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-
- *---== CPU NEWSWIRE ONLINE MAGAZINE ==---*
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""
- "The Original 16/32bit Online Magazine"
- _____________________________________
- from
- STR Publishing Inc.
- """"""""""""""""""
-
-
- February 02, 1990 No.4.05
- =======================================================================
-
- CPU NewsWire Online Magazine™
- featuring
- STReport ~ Online
- __________________________
- Post Office Box 6672
- Jacksonville, Florida
- 32205 ~ 6672
-
- R.F. Mariano
- Publisher - Editor
- _________________________________________
- Voice: 904-783-3319 10 AM - 4 PM EDT
- BBS: 904-786-4176 12-24-96 HST/14.4
- FAX: 904-783-3319 12 AM - 6 AM EDT
- _________________________________________
-
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- and
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- carrying CPU NewsWire for their users enjoyment Worldwide!
- __________________________________________________________________
-
- > 02/02/90: CPU Newswire™ #405 The Original 16/32 bit Online Magazine!
- ----------------------------
- - The Editor's Podium - CPU REPORT
- - Fast Technology - An overview - FCC & ATARI?
- - THE BEAT GOES ON! - PC-DITTO II (hmmm)
- - DynaCADD 1.7 part II - CPU CONFIDENTIAL
-
- ---====**** MEGA ST2 DISCONTINUED! -> J&R ****====---
- --==** STE ON SALE THROUGHOUT EUROPE! **==--
- --=* $99.00 LYNX ANNOUNCED IN THE UK *=--
-
- ==========================================================================
- CPU NEWSWIRE™
- "Only UP-TO-DATE News and Information"
- -* FEATURING *-
- Current Events, Up to Date News, Hot Tips, and Information
- Hardware - Software - Corporate - R & D - Imports
- ==========================================================================
- CPU/STR's support BBS, NODE # 350 invites systems using Forem ST BBS to
- participate in Forem BBS's F-Net mail network. Or, Please call # 350
- direct at 904-786-4176, and enjoy the excitement of exchanging ideas about
- the Atari ST computers through an excellent International ST Mail Network.
- ==========================================================================
- AVAILABLE ON: COMP-U-SERVE ~ DELPHI ~ GENIE ~ BIX
- ==========================================================================
-
- > The Editor's Podium™
-
-
- Here we are in the first few days of February 1990, alas, with the
- situation we have at hand it seems like Feb. 1989. In the last twelve
- months what have we actually seen from Atari besides TOS 1.4, the Lynx and
- the Portfolio in the USA? What we did receive was a profusion of
- verbosity pertaining to the future and how Atari was going to
- specifically CATER to the US market, ..the US Market would have the first
- release all new products for the year..(1989). Well 1989 has come and
- gone and still, the best that can be said is Atari is moving ahead with
- new products. That sadly, are not available in the USA. ...Yet.
-
- We saw a low key release of TOS 1.4 which, in our opinion was prudent.
- If one were to consider the fact that our neighbors to the north beat
- Sunnyvale to the draw on the release of TOS 1.4 information and
- HDX300-301 by a country mile. Sadly enough, the release version of TOS
- 1.4 was broken! We now have Tos14fix.prg and poolfix3.prg. The STE,
- which uses TOS 1.6, has been shipped to "ALL POINTS" around the world and
- released for sale. ...EXCEPT of course, the USA. Speaking of TOS 1.6 it
- too is broken and needs a tosfix.prg of its own. Apparently, it (TOS 1.6)
- boots in only one rez regardless of the monitor in use..
-
- The Lynx is in very limited distribution and the Portfolio (the only
- new computer related product in the US so far) is selling well but it is
- just about to go through the 'baptism of fire' called the "Upgrade Blues"
- this should get interesting in the coming months.
-
- In taking these events into consideration, it can be said that Atari,
- even with the personnel changes and 'new product' releases, is quite
- consistent. They are still manufacturing and shipping the new products
- (STE) in large quantities to Europe first. It also appears there are no
- plans to advertise nationally in the USA. They will however, do a nifty
- ad campaign west of the Rockies because "most of the dealers are out this
- way...."
-
- As we progress into 1990, we will, most certainly, begin to enjoy the
- benefits of an expanded userbase resulting from the sale of the STE units
- both in Canada and soon in the USA. There is no doubt the Stacy will
- become available 'real soon now' and once it does, again the size of the
- installed userbase in the USA will rise. That is just "what the doctor
- ordered".
-
-
- Thanks again for your strong support,
- Ralph......
-
-
-
-
- **********************************************************************
-
-
- :HOW TO GET YOUR OWN GENIE ACCOUNT:
- _________________________________
-
- To sign up for GEnie service: Call: (with modem) 800-638-8369.
-
- Upon connection type HHH (RETURN after that).
- Wait for the U#= prompt.
-
- Type: XTX99587,CPUREPT then, hit RETURN.
-
- **** SIGN UP FEE WAIVED ****
-
- The system will now prompt you for your information.
-
-
- THE GENIE ATARI ST ROUNDTABLE - AN OVERVIEW
- ___________________________________________
-
- The Roundtable is an area of GEnie specifically set aside for owners and
- users of Atari ST computers, although all are welcome to participate.
-
- There are three main sections to the Roundtable: the Bulletin Board, the
- Software Library and the Real Time Conference area.
-
- The Bulletin Board contains messages from Roundtable members on a variety
- of Topics, organized under several Categories. These messages are all
- Open and available for all to read (GEnie Mail should be used for private
- messages).
-
- If you have a question, comment, hot rumor or an answer to someone else's
- question, the Bulletin Board is the place to share it.
-
- The Software Library is where we keep the Public Domain software files
- that are available to all Roundtable members. You can 'download' any of
- these files to your own computer system by using a Terminal Program which
- uses the 'XMODEM' file-transfer method. You can also share your favorite
- Public Domain programs and files with other Roundtable members by
- 'uploading' them to the Software Library. Uploading on GEnie is FREE, so
- you are encouraged to participate and help your Roundtable grow.
-
- The Real Time Conference is an area where two or more Roundtable members
- may get together and 'talk' in 'real-time'. You can participate in
- organized conferences with special guests, drop in on our weekly Open
- COnference, or simply join in on an impromptu chat session. Unlike
- posting messages or Mail for other members to read at some later time,
- everyone in the Conference area can see what you type immediately, and can
- respond to you right away, in an 'electronic conversation'.
-
-
-
- **********************************************************************
-
-
-
-
-
-
- REPRINT FROM ISSUE #401
- -----------------------
-
-
- IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
- ======================
-
-
- Please, be advised that beginning with the current issue, #401, CPU
- NewsWire will be available for Download regularly between 6 - 7pm friday
- evenings. The reason for the recent fluctuations over the past few weeks
- are far too numerous to mention here. The fluctuations are however, at an
- end. We apologize for any inconvenience you may have experienced.
- Henceforth, you may rely on our being on time, with the latest info and
- news Fridays between 6-7pm.
-
- With the advent of ARCSHELL 2.1 and ARC 6.02, with their ease of use,
- increased speed, reliability and efficiency improvements, PLUS the
- portability of the arc format to many other computers than just the ST has
- given us good reason to no longer upload CPU/STR Newswire in dual formats
- of ARC/LZH. Therefore, beginning this week, 01-05-90, we will upload to
- the major services in the ARC format only. Please, do not misconstrue
- this decision to stay with the latest arc format as a blanket denunciation
- of all other file compression techniques as this is definitely not the
- case.
-
-
- Thanks for your support,
- Ralph F. Mariano
- STR Publications Inc.
-
- FIVE ISSUES LATER...
- --------------------
-
-
- Admittedly, we recently went to the LZH format, we did so as a result
- of a number of requests from our readers..... We found however, after
- considering the "profusion of confusion" that has crept into the LHARC
- arena, and the LACK OF COMPATIBILITY with other computer systems , we will
- revert to ARC as originally intended. Once the myriad of programs
- dedicated to LZH become "standardized" in the ST arena and among other
- computer systems, as ARC is, we will reconsider the use of the LZH format.
-
-
-
-
-
- _____________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > CPU REPORT™
- ==========
-
-
- Issue # 52
- ----------
-
-
-
- by Michael Arthur
-
- Remember When....
-
- In 1984, while engaging in lawsuits with up to 50 computer companies
- which tried to illegally introduce Apple II Clones, Apple Corp. won a
- copyright infringement suit against Franklin Computer for their Apple II
- clone, which set a legal precedent for the protection of software by
- copyright, and when Apple used this precedent in 1988 as part of their
- lawsuit against Microsoft, which alleged that Windows 2.0 had infringed on
- an interface licensing agreement that Apple made with Microsoft?
-
-
-
- CPU Systems Roundup™ XXII
- =========================
-
-
-
- Dream Computer Systems V: The Empires Strike Back
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Part I
-
- Change is the only constant in the computer industry. As the
- capabilities of microcomputers increased during the 1980's, they began to
- provide the functionality, versatility, and speed of the workstation
- industry. Unix, for example, was once the domain of workstations and
- non-IBM minicomputers, but is now competing to become the operating
- system of the future for the microcomputer industry. However, while
- microcomputers evolved characteristics of workstations (including cost),
- many workstation companies began making low-end workstations, in an
- attempt to combine the innovations microcomputers had fostered, such as
- the idea of graphical user interfaces, with the inherent versatility of
- workstation-class machines. RISC (Reduced Instruction Set Circuitry)
- chips are an offshoot of this development, as their increased speed and
- use of modern chip technologies gave workstations the power of small
- mainframes. However, now that conventional CISC (Complex Instruction Set
- Circuitry) microprocessors, such as the Intel 80486 and Motorola 68040
- chips, are as powerful as the best RISC chips, the choice to determine the
- best microcomputers only becomes more difficult....
-
- In order to explore this situation in depth, while providing a broad
- timespan in which to cover new developments, this "Dream Systems" series
- appears once every three months. The "Dream Computer Systems" series
- itself will also continue and expand its focus on workstation-class
- capabilities. Furthermore, since Local Area Networks are a logical use
- for these Dream Systems, Ethernet Networking is also being covered. This
- will only apply to microcomputer systems, however, since the Unix
- workstations have Ethernet ports as standard. To attempt to determine
- which Dream System really IS the best, I have made a list of the most
- powerful personal computers on the market, comparing their features to
- make an objective opinion.
