its 56-Kbps modems, after postponing shipment earlier
- so it could fix some bugs in the software. Motorola plans to introduce its
- products in a couple of months. (Wall Street Journal 25 Feb 97)
-
- RUPERT'S REACH FOR THE SKY
-
- Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. will spend $1 billion for 50% ownership of
- Denver-based Echostar Communications and will sell more than 500 channels
- of digital TV service in all 50 states beginning in 1998 under the brand
- name Sky, offering serious competition both to cable TV operators and to
- such direct broadcast satellite (DBS) operators as DirecTV. In contrast
- with other DBS systems, Sky will have enough satellite capacity to offer
- local television programs, and the company will use "spot beams" that
- target local signals down toward small geographic areas. (Washington Post
- 25 Feb 97)
-
- JOBS ON TOP OF THINGS AT APPLE
-
- Steve Jobs, who returned to Apple Computer in December after an 11-year
- hiatus, is rapidly becoming the focal point for the computer company's
- revival strategies, say analysts. "It may not be official, but Jobs is
- the guy," says a market researcher at Dataquest Inc. "He will -- either
- through influence or direct control -- have a say in what happens to this
- company." Meanwhile, a number of top Apple executives have left over the
- past couple of months, and several Next executives have assumed key posts -
- Avie Tevanian now runs Apple's software unit while Jon Rubinstein manages
- the hardware unit. "When you are running hardware and software -- that
- doesn't leave much left over," says an analyst with Wasserstein Perella
- Securities. (St. Petersburg Times 24 Feb 97)
-
- ACADEMICS CHALLENGE INDECENCY LAW
-
- A group of 25 individuals and organizations has filed a brief with the U.S.
- Supreme Court, urging it to overturn a federal law restricting "indecent"
- content in cyberspace. The Communications Decency Act (CDA) specifies
- punishment for anyone who knowingly provides "indecent" material to minors.
- One of the signers, the American Association of University Professors,
- wrote that it "is concerned that the CDA will chill online expression and
- discussion on a wide variety of academic subjects (e.g., medicine, biology,
- anatomy, social work, art, and journalism), impairing use of this promising
- new medium for legitimate pedagogical and research purposes." (Chronicle
- of Higher Education 28 Feb 97)
-
- AUCTIONING OFF EXTRA AD SPACE ON WEB
-
- FlyCast Communications Corp. is aiming to become the Web's advertising
- liquidator, selling unused ad space through an electronic auction system.
- The company estimates that most Web sites fill only about 50% of their
- allotted space, often using the remainder for house ads or giving it away
- free to steady customers. FlyCast doesn't see its business as dominated
- by blue light specials at rock-bottom prices, however. It's setting up
- its system so that agencies can snap up highly targeted ad space on short
- notice, for premium prices. (Wall Street Journal 24 Feb 97)
-
- IBM & NTT COLLABORATE ON NETWORK PROJECT
-
- IBM and Japan's Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT) will work
- together to develop computer network products and services in Japan, using
- NTT's communication and IBM's "middleware" software (probably Lotus
- Notes). The ultimate goal of the collaboration will be to develop
- technological standards for corporations that want to use data networks to
- offer commercial services such as electronic shopping. (AP 24 Feb 97)
-
- C-CUBE'S DECODER CHIP COULD MEAN CHEAPER DVD PLAYERS
-
- A new digital video disk (DVD) chip from C-Cube Microsystems could drop the
- price of DVD players below $500 -- the price point at which the new
- devices are more likely to experience significant market success. C-Cube
- says its new chip can do the work of six chips installed in existing DVD
- players, and analysts say machines containing C-Cube's chips will appear
- later this summer in the U.S. Hollywood is expected to begin releasing
- their first DVD titles in the next several weeks, with computer software
- makers expected to follow suit eventually. (Wall Street Journal 24 Feb
- 97)
-
- VIRTUAL INTRANET
-
- A virtual intranet created by Netscape for a fictitious company allows
- visitors to see the kinds of things an Intranet can do and then choose to
- accept a free download of the Netscape AppFoundry applications used to
- create the intranet. (Financial Times 24 Feb 97)
- <http://home.netscape.com/comprod/at_work/vip/index.html>
-
- 3COM ACQUIRES U.S. ROBOTICS
-
- 3Com Corporation is buying modem-maker U.S. Robotics for $6.6 billion,
- creating a combined company with $5 billion in annual revenues and more
- than 12,000 employees. 3Com's move will make it one of the two top
- competitors in the networking business, the other being Cisco Systems.
- (Washington Post 26 Feb 97)
-
- AOL AND TEL-SAVE STRIKE BIG MARKETING DEAL
-
- Tel-Save, a reseller of long-distance phone service, will spend $100
- million marketing its services through America Online. The deal will
- allow Tel-Save to save on marketing costs and administrative costs, and
- will make AOL less reliant on subscriber revenue as it switches its
- business model to offer flat-rate pricing -- a strategy that has enabled
- it to keep its huge numbers of subscribers, thereby attracting advertisers
- and online commercial enterprises. (New York Times 26 Feb 97)
-
- AT&T UNVEILS WIRELESS LINK TO LONG-DISTANCE NETWORK
-
- AT&T has developed what it calls the "communications medium for the 21st
- century" -- a wireless system that bypasses the local phone network to
- link residential and business phones directly to the company's long-
- distance network. The system, which operates via a small transceiver
- attached to the side of a house or building, provides at least two phone
- lines and data transmission at twice the speed available over Bell company
- lines. "When we call this a breakthrough, we're placing it in the same
- category as satellite and fiber-optic transmission and electronic
- switching," says AT&T President John Walter. The company claims its new
- system, nicknamed Project Angel during the development phase, will beat
- regular wired service in call quality and error-free data transmission.
