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- Silicon Times Report
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- "The Original Independent Online Magazine"
- (Since 1987)
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- July 18, 1997 No.1329
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- Silicon Times Report International Magazine
- Post Office Box 6672
- Jacksonville, Florida 32205-6155
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- R.F. Mariano, Editor
- STR Publishing, Inc.
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- 07/18/97 STR 1329 Celebrating Our Tenth Anniversary 1987-97!
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- - CPU Industry Report - Cheapo CPU Fan - Avoid New V-chip
- - McAfee's WebScanX - Man SHOOTS CPU - Voice MS Word
- - Geek Search - The Jersey Devil - Travel Talk French
- - Sony in the UK - Top Games Awards - Classics & Gaming
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- Jobs NIXES Apple CEO Post!
- Netscape CRIES About MS Plan!
- Year 2000 Suits over $1 TRILLION?
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- The Publisher, Staff & Editors
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- 1987-1997
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- Florida Lotto - LottoMan v1.35
- Results: 07/12/97: two of six numbers with no matches
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-
- From the Editor's Desk...
-
-
- Its editorial time! I got one for you. Can you imagine a full size
- tower filled with most every thing one could imagine? I can. Try this for
- starters. 200Mhz MMX CPU, 64Mb EDO Fast Ram, 12gb EIDE HD (3 4gb drives),
- 4X6x CD-ROM, 6000SureStore .dat tape drive, AWE32 Sound Card w/12mb ram,
- Matrox Millenium 8mb video, Monster 3D w/4mb video, 3com 10/100mbit Combo
- Card, USR I-Modem, Adaptec 2940 Ultra wide SCSI 1gb scsi HD, hp scsi
- scanjet 3c, Lexmark Optra C color laser, HP 1600cm Color inkjet, MS natural
- keyboard, MS wheel mouse, MAG mx17f .26 monitor. there's more but by now,
- I'm sure you get the picture. All I have to ask is WHY.. WHY did I have
- to have this system come tumbling down like a rockslide spitting "Windows
- Protection Errors" all over the place? Is the reason upsetting? No, its
- downright disgusting. A six dollar. that's right a $6.00 FAN on the CPU
- brought this system to its knees!
-
- Come on INTEL!! You can design the latest WhizBang and sell it for
- hundreds of dollars the least you can do is design a reliable fan for your
- CPUs and do away with the aftermarket trash that's dropping the high power
- chips like flies! Or, is that the way you (INTEL) like it?? I don't want
- to think that's the case at all. After all I have more faith in fine
- upstanding companies like INTEL. But for goodness' sake a $6.00 fan
- clobbered a system most anyone would be proud to use let alone own. Our
- userbase deserves a better CPU fan than the JUNK that's available
- worldwide. The fan was alleged to have bearings.. but this sucker, in the
- machine less than three months was frozen solid and RED hot when it was
- replaced. Due to the downtime. We have a very "skinny" issue this week.
- We'll get caught up next week.
-
- Congratulations INTEL. at least the 200Mhz MMX CPU withstood the
- torture wreaked upon it by the junk fan. its still working fine with
- another CPU cooling fan that alleges it too has bearings. We shall see.
- If anyone knows of or has a GOOD source of QUALITY CPU fans.. PLEASE let us
- know about it and how we and others may obtain them.
-
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- Ralph F. Mariano, Publisher - Publisher, Editor
- Dana P. Jacobson, Editor, Current Affairs
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- R.F. Mariano Help Wanted Lloyd E. Pulley
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- Classics & Gaming Kid's Computing Corner
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- STReport Headline News
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- LATE BREAKING INDUSTRY-WIDE NEWS
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- Weekly Happenings in the Computer World
-
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
-
- Jobs Declines Apple CEO Post
-
- Steve Jobs reportedly isn't interested in becoming Apple Computer Inc.'s
- new CEO, replacing Gilbert Amelio who abruptly resigned Wednesday. Jobs,
- the computer maker's co-founder, returned to the company last December as
- an advisor. "At this point in time, Steve has indicated he does not want
- to be considered for the CEO job," stated Edgar S. Woolard Jr., Apple's
- board director and chairman of E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., told CNBC
- in a broadcast interview. "We have asked Steve Jobs to come back to help us
- identify the best CEO ... and improve the strategy and execution." Woolard
- also denied reports that Apple is looking for a CEO who will arrange a sale
- of the company. "We don't think a sale of the company is the appropriate
- thing," he stated.
-
- Apple Cuts Prices on Macs
-
- Prices on eight of its popular Macintosh computer models are being reduced
- by Apple Computer Inc. effective immediately. Reporting from Apple's
- Cupertino, California, headquarters, United Press International says the
- move will lower the retail price of computers in the Power Macintosh 6500
- and Macintosh Performa 6400 series by up to $300. Company officials told
- the wire service this is part of a strategy to provide the industry's most
- powerful and easy-to-use computers at competitive prices.
-
- The Power Macintosh 6500 line, introduced in April, offers systems ranging
- in speeds from 225 to 300 megahertz. All systems feature accelerated
- multimedia features, built-in Internet access capabilities and advanced
- video capture, edit and publishing options. The Macintosh Performa series
- combine power PC processor technology and affordability. The Performa
- desktop computers are designed for families at home, individuals in small
- businesses, and college-bound students.
-
- Apple Delays PowerBook Release
-
- Apple Computer Inc. reports that it has delayed the U.S. release of its new
- PowerBook 2400c model until August so the notebook system can ship with Mac
- OS 8 preinstalled. The PowerBook 2400c was originally scheduled to be
- released in the U.S. at the end of July with Mac OS 7.6 preinstalled. The
- high-end PCI-based notebook, shipping since May in Japan, was designed by
- Apple with collaboration from IBM Japan. Apple says the system is exceeding
- all initial expectations in Japan.
-
- The PowerBook 2400c targets mobile professionals who require a lightweight,
- yet powerful portable computer. The notebook will be available in a single
- configuration: 180MHz 603e processor; 256K level 2 cache; 16MB RAM; 1.3GB
- IDE hard drive; 10.4-inch active-matrix color display; two PC Card slots;
- 16-bit stereo sound recording and playback; and built-in ports for 16-bit
- video out, ADB, SCSI, serial, and FDD connectors. The system measures 10.5
- by 8.4-by 1.9 inches and weighs 4.4 pounds. Mac OS 8 is a major system
- software upgrade. It includes a simplified Internet set up feature, a new
- 3D look and feel and a variety of other new features.
-
- Net Tax Freeze Gains Strength
-
- A move to freeze new state and local taxes on Internet commerce is said to
- be gaining momentum in Congress. The Dow Jones News Service reports that
- members of the House telecommunications subcommittee voiced strong
- bipartisan support for the measure Friday. The panel is mulling legislation
- that would place a moratorium on taxes levied on the Internet by state and
- local governments. The Senate is considering a similar bill.
-
- "Supporters of the legislation, which include major Internet service
- providers, say they fear local governments will spin a complex web of taxes
- that would stymie growth of the global computer network," notes the Dow
- Jones report. "The freeze on new taxes would give policymakers time to
- develop a comprehensive plan to address taxation of electronic commerce."
- "Some of the taxing authorities see the Internet as the next pot of revenue
- to fill shrinking budget; others see the Internet as a threat to their
- local business," Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-Louisiana), the subcommittee's
- chairman, told Dow Jones. "Instead, states and localities should see the
- Internet as a tax-free zone."
-
- Internet Fee Services to Boom
-
- The consumer fee-based Internet services market is entering one of the most
- interesting phases of its development, says market research firm Frost &
- Sullivan. The Mountain View, California, firm reports that the market has
- attracted a large number of competitors "who are seeking to take advantage
- of the gigantic opportunities for growth that exist."
-
- Frost & Sullivan projects that revenues for fee-based Internet services
- will climb rapidly through 2003. After two years of growth rates exceeding
- 200 percent in 1995 and 1996, total revenues generated in 1996 reached
- $1.98 billion. "Strong consumer interest in this interactive media is the
- major driver for the market," says Jeff Berger, Frost & Sullivan's
- telecommunications industry analyst. "The fee- based Internet services
- market is at a stage of expansion when a large number of new entrants and
- the introduction of new products and services are expected."
-
- Netscape Warns of Microsoft Plan
-
- Several U.S. senators are being told by Netscape Communications Corp. that
- rival Microsoft Corp. plans to use new Internet software to lock out
- competitors and monopolize distribution of information over the World Wide
- Web. Reporter David Bank writes in The Wall Street Journal this morning
- Netscape is complaining Microsoft is tightly linking the forthcoming
- version of its Internet Explorer Web browser with the Windows operating
- system that is used on nearly all personal computers.