-
- I have ignored variables like operating systems and software, and
- concentrated on the actual computers' features and speed, the greatest
- amount of mass storage you could attain, and the best graphics that system
- could provide. While operating systems and software are a definite factor
- in a computer, I wanted to aim for the best hardware itself, to which you
- could add the other items. However, since many of the high-end
- microcomputers featured here are beginning to rival workstations in both
- performance and price, this series will now include some low-end
- workstations in its analysis, in order to both study the state of high-end
- microcomputers as compared to low-end workstations, and to see whether
- these microcomputers outperform some workstations in certain aspects....
-
-
- After doing some research, I found several configurations that could
- truly claim to be "Dream Systems". Shown in no particular order, here is
- my list:
-
- (Warning: Do not be surprised by the Retail Prices Shown.)
-
-
- System #1
- ---------
-
- - Cheetah Gold 33 - Total Cost of System: $20,100.00 Dollars
-
- This IBM Compatible is a 25 MHZ 80486 system with 4 Megabytes of RAM
- onboard, a built-in Math chip and VGA support, 5 AT Expansion Slots, and a
- Cheetah DTP Disk Controller, which (with 4 Megs of RAM onboard as a cache)
- provides for greatly increased Disk I/O speed....
-
- To further enhance this system, I would add a 1 Gigabyte Magneto
- Optical Drive made by Maxtor using Removable Cartridges, a Dell GFX-1024
- Graphics Performance Accelerator, with a TI 34010 Graphics Coprocessor,
- and future support of the TIGA Display standard, a 3Com Etherlink Card
- providing an Ethernet port, and an NEC Multisync 4D Monitor.
-
- So with this system, you would have:
-
- Cheetah Gold 33 w/25 MHZ 80486 chip (Cost: $5000.00)
- Cheetah DPT Disk Controller (Cost: $1500.00)
- 3 SIMM Memory Modules w/2 Megs of RAM Each (Cost: $1800.00)
- Maxtor 1 Gigabyte Magneto-Optical Cartridge Drive (Cost: $8000.00)
-
- Dell GPX-1024 Graphics Board (Cost: $1500.00)
- 3Com EtherLink Card (Cost: $300.00)
- NEC Multisync 4D Monitor (Cost: $2000.00)
-
- VGA Graphics Resolution: 320*200 with 256 Colors out of 256,000
- 640*480 with 16 Colors out of 256,000
-
- Extended Mode has 640*480 with 256 Colors out of 256,000
- 800*600 with 16 Colors out of 256,000
- 800*600 with 256 Colors out of 256,000
- 1024*768 with 16 Colors out of 256,000
-
- GPX - 1024 Resolution: 1024*768 with 256 Colors out of 16 Million
-
- Faults with System: None whatsoever. Unless you think that a system's
- quality is based solely on its cost....
-
-
- System #2
- ---------
-
- - Macintosh IIci w/FastCache IIci Board - Total Cost: $22,900.00
-
-
- This Macintosh uses a 25 MHZ 68030 with a 25 MHZ 68882 Math Chip,
- Four Megabytes of RAM, and 3 NuBus Expansion Slots. It also comes with a
- 1.44 Meg High Density Disk Drive, and uses the SWIM (Sander-Woz Integrated
- Machine) Disk Controller chip to allow the Mac to read/write to MS-DOS and
- OS/2 formatted disk. Also, a FastCache IIci memory cache card from
- DayStar Digital which (with 32K of Static RAM) boosts processing speed by
- 30 percent.
-
- To FURTHER enhance this system, I would add Mirror Technologies'
- RM600 Magneto-Optical Drive, which uses 650 Megabyte Removable/Erasable
- Cartridges like those found for the NeXT drive, an Adaptec Nodem, which is
- an Ethernet LAN Interface Unit that plugs into the SCSI slot, and a
- National Semiconductor Maccelerate Board, which is a DMA (Direct Memory
- Access) Controller that makes data transfer operations up to three times
- faster than before. Also, I would add one Mac IIci 4 Meg DRAM Expansion
- Kit from Apple, and a Taxan Ultravision 1000 Monitor to accompany a
- SuperMac Spectrum/24 Video Card, which lets the Mac have a 1024*768
- display with 16 Million colors at the same time, and makes Mac Quickdraw
- operations display 5 - 10 times faster than before.
-
- The reason I didn't compile a Mac IIx setup with a 33 MHZ 68030 Card
- is that, with the FastCache IIci and the Maccelerate board, the Mac IIci's
- processing speed rivals that of a 33 MHZ Mac IIx system. Curiously, in
- tests done in the February 1990 issue of MacWorld, it seems that a Mac IIx
- with Daystar Digital's 50 MHZ 68030 board is only marginally faster than a
- Mac IIci with a Cache Card....
-
- So with this system you would have:
-
- Macintosh IIci w/4 Megs of RAM (Cost: $7769.00)
- One Apple Mac IIci 4 Meg DRAM Expansion Kit (Cost: $2000.00)
- Maccelerate DMA Controller Card (Cost: $600.00)
- FastCache IIci Board (Cost: $300.00)
-
- Adaptec Nodem Ethernet Unit (Cost: $500.00)
- Mirror RM600 Magneto-Optical Cartridge Drive (Cost: $3500.00)
- Spectrum/24 III Video Board (Cost: $4500.00)
- Taxan 980 20-Inch Monitor (Cost: $3700.00)
-
- Macintosh II Resolution: 640*400 with 256 Colors out of 16 Million
-
- With Spectrum/24 it has 1024*768 with 16 Million colors at the same time.
-
- Faults with System: An extreme amount of add-in peripherals. But other
- than that, it is a SUPERB system....
-
- System #3
- ---------
-
- - SGI Personal Iris w/Geometry Engine - Total System Cost: $25,500.00
-
- This is a Silicon Personal Iris with a 20 MHZ R3000 RISC chip from
- MIPS Computer Systems, a R3010 Math Chip, and SGI's Geometry Engine chip,
- which does graphics coprocessing. It also has 8 Megs of RAM standard, a
- 170 Meg Hard Drive, a built-in Ethernet Port, and a color monitor....
-
-
- So with this system you would have:
-
- SGI Personal Iris system w/MIPS R3000 chip (Cost: $25,500.00 total)
- SGI 170 Megabyte Hard Drive (Included in System)
-
- Iris Resolution:
- 1024*768 with 16 million display colors at the same time
-
- Faults with System: Hard Disk storage is mediocre, at best....
-
-
- System #4
- ---------
-
- - Amiga 2000HD w/CSA Mega Midget Racer - Total Cost of System: $17,600.00
-
- This is an Amiga 2000 with 1 Meg of RAM, 7 expansion slots, and an
- A2091 Hard Disk Controller. With this would be a CSA Mega-Midget Racer,
- with a 33 MHZ 68030, and a 33 MHZ 68882 Math Coprocessor, two ProRAM 2000
- RAM Expansion Cards from Progressive Peripherals with 4 Megs of RAM each,
- and a CSA DragStrip Card to speed up the 16-bit RAM into 32-bit RAM, for a
- total of eight Megabytes of 32-Bit RAM.
-
- I would also add Supra's FD-10 Removable Disk Drive, which supports
- 10 Meg Floppy disks, and a 300 Megabyte Hard Drive made by ABCO, install
- Commodore's upcoming Enhanced Chip Set for the Amiga, which boosts its
- graphics capabilities, Microway's FlickerFixer board, which gives the
- Amiga a noninterlaced 640*400 resolution with a Multisync monitor, and the
- Ameristar Internet Package, which is an Ethernet board for the Amiga.
-
- So with this system you would have:
-
- Amiga 2000 w/7 Expansion Slots (Cost: $1900.00)
- Amiga A2091 Hard Disk Controller (Cost: $300.00)
- CSA Mega-Midget Racer Accelerator (Cost: $1700.00)
- CSA DragStrip 32-Bit RAM Adapter (Cost: $800.00)
- Amiga Enhanced Chip Set (Cost: Around $200.00)
-
- 2 ProRAM 2000 Memory Cards w/4 Mb of RAM each (Cost: $2500.00)
- Supra FD-10 Removable Floppy Drive (Cost: $1000.00)
- ABCO 300 Megabyte Hard Drive (Cost: $4000.00)
- Microway Inc. FlickerFixer (Cost: $600.00)
- Taxan 980 20-Inch Monitor (Cost: $3700.00)
- Ameristar Ethernet Board (Cost: $900.00)
-
- Amiga Resolutions: (Not including Overscan)
- 320*200 with 32 colors out of 4096
- 320*200 with 64 colors out of 4096 (Extra Half-Brite)
- 320*200 with 4096 colors at the same time (HAM Mode)
-
- 640*200 with 4 to 32 colors
- 640*400 with 2 to 16 colors (interlaced)
-
- With Enhanced Chip Set:
-
- 640x256, with 64 displayable colors out of 4096
- 1280x200 with 4 colors out of 64
-
- - 640x960, with 4 colors out of 64 (interlaced)
- - 1280x400, with 4 colors out of 64 (interlaced)
-
- With FlickerFixer:
-
- 640*400 with 2 to 16 colors (noninterlaced)
-
- Faults with System: All but ONE of the Amiga 2000 Dream System's Slots
- are taken up by its Third-Party peripherals, which
- erases much of its future expandability. Also, it
- has a comparatively small amount of hard disk
- storage....
-
-
- System #5
- ---------
-
- - Sun SPARCStation 1 w/16 Megs of RAM - Total System Cost: $26,500.00
-
- This is a Sun SPARCStation 1 with a 20 MHZ SPARC chip running at 10
- to 12 MIPS, a 20 MHZ Weitek 3167 Floating Point Math Chip, 8 Megs of RAM
- onboard, 1 S-Bus Expansion Slot, Color Monitor, a 1.44 Meg Disk Drive, and
- a built-in Ethernet port.