- (Wall Street Journal 26 Feb 97)
-
- SCHOLARS PROPOSE STRENGTHENING
- PEER REVIEW ELECTRONICALLY
-
- An editor at The Journal of the American Medical Association and an adjunct
- professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco
- have recommended an electronic peer-review system that would allow
- researchers to have ready access to all comments related to a particular
- paper through a consolidated database. Editors could review readers'
- comments, request responses from authors, and update the database on a
- quarterly basis. Journals could make publishing a work conditional upon
- such participation, and people who submit comments would be required to
- disclose any conflicts of interest or affiliations that might affect their
- response. (Chronicle of Higher Education 28 Feb 97)
-
- SILICON GRAPHICS SOLD SUPERCOMPUTERS TO CHINESE
-
- On the heels of their admission that they sold supercomputers to a Russian
- nuclear weapons lab without the required export license, Silicon Graphics
- has now acknowledged that it sold two similar computers to China's Academy
- of Sciences, which also is involved in nuclear weapons and missiles
- research. The company says the China deals were conducted "in full
- compliance with U.S. export regulations," but records show it was sold in
- June 1996 without an export license. The Clinton administration began its
- policy of requiring licenses for the export of supercomputers to foreign
- entities involved in nuclear weapons research in January 1996. The
- computer sold to the Chinese is twice as powerful as the one recently sold
- to the Russians and will be used as a "backbone" for "hundreds of
- institutes" in the Chinese academy. (Wall Street Journal 27 Feb 97)
-
- AT&T ENDS FREE WORLDNET SERVICE
-
- AT&T is ending its introductory offer for long-distance customers of five
- free hours a month on its WorldNet Internet access service. After March
- 31, a new pricing plan kicks in, at a flat-rate of $19.95 a month, or
- $4.95 for the first five hours. (Investor's Business Daily 27 Feb 97)
-
- SEC SETTLES INTERNET FRAUD CASE
-
- The Securities and Exchange Commission has settled the case it brought
- against a Florida-based online investment newsletter. George Chelekis and
- two companies he controls -- KGC Inc. and Hot Stocks Review Inc. - have
- agreed to pay fines totaling $162,727. The SEC alleged that Chelekis
- knowingly made "false and misleading statements" about six companies:
- Luminart Inc., Nona Morelli's II Inc., Urban Resource Technologies Inc.,
- Advanced Viral Research Corp., Canmine Resources Corp., and Quest
- International resources Corp. Some 150 companies had paid Chelekis to
- promote them on the Internet, and he was charged with failing to disclose
- those payments. (Wall Street Journal 26 Feb 97)
-
- NET HATE
-
- The Anti-Defamation League's annual report says that "electronic hate is
- the dark side of technology, and anti-Semites have particularly taken to
- the medium." In 1996 anti-Semitic incidents in traditional forms declined
- by 7% from 1,843 to 1,722 incidents, but "anti-Semites and Holocaust
- deniers" shifted to the Net. The report says that, because the Internet
- is unregulated, "bigots can spew their hatred without ever running the
- risk of being identified." (USA Today 26 Feb 97)
-
- TAXING THE NET
-
- Advising state and local governments not to consider the Internet as a
- potential source for new tax revenue, the technology director of the
- American Electronics Association says that the imposition of a multitude of
- state and local taxes would "degrade and demean the technology." At the
- federal level, the Clinton Administration, the U.S. Treasury, and House
- Republicans have all indicated rejection of the idea of taxing sales on
- the Internet, but at the state level, Connecticut, Massachusetts,
- Tennessee, Pennsylvania, Texas, Ohio and Wisconsin are taxing some
- Internet services. New York Governor George Pataki made his the first
- state to exempt Internet service providers from state taxes. (AP 26 Feb 97)
-
- DRUCKER SAYS "UNIVERSITIES WON'T SURVIVE"
-
- Renowned management consultant and author Peter Drucker says: "Thirty
- years from now the big university campuses will be relics. Universities
- won't survive. It's as large a change as when we first got the printed
- book. Do you realize that the cost of higher education has risen as fast
- as the cost of health care? ... Such totally uncontrollable expenditures,
- without any visible improvement in either the content or the quality of
- education, means that the system is rapidly becoming untenable. Higher
- education is in deep crisis... Already we are beginning to deliver more
- lectures and classes off campus via satellite or two-way video at a
- fraction of the cost. The college won't survive as a residential
- institution. " (Forbes 10 Mar 97)
-
- Edupage is written by John Gehl (gehl@educom.edu) & Suzanne Douglas
- (douglas@educom.edu).
- Voice: 404-371-1853, Fax: 404-371-8057.
- Technical support is provided by the Office of Information Technology,
- University of North Carolina.
-
- EDUPAGE is what you've just finished reading. To subscribe to Edupage:
- send a message to: listproc@educom.unc.edu and in the body of the message
- type: subscribe edupage Marvin Minsky (assuming that your name is Marvin
- Minsky; if it's not, substitute your own name). ... To cancel, send a
- message to: listproc@educom.unc.edu and in the body of the message type:
- unsubscribe edupage... Subscription problems: educom@educom.unc.edu.
-
- EDUCOM REVIEW is our bimonthly print magazine on learning, communications,
- and information technology. Subscriptions are $18 a year in the U.S.; send
- mail to offer@educom.edu. When you do, we'll ring a little bell, because
- we'll be so happy! Choice of bell is yours: a small dome with a button,
- like the one on the counter at the dry cleaners with the sign "Ring bell
- for service"; or a small hand bell; or a cathedral bell; or a door bell;
- or a chime; or a glockenspiel. Your choice. But ring it!
-
- EDUCOM UPDATE is our twice-a-month electronic summary of organizational
- news and events. To subscribe to the Update: send a message to:
- listproc@educom.unc.edu and in the body of the message type: subscribe
- update John McCarthy (assuming that your name is John McCarthy; if it's
- not, substitute your own name).
-
- INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CONFERENCE
- The CAUSE organization's annual conference on information technology in
- higher education is scheduled for the end of this month in New Orleans.
- The conference will bring together administrators, academicians and other
- managers of information resources. For full conference information check
- out <http://cause-www.colorado.edu > or send e-mail to
- conf@cause.colorado.edu.
-
- ARCHIVES & TRANSLATIONS. For archive copies of Edupage or Update, ftp or
- gopher to educom.edu or see URL: < http://www.educom.edu/>. For the
- French edition of Edupage, send mail to edupage-fr@ijs.com with the subject
- "subscribe"; or see < http://www.ijs.com >. For the Hebrew edition,
- send mail to listserv@kinetica.co.il containing : SUBSCRIBE Leketnet-Word6
- <name> or see < http://www.kinetica.co.il/ newsletters/leketnet/ >. For
- the Hungarian edition, send mail to: send mail to
- subs.edupage@hungary.com. An Italian edition is available on Agora'
- Telematica; connection and/or free subscription via BT-Tymnet and Sprint
- (login: <agora) or via telnet <agora.stm.it; mail: <b.parrella@agora.stm.it
- for info. For the Portuguese edition, contact edunews@nc-rj.rnp.br with the
- message SUB EDUPAGE-P Seu Primeiro Nome Seu Sobrenome. For the Spanish
- edition, send mail edunews@nc-rj.rnp.br with the message SUB EDUPAGE-E Su
- Primer Nombre, Su Apellido.