-
- Says Bank, "That link, in turn, gives Microsoft the ability to promote its
- own media investments, such as the Microsoft Network and the MSNBC joint
- venture with General Electric Co.'s NBC unit, and increases Microsoft's
- negotiating power over other media companies that want to use the Web to
- deliver their 'content,' Netscape executives charge." Noting both firms
- are vying for lucrative deals with big media companies such as Walt Disney
- Co. and Time Warner Inc. to supply programming for the TV-style "channels"
- on the Web, Netscape President/CEO James Barksdale told the paper, "If they
- have a lock on the operating system and they successfully link that to
- content, it's going to be hard for people who are in the content business."
-
- But Microsoft spokesman Mark Murray characterized Netscape's charges as
- "just plain silly," adding, "Netscape has a long history of trying to use
- the government against Microsoft rather than competing on the basis of
- their products." Murray said his employer is in full compliance with
- antitrust regulations. The Journal says Netscape has contacted Sen.
- Barbara Boxer (D-California), Sen. Conrad Burns (R- Montona) and other
- senators with the complaint.
-
- Bank quotes Boxer spokesman David Sandretti as saying the senator wrote a
- letter to the Federal Trade Commission this month urging closer scrutiny of
- Microsoft's practices. Netscape chief Barksdale stresses his firm intends
- to fight Microsoft in the marketplace rather than through government
- channels or in the courts, but the Journal also quotes analysts as saying
- he is a savvy strategist who will use every opportunity to tie Microsoft's
- hands. Says analyst David Readerman of Montgomery Securities, "If he can
- have two forces working for him -- the courts and the marketplace --
- that's better than one."
-
- Clinton Eyes New Net Porn Guards
-
- Technology-based solutions to shield children apparently will be the White
- House's new approach to fighting pornography in cyberspace. Word is
- President Clinton tomorrow will huddle with lawmakers, software
- manufacturers, parents and other groups to discuss new approaches. This
- comes after the U.S. Supreme Court last month struck down as
- unconstitutional a law banning indecent material on the Internet. As
- reported, that measure -- the controversial Communications Decency Act --
- unsuccessfully tried to put on the millions of people who post information
- on the Internet the burden of keeping children away from indecent material.
-
- Writer Aaron Pressman with the Reuter News Service notes that in the
- aftermath of the court's ruling, Clinton -- who supported and signed the
- CDA -- said he saw promise in "filtering" software that parents could use
- to prevent their children from seeing pornographic material. "And," adds
- Pressman, "although Clinton July 1 issued a policy paper calling for
- minimal government regulation of the Internet, the president said new laws
- might be justified to protect children."
-
- Pressman quotes Internet specialists as saying Clinton's challenge will be
- to allow children access to interesting and educational sites while
- blocking inappropriate sites, all without violating the free speech rights
- of adults. Already, some in Congress are lining up with proposals:
-
- · Sen. Patty Murray (D- Wash.) says she will introduce legislation to
- create incentives for Internet sites to carry ratings. Filtering software
- relies on ratings, similar to those used for movies and, more recently,
- television, to determine which sites to block out. Murray said the Supreme
- Court ruling left "a large vacuum" that allowed children to access
- inappropriate material. "We face an unprecedented opportunity to provide
- parents the necessary tools to protect our children," Murray said.
-
- · Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.) is considering writing legislation but is
- skeptical that filtering and ratings will be sufficient. Asked if something
- like the ratings scheme for television could be applied to the Internet,
- one Coats staff person told Pressman, "The answer initially seems to be
- no," although adding "ratings are still a possibility."
-
- Look for computer industry officials also to be on hand for tomorrow's
- meeting. For instance, Microsoft Corp. will tout its preferred technology
- for rating sites on the World Wide Web, called "Platform for Internet
- Content Selection," or PICS, a system that adds to Web sites a tag
- containing ratings that can be read by Web browsing software.
-
- Pressman says ratings could be provided by numerous groups and parents
- could set their children's software to read or ignore any group's ratings.
- Of course, not everyone is on the PICS bandwagon. The American Library
- Association passed a resolution earlier this month opposing use of
- filtering software by libraries. Said the group, "Use in libraries of
- software filters which block constitutionally protected speech is
- inconsistent with the United States Constitution and federal law."
-
- Also, civil libertarians said a tagging system could be used by foreign
- governments to censor anything on the Internet. Staff counsel David Banisar
- for the Electronic Privacy Information Center told the wire service, "It
- creates an immense infrastructure for censorship." He added that while
- filtering generally is done by an individual's Web browser software,
- filtering could also be done at higher levels that prevent huge numbers of
- Internet users from accessing some sites.
-
- Net Seeks to Avoid New 'V-Chip'
-
- Hoping to avoid a v-chip for the Internet, Net computer firms are lining up
- to provide greater access to anti-smut software and to work to flag
- Internet sites that are clean enough for kids to visit. Look for this to
- be the repeated theme this week as the White House launches its new efforts
- to urge computer firms and parents' groups to take voluntary steps to make
- the Internet safe for youngsters. "We have tools out there which are 100
- percent available," Jerry Berman of the Center for Democracy and Technology
- civil rights group told Associated Press writer Jeannine Aversa, adding the
- software just needs to be more widely used and understood.
-
- About 30 to 40 people were expected to attend a private meeting today
- hosted by President Clinton and Vice President Al Gore, including
- representatives of Netscape Communications Corp., Microsoft Corp., Yahoo!
- Inc., the National Parent Teacher Association and the American Library
- Association, plus makers of screening technology and electronic civil
- liberties groups. Aversa quotes a White House statement as saying the
- president wants a solution "as powerful for the computer as the v-chip will
- be for the television that protects children in ways that are consistent
- with America's free-speech values." (Next year new TV sets are expected to
- have a computer chip that would allow parents to block unwanted programs.)
-
- Now that the Supreme Court has ruled as unconstitutional the controversial
- Communications Decency Act, the White House says that, instead of seeking
- new legislation to force the computer industry to shield children from
- Internet smut, it will push for a system of voluntary restraints. Aversa
- says no final industry-wide voluntary plan was expected to be announced
- this week, but some companies were expected to unveil plans. Also, look
- for the industry to hold a summit on the issue this fall.
-
- Clinton Urges Net Labeling
-
- Development of a labeling system to flag lewdness on the Internet is being
- urged by President Clinton to supplement what he praises as the computer
- industry's current technology to helps steer children away from online
- smut. Speaking at a technology summit meeting in Washington yesterday,
- Clinton said, "The Internet community must work to make these labels as
- common as food safety labels are today."
-
- Associated Press writer Sonya Ross says no final industrywide voluntary
- plan have been announced, but a top-level meeting involving industry
- leaders is expected this fall. Clinton said he is pleased by a decision by
- Netscape Communications, provider of a popular Internet browser, to begin
- using technology that allows parents to rate World Wide Web sites according
- to their content and block those they consider inappropriate. Microsoft's
- Explorer browser already uses the technology.
-
- Speaking before industry officials, parent groups and others, the president
- said, "We simply must not allow pornographers and pedophiles to exploit a
- wonderful medium to abuse our children." Following yesterday's meeting,
- Clinton and Vice President Al Gore indicated they are satisfied the
- industry is committed to making the Internet family-friendly without
- impinging on free-speech rights.
-
- Nonetheless, skeptical is Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.), who is an author of the
- Communications Decency Act, the measure that sought to outlaw smut on the
- Net. The CDA last month was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court, which
- found the law an unconstitutional violation of freedom of speech.
-
- "This is like trusting the fox to guard the chicken coop," Coats told AP,
- adding he will introduce another bill that takes the Supreme Court decision
- into account and provides "the certainty that parents need" to feel
- comfortable allowing their children to surf the Internet. Meanwhile, Ross
- says some civil libertarians also are dubious, saying the plans for a
- voluntary online rating system seem forced.
-
- Don Haines, legislative counsel on privacy and cyberspace for the American
- Civil Liberties Union, told the wire service, "Some of the companies are
- acting as if they have a gun to their heads. This is a major burden on free
- speech on the Net. We want to cooperate with any voluntary system, but the
- large question is whether this is voluntary." And parents groups, while
- pleased with the industry's decision to offer a voluntary system, aren't
- ruling out other steps if they are dissatisfied with what the industry
- offers.
-
- Lois Jean White, president of the National Parent Teachers Association,
- told Ross, "If for some reason we cannot find common ground, we will
- reluctantly turn to other areas for action, including Congress."
-
- McAfee Attacks Hostile Applets
-
- A virus protection product designed to protect computer users from the
- Internet's hostile "applets" -- small applications that can perform
- specific functions on a desktop computer -- is being unveiled by McAfee
- Software. Reporting from Santa Clara, California, the Reuter News Service
- notes applets also can be used by computer vandals to "wreak havoc on a
- computer unexpectedly by reformatting a hard disk or swiping confidential
- information, for example."
-
- McAfee's new WebScanX product can be used to block hostile applets in
- particular, or other objectionable or unnecessary content or sites. "The
- software works with applets which use both Microsoft Corp.'s ActiveX and
- Sun Microsystem Inc.'s Java technologies," says Reuters, adding the program
- will be available next month in retail stores for $39.95. The same
- capabilities will be available to corporate customers as part of McAfee's
- VirusScan Security Suite.