-
- Along with this would be a Sun 650 Megabyte Hard Drive, and two Sun
- Memory Expansion Kits, with 4 Megs of RAM each, for a total of 16 Megs of
- System RAM.
-
- So with this system you have:
-
- Sun SPARCStation 1 w/Color Monitor (Cost: $12,500.00)
- 2 Sun Memory Expansion Kits w/4 Megs of RAM each (Cost: $4000.00)
- Sun 650 Megabyte Hard Drive (Cost: $10,000.00)
-
- SPARCStation Resolution: 1152*900 with 256 Colors out of 16 Million
-
- Faults of System: A higher monochrome resolution should be developed, and
- hard disk storage is far too expensive....
-
-
- System #6
- ---------
-
- - Abaq Transputer w/300 Meg Hard Disk - Total Cost of System: $30,000.00
-
-
- This is an Abaq Transputer with a 20 MHZ T800 Chip having a built-in
- Math Coprocessor, 4 Megs of RAM, and 4 Expansion Slots. Along with this
- would be two Abaq M112 Expansion Cards, each having 4 T800 Chips and 4
- Megs of DRAM onboard, and one Abaq F104 Expansion Card, with 1 T800 chip
- and 1 Meg of RAM standard, for a total of 10 T800 chips and 13 Megs of
- System RAM. Since Helios can read/write to MS-DOS disks, and the ATW uses
- a Mega ST Motherboard as an I/O processor, an ABCO 300 Megabyte Hard Drive
- for the ST should be able to be used.
-
- So with this system you have:
-
- Abaq Transputer w/4 Megs of RAM (Cost: $8000.00)
- Two ATW M112 Expansion "Farm" Cards (Cost: $12,000.00 total)
- ATW F104 Expansion "Farm" Card (Cost: $2000.00)
-
- ATW X100 Ethernet Interface Card (Cost: $1100.00)
- ABCO 300 Megabyte Hard Drive for the ST (Cost: $3200.00)
- Taxan Ultravision 1000 Monitor (Cost: $3700.00)
-
- Abaq Resolutions: 1280*960 with 16 Colors out of 16 Million
- 1024*768 with 256 Colors out of 16 Million
- 640*480 w/256 Colors out of 16 Million (Double Buffered
- screens for high speed animation)
- 512*480 with 16 Million Colors at the same time
-
- Faults of System: Hard disk storage is decent, but comparatively
- weak. Also, it is the highest-costing system....
-
-
- Notice I did not mention products that aren't shipping yet, like the
- 68030 TT, or products which have not been fully announced, like
- Commodore's new Amiga 3000....
-
-
- In Part I of this series, I have given a list of the best systems to
- be found currently in the market, and shown the individual features which
- make the system. In Part II these Dream Systems will be compared to each
- other, in order to determine which is the "best" one.
-
- But this issue alone indicates many changes in the structure of the
- Dream Systems. The Mac IIci Dream System has steadily grown in features,
- and gained a speed increase WITHOUT an accelerator board. It is a good
- contender, competing on a level with the other systems. The IBM Dream
- System, which has always been a powerful system with steady and noteworthy
- increases in its capabilities, now gains the virtue of having good
- price/performance, as it is one of the least expensive systems on the
- list. Also, the Intel 80486 chip rivals the RISC Workstations in
- performance. A "new" entry, the Amiga 2000 Dream System has made a
- stunning introduction, with speed and graphics capabilities on a par with
- the other computers on this list.
-
- In the workstation field, the SPARCStation 1 is a very well-balanced
- system with superb versatility, but the SGI Personal Iris, with similar
- speeds and graphics equalled only by the Mac and ATW systems, has stolen
- much of its thunder. Now that it has been fully introduced, we now see
- that the ATW, while being superior in graphics and speed, can be
- comparatively expensive for a "Dream Systems" setup. The NeXT Computer
- has been taken out of this Dream Systems Essay, primarily because of
- reports that its operating system software drastically slows its
- theoretical performance. While a 68040 upgrade and a Color Board are
- forthcoming for it, there are several other systems which are steadily
- improving in features at this time....
-
- But ponder, if you will, these questions:
-
- 1) Is the word, "Workstation" a more appropriate term for microcomputers
- than simply the word, "Computer", given the type of operations that
- computers now perform?
-
- 2) Could a 25 MHZ 68040-based computer be faster to design and cheaper to
- produce than a system using a 25 MHZ 68030 and a 25 MHZ 68882?
-
-
-
-
- CPU STATUS REPORT™
- =================
-
-
- Syracuse, NY Robert Tappen Morris has been convicted of creating and
- ------------ releasing a computer "worm" which eventually disrupted
- the Internet network in November 1988. Morris had
- testified in his trial that he wrote the worm, and will
- be sentenced before March. He faces a penalty of up to
- 5 years in prison, and a $250,000 fine...
-
- The jury took over six hours to reach a verdict. Also,
- it seems that the law that Robert Morris (the son of
- the head of the National Security Agency's computer
- security division) was convicted under can hold a
- person legally liable for damage caused by a computer
- worm or virus, even if the person didn't intend to
- unleash a destructive virus....
-
-
- Austin, TX Motorola recently introduced the Application Binary
- ---------- Interface (ABI) for AT&T Unix System V Release 4. It
- is available in versions for the 680x0 microprocessor
- line, and the Motorola 88000 RISC chip. An ABI allows
- Unix software developed for a given type of chip to run
- unmodified on all Unix-based computers which use that
- type of CPU.
-
- This means, for example, that any Unix program written
- with Motorola's 680x0 chip ABI will be compatible
- with ANY Unix-based computer which supports the 68000
- ABI Specifications Standard. Commodore is reportedly
- considering using this in their Amiga 3000, an upcoming
- low-end Unix workstation....
-
- Interestingly enough, it seems that supporting this
- ABI may be the quickest way to get System V Release 4
- (the newest version of AT&T Unix). And given that ALL
- future 680x0-based Unix machines will be supporting
- this standard....
-
-
- Cambridge, MA Lotus Corp. has announced a new version of Lotus 1-2-3
- ------------- Version 3.0 for the entire Sun workstation line. It is
- scheduled to be available in the Second Quarter of
- 1990. Cost: $695 for the Standard Edition, and $495
- for a Node Edition for installing 1-2-3 in a Network of
- Sun systems. Lotus also says that a Mac version of
- 1-2-3 is still in development. However, a version
- of Lotus 1-2-3 for other Unix-based machines may be in
- the horizon....
-
-
- Hopkins, MN Image Systems Corp., the same company who made the
- ----------- Video Board used in Moniterm's 1280*960 monochrome
- monitor for the ST, has introduced a new Ultra-High
- Resolution Color Board for the Mega ST, which fits in
- the Mega ST Expansion Slot. It provides a 1024*768
- resolution with a choice of either 2 or 16 displayable
- colors, available from a 4096 color palette. It
- supports the Blitter chip, and can be used with any
- multisync monitor that is capable of running at a
- 50 KHz horizontal scan rate. Cost: $800.00....
-
- In case you are interested in this board (which also
- has a socket for Motorola's 68881 and 68882 math chips)
- Image Systems' numbers are 1-800-462-4370, and
- 1-612-935-1171....
-
-
- Errata: CPU Report Issue 37 stated that the Amiga's new Enhanced Chip Set
- ======= (ECS) would have a 24-bit (16 million color) palette. The new
- version of the Amiga ECS's Denise chip will actually give the
- Amiga these new resolutions:
-
- Noninterlaced Resolutions:
- --------------------------
- - 640x256, with 64 displayable colors out of a 4096 color palette.
- - 1280x200 with 4 colors out of 64.
-
- Interlaced Resolutions:
- -----------------------
- - 640x960, with 4 displayable colors out of a 64 color palette
- - 1280x400, with 4 colors out of 64.
-
-
-
-
-
- PRESS RELEASE
- -------------
-
- Contact: Steve Riker
-
- (619) 566-3911
-
- "Mega-Midget Racer(tm)," MC-68030 Accelerator for Amiga(tm)
-
- San Diego, CA: Computer System Associates, Inc.
-
- (CSA) announces the latest in MC-68030 accelerator technology; the
- "Mega-Midget Racer(tm)". The first and only MC- 68030 accelerator to
- employ state-of-the-art surface mount technology and plug into Amiga A500
- or A2000. Evolving from CSA's very popular Midget Racer(tm), "Mega-Midget
- Racer" features include selectable clock speeds of 20, 25 or 33 MHZ,
- support for floating-point math co-processor at speeds up to 40 MHZ,
- 32-bit 512KB SRAM for operating system kernal, 32-bit RAM expansion bus,
- and software-selectable MC-68000.
-
- The asynchronous design of the "Mega-Midget Racer" permits blazing fast
- CPU performance at 20, 25, or 33 MHZ through an easily changeable crystal
- oscillator and an optional MC-68881 or 68882 math co-processor at clock
- speeds up to 40 MHZ for racing through number crunching applications.
- Users may choose less costly 20 MHZ 030's while providing a
- high-performance accelerator which is readily expandable to maximum
- performance. An optional 512KB, 32- bit SRAM module allows copying the
- Amiga ROM kernal into high- speed, 32-bit SRAM for lightning-fast screen
- refreshes, page flipping, scrolling, and image processing. A full 32-bit
- wide expansion bus provides support for high speed memory and I/O devices
- in 8, 16, and 32-bit configurations.
-
- The "Mega-Midget Racer(tm)" assures complete software and hardware
- compatibility by resocketing the MC-68000 on board for easy software
- switching to either MC-68030 or MC-68000 operation.
-
- The "Mega-Midget Racer(tm)" is priced at $795.00 with a 20 MHZ MC68030
- installed. For more information, contact CSA at (619) 566-3911.
-
- A500, A2000 and Amiga are trademarks of Commodore Amiga Inc. Midget Racer
- and Mega-Midget Racer are trademarks of Computer System Associates, Inc.
- MC-68000, 68030, 68881 and 68882 are trademarks of motorola Inc.
-
-
- THE MEGA-MIDGET RACER
-
- "ALL YOU'LL EVER NEED!"