-
- Educom -- Transforming Education Through Information Technology
-
-
-
-
- Nowhere Else on Earth
-
- .Can you get all this:
-
- Disk Duplication
- CD-ROM Replication
- CD-R Replication
- Six Color Printing
- Six Color + UV Label Printing
- Product Design Consulting
- Market Channel Consulting
- Die Cutting
- Direct Market Packaging
- Tuck Tab Box Folding and Gluing
- Assembly
- Warehousing
- Fulfillment
- Electronic Pre-Press / Film and Proofs
- Bulk Mail Services
-
- .All Under One Roof!
-
- Vertical Development Corporation
- Software Manufacturing and Commercial Printing
-
-
-
- One Vertical Drive
- Canonsburg, PA 15317
-
- Phone: 1-412-746-4247
- Toll Free: 1-800-222-DISK
- Fax: 1-412-746-3566
-
-
-
- Vertical's Internet Resources
- info@vdev.com http://www.vdev.com
-
- Now... with Offices in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Illinois and California!
-
-
-
-
- STReport's "Partners in Progress"
- Advertising Program
-
- The facts are in... STReport International Online Magazine reaches more
- users per week than any other weekly resource available today. Take full
- advantage of this spectacular reach. Explore the superb possibilities of
- advertising in STReport! Its very economical and smart business. In
- addition, STReport offers a strong window of opportunity to your company of
- reaching potential users on major online services and networks, the
- Internet, the WEB and more than 200,000 private BBS's worldwide. This is
- truly an exceptional opportunity to maximize your company's recognition
- factor globally.
-
- (STReport is pronounced: "ES TEE Report")
-
- STR Publishing's Economical "Partners in Progress" Plans!
- "Partners in Progress" Program.. Call Today!
-
- STR Publishing, Inc. (STR, STReport, CPU Report);
- · maintains a commitment to utilizing the power of the Internet and Web
- to keep computer users, worldwide, both private and commercial, informed of
- new trends in equipment, upgrade reports and future planning.
- · offers highly informative Hardware and Software Reviews, Press
- Releases, hands-on stories, user experiences and show reports.
- · presents the NEWS about new hardware, new software and how-to
- publications within HOURS of its being made public.
- · is dedicated to keeping the users informed of what your company has to
- offer at incredibly, almost the moment its offered!
-
- Take full advantage of STReport's Exciting "Partners in Progress" Programs!
- MAXIMIZE your Company's Presence Worldwide. TODAY!
-
- Eighth Page - $200 per month Quarter Page - $400.00 per month
- Half Page - $800.00 per month Full Page - $1200.00 per month
-
- Your company's color ad, as described/submitted by you or designed by us,
- will appear in STReport International Magazine. STReport is published and
- released weekly on Fridays Evenings. All sizes based on a full color,
- eight and a half by eleven inch page. Trade-outs and Special Arrangements
- are available.
-
- Email us at or, for quick action call us at:
- VOICE: 904-292-9222 10am/5pm est FAX: 904-268-2237 24hrs
- or, write us at:
- STR Publishing, Inc.
- P.O. Box 6672
- Jacksonville, Florida 32205
-
-
-
-
- MCAFEE DISCOVERS SHAREFUN VIRUS
-
-
- FIRST MACRO VIRUS TO AUTOMATICALLY EMAIL ITSELF TO UNSUSPECTING VICTIMS
-
- SANTA CLARA, CALIF. (February 24, 1997) -- McAfee (Nasdaq: MCAF), the
- world's leading vendor of anti-virus software, today announced that its
- Anti-Virus Emergency Response Team (AVERT) has discovered the first macro
- computer virus to specifically target users of Microsoft's popular
- Microsoft Mail (MS-Mail) email software. The virus, which is called
- ShareFun, searches through a user's email directory and automatically
- generates and transmits email messages with virus-infected attachments.
-
- "ShareFun is the first macro virus to commandeer an electronic mail program
- and use that program to accelerate its own spread," said Jimmy Kuo,
- director of McAfee's Anti-Virus Response Team. "The virus is especially
- pernicious in that it tricks its recipients into believing they were sent
- the file by a trusted friend."
-
- How ShareFun Works
-
- ShareFun is a macro virus which infects Word for Windows versions 6 and 7.
- A user becomes infected with ShareFun when they open an infected Word
- document. Once an infected document is opened, the virus infects the user's
- Microsoft Word environment and then runs a self-contained random number
- generator which results in a 25% probability of the virus taking a second
- action. During this second action, the virus searches the user's hard disk
- for the presence of MS- Mail, an electronic mail program which is bundled
- with the popular Microsoft Office suite. If the virus does not find MS-mail
- present, then it takes no action.
-
- If the virus finds MS-Mail present, it accesses the MS-Mail email
- directory, chooses three random email addresses out of the directory, and
- generates an email message to each of the recipients. As part of the email
- generation process, the virus attaches a ShareFun-infected Word document to
- the email and creates an email subject line that reads "You have GOT to
- read this!" The attached document is the same ShareFun-infected Word
- document that was launched by the user.
-
- Once the ShareFun virus finishes composing the email, it automatically
- transmits the virus to the three recipients, often without the knowledge of
- the originating user. Upon arrival of the email, recipients will find a
- blank message. What they will see is an attachment, which will have arrived
- from a trusted friend or associate, with the subject line message, 'You
- have GOT to read this!'". When the recipient double-clicks on the attached
- document, the virus will activate and infect the recipient's Microsoft Word
- environment.
-
- In addition to leveraging MS-Mail as a replication and transmission
- vehicle, ShareFun also infects all subsequent Word documents that are
- opened by the user from within Word. These infected documents can in turn
- infect other Microsoft Word documents as they are shared over a corporate
- network, transmitted via email over the Internet or corporate intranet, or
- shared via floppy disk.