-
- Police Say Man Shot Computer
-
- It was a bad day to be a computer in Issaquah, Washington, where a man had
- to be coaxed out of his townhouse by police after he reportedly pulled a
- gun and shot his PC. Frustration? Guess so. "We don't know if it wouldn't
- boot up or what," Sgt. Keith Moon told The Associated Press. The victim,
- which resided in a home office on the second floor of the townhouse, took
- four bullet holes to the hard drive and one to the monitor. One bullet
- struck a filing cabinet, while another made it through a wall and into a
- neighboring unit. No humans were hurt. AP says police evacuated the
- complex, contacted the unidentified 43-year-old man by telephone and got
- him to come out. He was taken to a hospital for a mental evaluation.
-
- Digital Camera Boom Continues
-
- Peripheral Insight Inc., a Nashua, New Hampshire market research firm, is
- forecasting a 50 percent annual growth rate in the digital camera market
- through the year 2001. The company also predicts an early shakeout of the
- industry's growing list of digital camera manufacturers, which now exceeds
- 20. A similar study released least week by Lyra Research Inc. of
- Newtonville, Massachusetts, predicted that the digital camera market will
- advance at a compound annual growth rate of slightly more than 58 percent
- over the next seven years. Lyra also forecast that worldwide shipments of
- digital cameras will reach nearly 10 million units in 2001.
-
- Removable Hard Drives Unveiled
-
- Procom Technology Inc. and Kingston Technology Co. have joined forces to
- develop a removable hard drive line with capacities ranging from 1.2GB to
- 6.4GB. The new Data Dock series is designed for security-critical
- applications, since the drive can be removed when not in use, say the
- companies. The Data Dock drives are set to become available later this
- summer at
- prices yet to be announced. Procom, based in Irvine, California, designs,
- makes and markets data storage devices. Kingston, located in Fountain
- Valley, California, specializes in memory, storage and networking products.
-
- CompUSA to Build-to-Order
-
- Built-to-order computers will be offered by CompUSA Inc. starting in the
- fall, putting the Dallas business in direct competition with Dell Computer
- and Gateway 2000. CompUSA President Jim Halpin told United Press
- International, "Our goal is to sell computers any way that our customers
- want to buy them, and we believe CompUSA PC will help us reach that goal."
- He said catering to buyers who want to purchase custom-built personal
- computers offers the best opportunity for the company. CompUSA has not
- disclosed pricing schedules, UPI notes.
-
- UPI quotes the company as saying the customized machines will come with
- "added value" because CompUSA offers "convenient personal service and
- training through" at its 130 stores nationwide, along with shelves filled
- with peripherals to beef up the machine's potential. The company says the
- assembled machines will be shipped directly to buyers.
-
- Intel Beats Expectations
-
- Intel Corp. is reporting a 58 percent increase in second-quarter profits.
- The chip giant beat most analysts' expectations by earning $1.6 billion --
- 92 cents a share -- in the three months ended in June, up from $1.0 billion
- -- 59 cents a share -- from the same period a year ago. Revenues climbed 29
- percent to $6.0 billion from $4.6 billion in 1996's second quarter.
- "Strong microprocessor shipments in the first quarter led to some inventory
- correction in the second quarter as the industry prepared for a rapid
- transition to processors with MMX technology," Intel Chairman Andrew Grove
- said in a statement.
-
- "Demand for the Pentium processor with MMX technology and the Pentium II
- processor is strong, and we are ramping production at a record rate." But
- Grove warned that third quarter revenues would show little or no
- improvement from the second quarter. Industry observers expect Intel will
- cut prices sharply later this month in a move to clear out stockpiles of
- older processors.
-
- Survey Says We Still Want More
-
- Despite all-time low prices of desktop and notebook computers, users think
- they still are paying too much for too little, according to a new survey by
- Computerworld newspaper. Reporting from Framingham, Mass., United Press
- International says the survey of 1,651 senior-level information technology
- buyers found that corporate computer buyers are fed up with high prices
- from leading hardware vendors such as IBM, Compaq and Digital. Technology
- evaluations editor James Connolly of the Computerworld Buyers Guide told
- the wire service that users are receiving more satisfaction from smaller
- direct sale vendors like Dell, Micron and Gateway 2000.
-
- Connolly says that with most PCs and notebooks offering comparable
- reliability, the focus has shifted to cost, but that where price is not an
- issue, an overwhelming number of respondents still rate IBM and Compaq as
- their vendors of choice. Asked to score computer vendors in a variety of
- categories relating to equipment quality, vendor image and cost issues,
- respondents said that:
-
- · For PCs, Hewlett-Packard Co., Dell Computer Corp., and Gateway 2000
- scored the highest in overall satisfaction among all categories.
- · For notebook computer vendors, Hewlett-Packard, Dell and Micron
- received the highest overall satisfaction, while AST, NEC and Compaq users
- were least satisfied with their notebooks.
-
- Connolly told UPI that the survey showed direct-sale vendors such as Dell,
- Gateway and Micron also offered good customer support, making them more
- popular with users.
-
- Used PCs Appeal to Many
-
- Nearly 2.4 million used PCs were acquired by home and self-employed PC
- users in the U.S. last year, reports Computer Intelligence, a La Jolla,
- California, market research firm. This year's results show that while used
- PCs remain an important part of the U.S. PC landscape, the numbers are down
- slightly from last year. CI finds that 2.47 million used PCs were acquired
- by home and self-employed PC users in 1995, or 19 percent of the 13.2
- million total PCs acquired by these users in 1995. The latest study shows
- that the number of used PCs acquired remained nearly unchanged at 2.39
- million, although the portion of the market declined to 17 percent.
- CI notes that a primary attraction of the used PCs acquired in 1996 was low
- prices -- half were acquired for under $500, and 73 percent were acquired
- for under $1,000. In comparison, only ten percent of PCs acquired new in
- 1996 cost under $1,000.
-
- CI states that used PC buyers had median household annual income of
- $33,500, or nearly one-third lower than that of new PC buyers ($48,900).
- The used PC was the first PC in the household for 53 percent of those
- acquiring a used PC in 1996. In contrast, the new PC was the first PC for
- only 36 percent of buyers. "Until the latter part of 1996, a sub-$1,000 PC
- was inevitably a used PC," says Dave Tremblay, a CI senior industry
- analyst. "Inexpensive used PCs opened up PC ownership to the lower income
- households, and made it easier for families of more moderate means to
- afford PCs. Samples of CI's market data and research results, commentary
- from industry authorities and previews of upcoming technology events are
- available on the company's Web, http://www.ci.zd.com.
-
- Java Use Rising
-
- A new study finds that 50 percent of medium and large corporations are
- currently using Java applications. Zona Research Inc. notes that the
- technology is being widely adopted as an enterprise-wide solution for
- mission- critical application deployment. It adds that 32 percent of the
- respondents indicate that the decision to deploy Java is a strategic
- decision being made from the top of the IT management structure.
-
- The Redwood City, California, research firm also finds that information
- sharing, resource scheduling and project/workgroup management are the most
- common business processes for which Java is being used. "From this study,
- we can see that Java application deployment is positioned to grow
- dramatically over the next two years," says Clay Ryder, chief analyst at
- Zona Research. The full report, titled "Java in the Enterprise," is
- available free of charge from Zona Research's Web site at
- http://www.zonaresearch.com.
-
-
-
-
- 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
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- COLOR
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- STReport's LEXMARK Printout Offer
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- 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
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- 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-
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- 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.
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- 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
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- Shareware Treasure Chest STR Feature "The Latest & Greatest"
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- By Lloyd E. Pulley
- lepulley@streport.com
-
- (next week)
-
-
- EDUPAGE STR Focus Keeping the users informed
-
-
- Edupage
- Contents
-
-
- BT-MCI Deal Still On Track Despite
- Bad News From MCI
- Senate Rejects Stricter Computer
- Export Controls
- FCC Stretches Payment Plan For
- Wireless Licenses...
- ...And Modifies E-Rate Rules
- City Leaders Oppose Temporary Ban
- On Internet Taxes
- Security Breach Shuts Down Online
- Sports Stores
- Year 2000 Litigation Could Top $1
- Trillion
- Helsinki In 3-D ... Virtually All
- Of It
- In Search Of GeeksMicrosoft
- Explorer Discovers ... Windows!HP
- And AT&T Collaborate On Electronic
- ShoppingFCC Chair Tries To Prod
- Competition In Local Phone Markets
- Battle Over BIFF Vs. TIFF
- Cartridges Escalates
- Canadian Satellite Seeks License
- For Euronews
- Apple Delays PowerBook Shipments
- Siemens, NetSpeak Target Internet
- Telephony Market
- FTC Says Web Sites Aimed At Kids
- Must Get Parental Okays
- Snafu At Network Solutions Leaves
- Users Angry
- Good News From Apple. Good News
- From Apple.