-
- FEATURES YOU CAN'T IMAGINE
- AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD.
-
- 1) MC68030 CPU
- a) asynchronous design.
- b) clocked at 20, 25, or 33MHZ, or any speed in between.
- c) oscillator defines speed: no jumpers necessary for control.
-
- 2) REPLACES MC68000 CPU ON AMIGA 500 OR 2000 MOTHERBOARD
- a) 68000 CPU is resocketed on board and is software selectable.
- b) 100% compatibility is achieved by using on-board 68000.
-
- 3) OPTIONAL HIGHSPEED, 32-BIT, 512KB SRAM AREA
- a) sockets for four 128K x 8-bit SRAM chips or modules.
- b) Amiga ROM kernal is copied into and then executed out of the
- highspeed, 32-bit SRAM. (NOTE: special hardware allows this to be
- done without using the 68030's MMU, so that it is free for use by
- other software.)
-
- 4) FULL 32-BIT EXPANSION BUS
- a) 32-bit data bus
- b) 32-bit address bus
- c) capable of supporting highspeed memory and I/O devices in 8, 16, and
- 32-bit configurations.
-
- 5) SPECIAL CACHE CONTROL LOGIC
- a) a special cache control PLD(Programmable Logic Device)provides safe
- data and instruction caching from ROM and 16/32 bit memory.
- b) special-configuration cache control PLDs can be ordered for expanding
- data cache environment.
- c) cache control PLD is socketed for easy replacement.
-
- 6) OPTIONAL MC68881 OR MC68882 FLOATING-POINT COPROCESSOR
- a) clocked at 20, 25, 33, or 40 MHZ, or any speed in between.
- b) can be clocked by CPU's oscillator or by a second, faster one.
-
- 7) USES SURFACE-MOUNT TECHNOLOGY/EXTRA POWER/STAND-OFFS
- a) only user installable parts are socketed.
- b) all other parts are surface mounted to save space and enhance
- reliability.
- c) extra power-connector, compatible with disk drive cable, supports
- external power source.
- d) plastic stand-offs provide sturdy physical support.
-
- CONTACT CSA at (619) 566-3911 FOR A COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF FEATURES.
-
- Actually this information is a little outdated, as they now have the CPU
- running at 40mhz, not 33mhz, and when Motorola releases their 50mhz 68030
- it will run on this board. I have seen the board in operation and it is
- fabulous, and I would love to see it on the Atari, perhaps, we will.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- __________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > Fast Technology CPU/STR Feature™ Profiles in success....
- ===============================
-
-
-
- FAST TECHNOLOGY AND JIM ALLEN
- =============================
-
-
- by Jim Allen
-
- So, ... you want to know about Fast Tech.....
-
- As a young engineer, I got a job at a machine vision company called
- Itran, they make machines that "look" at parts and taking measurements and
- checking quality. It was all 68000 based and so I became very well
- trained in 68000 computers. Finally the day came when I wanted a personal
- computer, the Mac was real new as was the ST. The Mac was $3000 and the
- ST was $1199 so which do you think I bought? Of course...an ST. I didn't
- want anything to do with MESSYDOS it was so very "old fashioned".
-
- So, I became an ST user in 85', I have always had this habit of
- becoming an expert in the things I'm interested in so, I read everything I
- could about the ST and used it as a test pad for many of the little HW
- projects I became involved in. By the time an Atarifest came to my area
- in Oct 87' I had gone all the way to the point of putting a CSA 020 board
- into the ST. This is an off the shelf 020 to 68000 board that helps ease
- the way when converting systems that you design over to the 020. I had it
- running diagnostics and the like but discovered, to all our
- disappointment, that the TOS operating system was completely and utterly
- incompatible. So I decided I'd go to the show and bring the computer along
- and see if Atari might be interested or at least help me out on the TOS
- situation.
-
- Well, the reception I got was quite interesting, Neil Harris told me
- it was impossible, engineering had said so, and to move along. Moving
- right along I then cornered Leonard Tramiel, same story, he just didn't
- believe me at all or so my impression of his interest in what I was saying
- went. And as he was quite busy with dealers and such, I simply resolved
- myself to the fact of not getting any help from Atari.
-
- As I wandered through all the exhibits, I came across two interesting
- products...PCDITTO and Magicsac. I met Bill and Ginnie Teal and they were
- just about the nicest folks you could meet. They offered to help out if
- they could, they actually wanted some kind of accelerator to come out
- since PCDitto needed a speedup. Ever since then the Teals have always
- been there to help out when and where they could. Of course I bought a
- PCDitto. They even passed on to me the IDRIS system that allowed me to do
- some further testing as it was immune to all the software
- incompatibilities.
-
- At the same show was a guy named Dave, he had these funny little
- "rabbit" bags he was selling, something about MAGIC? Well of course, I
- had always WANTED a Mac so I bit. Got the "pro" package with translator
- and was a devoted follower of "the Dave" from then on. Over the last
- couple years we have swapped horror stories about Atari and help each
- other out with hardware funny's. He volunteered to beta test any
- accelerators I came up with and I agreed to sell him my ZAX emulator. It
- was a good trade.
-
- Everytime I talked to either the Teals or the Smalls they told me over
- and over that an accelerator was needed, desperately. There seemed to be
- a good potential to sell something. But what? After running through the
- numbers a zillion times it seemed only a 16Mhz 68000would be inexpensive
- enough to sell well as a compliment to a low cost computer. Off I went to
- the lab to get the T16 created. After struggling to find any type of REAL
- documentation for the ST like schematics, even becoming a real developer,
- there was a void to be filled.
-
- I finally got some schematics from a local dealer. I had to twist his
- arm but he finally gave in. From there is was just weeks of late nights
- after hours at Itran, with pauses to deal with Itran crisis's, and a lot
- of dead PALs. About $600 in dead 16R4D PALs, boy do I wish I had known
- about GALs sooner!!!! It would have cost me $40 instead. I took a rough,
- and I do mean ROUGH, prototype alot like the JATO board and sent it to the
- Teals. Well frankly they were underwhelmed, it gave only a tiny speedup
- and it crashed alot. Obviously more was needed, but how? Then it struck
- me, everyday I sit and type on a Sun workstation and it is really fast.
- Why? Well it probably is the 68030 but it also has a CACHE!!! Yes a RAM
- CACHE to speed up the overall throughput of the processor in getting data
- to and from memory. Viola' we had the solution, almost. Turns out
- caches are quite expensive and complicated so I spent the next couple of
- months designing a really unique, bullet-proof, and inexpensive cache.
- There are alot of engineering details I'll skip but that was going to be
- the ticket.
-
- Along came fall 88' Comdex and off I went, to once again meet the
- folks that had helped so much, not to see Atari. I caught up with the
- Teals and showed them the less rough prototype and they were impressed by
- the possibilities. It looked horrible but the expected performance was
- good. Bill and Ginnie then showed me the "ropes" and told me all about
- this market and who to go to from there. They gave me sales leads and
- distributor and dealer introductions and finally even bought dinner. They
- even let me take a nap in their hotel since I was in at 1AM Wednesday
- morning and back out red-eye Thursday morning with no place to sleep. I
- did bring along a few hundred bucks to loose at the tables.
-
- Dave was there too and we talked for an hour about what Spectre does
- and all sorts of secret stuff to make sure the T16 would operate correctly
- as a Mac. Back to the lab I went, to finish the T16, which with all the
- different versions of the Atari out there to interface to, took another 5
- months to complete. With real clean prototypes in hand it was time for
- the World of Atari, actually the World of People involved with Atari
- Products.
-
- I picked up a business partner along the way and off we went to the
- show we even had a booth. It was a hit, sort of, the JATO was there and
- we were faced with a real problem. We were much faster however, the
- differences were so technical that it was going to be tough job to
- explain in understandable layman's terms.
-
- I had determined in Feb that we needed to really put the pressure on
- marketing-wise to get this product sold quick since it might be copied
- right away. The Teals had connected me with Nevin Shalit, a writer for ST
- Informer, and we sent him a prototype to do a story that would come out
- just in time for the show...smart huh? He did a great report, very
- truthful and very thorough. It helped alot, we were kinda late getting
- our registration in for the show but Rich Tsukiji bent over backwards to
- help...an accelerator, WOW!!! He gave us a great booth and the show was
- a real hit. Again I spent time with the Teals who were there showing
- PCDitto II and the Smalls who had a proto GCR and were absolutely swamped
- by the crowd every second. If you ever enter a show be sure to get beside
- Gadgets, of course you'll have to use the other side since I'm on one side
- already!!!
-
- I met most of the developers and they are all a great bunch, not
- stuffy like Mac and IBM developers, these are real people.
-
- After the show we set out to get up the $$$ needed to make a bunch of
- T16s, we also instituted a big testing program and made a dozen protos to
- send out to people to test with. We found a bug with Calamus and tracked
- down ahead of time all the incompatibilities we could find. That way what
- we couldn't "fix" we could tell people up front so they wouldn't get a
- surprise. We did fix the Calamus bug which was related to the blitter and
- a couple of the peripheral chips and the need for a "rest" between
- accesses. Then we faced the CMI problem. CMI suddenly appeared with full
- page color ads in STart and alot of mumbo jumbo, we decided to wait and
- let them crash and burn before plunging a life savings into the business.
- Business is a risk but lets not go LOOKING for trouble!!! We waged a war
- in the media, getting each magazine to review the accelerator boards and
- report the truth as to which was a better bargain. Sure, T16 would only
- offer the most speed for the most money, but after all it was an
- accelerator.
-
- The T16 was to be priced at $399 but the CMI situation forced us to
- lower it to $299, this was a mistake because the T16 is now only
- marginally profitable. As we all found out, the CMI units weren't any
- faster than the JATO and they didn't work as well ours either. We lost
- about 300 sales in the US because of CMI, and those are people who won't
- be back no matter how good the magazines say the T16 is. Since CMI went
- under we have just been slowly building systems to fill the back orders we
- received in a manner that makes sure we will be around for a while. I
- know it is a pain waiting for the T16 but better everyone wait a little
- than Fast Tech stick it's neck out and go under. That would mean NO T16s
- no matter how long the wait. Building surfacemount products is a business
- that requires extreme care, we have been bitten by bad raw PC boards, bad
- assembly practices, and even late shipments of simple ram chips... surface
- mount package stuff. So that is where we are now, your up to date, T16s
- are rolling out the door and everyone will have one very soon.