-
- McAfee Customer Discovers ShareFun
-
- Researchers at McAfee's Anti-Virus Research Center (AVERT) discovered the
- virus the evening of Tuesday, February 18, after a McAfee customer, a major
- international retailer, submitted a sample which the customer believed to
- be a virus. Upon receipt of the sample, AVERT researchers began working
- with Microsoft to investigate the sample, confirm its identity as a virus,
- and characterize its behavior. McAfee posted a special detector for the
- ShareFun virus on its web site on Wednesday, February 19.
-
- "Microsoft is committed to working with McAfee and other anti-virus
- software vendors to make sure our customers have the best information and
- the best tools to prevent the spread of macros viruses," said Tom Williams,
- Microsoft's Product Manager for Microsoft Office. "This new virus does not
- harm data and customers should use the same precautions they've used in the
- past to protect themselves: never open an attachment if you're uncertain of
- its origin, use the built-in tools in Microsoft Word to screen for
- potential viruses, and use an NCSA-certified anti-virus application at all
- times."
-
- McAfee Develops World's First ShareFun Virus Scanner
-
- As a public service, McAfee has developed a special update of its VirusScan
- software which provides an antidote for the virus. The free working
- evaluation version of the product can be downloaded from McAfee's web site
- at http://beta.mcafee.com/public/dosscan/betascan.zip. McAfee has also
- shared the virus sample with other anti-virus researchers, so that they too
- can develop solutions to protect their customers.
-
- McAfee Anti-Virus Researchers Provide Rapid Response to Virus Outbreaks
-
- According to market researcher IDC, McAfee's VirusScan is the world's most
- popular anti-virus software, selling more units that all other titles
- combined. As the world's leading vendor of anti-virus software, McAfee is
- considered the computer industry's Center for Disease Control.
-
- AVERT researchers, which are located in the U.S., Japan, France and the
- Netherlands, work 24 hours a day to analyze approximately 1,000 suspect
- files submitted each month by McAfee customers. In order to provide rapid
- response to emerging virus threats, AVERT now posts hourly beta updates for
- detectors of new viruses on the Internet at beta.mcafee.com. McAfee is the
- industry's only anti-virus vendor to provide this level of protection.
-
- McAfee provides the industry's most comprehensive line of anti-virus
- software solutions designed to protect against computer viruses on all
- major desktop and network computing platforms. VirusScan is just one
- component in McAfee's multi-tiered virus defense family, in with McAfee has
- developed specialized anti-virus solutions for each potential point of
- network virus penetration. McAfee's anti-virus solutions include:
-
- VirusScanProtects DOS, Windows 3.x, Windows 95, Windows NT, Unix, Linux,
- OS/2 and Macintosh desktops.NetShield Protects Windows NT and NetWare
- servers.WebShield Protects firewall and Internet gateway environments by
- scanning all HTTP, FTP, and SMTP traffic.GroupScan and GroupShield Provides
- native anti-virus protection for Lotus Notes environments.WebScan Protects
- Windows 95 and Windows NT desktops from downloading virus- infected files
- over the Internet.
-
-
- VirusScan 3.0 for Windows95
-
- better than ever!
-
- VirusScan 3.0 now offers the highest level of virus detection rates in the
- industry as well as fast scanning performance with its new Hunter engine
- technology. The Hunter engine achieves its stellar performance through a 32-
- bit, multithreaded implementation designed to utilize the latest advances
- in memory and I/O management. All virus types including Word and Excel
- macros, boot-sector infections, file, multi-partite, stealth, polymorphic
- and encrypted viruses are detected. The Hunter engine even stops viruses
- written in Visual Basic 5.0 and Office97 file formats, offering users
- maximum defense against the newest threats to data.
-
-
- · Price: $65 USD electronic delivery
- · System Requirements: CPU capable of running Windows 95
- · Disk space: 3 MB
-
- The McAfee Mall offers downloadable software products from many software
- vendors as well as McAfee's own award winning software. For multiple
- license pricing of McAfee products, please call 408-988-3832.
-
- McAfee Associates
- 2710 Walsh Avenue
- Santa Clara, CA USA
- 95051-0963
- Phone: (408) 988-3832
- Fax: (408) 970-9727 If you have any questions about the McAfee Mall please
- send electronic mail to ordermaster@cc.mcafee.com
-
- Founded in 1989, McAfee is a leading worldwide vendor of Network Security
- and Management products for enterprise networks. The Company is also a
- leader in Internet and Web-based electronic software distribution. McAfee
- is headquartered in Santa Clara, California and can be reached by phone at
- (408) 988-3832 or by fax at (408) 970-9727. McAfee's Web address is
- http://www.mcafee.com. McAfee is a registered trademark of McAfee
- Associates, Inc. Other product names and various content (including but not
- limited to audio, video, and graphics) are trademarks of their respective
- owners. (c) McAfee. All rights reserved, 1997.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Kids Computing Corner
- Frank Sereno, Editor
- fsereno@streport.com
-
-
- The Kids' Computing Corner
- Computer news and software reviews
- from a parent's point of view
-
-
- Travel Talk Spanish
- Windows CD-ROM
- $54.00 Street price
- ages 12 and up
-
- The Learning Company
- 6493 Kaiser Drive
- Fremont, CA 94555
- 1-800-227-5609
- http://www.learningco.com
-
- Program Requirements
- OS: Windows 3.1
- CPU: 486DX
- HD Space: ? MB
- Memory: 8 MB
-
- Graphics: 640 x 480, 256 colors
- CD-ROM: Double-speed
- Audio: 16-bit sound card
- Optional: microphone
-
-
- review by Jason Sereno (jason.sereno@mules-ear.com)
-
-
- Travel Talk Spanish is a new release from The Learning Company. This
- program is for people who go on trips of work or play to Spanish-speaking
- countries and unfamiliar with the Spanish language. The program uses the
- QuickTime movie format and a 3D interface. The audio and the video in this
- program are remarkable and it presents information in many different and
- exciting ways. There is also an option that allows you to respond to
- characters using a microphone.
-
-
- Travel Talk Spanish uses a 3D interactive interface. First, you arrive on
- a plane into a Spanish-speaking resort. Bill Harvey greets you as you begin
- your language journey. He will be your guide through most of the program.
- You can enter three different rooms from the main lobby of the resort. This
- program then puts you in real situations that you could experience while on
- a trip in a Spanish-speaking country. It uses games and activities from
- the three different rooms that can be accessed from the lobby: the game
- room, travel lab, and language studio. Each room has its own
- characteristics and activities that help you to learn and comprehend the
- language.