- AT&T President Forced To Resign
- Phone Industry Wants FCC's Help
- Against FBI's Wiretap Plans
- Web Costs High, Revenue Low
- Voice-Controlled MS Word
- U.S., Japanese Chip Makers Work
- Toward Global Standards
- Be Beta Debuts
-
-
- BT-MCI DEAL STILL ON TRACK DESPITE BAD NEWS FROM MCI
-
- British Telecommunications plans to proceed with its $20 billion merger
- with MCI, in spite of this week's news that MCI could lose $800 million as
- a result of its expansion efforts into the U.S. local phone service market.
- It is not yet clear whether BT might seek to renegotiate the terms of the
- deal, which includes a plan to form the world's first global telecom
- company, Concert, by the end of the year. (Financial Times 12 Jul 97)
- BellSouth, the regional Bell operating system providing local-service in
- Southeastern U.S., is warning regulators not to be "fooled" by MCI's
- "ploy" claiming its loss is due to the fact the regional Bells are cutting
- it out of the local service market. A BellSouth executive says: "Any
- start-up business tends to lose money at the beginning. Long-distance
- companies' losing money as they get into local telephony is not
- exceptional... The remarkable part of this saga is MCI's brazen attempt to
- turn this fact of business life into something more than it is in order to
- gain political advantage." (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 12 Jul 97)
-
- SENATE REJECTS STRICTER COMPUTER EXPORT CONTROLS
-
- The U.S. Senate rejected an amendment brought by Sen. Thad Cochran (R-
- Miss.) that would have reimposed stricter licensing controls on sales of
- certain medium- to high-powered computers to China, Russia and other
- countries suspected of diverting them to military use. The House
- overwhelmingly approved a similar measure sponsored by Rep. Floyd Spence
- (R-S.C.). The Clinton Administration is opposed to the stricter controls,
- arguing that its policy of allowing companies to sell computers capable of
- processing 2,000 to 7,000 MTOPS (million theoretical operations per
- second) only for nonmilitary purposes was working well. Under this plan,
- it is up to the companies selling the computers to determine whether the
- country purchasing the computer plans to use it for military purposes.
- (TechWire 12 Jul 97)
-
- FCC STRETCHES PAYMENT PLAN FOR WIRELESS LICENSES...
-
- In an effort to ease a purported cash flow problem, the Federal
- Communications Commission says bidders on wireless personal communications
- services licenses who are having trouble raising money from investors may
- make their payments in annual rather than quarterly installments. That
- change puts the first payment off until early next year, which gives
- companies more time to raise the necessary funds. The bidders have
- suggested that the FCC postpone any payments for as long as eight years,
- or cut the payments in half. (Wall Street Journal 11 Jul 97)
-
- ... AND MODIFIES E-RATE RULES
-
- The Federal Communications Commission has amended its rules for E-rate
- discounts, saying that schools and libraries that signed contracts with
- their telecommunications service providers prior to Nov. 8, 1996 need not
- comply with the original order's competitive bidding requirements in order
- to be eligible for federal universal service discounts. The discounts
- will go into effect Jan. 1. In the same action, the FCC clarified that
- support
- mechanisms for serving rural, insular and high-cost areas will also be
- funded by the new Universal Service Fund. (Telecommunications Reports
- Daily 11 Jul 97)
-
- CITY LEADERS OPPOSE TEMPORARY BAN ON INTERNET TAXES
-
- National League of Cities president Mark Schwartz says that new legislation
- being considered in the U.S. Congress to make the Internet a tax-free zone
- for business is "offensive" to local governments. The legislation,
- offered by Sen. Ron Wyden, (D-Oregon) and Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Calif.),
- proposes a temporary ban on new state and local Internet taxes until all
- parties agree on a uniform way to proceed. Another opponent of the
- legislation is Bill Fulginti of the New Mexico Municipal League, who says
- it would destabilize local economies by encouraging businesses to use the
- Internet as a tax haven. But Internet service providers argue that they
- could be driven out of business if local governments start taxing
- electronic transactions routed through a local computer server en route to
- its final destination. (AP 13 Jul 97)
-
- SECURITY BREACH SHUTS DOWN ONLINE SPORTS STORES
-
- The online stores at the popular ESPN SportsZone and NBA.com Web sites were
- shut down after an anonymous person sent e-mail to hundreds of shoppers
- who'd made purchases at the stores, saying he'd acquired their credit card
- information from parent company Starwave's computer systems and including
- their credit card number to prove it. Starwave says it's beefed up its
- security now, and the ESPN SportZone store is already back up and running.
- NBA.com is expected to be back online next week. "We've changed the system
- and now it's a much more painful process for us to fill orders, but it was
- to make sure it was secure for our customers," says a Starwave
- spokeswoman. "You can be sure that we are doing everything possible to
- prevent it from happening again." (InfoWorld Electric 11 Jul 97)
-
- YEAR 2000 LITIGATION COULD TOP $1 TRILLION
-
- With the total cost of fixing the Year 2000 software problems still sinking
- in, here's something else to worry about: The New York law firm of
- LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae predicts companies that neglect to become
- Year 2000-compliant will be sued for poor management and malpractice,
- resulting in total litigation costs exceeding $1 trillion. (Information
- Week 30 Jun 97)
- HELSINKI IN 3-D ... VIRTUALLY ALL OF IT
- Helsinki, in a country that has the highest per-capita use of the Internet
- and mobile phones in the world, is developing an interactive guide to the
- city. Risto Linturi, the technology director for the project, says: "What
- we are making is a 3-D interface that will create 100,000 private
- television stations in the city, uniting people through a combination of
- the telephone, the computer, and Internet. You can check out what is
- happening on Main Street, or click a university and pick a lecture to
- attend in real time. Everyone who places a tiny camera, a cheap device
- that is already common, on their personal computer -- from your banker to
- your barber -- can be accessible by video and sound in real time."
- Linturi's colleague, Immo Teperi says: "What is new is the mass
- application. Instead of making just one square or one building accessible,
- we are making a whole city accessible in a multimedia network with its
- everyday life." (New York Times 11 Jul 97)
-
- IN SEARCH OF GEEKS
-
- Industry observers say the widening gap between the supply of computer
- science graduates and computer industry demand probably won't close for at
- least a decade, leaving computer companies looking overseas for qualified
- applicants to fill their jobs. The number of computer science graduates in
- the U.S. has dropped from 38,000 in 1984 to 26,000 this year. "This is a
- real limiting factor to growth," says a researcher at Stanford Computer
- Industry Project. And it's not only computer companies that are hurting --
- automobile makers, banks, brokerage houses and phone companies all are
- vying for the few "computer nerds" available. "Everybody's going crazy
- now trying to find these folks," says a Netscape human resources director.
- High on the list for overseas recruitment efforts are South Africa, the
- Philippines, India, Russia, Israel, Bulgaria and the Ukraine. (Business
- Week 21 Jul 97)
-
- MICROSOFT EXPLORER DISCOVERS ... WINDOWS!