-
- Special thanks goes to Dave and Sandy Small, and Bill and Ginnie Teal,
- and Nathan Potechin, and ST World, ST Informer, and ST Xpress for all the
- help and encouragement they have given Fast Tech, we wouldn't be here if
- it weren't for them...and of course, Ralph Mariano and STReport too.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ____________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > DynaCADD 1.7 CPU/STR Review™ "When only the best will do..."
- ===========================
-
-
-
-
- DynaCADD 1.7 VS AUTOCAD REVISION 10
- ===================================
-
- Part II
- -------
-
-
-
- by Myles Goddard
-
-
-
- It will be rather difficult to compare Computer Drafting and Design
- packages when one considers the two programs that have chosen to be
- included in this review, DynaCADD 1.7 and AutoCad Version 10. They are
- however, professionally speaking, two of the most powerful CaDD programs
- available today.
-
- First thing we have to realize, of course, is that AutoCad has been
- in the IBM market since the early 80's and DynaCADD is a relative newcomer
- on the scene. I will try to make as thorough a review of the two programs
- as is humanly possible. Needless to say, it can not be done in one
- article. I have decided to make a series of articles so that a thorough
- comparison can be made of these two superb products. Be mindful this is
- not intended to become a positive - negative type review but a thorough
- presentation of both programs. Thusly affording the reader a marvelous
- opportunity to make a well informed decision.
-
- Before beginning, I would like to say that I have been working with
- AutoCad for over a year now on a regular basis. I have an IBM AT 286 at
- home and am very comfortable with using the commands and features of
- AutoCad. I have only been able to work with DynaCADD 1.32 on a hit and
- miss basis. I like the resolution and clarity of DynaCADD on my SM124
- monochrome monitor and the ease of the icon environment incorporated in
- DynaCADD.
-
- The chief advantage of Autocad at this time is the ability to change
- many configurations of the program. For example, it allows me to use the
- maximum resolution of my graphics card, which is 1024 x 768, but I prefer
- 800 x 600 with 16 colors. In my opinion, this is a great advantage,
- especially when you have several layers that you want in different colors.
- But on the other hand, I was able to use Dynacadd 1.7 on a VIKING II 19"
- monochrome monitor with a resolution of 1280 x 960 at 16 mhz and the
- results were astounding. I am told that DynaCADD is available for the IBM
- and is identical to the ST version. Unfortunately, I do not have the IBM
- Dynacadd version to review so I will compare the ST version of DynaCADD
- with the alleged, industry standard, Autocad 10.
-
-
- SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
- -------------------
-
-
- The minimum requirements for AutoCad Versions 1 through 8 to work on
- an IBM system is:
-
- IBM XT with minimum of 512K (640K highly recommended)
-
- Monochrome or Color monitor
-
- Hercules Graphics Card (EGA or higher recommended)
-
- One serial port, One Printer port
-
- High density floppy PLUS Hard disk
-
- Input Device (Mouse or Digitizer tablet)
-
- Dot Matrix printer (Plotter preferred)
-
-
- Please note that Autocad can be used with keyboard entry but results
- in extremely time consuming input. Also, even though Autocad supports
- Hercules and CGA displays, severe eye fatigue can result in using these
- displays. EGA is normally the minimum resolution required and offers good
- eye relief over long periods of time. I personally prefer VGA for the
- higher resolution. If possible, use a multisync monitor for flicker free
- display. You will appreciate it I guarantee it.
-
-
- Autocad Versions 9 & 10 require:
-
-
- IBM XT ( 286 or 386 preferred ) 8 mhz or faster
-
- 512K minimum memory ( 640K or EMS recommended )
-
- Math co-processor required ( will not run without one )
-
- Monochrome or Color Monitor ( VGA or Multisync Color
- highly recommended )
-
- 1.2 Meg High Density floppy drive ( 720K will work but
- disk swapping will drive you crazy )
-
- Hard disk a must ( especially since Autocad accesses
- the information on a hard disk frequently )
-
- Input device ( Mouse & mouse driver ) or Digitizer
- tablet & driver ) I prefer the mouse as input but many
- prefer a tablet. Autocad supports over 30 drawing
- devices.
-
- Dot matrix printer ( Plotter preferred, although printer
- can give satisfactory quick printouts of your drawings)
-
- Laser printer gives superb results with Autocad.
-
-
- GETTING STARTED
- ---------------
-
-
- After you have installed AutoCad (preferably on your fixed disk)
- you will be greeted with a notice that you have not configured AutoCad.
- In other words you have to go into the main screen option 5, to configure
- AutoCad to suit your personal computer system. This is easy to do,
- although it does take some time to get it customized.
-
- AutoCad versions 1 through 8 have pseudo-3D support, that is, it
- would probably be more accurate to describe it as isometric views, just
- like the hand drawings you did on your drafting table. AutoCad 10 uses
- full 3D as well as shading to make the objects drawn as authentic as the
- real thing. Another difference that version 10 has over the older
- versions is that it supports drop down menus and semi-alert boxes, or as
- they are called in the program, Ddrmodes. This allows AutoCad to offer
- input from the mouse (Drop Down menus), Keyboard entry (if you can
- remember the commands), or the side menus (by means of Tablet or mouse).
-
- Below, is a meager rendering of the AutoCad Drawing Editor.
-
-
- |---------------------------------------------------------------|
- | Layer 0 0.000,0.000 |
- |---------------------------------------------------------------|
- | Status line | AutoCad |
- | | ********* |
- | | Setup |
- | | |
- | | Blocks |
- | | Dim: |
- | | Display |
- | | Draw |
- | DRAWING AREA | Edit |
- | | Inquiry |
- | | Layer: |
- | | Settings |
- | | Plot |
- | | UCS: |
- | | Utility |
- | | |
- | | 3D |
- | | Ashade |
- | | |
- | <-- UCS Icon | Save: |
- |---------------------------------------------------------------|
- | Prompt Area Menu Area |
- |---------------------------------------------------------------|
-
-
-
- So far, it has taken four pages to describe the system requirements
- and setup to use AutoCad on an IBM system. Taken into account the
- complexity of the program and the many variables of the users's own
- computer system. I think you will find that DynaCADD is much easier to
- install on the Atari ST system.
-
- Here are the requirements for installation of DynaCADD-
-
-
- Atari 1 meg 520ST, 1040ST or MEGA w/ DS drive
-
- SM124 Monochrome monitor or Multisync Color w/adaptor
- for use with ST. I have found that the clearest &
- sharpest results are when using the Moniterm monitor.
-
- Hard Disk (Nice to have but not necessary for DynaCADD)
-
-
- That's it folks. If you have the hardware listed, you can get
- started right in with DynaCADD. Just place disk one of DynaCADD into the
- DS drive and click on DynaCADD.PRG and you are off and running.
-
- Subsequent installments of this review will appear on a weekly basis
- in CPU NewsWire ...
-
-
- Until next time,
-
-
- Myles Goddard
-
-
-
-
-
- ________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > THE BEAT GOES ON! CPU/STR Spotlight™ What it all really looks like.
- ===================================
-
-
-
-
- IS THE US MARKET BEING GIVEN A FAIR SHAKE?
- ==========================================
-
-
- by R.F. Mariano
-
-
- Atari has, in the past, been a disappointment as far as national
- advertising campaigns and timely delivery of announced new products aimed
- for the US marketplace is concerned. There is no doubt that extenuating
- circumstances can and do cause a good number of these situations.
- Hopefully, by bringing this to your attention, it is hoped to resurrect a
- positive, corrective attitude. And at the same time, request that the
- users/readers please institute a positive letter campaign directed to
- Atari's CEO; Sam Tramiel.
-
- It appears the same old problems are still haunting us. For example,
- let's start with the Lynx, (an excellent color LCD hand held game machine)
- this jewel could have turned the tide if it had been to market in time for
- Christmas, but no... completely bungled by 'whomever', Atari blew another
- Christmas marketing season completely.
-
- Along comes the fabled STACY, the fantastic laptop we all have seen
- from time to time (outside of California) as far back as WOA Dearborn
- where Chris Roberts performed his, now famous, juggling act. Thankfully
- the Smalls (GBS) were gracious enough to rebuild the trashed STACY. It is
- a mighty impressive computer but where is it and who can buy it and on and
- on and now...??? Which type acceptance and why Class A as opposed to
- class B and is the FCC really going to go for this "Midi Controller" hype?
- The Stacy is a computer plain and simple, a portable, laptop computer.
- Why play the name game? Why is this device having so much trouble making
- the grade? Especially when it is now very much in evidence that many of
- the current ST users will purchase a Stacy the moment they are available.
-
- STE ...Not much to say here other than why? Why is it on sale all
- over the globe and not in the States? Is this another of the grandiose
- marketing schemes designed to "blow our socks off" or just blow us off?
- The STE has just recently been submitted to the FCC for type acceptance.
- Or, so they say.. The BIG question is; why wasn't this thing tested in
- house months ago BEFORE being released for sale all over the world except
- OBVIOUSLY the USA? Was this done purposely to embarrass Sam who promised
- the USA would not be neglected and would enjoy having products released
- here first? We are told that Atari does its own tests for FCC type
- acceptance with in-house tests and the use of a local facility not unlike
- the FCC's where they perform the same basic tests as the FCC. Many of the
- above questions are being heard all over the US Userbase, in almost every
- usergroup at one time or another. The STE is quite a machine and is
- expected (our own optimistic estimate) to be on sale in the States within
- 90 days. Now, if only they could hear us begging for them to put the STE
- in a Mega style cabinet... And call it a MEGA STE.
-
- The crippled MEGA2 recently released was likened to Atari mooning the
- entire worldwide market. Did they really think that the market (all of
- us) would sit still for this outrageous insult to our intelligence? To
- purposely cripple a PCB to prohibit an in-the-field memory upgrade is
- unconscionable as far as marketing and public relations are concerned.