-
- The language studio is the first room that you should enter when using this
- program. It has vocabulary words and phrases in interactive sections that
- deal with subjects anywhere from arrival to any unexpected events that may
- occur. This is the most important section in the program. It teaches you
- the fundamentals of Spanish and phrases that may come in handy for you.
-
-
- The virtual travel lab is the place where you can put your newly learned
- vocabulary to work. It has simulations that you respond to using a
- microphone. This is a very useful section. The interface lets you feel
- like you are right there with the person on the screen. There are really
- no limits as to what you can say. As long as you speak clearly and you are
- using the words that are in the Spanish dictionary, the computer can give
- you multiple answers. You can also ask the person on the screen to repeat
- what they have just said and they can also ask you to repeat yourself if
- they do not understand you. You can also watch slideshows on different
- aspects Spanish culture.
-
-
- The game room features a juke box that displays the words to some favorite
- Spanish lyric songs. It also has a video matching game. You must match
- the question that to the correct response. There is a conquest game
- available, too. You can be play against the computer and it is a fun way
- to brush up on your Spanish vocabulary skills.
-
- If you would prefer just to build your vocabulary, you can visit the lobby
- and use the dictionary and grammar books. The dictionary contains the
- basic words that you will need to know. The program presents these words
- in Spanish-to-English or English-to-Spanish format. You can browse for the
- word that you are looking for also. This can be helpful if you wish to
- take your laptop with you and find words quickly and easily. The grammar
- book shows some basic verb conjugation, and uses example sentences for you
- to study.
-
- The software contains upbeat music that really adds to the fun. Travel
- Talk Spanish has great sound along with the QuickTime movies. The movies
- are not the same all the time because different situations can occur based
- on what you say in the interactive section. I really enjoyed the use of a
- microphone in the travel lab room. It is an excellent addition to the
- program. All these factors add to the overall fun level of Travel Talk
- Spanish.
-
-
- This program teaches you Spanish by giving you phrases. If you are buying
- this program for your child, you should reconsider. Travel Talk Spanish is
- not designed for younger children nor is it a full language course. The
- program is most useful to business people or travelers who are planning
- trips to Spanish-speaking countries. People can quickly brush up on
- Spanish vocabulary and learn some useful phrases. If you want your child
- to learn the language efficiently and correctly, then they should learn the
- meaning of each word in a phrase. Knowing phrases in Spanish is little
- help in the long run, because when someone speaks a phrase that you do not
- understand then you can no longer speak with them. However, if you can
- identify each word by its definition, then you can talk to that person
- without interruption. If you are looking for a good program for teaching
- your child Spanish the more correct way, you should consider picking up
- Practice Makes Perfect Spanish. It is another fine product from The
- Learning Company.
-
- Travel Talk Spanish is a great program for people that are planning a trip
- to a Spanish speaking country. With this program you will learn vocabulary
- and phrases that will be useful to you during your travels. This is a
- great program to use. It never gets repetitive or boring because of the
- many different scenarios that you can experience. If you or someone you
- know is planning a trip to a Spanish speaking country, pick up a copy of
- Travel Talk Spanish today. It's simpatico por negocios gente usar para
- hablar en espanol.
-
-
-
- Nickelodeon 3D Movie Maker
- Windows 95 CD-ROM
- around $40
- ages 8 and up
-
- Microsoft
- http://www.microsoft.com
-
- Program Requirements
- OS: Windows 95 or NT 3.51
- CPU: 486/50mhz
- HD Space: 12 MB
- Memory: 8 MB
- Graphics: 640 x 480, 256 colors
- CD-ROM: Double-speed
- Audio: 16-bit sound card
- Optional: microphone
-
- review by Frank Sereno (fsereno@streport.com)
-
-
- Nickelodeon 3D Movie Maker from Microsoft is one of the coolest creativity
- programs available for children. It combines many beloved cartoon
- characters from "Nick" with eye-popping graphics and powerful animation
- tools. With this potent program, your children will have no limits as they
- create their own amazing cartoons.
-
- Stick Stickly is the amiable and helpful host for the program. Your
- children know and love him from his day job as the host for Nickelodeon's
- afternoon programming. He'll explain the steps needed to produce original
- animated shorts. Stick is available to assist your budding director
- whenever he needs help using the numerous tools and gadgets included with
- the program.
-
- The program includes some of your child's favorite characters including Ren
- and Stimpy, Rocko, Heffer and Real Monsters. Each has a wide array of
- facial expressions and action modes. The characters are in 3D so you can
- view them from any angle. Nickelodeon 3D Movie Maker also includes many
- recorded dialogs using the voices from the animated series. If these
- aren't enough to satisfy your child's script, he can create original
- recordings provided he has a microphone and sound card.
-
- To further spur your child's creativity, the program includes some pre-
- recorded movies. These short movies can provide many ideas that your child
- can include in his own projects. He can also use the Choosometer to gain
- inspiration. It works like a slot machine for ideas. Pull a handle to
- change scenes, characters or music. If an interesting scene comes up on
- the screen, you can click on an icon to immediately begin work with that
- setting.
-
- Nickelodeon 3D Movie Maker can be a bit daunting at first. The program has
- many tools and the learning curve can be steep. Just remember that any
- time your child needs assistance, Stick is only a mouse click away. In a
- matter of only a few hours, your child can be creating original animations
- starring some world-famous characters. Even adults will be fascinated by
- this powerful and engaging program. It's backed by Microsoft's 30-day
- moneyback guarantee and it has a very reasonable price. If you are looking
- for a fun and powerful program to encourage your child to be more creative,
- Nickelodeon 3D Movie Maker is your ticket to stardom.
-
-
-
-
-
- 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
- rmariano@streport.com
- STReport International Online Magazine
-
-
-
-
- Classics & Gaming Section
- Editor Dana P. Jacobson
- dpj@streport.com
-
-
- From the Atari Editor's Desk "Saying it like it is!"
-
-
- This week has flown by quickly; I feel like I've missed a few days
- somewhere along the way!
-
- I could excuse such a feeling if it occurred the past few weeks. After
- all, I was "consumed" with the challenge of working on some web pages and
- getting the bugs worked out. Now, it's some occasional "maintenance" and
- the addition of newly-found sites. I guess time just flies by these days!