-
- The new test version of Microsoft's Explorer software for browsing the
- World Wide Web will be more closely coupled with the company's Windows95
- operating system, with Explorer to be embedded directly into what
- Microsoft calls the "active desktop" of the computer screen. The
- information and entertainment that will be delivered through "channels"
- available on the desktop will come from 250 companies, including Warner
- Brothers, Disney Online, CBS, Sportsline, the Discovery Channel, ESPN
- Sports Zone, the New York Times, and the Wall Street Journal. A Microsoft
- executive boasts that this new development "will bring millions of new
- people to the Internet," whereas an executive with rival Netscape argues:
- "This is a scheme that Microsoft has cooked up to tie users in to Internet
- Explorer. The key anticompetitive issue is that the user doesn't get to
- choose. They trick the user into using Internet Explorer when the user
- doesn't want to." (New York Times 15
- July 97)
-
- HP AND AT&T COLLABORATE ON ELECTRONIC SHOPPING
-
- Hewlett-Packard and AT&T will collaborate on the development and marketing
- of technologies and services supporting electronic storefronts on the
- Internet. AT&T will provide networking and secure-purchasing capabilities
- and HP will provide computer equipment and software. (Financial Times 15
- Jul 97)
-
- FCC CHAIR TRIES TO PROD COMPETITION
- IN LOCAL PHONE MARKETS
- Federal Communications Commission Chairman Reed Hundt wants a task force to
- examine charges by long- distance phone service companies AT&T and MCI that
- the local phone service providers (the Bell operating companies and GTE)
- are preventing them from entering the local markets. AT&T chief executive
- Robert Allen has charged: "We've been blocked [by the local companies] at
- every step through the system, through favoring their own companies,
- through activities at various courts." BellSouth executive Bob Blau
- responds: "They are throwing up another smokescreen to keep us out of long-
- distance for a few more months." (USA Today 15 Jul 97)
-
- BATTLE OVER BIFF VS. TIFF CARTRIDGES ESCALATES
-
- In an ongoing dispute over printer cartridges, a federal judge has issued
- an injunction against Hewlett-Packard, labeling as "false advertising"
- HP's practice of advertising a new type of cartridge on boxes that contain
- an older model. Nu-Kote International, a company that provides equipment
- to refill H-P cartridges with ink so that they may be reused, says the new
- cartridges are deliberately designed so that they can't be refilled with Nu-
- Kote products. HP says its switch from TIFF (top ink-fill format) to BIFF
- (bottom ink-fill format) was made to increase the product's reliability,
- not to sabotage Nu-Kote's market. The companies each have sued the other,
- and both cases are pending. (Wall Street Journal 14 Jul 97)
-
- CANADIAN SATELLITE SEEKS LICENSE FOR EURONEWS
-
- Canadian Satellite Communications hopes to obtain a license to broadcast
- Euronews, the multilingual European news network, across Canada. Euronews
- continuously broadcasts world news events as seen from a European
- perspective and transmits simultaneously in five languages: French,
- English, German, Italian and Spanish. (Toronto Financial Post 15 July 97
- p12)
-
- APPLE DELAYS POWERBOOK SHIPMENTS
-
- Apple Computer's new subportable computer, the PowerBook 2400c developed in
- conjunction with IBM, won't ship in the U.S. until August -- the delay
- will enable Apple to include the latest Mac OS upgrade, scheduled to
- become available July 26. Mac OS 8 will include a new user interface and
- increased stability. The machine is already available in Japan, where it
- has been selling well. (Wall Street Journal 15 Jul 97)
-
- SIEMENS, NETSPEAK TARGET INTERNET TELEPHONY MARKET
-
- Siemens Stromberg-Carlson and NetSpeak will collaborate on developing
- Internet telephony products, including Internet protocol telephony
- gateways, servers and Web phones, as well as installation and integration
- services that will enable customers to provide Internet telephony and
- related services. The new products are targeted at telecommunications
- carriers, cable companies and Internet service providers. (InfoWorld
- Electric 14 Jul 97)
-
- FTC SAYS WEB SITES AIMED AT KIDS MUST GET PARENTAL OKAYS
-
- The Federal Trade Commission has announced that the managers of Web sites
- that collect personal information about children must obtain parental
- consent before releasing it to third parties. Although the FTC does not
- regulate advertising for children over the Net, it does have general
- jurisdiction over any deceptive market practices. (USA Today 17 Jul 97)
-
- SNAFU AT NETWORK SOLUTIONS LEAVES USERS ANGRY
-
- Corrupted data used by Network Solutions, the company that processes
- Internet domain name registrations, has resulted in some Internet
- addresses being routed incorrectly or not at all, say some Internet service
- and backbone providers whose servers are maintained by Network Solutions.
- The problems started Wednesday night, when data entry errors resulted in
- the root server assigning incorrect IP addresses in response to URL
- requests. The problem is affecting .com and .net addresses. Network
- Solutions will have to reinstall the entire InterNIC database to correct
- the problem, according to one backbone provider. "It's a nightmare week for
- the Internet," says the head of a Santa Cruz Internet service provider.
- (Computer Reseller News 17 Jul 97)
-
- GOOD NEWS FROM APPLE. GOOD NEWS FROM APPLE.
-
- Apple Computer posted a smaller-than-expected loss of only $56 million this
- quarter, giving well-wishers some reason to hope that it can still make a
- comeback. As a result, Apple's stock rose 5% Thursday morning. Chief
- Operating Officer Fred Anderson, who is running the company since the
- recent resignation of Chief Executive Gil Amelio, says: "This management
- team is now moving . . . at 500 megahertz." (San Jose Mercury News 17 Jul
- 97)
-
- AT&T PRESIDENT FORCED TO RESIGN
-
- The AT&T board of directors has forced the resignation of AT&T President
- and Chief Operating Officer John R. Walter, who was second-in-command
- after Chairman and Chief Executive Robert Allen. Walter, who had been
- recruited nine months ago from R.R. Donnelley & Sons, a printing company,
- was told that the board had lost faith in his performance, and board
- member Walter Y. Elisha told a reporter: "He lacked the intellectual
- leadership to lead AT&T. He's a bright guy, but the complexity of the
- business is far greater than he might have realized." (New York Times 17
- Jul 97)
-
- PHONE INDUSTRY WANTS FCC'S HELP
- AGAINST FBI'S WIRETAP PLANS
- Arguing that the FBI's requests for expanded wiretap capabilities go beyond
- that agency's authority, telephone industry officials are asking the
- Federal Communications Commission to help them resist the FBI's proposed
- digital phone design, which would allow law enforcement officials to
- continue the wiretapping of a conference call even after the person
- targeted by a court-authorized wiretap drops out of the call. The phone
- industry claims the request would cost billions of dollars to implement
- and would expose it to lawsuits by civil liberties groups fighting against
- privacy invasions. (New York Times 16 Jul 97)
-
- WEB COSTS HIGH, REVENUE LOW
-
- Companies are paying top dollar to workers to design and manage their Web
- sites, and the costs far exceed the revenues generated, according to a
- survey by Buck Consultants. A typical company spends $200,000 to $300,000
- a year on salaries, bonuses and benefits for Web workers, but the survey of
- 104 companies found only 25 of them use their sites to generate revenue.
- Most companies use their sites to post financial and product information.
- One respondent says the "big myth of the Internet" is that it generates
- sales. In fact, he says, it's really a way to create dialogue between the
- customers, salespeople and employees. Despite the lack of payoff, few
- companies plan to reduce their Web efforts. "It's peanuts compared to
- running a major advertising campaign," says the director of information
- systems for Sonesta Hotels & Resorts. (USA Today 16 Jul 97)
-
- VOICE-CONTROLLED MS WORD
-
- Lernout & Hauspie, a speech technology software vendor, will introduce a
- voice-controlled software editor for Microsoft Word in the fall. Users
- will be able to select a sentence, underline a group of words, and change
- the color and size of a font, all by naturally spoken voice. "It'll make
- people give up the mouse," says Lernout & Hauspie's chief technology
- officer. The Lernout & Hauspie product uses discrete dictation pathology
- software from Kurzweil Applied Intelligence, which it acquired earlier
- this year. Kurzweil's artificial intelligence technology allows the
- software to prompt users for answers as if they were entering information
- onto a form. The initial product will be aimed specifically at
- pathologists, with other versions for the legal profession and police
- reporting to follow. (InfoWorld Electric 17 Jul 97)
-
- U.S., JAPANESE CHIP MAKERS WORK
- TOWARD GLOBAL STANDARDS
- Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International, an industry group
- comprising both U.S. and Japanese chip manufacturers, says its members
- have agreed to jointly develop global standards for the next-generation 12-
- inch semiconductor wafers. Today's chips come from 8-inch wafers. Moving
- to the larger size will enable chipmakers to squeeze two and a half times
- more chips on each wafer. By agreeing to establish a common manufacturing
- standard, the companies could reduce the transition period by two to three
- years. (Wall Street Journal 17 Jul 97)
-
- BE BETA DEBUTS
-
- The first public beta version of BeOS, Be Inc.'s operating system geared
- toward digital content design and Internet capabilities, is available as
- part of a BeOS Preview Release Full Pack (including printed documentation
- and two free future upgrades) for $49 on its Web site. http://www.be.com/
- (InfoWorld Electric 16 Jul 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.
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- EDUPAGE is what you've just finished reading. To subscribe to Edupage:
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-
- Travel Talk French
- Conversation Basics
- Windows CD-ROM
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- Planning a trip to France soon? Then it might be a good idea to brush up
- on your French. Travel Talk French by The Learning Company makes it
- possible to learn basic conversational French (just enough to get by) or to
- brush up on your high school French (mine is really rusty as I found out)
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- Travel Talk French is a lot of program. There is so much program here that
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- video clips were slow and choppy. Since Travel Talk French is loaded with
- video, this presented a real problem. Reading the documentation packed
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- my Quick Time .ini file which I really appreciated. However, unless you
- are really into waiting, you are going to get very frustrated waiting for
- things to happen in this program on an older computer. The minimum system
- requirements call for a 486DX-66 and a double-speed CD-ROM drive. I
- wouldn't recommend purchasing this program for anything less than a Pentium
- system with a good-sized hard drive and at least a 4X CD-ROM drive. Travel
- Talk French is too nice a program to run on anything less.
-
- The Learning Company uses some of the best technology available for Travel
- Talk French. You are guided through the program by a full action "video
- hostess." She is there anytime you go into something new to explain its
- use or to explain something about travel in a French-speaking land. The
- program also uses voice recognition technology to test your ability to
- speak the words and phrases you are learning.