- This action solidifies the impression that Atari appears to have very
- little intention of interacting favorably with its US userbase. As a
- result of all the bad feelings, according to a large east coast
- distributor, J&R Music, the manufacture of the MEGA2 computer has been
- discontinued. Where most all the various delays and changes can be 'lived
- with' this particular decision was rather disturbing to say the very
- least. I hope we never witness such a bad move again.
-
- Additionally, this action is likely to cause users to become even
- more cautious when it comes to investing in NEW releases like the TT,
- where, we are told, we must like the "Wedding Cake" cabinet because that's
- that. The TT model expected to ship first is alleged to be a far cry from
- the tower configuration TT enthusiastically discussed at its announcement
- in Hanover, Germany and Comdex/Fall '89. Will there be a path for those
- who decided to support Atari and purchase the preliminary TT to obtain the
- 'better' tower style TT later on? I think not. By recalling a number of
- Atari's past remarks online, the users, most likely, will be told all the
- same snappy remarks they have been getting all along about an upgrade
- path. Or, will they? Hmmm another unanswered question.
-
- Granted, the PORTFOLIO has kept the ship afloat, but where is it
- going? Multitudes of folks who own the original version are about to face
- that UGLY, ILL-TEMPERED, UPGRADE OGRE. The indications are loud and
- clear that change is in the wind. Portfolios are now being discounted and
- sold by dealers who are not bashful about selling mail order thus,
- effectively taking business from other dealers' territories. Perhaps
- Atari's pros have decided to allow a marketing "free-for-all?
-
- Tos 1.4, now this was an exercise in marvelous marketing management
- this had to be the most on again, off again, offering the world had ever
- known. Chris Roberts prematurely released this information to us and at
- that, it was erroneous information. However, once it made it to market,
- the reception was strong and the users (even now) are clamoring for the
- chipsets (6 chip and 2 chip). Atari has stated, on more than one
- occasion, that the chips must be installed by a dealer and the recommended
- retail price is: $90.00. Interesting enough, we find this product being
- bandied about. While Atari's hands are tied, (price fixing is a no-no)
- they do offer a factory recommended price. Unfortunately, certain dealers
- seem to take delight in trying to cut the throats of every other dealer in
- the country with these idiotic price wars. Just this past week we see
- where a notable dealer has advertised they will sell TOS 1.4 via the mails
- and for less than 90.00!! Why recruit dealers and allude to territories
- when this sort of thing is allowed to occur? This is truly the recipe to
- make sure the whole magilla croaks. Hopefully, those dealers who seem to
- delight in killing the market, other dealers and Atari (indirectly) will
- find themselves "backordered" more often than not.
-
- The Atari warehouse has plenty of Mega4 Computers - Color Monitors
- CDROM - SLM804 - Portfolio - Lynx - SX212 - but NO SM124 Monochrome
- Monitors, 1040ST, 520ST, STE and of course, NO MEGA2 STs. Oddly enough,
- this is not the first time, remember recently in the past, about this time
- last year when there was a shortage of SC1224 monitors? Perhaps this is
- the beginning of the implementation of product change and inventory
- rollover.
-
- Apparently, Atari's new wonder boys who are the "right hands" of the
- Tramiels have professed themselves to be sales and marketing gurus. Could
- it be they are undercover marketing saboteurs recruited by the competition
- to sink Atari? <<snicker>> Please take a moment to ponder the
- magnanimous results these wonders have actually posted, that's right, it
- only takes a moment to see there is nothing to get charged up over. Look
- back and consider the time prior to the holidays and right after Comdex..
- Atari's stock went up handsomely in anticipation of the results "promised"
- by these professionals. As one of them said awhile back; "Atari is like
- an Aircraft Carrier, it is now turned into the wind and preparing to
- launch its planes".. fantastic imagination, but NO results worth talking
- about. And it now appears the darn thing has been torpedoed.
-
- The most upsetting news is Sam's decision NOT to participate in
- Spring/Comdex '90 and other US Industry related shows. In light of this
- decision, all that can possibly be said is, Sam seems to rely on some of
- the industry's most inept, ill informed advisors. It becomes more than
- slightly evident that there are some desperately needed changes in the
- personnel directly responsible to Sam as they are NOT bringing to him the
- REAL grass roots information from the US userbase and industry in
- general. Isn't it rather coincidental that the same person(s) who
- appeared to put the US dealer network belly up are now handling the
- international efforts. The USA is still in the international scene too
- guys. It is more than apparent that the US market is looked at as being a
- crippled, ugly duckling. We never were really out of the mushroom patch,
- somebody merely turned the lights on ..temporarily. The time has come for
- Sam to go directly "into the trenches" to see and hear for himself the
- real facts and not the pablum he is being fed by his advisors, the so-
- called pros.
-
- What is happening now, without a doubt, is a full blown disaster.
- Announcements such as these (expressing a desire to NOT participate in US
- industry dedicated shows) is a loud and clear message to all that the
- company really has nothing new to show and ship in the USA and therefore,
- finds participation in these shows (COMDEX - SEYBOLD - CEPS etc..)
- unwarranted. If the other Atari worldwide entities have the right to
- decide which show(s) they attend, why then is Atari US still governed by
- the CEO? Shouldn't Atari US and its executives be making these decisions?
- Folks, by not being present at these shows in the USA, Atari is once again
- snubbing the US market. The cottage computer industry in the USA isn't
- going to sit on its collective duff waiting for Atari to decide that its
- really there. Things must happen this year, else, another brand will
- totally dominate this market too. That is a sad thought because this
- market is there waiting for Atari take charge. Folks, too many of the
- dyed in the wool Atari supporters are coming forward expressing sheer
- frustration with Sunnyvale and proclaiming they are finished with Atari
- for ever more. This is scary! When are they going to wake up out there?
- When the wolf bites them in the derriere? It would certainly bolster the
- sagging stock picture. Don't believe me? Check the market, the market,
- in general, is down by approximately 12% and Atari's stock is slipping
- downward at about 47%.
-
- The loud and clear message is, the smart money folks have lost faith
- in Atari and in particular, those who are making the decisions. Sam, you
- must get the real facts for yourself, bypass the pseudo corporate warriors
- and join the ranks of executives who demand to hear and see the stark
- naked truth for themselves. The caste system is dead in the USA, mingle
- with the 'untouchables' you will soon know the truth. Thus enabling you
- to guide the good ship Atari on a true course of success.
-
-
- In summation;
- As time goes on, it becomes more and more apparent that the top at
- Atari is a very lonely place, and as such, the Tramiels are in my humble
- opinion being misled and/or badly advised. Whether or not this is meant
- to be is another story. The important matter here is, it seems to be
- happening, it appears they are being told only what someone else "thinks"
- 'they need to know'. The bottom line is quite simple, they NEED to be
- told all the facts not just what is thought to be important by someone
- else. Hopefully, this will soon begin to occur, for only then will we see
- an end to the seemingly unfounded and irrational moves that come from
- Atari. In short, it appears that the Tramiels are being 'shielded' from
- the real thing... for what reason? Only time will tell.
-
-
-
-
-
- ________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > Stock Market ~ CPU NewsWire™ Watchin' the schekles grow!
- ===========================
-
-
- THE TICKERTAPE
- ==============
-
- by Michael Arthur
-
- Concept by Glenn Gorman
-
-
- Atari Stock went down 1/4 of a point on Monday, and was down
- another 1/4 of a point on Tuesday. On Wednesday it was down 3/8 of a
- point, and on Thursday, Atari Stock went up 1/4 of a point. On Friday,
- Atari Stock was down 1/4 of a point. Finishing up the week at 7 3/8
- points, Atari stock is down 7/8 of a point from the last report.
-
-
- Apple Stock is down 1 1/2 points from Friday, January 19, 1990.
- Commodore Stock is up 3/8 of a point from 1/19/90.
- IBM Stock is down 1 3/4 points from 1/19/90.
-
-
- Stock Report for Week of 1/22/90 to 1/25/90
-
- _________________________________________________________________________
- STock| Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday |
- Reprt|Last Chg.|Last Chg.|Last Chg.|Last Chg.|Last Chg.|
- -----|-----------|-------------|------------|-------------|--------------|
- Atari| 8 - 1/4|7 3/4 - 1/4|7 3/8 - 3/8|7 5/8 + 1/4|7 3/8 - 1/4|
- | | | | | 40,500 Sls |
- -----|-----------+-------------+------------+-------------+--------------|
- CBM | 8 - 1/2| 8 ---- |8 1/2 + 1/2|8 7/8 + 3/8|8 7/8 ---- |
- | | | | | 88,600 Sls |
- -----|-----------+-------------+------------+-------------+--------------|
- Apple|33 1/4 - 1|33 3/4 + 1/2| 34 + 1/4|34 1/8 + 1/8|32 3/4 -1 3/8|
- | | | | |1,618,300 Sls|
- -----|-----------+-------------+------------+-------------+--------------|
- IBM |96 5/8 - 2|97 1/2 + 7/8|97 1/2 +3/4|95 7/8 -1 5/8|96 7/8 + 1 |
- | | | | |1,836,400 Sls|
- -----'-------------------------------------------------------------------'
-
- 'Sls' refers to the # of stock shares that were traded that day.
- 'CBM' refers to Commodore Corporation.
-
- With the stock at 12.5 in December, it was running ahead of itself at
- that time. Therefore, its present position is seen as an average. The
- outlook for Atari Stock is predicted to become much brighter in March.
- The deciding factor is whether or not Atari's current decision makers
- continue to see the US market as a waste of time because of a totally
- impotent sales network. And when and if the US market enjoys the sales of
- the new products, STACY and STE.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > FCC & ATARI? CPU/STR PROBE™ WHAT ..really is the cause....
- ==========================
-
-
-
-
- ARE THERE REALLY UNREASONABLE DELAYS??
- ======================================
-
-
-
- preface
- -------
-
- The FCC is blamed for many things these days, just a scant few weeks
- ago, they were faulted by us and many others for the latest
- controversy that flared up over the Texas Telecommunications flap.