-
- Speaking of adding new sites, I want to thank all of the people that have
- sent me sites to add up to now - the response has been terrific. Most of
- the response has been garnered from my posts on the Usenet, but a few also
- came about from the readership here. Keep them coming; I hope to have a
- comprehensive list of web sites available. Don't worry about sending me
- ones that I might have already (in case you haven't been to my pages), or
- the ones that you feel I should already likely have. It's usually the
- "obvious" ones that are missed along the way.
-
- I'd like to especially add those sites that belong to dealers and
- developers. I feel it's important to provide such information to keep the
- Atari userbase as informed as possible, at the source. Also, user groups
- and BBSs, even if they don't have a web site. An e-mail address or a BBS
- phone number will suffice. We need to keep supporting those who help to
- keep supporting us.
-
- I saw a posting on Delphi this week regarding CAB. Apparently, and this
- hasn't been verified yet, CAB will become a commercial product. Here's the
- post, courtesy of Greg Evans:
-
- "Someone in the Afterburner 040 email list mentioned that Applications
- Systems Heidelberg has bought CAB and will be releasing it as a commercial
- product. That's all he wrote, but I'll try to track down some more
- information."
-
- Interesting news, if true. With the coming of Termite from Oregon
- Research, and possible others, CAB has a good head start and a good
- following. It should do well if the reported enhancements and fixes make
- it to the next release. We'll keep you posted as we learn more. No
- articles for you this week, just my ramblings. We're waiting for Michael
- Burkley's next "Unabashed Atariophile" column as well as some other
- projects in the making. So, stay tuned!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
- Gaming Section
-
-
- "Iron Soldier II" To Ship!
- "Spider"!
- Reviews, and more...
-
-
-
- From the Editor's Controller - Playin' it like it is!
-
-
- Well, the word on the streets is that the Jaguar's 'Iron Soldier II' will
- be going on sale March 7. The game was scheduled for February, but I guess
- a week or two delay at this point can't be much of a problem. 'World Tour
- Racing' is slated for March; we'll see if it arrives on time. As mentioned
- in a past issue, we've finally received the recent releases from Telegames.
- Both of these games are now in reviewers' hands and we hope to have these
- reviews soon. I'm waiting to hear about IS2, also. There's not much
- happening on the gaming front, typical for this time of year. We'll keep
- our eyes and ears alert, however.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
- Industry News STR Game Console NewsFile - The Latest Gaming News!
-
-
-
- BMG Interactive and Boss Game Studios Unveil Spider
-
- SAN FRANCISCO (Feb. 25) BUSINESS WIRE -Feb. 25, 1997--BMG Interactive, one
- of the world's most sought-after publishers of entertainment software, and
- Boss Game Studios, the game development arm of Academy Award-winning Boss
- Film Studios, today unveiled Spider, a visually-compelling, 3-D action
- title for the Sony PlayStation.
-
- Available now from BMG Interactive, Spider demonstrates Boss Game Studios'
- mastery of creative game development that leverages the same advanced tools
- and technology used to create spectacular special effects in major motion
- pictures such as Species, True Lies, Multiplicity, and Cliffhanger, to name
- a few.
-
- Understanding that it takes much more than striking imagery to create a
- great game, Boss has combined visual depth and complexity with incredibly
- fun game play action that is both engaging and easy to grasp. Summing up
- Boss Game Studios approach to game development, Colin Gordon, the company's
- vice president of product development states, "cool graphics, features and
- a great story are important extras, but the bottom line is game play -- and
- our mission is to create titles that are challenging, highly re-playable,
- and really, really fun."
-
- In Spider, players are enslaved inside the body of a cybernetic tarantula
- and travel through six 3-D, real-world environments. Relentlessly searching
- for the kidnappers of their original human body, they will indulge in over
- 30 levels of rich and challenging action -- climbing walls and underneath
- objects to battle deadly cybernetic beasts, including phase bats, mecha
- wasps, giant rats, and other artificial life experiments.
-
- Loaded with an arsenal of cybernetic weaponry, Spider provides the player
- with nearly 15 power-ups such as lethal flame throwers, devastating
- boomerangs and homing missiles, which can be used during travel through
- sewer pipes, down wells, across city streets, in the museum, and in
- factories and labs. The Spider can also use its head, abdomen and legs as
- defense mechanisms against a multitude of deadly enemies.
-
- Technical and Creative Edge
-
- With Spider, Boss Game Studios' development acumen shines through with the
- use of advanced 3-D computer animation, proprietary motion capture
- technology and in the creation of extraordinary characters.
-
- Every detail contributes to the visually commanding, life-like look and
- feel of the game, from the fully-textured images and sharper-edge
- characters, to the richly-animated backgrounds and seamless integration of
- motion in a virtual environment. The game's use of a "floating camera"
- further engages players as it continuously tracks motion to ensure that the
- player stays at the center of the action.
-
- An Accomplished Team of Experts
-
- Although Boss Game Studios is a young start-up operation, the creative and
- development team behind Spider boasts over 100 game credits to date,
- including Disney's Lion King, Fever Pitch and Dune II. The game's
- compelling soundtrack was also developed by an industry veteran, Barry
- Leitch, Boss Game Studios' music director, who has composed music for over
- 80 titles across all platforms. The entire group, from the designers,
- animators to technical specialists, comprise a development dream team.
-
- Spider, a first release for both Boss and BMG Interactive, will illustrate
- their talents.
-
- Operating under the studio model, BMG Interactive continues to attract and
- foster the abilities of some of the industry's most innovative game
- developers worldwide, providing the ideal environment where they can
- produce great games.
-
- In addition to Boss Game Studios, BMG Interactive's current roster of
- independent game developers includes BLAM!, Delphine Softwae International,
- DMA Design Ltd., EAI, Interactive Studios, NMS Software, New Level
- Software, Pixel Multimedia, Z-AXIS, and Zombie.
-
- Boss Game Studios is the sister company of Academy Award-winning Boss Film
- Studios, recognized for its remarkable contributions to special effects in
- motion pictures. Leveraging its technical and creative acumen, the company
- will produce break-through video games for leading, next generation
- platforms. Boss Game Studios is based in Redmond, Washington.