-
-
- Although The Learning Company uses highly advanced voice recognition
- technology, it just isn't possible, yet, for a computer to recognize
- everything a person says 100% of the time. I ran into several instances
- where Travel Talk French just couldn't recognize what I was saying. No
- matter how often I tried with some words, the program just couldn't make
- out what I was saying. This wasn't much of a problem though. There were
- times I was sure the program couldn't have understood me and it did. Just
- be prepared for problems at times with the voice recognition.
-
- Travel Talk French uses a building concept to present its various features.
- Enter the lobby of the "Language International" building to sign in and
- choose a destination. Your options are to enter the Language Studio,
- Travel Lab or Game Room.
-
- You will use the Language Studio to learn French. Using a dashboard type
- layout, the program leads you through eight different themes. These themes
- are Arrival, Getting Around, Lodging, Meeting People, Touring, Eating Out,
- Shopping and Unexpected Events. The program will teach you words and
- phrases you will need in various situations related to these themes using
- orientation, situation and communication.
-
-
- In orientation you will see a picture and hear the related word spoken to
- you in French. You then repeat this word into the microphone. The program
- analyzes your pronunciation and shows the result on a gauge. If the gauge
- needle stays in the red then your pronunciation is really off. Keep
- working at it and you will eventually work the needle into the green. This
- is where the program had problems reading my pronunciation of a few words.
-
- Select situation and you will watch a video clip. The words and phrases
- you learned in orientation will be put into action in an interchange
- between characters in the video. You can slow the speed of the speech and
- can also see a translation of the speech. Choosing to see the speech in
- French helps you to understand what is being said the first couple of times
- through.
-
-
- In communication, you are asked to carry more of the load. Your listening
- and speaking skills are tested here. To test your listening skills, the
- program presents you with four pictures. A word is then spoken. It's up
- to you to click on the picture that matches the spoken word. To test your
- speaking skills the program presents you with three types of problems. You
- must name a picture in French, correctly reorganize a jumbled sentence or
- correctly answer in French a spoken French question.
-
- Back in the lobby we still have two other rooms to enter. In the Game
- Room, we are presented with several ways to hone our new French skills.
- "Conquest" is a board game that I never really completely understood.
- Anyway, you get to take a turn against the computer by either properly
- speaking a French word to describe a picture or clicking the correct
- picture after the program speaks a word.
-
- "Video Match" was a little bit easier for me to understand. You are
- presented with twelve covered squares. Behind each is a video clip. Click
- on a square and that video plays out in French. The object is to find
- another video clip that is related to the first. Match them and the
- squares turn into your color. Both games can be played against an
- opponent.
-
- There is also a jukebox in the Game Room. It contains six song selections.
- You can choose to turn the voice off to sing the song yourself, turn the
- text on and even have the text show an English translation. The jukebox
- isn't really an important feature, but it is entertaining and gives you a
- little taste of the culture.
-
- Back in the lobby again, we have only the Travel Lab to explore. Here you
- can enjoy a narrated slide show about the land, people, attractions and
- travel tips. The real highlights are the travel simulations. They tended
- to overwhelm my computer, so I didn't get to delve very deeply into them.
- What I did see was impressive though. An example is simulation number one
- which features three scenarios. "Tourist without Hotel Reservations" takes
- you through every person-to-person interface you are likely to encounter on
- your way into the country and to a hotel. Your answer to each question
- will determine the direction the conversation heads in. It was really
- fascinating to watch the people on the screen react to what I was saying in
- French. Wow!!
-
- Travel Talk French also contains a dictionary and a grammar book. I can
- understand their presence, but they probably won't be all that useful
- because of the limited mission of this program.
-
- Overall, this is a well thought-out and executed program. The graphics and
- sounds are sharp and clean. The interface is easy to understand and use
- every step of the way. Travel Talk French even has some play value to it,
- though it has a very serious objective. The educational value is beyond
- question. At a street price around $30, bang for the buck is extremely
- high because of all that The Learning Company packed into this program and
- the way that it is used and presented.
-
- The main question is whether or not I can recommend Travel Talk French to
- you. That depends greatly upon what you plan on doing with it. By its
- nature, this program has a very limited scope. It does not really teach
- you French. All Travel Talk French will do is teach you the bare minimum
- of words and phrases you need to get along on a trip to France or another
- French-speaking country. You do not learn grammar, parts of the language,
- vocabulary, spelling, etc. If you only plan to make one trip, this program
- will quickly lose its value for you. If you have friends or business
- associates who can use the program also or you enjoy the narrow focus of
- this program, then it has additional value. On the other hand, this
- program is highly valuable when used as designed. It does an excellent job
- of teaching you that bare minimum and does it with a lot of class.
-
- If you really want to learn conversational French that you can use for a
- lifetime, then I wouldn't recommend this program to you. The Learning
- Company has other language software for that purpose. If it is as good as
- this program, then you should definitely get your hands on it. If you just
- want to learn basic conversational French, enough to get you to, around and
- home from France, then this is the program for you. You might want to pass
- it on to someone else in the family who needs these skills after you're
- done, unless you are planning several trips.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- Ralph F. Mariano, Editor
- rmariano@streport.com
- STReport International Online Magazine
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
- Classics & Gaming Section
- Editor Dana P. Jacobson
- dpj@streport.com
-
-
-
- From the Atari Editor's Desk "Saying it like it is!"
-
- House-hunting update - we got one! The offer that we made on a house last
- week was accepted (with some minor haggling) and we're currently going
- through the channels to finalize the sale. We had the house inspected
- yesterday and found a couple of problems which we hope will be resolved
- accordingly. Other than that, we're looking forward to our new home; this
- will be our first. We're not looking forward to all of the dreaded closing
- meetings, but I guess it's all part of the home-buying experience. <grin>
- We hope to be in the new house before Labor Day. Wish us luck!
-
- I just received CAB 2.0 in the mail yesterday and I'm looking forward to
- testing it out shortly. Can't wait to put it through its paces and check
- out the improvements.
-
- So let's get on with this week's issue. As mentioned above, life is still
- on a hectic schedule and likely will continue through the summer for me.
- Next year at this time I hope to be relaxing out in the pool with a couple
- of cold drinks in hand!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
- From Mille Babic:
-
- NEWSie is up to v0.79 and finally contains an Address Book. Only the memory
- sets a limit to its size, automatic or manual sort; and it's fully
- scrollable, with pop-up menu, help file, and Toolbar. For those of you
- using Magic, the pop-up menu support is not a part of the system. You need
- to run a program called MNU_MGR.PRG found in the EXTRAS folder at system
- start-up (START folder) to see the pop-up menus available in NEWSie via the
- right mouse button. These pop-up menus are available for most windows and
- offer yet another method to improve the user interface.
-
- You will find v0.79 at:
- http://www5.tripnet.se/~mille/english/newsie.html
- and of course at The Author's Homepage:
- http://www.primenet.com/~rojewski/
-
- For you who use N.AES, there's a new Win95-like Taskbar available from Jo
- Even Skarstein. I have a supporting webpage at:
- http://www5.tripnet.se/~mille/skarstein/taskbar.html You can hide, quit,
- top or kill running apps or accs. Supports Drag & Drop onto the buttons
- thanks to The AV_Server (e.g Thing Desktop), which uses VA_START to notify
- the app in question and if You have a file selector that supports Christian
- Grunenberg's font-protocol then You can just drop a font file onto the
- taskbar and it will use that font.
-
- Howard Chu have released a very fast MiNT/MiNTnet CAB.OVL module:
- http://www5.tripnet.se/~mille/english/web_apps.html
-
- Best Regards
-
- Mille Babic
- mille@tripnet.se
- http://www5.tripnet.se/~mille
-
- Gaming Section
-
-
- "Quest 64"! Best of 1997 E3!
- "Jersey Devil"!! Sony in the UK!
- And more...
-
-
- From the Editor's Controller - Playin' it like it is!
-
- It's Thursday evening at about 8:00 p.m. and it's still about 93 degrees
- outside with horrendous humidity. And here I am sitting in front of two
- computer systems throwing off even more heat! It's a good thing that
- there's not much for me to say this week; I'll let the articles below speak
- for themselves. Try to stay cool!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
- Industry News STR Game Console NewsFile - The Latest Gaming News!
-
-
- Sony Invests Millions In UK Games Facility
-
- CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND, 1997 JUL 17 (Newsbytes) -- By Sylvia Dennis. Sony
- Computer Entertainment has announced it is spending UKP6 million on a games
- production facility in Cambridge, England. The studio will work on
- developing games for the Sony Playstation, as well as promoting the
- Playstation games system generally. Sony has been battling long and hard
- against arch-rival Nintendo, for domination of the UK games console market,
- Newsbytes notes. Sega has slipped somewhat, as some analysts contend that
- its Megadrive system is now looking dated, while the Playstation's use of
- CD-ROMs as its main software has increasingly appealed to games buyers.