- Well, it seems the FCC is catching heck again over the speed of its
- type acceptance program. In particular, why the big delays over the
- STACY and STE??
-
-
- We present a few questions and answers that may help clear the air.
-
- Question:
- Why is it that IBM and all the 'big' guys never seem to have a
- problem with type acceptance.
-
- Answer:
- The bottom line here is quite complex, but here are a few ideas.
- The primary reason IBM etc... have little or no problems is their
- units are truly modular in design. This results in having a
- group of sub chassis that have been previously 'type accepted'.
- The FCC actually has inspected the units in bits and pieces prior
- to the submission of the complete device. Since most of the sub-
- chassis had been type accepted the 'whole unit' is virtually
- assured to 'fly' through the system.
-
- Question:
- Does the FCC actually test each and every new product that
- carries its certification authorization?
-
- Answer:
- Not hardly. In most cases, a device is submitted to a lab that
- is local to the manufacturer's facility and more often than not,
- the testing site is a privately owned lab that is authorized to
- perform the emission and type acceptance testing procedures. If
- the device submitted passes the requirements and meets the type
- acceptance guidelines for which it is submitted, the testing site
- would then issue a certificate of type acceptance and the records
- of same are then forwarded to the FCC. The FCC does however,
- perform type acceptance test also, but considering the enormity
- of electronic devices capable of all sorts of emissions, if they
- were to test each and every new device, wait would be impossible
- to bear with. Thus, the testing is permissible by private labs.
-
-
- Question:
- Does the FCC actually hold up products to be tested for months
- and months?
-
- Answer:
- Absolutely not. The average time span from start to finish for
- type acceptance testing, in normal cases, is four to six weeks.
- If there are extenuating circumstances, (not passing,
- corrections, resubmission etc.), then the individual or firm
- having made the submission is well aware of the causes of the
- delays and can, in most cases, expedite the process. In fact,
- the FCC will advance a resubmission to the point is was, at the
- time of failure, they do not require that the process be started
- from step one. Unless of course, the changes to the product
- being re-submitted are so vast as to require such.
-
-
- In preparing these points of information, it is hoped that the
- confusion generated by a lack of valid information is somewhat quelled.
- The situation is totally avoidable if a manufacturer or importer will
- forward pre-production models of the devices for testing and once passed
- provide statements of continued compliance. This would in most cases,
- preclude the situations we are seeing where the product is flowing freely
- to all parts of the world EXCEPT THE USA. The FCC is in no way to blame
- for this happenstance.
-
-
-
- Editor Note:
- Apparently Atari is doing EXACTLY the same thing it has in the past,
- shipping to the bigger European market first in large numbers. According
- to our information, we are told; "Throughout Europe the only machine
- generally available now is the STE!" It is sad to see an arm of the US
- Government being made the scapegoat in this scenario. It simply is not
- the case. Atari submitted the STE for FCC testing long after having
- shipped the devices to Canada and Europe. Once again, the USA takes a
- back seat.... Another promise to the US market unfulfilled.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
- > Beckemeyer Development CPU/STR Tech Notes™ Tools - Multitasking
- =========================================
-
-
-
-
- Micro RTX and MT C-Shell
- ------------------------
-
- Since the introduction of Micro RTX and MT C-Shell there has been
- confusion between the two. In an attempt to address this, I have prepared
- the following brief discussion.
-
- Micro RTX is a Real-Time Multitasking Executive. Micro RTX is a
- general purpose operating system kernel. It is the kernel used in the MT
- C-Shell system.
-
- Micro RTX also implements multitasking TOS compatibility. It
- implements all the GEMDOS and BIOS calls and adds some new TOS-level calls
- as well.
-
- Micro RTX is not an end-user application and includes no intrinsic
- interactive programs. It is more like a subroutine library; RTX by itself
- doesn't do anything. Micro RTX is a tool for developing stand-alone
- multitasking applications. MT C-Shell is an RTX application that emulates
- a UNIX environment. Micro RTX is very simple and general purpose. It has
- very few intrinsic limitations and is easy to customize via program
- extensions and "hooks". MT C-Shell installs hooks into RTX that support a
- UNIX-like multitasking multiuser environment. MT C-Shell actually extends
- the RTX kernel, just as any other RTX program could.
-
- The standard (non RTX) TOS system breaks down roughly as follows:
-
-
- Application Program and its Libraries
- |
- v Application Layer
- ============
- | System Services Layer
- v
- GEM AES services
- |
- v
- GEM VDI services
- |
- v
- GEMDOS services
- |
- v
- BIOS services
- |
- v
- XBIOS services
- |
- v
- Line A services
-
- The system services are not perfectly layered. An application may
- actually use a set of services at various layers in a number of acceptable
- combinations (e.g. GEMDOS only, AES/VDI only, AES/VDI and BIOS etc.) Non
- graphics applications (e.g. .TOS or .TTP) typically won't use the GEM
- services. Some graphics applications may bypass the VDI and use Line A
- directly.
-
- MICRO RTX installs replacement GEMDOS and BIOS system services and
- installs a new set of "MICRO RTX" services. Applications that use the
- normal system services won't be affected. However, applications that
- "know" about the new services can take advantage of advanced system
- features for multitasking, interprocess communication etc.
-
- MICRO RTX provides the low-level building blocks for building a
- higher-level OS interface. Such an interface is demonstrated in MT
- C-Shell and the VSH Visual Shell. RTX could also be the basis of a
- stand-alone application which could benefit from multitasking, such as
- TurboPOS, where multitasking and interprocess communications services of
- MICRO RTX are used in a sophisticated multi-user distributed data-base
- system, based on the client-server model.
-
- VSH is an "outer-layer" to the base MT C-Shell which provides a GEM
- windowing interface. It sets up device drivers and a GEM
- application/accessory to manage "virtual terminals", running commands
- inside GEM windows, even while another GEM application is running at the
- same time.
-
- Another application benefiting from multitasking is networking, where
- server tasks could run "in the background".
-
- I hope this brief introduction helps to answer a few questions about
- MICRO RTX, MT C-Shell, and VSH.
-
- David -- Beckemeyer Development
-
-
-
-
-
- ___________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- > PC DITTO 2 CPU/STR OnLine™ As the PAL flip - flops...
- =========================
-
-
-
- ctsy GEnie Atari RT
-
-
-
- Below, we present the ongoing saga of the user's lament with the latest
- entrant into the ST arena, PC-Ditto II.
-
-
- SALVIUS; posts,
-
- OK, I guess I'm missing something.. AG writes a single message saying they
- are now devoting their time to the software update.
-
- How does that solve the problems I've read here (I believe they also said
- they did NOT read this topic thoroughly, I'm still trying to figure that
- out, how they could afford not to spend a half hour capturing this topic
- with all of the vital info here):
-
- 1) The board don't not fit one bit at all no how in most STs...
-
- 2) The clip is poorly designed for many users, and there is a problem
- physically connecting it to the 68000 chip...
-
- 3) Some people cannot even boot up their computers, OR the ST operating
- mode is slowed down or otherwise affected. Software CAN'T fix that!!!
-
- 4) The board is obviously 100% incompatible with the blitter chip. Hey,
- people! Wake UP! YO! This is an internal board! What are you going
- to do, permanently sacrifice your blitter chips??? It may not be
- the greatest chip that Atari ever invented, and software might
- work faster (Turbo, etc.), but hey, it is a part of your megas! I don't
- care what the chip is, and AG cannot be forgiven for failing to test
- PCDII in a machine with a mega, given the HISTORY of blitter problems
- over the last year.
-
- Guys, I'm shaking my head, and giving up. When Supercharger is available,
- I'll buy that. My patience ended with AG's last message. This is absurd,
- and AG's ONLY answer is to do a recall, whether software can patch a few
- ST's or not! I would not think of tearing my ST apart for anything, and
- I'm not buying an AT case. Thank you, but no thank you.
-
- >>>Vinny
- ------------
-
-
- C.RICKERT; posts,
-
- I just got back from the atari store which i deal with, I had stopped in
- not because i received my pcditto but instead for a memory upgrade to 2.5
- meg. But while in the store two different customers brought their pcdII
- boards in after failing in their attempt to get them running(they all said
- that they locked up) The tech asked if i would mind if he looked at theirs
- first since he had not seen one yet and i figured that i also could learn
- something of interest to most of you and myself since i am also waiting.
- Within about 2-3 hours both units were repaired installed and working
- fantastic now waiting for mine will be twice as bad.
-
- JIM ALLEN ----- the technician knows you and said if you rush his orders
- for the boards he has ordered he will be more than happy to help you out.
- He also asked me to let everyone who has a board and wishes to return it
- know that he will buy it from you for $169.95 so that way everyone will be
- happy. the name of the dealer is COMPUTER CELLER LOCATED IN ST.CHARLES IL.
- THEIR PHONE # IS (312)584-4048 I HOPE THAT THIS HELPS SOME OF YOU OUT ALSO
- IF ANYONE IS INTERESTED IN RETURNING THEIR UNIT AND IT IS STILL IN
- ORIGINAL CONDITION I WILL PURCHASE IT AND PAY POSTAGE. LEAVE MAIL. THANK
- YOU CHUCK
- ------------
-
-
-
- J.ALLEN27; posts,
-
- There is that one rev of the 1040 that nobody has any troubles with, the
- board goes in and works. I have a distinct feeling that this rev of the
- 1040 is the one Ag developed the board in...so of course it works. It's
- the rest of us who don't have one of those 1040s that need a fix.
-
- Computer Celler's order does go out on Monday...coincidence huh? But
- really
- there are only 3 problems:
-
- 1: It doesn't live well with blitters...most not at all, some slightly,
- and some sort of.
-
- 2: There is some kind of an interrupt related bug that is hardware
- sensitive and so manifests itself as most machines not DOS booting.
-
- 3: It don't fit most machines...certainly not in conjunction with memory
- upgrades, etc.
-
- A SW fix will bag #2, a HW fix ( a PAL maybe) will bag #1, and I have no
- idea how they will deal with #3. But it is good to know that Nevin and I
- aren't the only ones having seen PCDII work.