-
- Video games come of age - UPI Computer Comment
-
- LOS ANGELES, Feb. 24 (UPI) -- The year is 2073 and the World Federation has
- gone to war against the might of the Drakken, a conglomeration of the
- world's biggest businesses. You have to wonder, at this point, if Sony
- Entertainment might just be one of those mega-conglomerates. Sony Computer
- Entertainment America is the place where the Drakken come from. They're the
- bad guys in the company's new CD for the PlayStation game system, Carnage
- Heart.
-
- This new battle simulation/strategy game is part of a new breed of video
- game, designed for present-day technology game systems, that require a lot
- of skill and savvy to win. This is not a kid game. The packaging says the
- skill level is intermediate to difficult and Sony says it is targeting this
- particular CD at males ages 17-28.
-
- Older games shared a very similar interface for almost all titles, but the
- improved technology in machines like the PlayStation and the Nintendo 64
- allows software engineers and programmers a lot more room to experiment.
- Carnage Heart requires users to pick options from a menu and battle robotic
- combatants who possess simulated skills rivaling those of a human.
-
- Sony expects this title to sell for between $40 and $60, which is a bit
- more than previous generation video games. The PlayStation is also the
- platform of choice for Spider, another of the new-generation action
- adventure games. As a player, you find yourself imprisoned in the body of
- a cybernetic tarantula, required to navigate six worlds in search of your
- old body. Along the way, you do battle with phase bats, mecha wasps and
- giant rats. Working in your favor are your access to such non-spiderly
- devices as flame throwers and homing missiles.
-
- A lot of effort in this particular title went into designing the artificial
- environments and a "floating camera" to provide perspective to users as
- they play along. Three dimensional environments are also featured in the
- new version of 3-D Kart Racing from Nintendo, which plays on the immensely
- popular Nintendo 64 game system.
-
- Unlike a lot of other games being introduced this spring by the big game
- makers, this one isn't a lot different from earlier games. And there's a
- good reason for this. 3-D Kart Racing already exists for the Super Nintendo
- game system, and a lot of people like it. They're also likely to appreciate
- the game on the new platform.
-
-
-
-
-
- ONLINE WEEKLY STReport OnLine The wires are a hummin'!
-
-
-
- PEOPLE... ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- On CompuServe
-
- Compiled by Joe Mirando
- jmirando@streport.com
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors (jeez, I've just got to find an new
- opening line... any suggestions?). Another week has come and gone, and
- it's time to check out what's happening on CompuServe. But before we do,
- let's talk a little bit about this program for copying your ST's TOS to a
- file that others can use to 'upgrade' their machine.
-
- In my view, it's piracy unless you are the owner of the machine that
- the "image" was taken from. TOS is a copyrighted product. The fact that
- the old copyright holder no longer exists is irrelevant, as is the fact
- that the new copyright holder doesn't seem interested in making the product
- available. When you bought an ST, Mega, Falcon, or TT, you also purchased
- the rights to use the TOS included in the product. It's not the chips that
- contain the code that is important, it is the code itself... and that's
- still owned by the copyright holder. The 'product' is the code itself.
- The chips are simply a convenient medium. You OWN the chips because you
- bought them with the computer, you can only LICENSE the code. I don't have
- a problem with someone who has an old ST that's been in the closet for a
- year who 'clones' TOS from it to run on his or her GEMulator. If you still
- own the Atari, in my view, you still have the right to use the TOS.
-
- MY problem is with the folks who use circular reasoning to support
- their collecting and trading TOS versions with others. One intellectual
- giant put out a public call for someone to send him a copy of their TOS
- for him to use with his GEMulator because he no longer had an ST that he
- could take the TOS image from and, even if he did, his ST had an older
- version of TOS and he was looking for 2.06. When someone pointed out that
- the rights to TOS were still owned by someone, he got quite indignant and
- said that he surely wasn't going to pay for TOS since it was such trash.
- The thought that sprang to my mind was, "if it's such
- Trash. do without it".
-
- Now I have, in the past, supplied other writers here at STReport with
- one TOS version or another for testing programs and comparing versions. To
- be honest, this too is piracy, but the the image was used for testing
- software for review and not for profit or as a means of getting around
- something. The people I have supplied these images to do not have PCs,
- and therefore will not be using the TOS for an emulator. And since it is
- both easier and more compatible to run the version of TOS on the ROM chips
- of your own machine, I know the TOS images won't be used for long or for a
- purpose other than just testing.
-
- But as I said, this is still piracy. That makes me _almost_ the same
- as our rocket scientist friend with the attitude. The difference is that
- _I_ understand the concept of someone besides myself owning the rights to
- something. In a perfect world JTS would release TOS to the public so that
- we could all enjoy and benefit from it. But this is not a perfect world
- and the fact that you CAN do something does not mean that you have the
- right to do it. Okay, I'll step down off of my soap box now. <grin> Let's
- take a look at "The CIS Files"...
-
- From the Atari Computing Forums
-
- In response to a question about booting MagiC from GEMulator Rob Rasmussen
- posts:
- "I asked similar questions as your friend did recently about Gemulator, and
- got a reply from Derek M who wrote the program. He told me-
-
- "Boot up MagiC from floppy, create a C: drive icon on the GEM desktop, open
- in, and then copy MagiC's GEMSYS folder to that C: drive. Then reboot and
- it'll boot up from the virtual C: drive."
-
- I had problems trying to create a C drive with MagiC, and thats why I'm
- anxious to talk to any others who use Gemulator/MagiC... Does anyone know
- if I can have Speedo installed on my PC so I can print documents from
- AtariWorks under Gemulator? I don't know whether to try installing Speedo
- from the installation disk or copy the files from my Atari to the PC, and
- I'm kinda afraid of it crashing my PC.
-
- Also if anyone else is using Gemulator I would love to discuss how to do
- certain things - like how to have access to the hard drive instead of only
- floppy disks."
-
- Steve Wilson posts:
- " that it could well come in handy transporting stuff between my old ST and
- the PC. I tried searching the library here for a driver/installation
- program, but to no avail. Can anyone help??"
-
- Albert Dayes tells Steve:
- "ICD has a driver for the ZIP drive. I am not sure of what the cost for it
- is unfortunately. ICD or another forum member will probably post more
- info."
-
- Steve tells Albert:
- "Thanks for the info... How are things in the Atari camp, by the way? I
- originally bought my ST (in 88) for midi, and was using it for all sorts
- up until a year ago when I finally succumbed to PC fever :) I read that ST
- / Falcon technology had been sold to a German co called CLab, but then I
- lost touch. Are CLab actively investing? Is the Atari story on-going, or
- are we talking epilogue here?"