-
- Nintendo, in contrast, has its games console based around cartridge
- technology, which means the production costs of each cartridge is higher
- than Sony's. For this reason, while the Playstation is less discounted than
- the Nintendo system, games for the Sony unit are cheaper from most outlets.
- Despite the aggressive competition, the Sony Playstation remains a luxury
- item. At UKP200 per console, plus UKP30 per game, it seems that many kids
- are happier buying a Gameboy for a quarter of the price and playing games
- costing UKP15 and up.
-
- It has always been Sony's aim to make the Playstation a commonplace
- consumer item in the UK, Newsbytes notes, so the aim of establishing the
- Cambridge operation is very much to "consumerize" the Playstation, with the
- addition of add-on units for the console, making the system an all-in-one
- entertainment system, rather than just a games console. Sony claims it has
- sold a million Playstations into the UK market, pushing Nintendo's N64 unit
- into second place.
-
- Mysterious Character Roams City Streets Battling Crime
-
- Development of Jersey Devil, Riveting Action Game for Sony PlayStation
- Nearly Completed
-
- MONTREAL, July 16 /PRNewswire/ -- Malofilm Interactive's creative division,
- Megatoon Studios, is approaching the much anticipated beta release of
- Jersey Devil(TM), an exciting new 3D action/adventure game that combines
- fast reactions, quick controls, and puzzles for a fantastic entertainment
- experience in a totally off-the-wall environment. Designed for the Sony
- PlayStation, Jersey Devil provides gamers with a completely interactive,
- 360 degree environment and offers multilevel exploration of an entire 3D
- city with the most fluid, astounding, hilarious cartoon animation possible.
-
- Unlike other 3D games, Jersey Devil lives in non-linear dynamic 3D
- environments, with colorful multiple levels and real 3D objects that he can
- move, pick up, and use to defeat his unpredictable enemies. "E3 attendees
- were astonished at Jersey Devil's unique ability to completely interact
- with his environment and pick up all sorts of objects and use them to solve
- puzzles. They were equally impressed with the way the character responds
- to Sony's upcoming dual-analog controller which allows more precision and
- fluidity in his movements," explained Francois-Dominic Laramee, Head of
- Research and Development.
-
- The intrepid Jersey Devil wanders the streets of Jersey City each night
- chasing the sinister Doctor Knarf and his minion, Dennis the Pumpkinhead,
- who are invading the city with their mutant army of pot plants and
- vegetables. To foil their evil schemes, he must uncover and destroy all of
- Doctor Knarf's secret labs defended by strange monsters and supernatural
- creatures viciously attacking him from all sides.
-
- To further his quest and/or restore his health after strenuous battle,
- Jersey Devil must discover bonuses, energy and power-ups hidden in boxes or
- scattered in hard to reach places. Jersey Devil includes a number of
- breakthrough features, most notably free-form 3D environments, the support
- for Sony's dual-analog controller and user control over camera angles. It
- also offers "intelligent" opponents, and features randomized movements,
- minimum repetition, and diversified attack styles that serve to keep
- players alert and to prevent them from memorizing any of the game's 11
- different 3D levels.
-
- Jersey Devil is an athletic little creature who can run, lean, glide (with
- the help of wings), jump/somersault, bounce on monsters and balloons, pick
- up, throw and push objects, break boxes and punch or strike opponents with
- his tail. He can also ride animals as well. Jersey Devil will be
- available at major retailers nationwide for an approximate street price of
- $59.95. For more information, contact Isabelle Marazzani at Malofilm
- Interactive at 514-844-4555, or visit the company's web site at
- http://www.malo.com.
-
- 10 Game Publications Honor Interactive Games
-
- SAN FRANCISCO (July 11) BUSINESS WIRE -July 11, 1997--GamePen.Com
- (http://www.gamepen.com), the online community for gamers, has announced
- the winners of the first annual GamePen's Best of E3 Show Awards
- (http://www.e3.net/awards). These independent awards, sponsored by
- Concentric Network Corporation, are the first of their kind, nominated and
- voted on by ten top journalists in the gaming trade.
-
- The nominees and winners were selected from the 1500 titles shown at the
- Electronic Entertainment Expo in Atlanta, Georgia last month. Each category
- had four to six nominations, decided on in June by weighted vote of the
- editors. Final voting took place yesterday. Each editor received one vote
- per category. Ties were broken using the points scored in the nomination
- process.
-
- "The Concentric Network is very excited to be sponsoring these awards,"
- Chris Sherman, Director of Games and Entertainment at Concentric commented
- earlier. "Usually gaming awards are given by a single publication or
- institution. It's terrific to see ten publications working together to
- honor the best in the trade. We're delighted to be able to support that
- kind of community spirit."
-
- Judging publications included, GamePen.Com, Arcadium.Com, Online Game
- Review, Computer & Net Player, Game Demo Depot, Game Revolution, Gameslice,
- PC Games Magazine, PCM&E, Game Briefs.
-
- The Winners and Nominees
-
- Aaron John Loeb, Editor-in-Chief of GamePen, and the awards organizer,
- commented: "Unlike many 'Best Of' programs, we opted to make the
- centerpiece award one for innovation. While we have 'Best Game' awards,
- the real stand-out prize is 'Most Promising New Game,' awarded only to
- titles that are not part of an existing franchise. This way we, the press,
- can give a thumbs up to the designers and publishers who are really pushing
- the creative envelope."
-
- The categories, winners, and nominees are:
-
- Most Promising New Game - Winner: Myth: The Fallen Lords (Bungie)
-
- Nominees: Unreal (GT Interactive/Epic)
- Dungeon Keeper (Bullfrog)
- Half Life (Sierra/Valve)
-
- Most Promising New Peripheral - Winner: SideWinder Force Feedback Pro
- (Microsoft)
-
- Nominees The Glove (Reality Quest)
- Cyberman 2 (Logitech)
- PC-Dash (Saitek)
- ACT Labs Racing System (ACT Labs)
-
- Best Game -- PC - Winner: Dungeon Keeper (Bullfrog)
-
- Nominees: Quake 2 (Activision/id)
- Myth: The Fallen Lords (Bungie)
- Blade Runner (Westwood)
-
- Best Game -- PlayStation - Winner: Abe's Oddworld Oddysee (GT
- Interactive/Oddworld Inhabitants)
-
- Nominees: Final Fantasy VII (Sony/Squaresoft)
- Crash Bandicoot 2 (Sony)
- Jurassic Park: Lost World (Dreamworks)
-
- Best Game -- Saturn - Winner: Enemy Zero (Sega/WARP)
-
- Nominees: Duke Nukem 3D (Sega/3D Realms)
- Panzer Dragoon Saga (Sega)
- Sonic R (Sega)
-
- Best Game -- N64 - Winner: Star Fox 64 (Nintendo)
-
- Nominees: Zelda 64 (Nintendo)
- Goldeneye (Nintendo)
- Banjo Kazooie (Nintendo)
-
- Best Action Game - Winner: Half-Life (Sierra/Valve)
-
- Nominees: Quake 2 (Activision/id)
- Unreal (GT Interactive/Epic)
- Hexen 2 (Activision/Raven)
-
- Best Adventure Game - Winner: Riven (Red Orb)
-
- Nominees: Blade Runner (Westwood)
- Curse of Monkey Island (LucasArts)
- WarCraft Adventures: Lord of the Clans (Blizzard)
-
- Best Real-Time Strategy - Winner: Age of Empires (Microsoft/Ensemble)
-
- Nominees: Total Annihilation (GT Interactive/Cavedog)
- Dark Reign (Activision)
- Starcraft (Blizzard)
-
- Best Turn Based Strategy - Winner: X-Com: Apocalypse (Microprose)
-
- Nominees: Panzer General II (SSI)
- Guardians: Agents of Justice (Microprose)
- Jagged Alliance 2 (Sir-Tech)
- Warlords III (Red Orb)
-
- Best Combat Sim - Winner: Longbow 2 (Jane's)
-
- Nominees: F-15 (Jane's)
- if22 (Interactive Magic)
- Falcon 4.0 (Microprose)
- Saber Ace (Virgin Interactive)
- Heavy Gear (Activision)
-
- Best Non-Combat Sim - Winner: Flight Unlimited 2 (Eidos/Looking Glass)
-
- Nominees: Populous III (Bullfrog)
- Flight Simulator 98 (Microsoft)
- Sim City 3000 (Maxis)
-
- Best Fighting - Winner: Star Wars: Masters of Ters Ksi (LucasArts)
-
- Nominees: Bushido Blade (Sony/Squaresoft)
- Die By The Sword (Interplay)
- Last Bronx (Sega)
-
- Best Racing - Winner: Test Drive 4 (Accolade)
-
- Nominees: Andretti Racing '98 (EA Sports)
- F/Zero 64 (Nintendo)
- F1 Racing Simulation (UbiSoft)
- Formula 1 97 (Psygnosis)
-
- Best Sports - Winner: Baseball 3D (Microsoft)
-
- Nominees: World Wide Soccer 98 (Sega)
- Powerplay 98 (Virgin Interactive)
- Links LS 98 (Access)
-
- Best RPG - Winner: Might & Magic VI (New World Computing)
-
- Nominees: Lands of Lore 2 (Westwood)
- Final Fantasy VII (Sony/Squaresoft)
- Wizardry 8 (Sir-Tech)
-
- Best Online Only - Winner: Ultima Online (Origin)
-
- Nominees: Fighter Ace (Microsoft/VR-1)
- Asheron's Call (Microsoft/Turbine)
- FireTeam (Multitude)
-
- Best Puzzle/Trivia - Winner: You Don't Know Jack: TV (Berkeley)
-
- Nominees: Tetrisphere (Nintendo)
- Saturn Bomberman (Sega)
- Acrophobia (Berkeley)
-
- Best Booth - Winner: Sony
-
- Nominees: Activision
- Eidos
- Electronic Arts (EA Sports, Bullfrog, Origin, Jane's)
-
- Best Party - Winner: Eidos
-
- Nominees: SegaSoft's HEAT
- Activision's Apocalypse
-
- SouthPeak Interactive Special Commendations
-
- In the spirit of a creative festival, the jury also awarded special
- commendations. These were chosen by blind vote in a number of categories,
- each editor naming only one title. "In order to receive a commendation, a
- game had to be the first title that popped to mind for over 30% of the
- editors," Mr. Loeb explained. "With 1500 titles to choose from, and no
- nomination list, games that received commendations are the ones which made
- an enormous impression at the show."
-
- Commendations were awarded to the following titles:
-
- Best Take on Real-Time Strategy: Total Annihilation (GT Interactive/Cave
- Dog)
- Best Take on First-Person Action: Half-Life (Sierra/Valve)
- Most Egregiously Gory: Postal (Ripcord/Running With Scissors)
- Most Impressive Graphics: Two Commendations: Quake 2 (Activision/id) &
- Half-Life (Sierra/Valve)
- Most Impressive Sound: Blade Runner (Westwood Studios)
- Best Promo Piece: Blade Runner (Westwood Studios)
- Best Use of Models at Booth (and we don't mean the polygonal kind): Eidos
- Best Lead Character Commendations: Best Lead-Lara Croft-esque: Lara Croft
- in Tomb Raider 2 (Eidos)
- Best Lead-Real Actor Commendation to: Bruce Willis in Apocalypse
- (Activision)
-
- The Judges
-
- GamePen's Best of E3 Show Awards were voted on by editors from eight
- web-based magazines and two print magazines. The awards are not officially
- affiliated with the E3 Show, it's owner IDSA or its management MHA. The
- Judging editors are:
-
- Aaron John Loeb -- Editor-in-Chief, GamePen.Com
- (http://www.gamepen.com)
- Erika Hall -- Producer, Arcadium.Com (http://www.arcadium.com)
- Paul Bannister -- Editor-in-Chief, Online Game Review
- (http://www.ogr.com)
- Jeff James -- Senior Editor, Computer & Net Player
- (http://www.ogr.com)
- Kevin Lynch -- Editor-in-Chief, Game Demo Depot
- (http://www.gamedemo.com)
- Duke Ferris -- Editor-in-Chief, Game Revolution
- (http://www.game-revolution.com)
- Geoff Keighley -- Editor-in-Chief, Gameslice
- (http://www.gameslice.com)
- George Chronis -- News & Technology Editor, PC Games Magazine
- (http://www.pcgames.com)
- Rod White -- Assistant Editor, PCM&E (http://www.pcme.com)
- Chuck Miller -- Editor-in-Chief, Game Briefs
- (http://www.gamebriefs.com)
-
- THQ To Publish "Quest 64" for Nintendo 64
-
- CALABASAS, CALIF. (July 14) BUSINESS WIRE -July 14, 1997--THQ Inc.
- (NASDAQ/NMS:THQI) Monday announced that it has signed an agreement with
- Japanese game publisher Imagineer Co. Ltd. to publish and distribute its
- first adventure role playing game (RPG) for the Nintendo 64 platform,
- "Quest 64." The game is scheduled to be released in the United States the
- first quarter of 1998. "Quest 64" transports players into a vast, fully
- explorable 3-D world of magic and mystery through the role of the hero,
- who, with special powers acquired through combat and character interaction,
- guards humankind by manipulating the four spirits in nature -- air, water,
- earth and fire. Other features include hundreds of characters, including
- two companions, countless spells and isolated combat.
-
- "THQ is thrilled to be teaming with Imagineer in creating our first RPG
- adventure for the sought-after Nintendo 64 platform," said Mike Haller, THQ
- senior vice president. "We are extremely impressed with the quality of
- this extensive 3-D environment from Imagineer which promises to be one of
- the most talked about games of the year." "'Quest 64' is THQ and
- Imagineer's third team effort and we are delighted to be working with a
- company who has successfully brought numerous interactive video games to
- the U.S. market," said Yan Qiu, manager, international division, Imagineer.
- "What makes 'Quest 64' unique is the free-flowing epic gameplay and
- in-depth storyline which is sure to capture the videogame audience in this
- popular RPG category."
-
- PlayNet Launches First National Networked Prize
-
- SAN FRANCISCO (July 17) BUSINESS WIRE - July 17, 1997 PlayNet
- Technologies, Inc. today announced the launch of its first nationally
- networked game tournament and its first tournament sponsor, Yamaha
- WaterCraft. Each of PlayNet's summer monthly tournaments will feature the
- perfect summer grand prize, a fabulous Yamaha WaveRunner GP1200. Prizes for
- monthly regional, city, and location winners will also be awarded. The
- Yamaha WaterCraft sponsored National Tournaments will run through
- September.
-
- The tournaments will feature fun and challenging games of skill played on
- PlayNet Web terminals located in bars and hospitality locations all over
- the country. The PlayNet Terminal is a Pentium(TM) PC that delivers
- exciting games and Internet content via network resources supplied by IBM.
- The PlayNet network will collect the scores from all locations and compile
- national, regional, and local standings. "We promised to bring back
- accessible fun into game play, and with the compelling edge of prize
- competition and the chance for someone to be top dog in the nation. This is
- the start of us fulfilling our promise," says Nolan Bushnell, developer of
- Pong, founder of Atari and architect of the PlayNet system.
-
- As the first sponsor of the PlayNet tournaments, Yamaha is extremely
- excited to be on the cutting edge of this new networked advertising medium.
- Andrew Buckley, Director of Marketing for Yamaha Watercraft commented, "I
- was sold on this idea from the start and fortunate enough to be the first
- sponsor. We at Yamaha are elated about the endless possibilities this new
- tournament game presents, especially PlayNet's ability to connect to our
- website. Traditional advertising media like TV and print are presented to
- me daily, but with PlayNet I knew right away that the sky's the limit!"
-
- The monthly grand prize, a Yamaha WaveRunner GP1200, which features a 135
- horse power engine and an incredible top speed of 60 mph, is valued at
- over $8,000. Tom Dixon, President of J. Thomas Markham, PlayNet's
- advertising agency, has worked with numerous Fortune 500 companies and sees
- PlayNet as "by far the most exciting project I have ever been involved
- with." Beyond its slate of sponsored tournaments, PlayNet intends to
- expand the features and content of its entertainment network. "We have
- tested our products extensively in the field and are confident that we are
- bringing robust systems with the tightest software to the market. Our
- diverse entertainment capabilities will generate demand and revenues that
- will have patrons and the industry taking notice of us very soon," said
- Mouli Cohen founder and President of PlayNet. PlayNet designs and develops
- global, networked entertainment systems. The company's website can be found
- at www.playnet.com.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ONLINE WEEKLY STReport OnLine The wires are a hummin'!
-
-
-
- PEOPLE... ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- On CompuServe
-
- Compiled by Joe Mirando
- jmirando@streport.com
-
-
- (vacation)
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL QUICKIES
-
- "When a bachelor marries, his wife has 3 qualities - she is an economist in
- the
- kitchen, an aristocrat in the living room & a devil in bed. After a few
- years,
- sure enough the 3 qualities remain, but not in the same order - she is an
- aristocrat in the kitchen, a devil in the living room & an economist in
- bed."
-
- "The doctor is the only man who can tell a woman to take off her clothes &
- send
- the bill to her husband."
-
- "The nervous bride to be sat on the dentist's chair to have her tooth
- extracted.
- Seeing so many intruments, she got frightened. "Doc, I would rather have a
- baby
- than have my tooth pulled out." The dentist retorted, "Well, make up ur
- mind so
- that I can accomodate accordingly."
-
-
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- STReport "YOUR INDEPENDENT NEWS SOURCE" July 18, 1997
- Since 1987 Copyrightc1997 All Rights Reserved Issue No. 1329
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