-
- Ben at TOC OZ tells Steve:
- "C-Lab Falcons are alive, and well. Check out the Frankfurt music show. New
- peripherals are coming out, and prices are gradually comming down."
-
- Albert adds:
- "C-lab Falcons are still being made and there are some other clones as
- well. I believe one of the previous issues of ST Report had more extensive
- specifics on one of the new Falcon clones."
-
- Dennis Larson tells Steve:
- "I also bought my Atari (in about '87?) for use with midi and have been
- happy for the most part. I presently use Notator LOGIC for most of my
- work. Due to compatibility problems with work and telecommunications I'm
- considering switching platforms <ugh!>. How has the pc platform worked out
- for you with MIDI applications? I'm particularly interested in notation
- software (FINALE, etc.) but have heard about midi timing problems, card
- compatibility, etc. What can you tell me about it?"
-
- Back to the original topic, James Spielman asks Steve:
- "Is your Zip parallel or SCSI? ICD does indeed make both an adapter and
- utility s/w (it supports the ZIP) that allows a SCSI connection through
- the DMA port on the ST. As for a parallel ZIP, I'm not sure if the ST's
- parallel port coudl be used this way. It _should_, but I don't know if any
- s/w is available that would support the parallel connection for disks."
-
- Gary Parkington asked last week about his keyboard, which tends to
- "sizzle" when he turns the computer on. Our pal Simon Churchill gave him
- some pointers about troubleshooting the problem.
-
- Gary now tells Simon:
- "I am quite capable of taking the thing apart and have done a few times. My
- problem is I am not an engineer but like messing - sometimes this can be a
- mistake! What is the 'power rail'? The noise could be coming from the
- board beneath the keyboard but if you imagine me sitting typing away at the
- moment I can hear the noise to my left and in the region of the letter 'D'
- This may not be where it is but I have already replaced one keyboard when
- the letters M,N,<,>,? & the SPACE bar stopped working. This may also be
- unrelated to the noise...
-
- I've taken the computer to pieces but not applied power as yet. There are a
- few capacitors in the general area of the noise, one is marked C216 or it
- could be the larger one to the right. As I explained I am not an engineer
- so need advice on purchasing a replacement. What do the markings mean on
- the capacitor and would a replacement look exactly the same or not if it
- had the same values? The power supply doesn't get any warmer than I would
- expect but this is my ST and I've only had it a few months."
-
- Sysop Bob Retelle jumps in and tells Gary:
- "Simon will probably get back to you about the capacitors, but just in case
- you want to take a look this weekend, there are two values you need to get
- from the old capacitor (if that indeed turns out to be the
- problem).
-
- One is the "capacitance" of the part, and the other is the voltage. Neither
- is absolutely critical that you match them exactly, a general rule is that
- you can replace a capacitor (in this type of application, where the
- capacitor is being used to filter the power supply) with one of slightly
- higher value with no problem. The only thing you would have to be careful
- of is to find one of similar physical size so the new part will fit between
- the motherboard and the keyboard. The capacitance will be (hopefully!)
- clearly marked as something like 100uf (where uf means microfarads, the
- unit of capacitance measurement). The voltage should be also clearly
- marked as something like 25vdc.
-
- Again, you could use (in this example) a 150uf, 50vdc replacement, as long
- as it fits in the same space. Radio Shack should probably have suitable
- capacitors, and since they're all "blister packaged", you can check out
- their physical size easily. This kind of capacitor uses a liquid as part
- of its "dilectric", or insulator, and with age and heat this liquid can
- begin to leak and may cause the kind of "sizzle" sound you've been
- hearing. Usually (although not always) there'll be some sign of leakage
- (or actual bubbling if the power is on) around the base of the capacitor.
-
- You can safely operate your ST with the covers off, to try to localize the
- sound, as long as you stay away from the area of the built-iin power
- supply. Some parts ot the power supply (notably the heat sinks) may be
- electrically "live" with high voltages that may be harmful.
-
- Oh.. the "power rails" that Simon mentioned are the +5 volt and ground
- power buses... Simon's from England, and probably thinks we talk kind of
- funny here in the US..."
-
- Kevin Sheridan takes the opportunity to ask Bob a question:
- "As long as you're on the subject of keyboards... My control key stopped
- working about 8 months ago. I've had the keyboard completely apart but
- couldn't see any obvious problems with it. Any ideas what I sould be
- looking for?"
-
- Bob tells Kevin:
- "The ST keyboards are usually pretty reliable, but a key that gets a lot of
- use, like the Control key, can some times be a problem... Did you try to
- clean the place under the actual key where the key makes contact?
- Unfortunately there's really not much that can be done for a single
- intermittant or non-working key, other than making sure there's no foreign
- substances under the key..."
-
- Well folks, that's about it for this episode. Tune in again next
- week, same time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they are
- saying when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL QUICKIES
-
-
-
- Spring is Coming..
-
-
-
-
- STReport International OnLine Magazine
-
- [S]ilicon [T]imes [R]eport
- HTTP://WWW.STREPORT.COM
- AVAILABLE through the Internet and OVER 250,000 BBS SYSTEMS WORLDWIDE
-
- All Items quoted, in whole or in part, are done so under the provisions of
- The Fair Use Law of The Copyright Laws of the U.S.A. Views, Opinions and
- Editorial Articles presented herein are not necessarily those of the
- editors/staff of STReport International OnLine Magazine. Permission to
- reprint articles is hereby granted, unless otherwise noted. Reprints
- must, without exception, include the name of the publication, date, issue
- number and the author's name. STR, CPU, STReport and/or portions therein
- may not be edited, used, duplicated or transmitted in any way without prior
- written permission. STR, CPU, STReport, at the time of publication, is
- believed reasonably accurate. STR, CPU, STReport, are trademarks of
- STReport and STR Publishing Inc. STR, CPU, STReport, its staff and
- contributors are not and cannot be held responsible in any way for the use
- or misuse of information contained herein or the results obtained
- therefrom.
-
- STReport "YOUR INDEPENDENT NEWS SOURCE" February 28, 1997
- Since 1987 Copyrightc1997 All Rights Reserved Issue No. 1309
-
-