- ------------
-
- Category 19, Topic 2
- Message 354 Mon Jan 29, 1990
- M.GENT at 01:34 PST
-
- AVANT-GARDE,
- When the next (and probably smaller) revision comes out, could I
- upgrade to it? This MONSTER board is impossible to mount in my machine.
- ------------
-
-
- Editor Note:
- While we are aware of the AG folks efforts to resolve their
- difficulties with PCD2, we still feel the best course of action would be
- to become more accessible to the users. Most feel that the problems
- surrounding PCD2 will, in time, be ironed out. In the meantime a strong
- consideration should be aimed at a) becoming more accessible and b)
- upgrading to a smaller pcb that will fit in any ST regardless of the
- model.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > "THE DREAM" CPU/STR FOCUS™ A good idea whose time has come.
- =========================
-
-
-
-
-
- "The Dream"
- =========
-
-
- An open letter to Atari, Dealers, Developers and Users.
-
-
- The Atari engineering department continues to produce astounding
- machinery. The STE and TT are well improved machines in a mature
- environment. Atari is also doing very well fiscally. A lot of Atari's
- current financial success is due to the Atari Portfolio. The world's
- smallest MSDOS computer has captured the imagination of computer
- aficionados world wide.
-
- Both the STACY Transportable (Midi Controller) and the TT have a very
- classy feel and give an experienced user the feeling of almost unlimited
- power. At last Atari's video resolution is second to none in the
- microcomputer market. If the TT does indeed release in a timely manner at
- less than $2000 and if the STACY is priced at $1495 for the basic floppy
- system, the pledge of "Power without the Price" will be truly fulfilled.
-
- In fact Atari has a virtual plethora of equipment and third party
- support for this equipment is substantial. From Parsec boards, to Mac and
- IBM adaptors, to Calamus, Pagestream, and Ultrascript, as well as music
- sequencing and sampling, point of sale systems, and even dedicated
- industrial control Mega ST's, there is no dearth of niche development for
- our machine which has somewhat disappointing sales figures.
-
- This brings us to the crux of the problem. In my opinion, the Atari
- ST/TT line is the broadest base of technically superior hardware available
- from any company. But every major computer company has an Achilles' Heel.
- IBM's is their graphic performance. They just aren't fun machines, and
- there are too many graphic standards. The Mac's is price coupled with a
- black and white standard which is dominant on their machines. The Amiga's
- problems are poor resolution and some doubt about the financial stability
- of Commodore. Tandy has a poor image due to their Radio Shack heritage
- and current IBM compatible technology. Atari has one major problem.
- Marketing. All of our minor problems stem from this basic flaw.
-
- The public attitude needs to be changed. Atari has tried various
- outside agencies including recently a division of Chiat Day, the
- advertising agency credited with Apple's success. They lasted about
- thirty days, then rehired and now finally, been given broader and more
- encompassing duties. Frequently, Atari has mounted in house campaigns.
- These have been dismal. Some of the promotions have been enticing, all of
- the hardware is desirable, and potentially well supported. The one thing
- Atari has not been able to come up with is a campaign to inspire the
- masses.
-
- I suggest that perhaps because of the owners coming from Canada, they
- misunderstand some aspect of the American market. We must certainly
- compliment the Tramiel family on what they do well. Atari is financially
- stable, and it was on the verge of ruin when they took over it. The ST
- consistently offers the most bang for the buck and is in my opinion the
- wonder machine of the decade.
-
- On the other hand, the American dollar is spent on fads. The hula
- hoop, Davy Crockett, Nehru jackets, Pet Rocks, and Apple Macintoshes are
- all fads. The Atari ST has not become a fad because it has not been
- advertised properly.
-
- I know this may sound self aggrandizing, but after four years as an
- Atari ST dealer, having to battle to survive as Jack Tramiel did in the
- marketplace, I think I am more in touch with users, user groups,
- developers and the American public than any Atari corporate officer. In
- fact I studied American Culture through graduate and post graduate school
- and have a degree in Anthropology. That I chose an economic life of
- marketing Atari is partially a testimony to the culture change computers
- are wreaking in our lives and partially due to Atari's accessability, both
- in ease of use and availability for less money. What makes Atari
- inaccessible is the lack of knowledge of their product by the American
- public.
-
- I say; "we can change that. One way is by supporting "The
- Revolution", Don Thomas' ideas on the users selling the brand. The second
- is hiring me as consultant or marketing specialist for Atari. In one
- year's time we can double Atari's dealers and quadruple Atari's ST sales
- in the U.S. with judicious advertising at a percentage of gross specified
- by Atari. Jack Tramiel and Sam Tramiel told me 10%. I submit that under
- my direction Atari can spend 8-10% on advertising, reach 10 times as many
- people, quadruple sales, and create the public image necessary to set the
- ST as a new standard firmly in the American economy.
-
- If you feel as I do that Atari's major shortcoming is in its public
- relations, from the general public, through dealer and user group
- organizations, then I am asking you to write Jack Tramiel, the chairman of
- the board to give us, the Atari users a chance to market their machine
- with me as the coach with certain powers in their company. This is not
- some kind of a takeover or assertion of democracy in action. After all,
- Atari is a family run company. I'm just suggesting that this one aspect
- of business could be managed better by me as someone coming up from the
- ranks. After all, when queried about marketing at COMDEX last week,
- Leonard Tramiel said, "What marketing?"
-
- If you support this move to better market the ST/TT line please write:
- Jack Tramiel, Chairman of the Board
- Atari Corporation
- 1196 Borregas Avenue
- Sunnyvale, CA 94086
-
- And please say: I'd like to see Atari ST/TT machines more widely
- sold and used. I think Bill Yerger has some good
- ideas. Why don't you give him a try?
-
- Thanks,
-
- Bill Yerger, owner Zephyr/Microworld
-
-
- Editor Note:
- Recently, the rumor mill has been active to the extent that we have
- heard there are certain Atari upper level employees who feel Mr. Yerger is
- not exactly what Atari expects him to be. Well, allow me folks.. Bill
- purchases MORE Atari products for sale in his dealership in one month than
- most dealers purchase for resale in a six month combined period. And ..he
- is not one of the price cutting comedians we see who try to impersonate a
- real dealer. Yet the same few "Axemen" near the top feel it necessary to
- try and take this man to task. I say it is because Yerger KNOWS what he
- is talking about and could, if he became a part of the decision making
- process at Atari, make life very miserable for these few vindictive
- characters who seem to make a career of misinforming the Tramiels. As
- time goes by, it becomes more clear just who is blowing smoke at Atari and
- it still boils down to the old BROWN-NOSE-SYNDROME of telling the boss
- things he either likes to hear or strongly impresses him. The corporate
- warriors and their jousting to gain the favor of the Tramiels is, once
- again, becoming rather painfully obvious.
-
-
-
-
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- > CPU NEWSWIRE CONFIDENTIAL™ Telling it like it is...
- =========================
-
-
-
-
- - Chicago, IL. ***** STACY NOW DELAYED BY CHINESE NEW YEAR! *****
- ------------
-
- What has to be the most UNBELIEVABLE EXCUSE of the year? The sales
- rep for Atari, in the Chicago area, was overheard saying; "The arrival of
- the Stacy Laptop has been delayed as a result of the celebration of the
- Chinese New Year." As I pick myself up from the floor, tears streaming
- down my cheeks from laughing so hard, I wonder if the sales rep thought
- the folks in this dealership were really that gullible. New Horizon
- Distributors needs to obtain new writers to produce their hilarious
- material, this one is a bit far fetched.
-
-
-
- - New York City, N.Y. **** MEGA2 PRODUCTION AND SALES DISCONTINUED! ****
- -------------------
-
- After calling and inquiring about a MEGA2 computer and its sale price,
- a major East Coast Distributor, J&R Music, informed us that the Mega ST2
- computer has been discontinued. This comes as no surprise to this
- reporter as the recently released production run was a heavily modified
- version incapable of accepting any type of memory upgrade.
-
-
-
- - Washington, D.C. ***** STE PRODUCTION TO BE ACCELERATED! *****
- ----------------
-
- Amidst complaints alleging the US market is being neglected on a grand
- scale, it is reported that the production quotas for the STE have been
- increased to bring the figure up over 25,000 units produced per month. At
- this time, the bulk of this production is destined for the European
- market, it is hoped that Atari will win FCC type acceptance soon and begin
- shipping the STE in the USA.
-
-
-
-
- - Munich, Germany ***** BORLAND TO RELEASE TURBO C/ST V2.0 *****
- ---------------
-
-
- Here is some news and an update on Turbo C for the ST. An ST
- programmer for Borland Germany in Munich said last friday if all goes the
- way it's planned, Turbo C/ST v2.0 and the source level debugger TD v1.0
- will be released in March (1990).
-
- That date does not apply to the English documentation. They still
- haven't found a producer/publisher/whatever for that. Sorry, no good
- news there yet. There are all sorts of new goodies, such as a complete
- PC-compatible BGI (Borland Graphics Interface) implementation. And TD is
- a sight to see. Incidentally, he said that Borland Germany received a
- number of complaints about the fact that TC/ST is not available in the
- USA. He suggested that those folks who wish to buy TC, if there was an
- official US version, should write to Borland USA and request an English TC
- version. It's entirely up to Borland USA to make such a version
- available, Borland Germany is more than willing to comply.
-
-
-
- - London, U.K. ***** SMALLER LYNX TO SELL FOR $99.00! *****
- -----------
-
- A notice in Electronic Gaming, January 1990 issue, states that Atari
- has a scaled down version of the Lynx under development. Unlike its
- luxurious big brother, it will not be quite as fancy, it will be smaller
- and more compact with a smaller color LCD screen, it will not have screen
- flip and it is slated to be available in late March or April.
-
-
-
- - Rockford, IL. **** ICD POISED TO RELEASE POWERFUL NEW SOFTWARE ****
- -------------
-
- ICD Inc. is now beta testing a group of new programs destined to be
- regarded as the most powerful programs ever written for use in the mass
- storage device arena. This new software will allow users of the older
- versions of TOS to utilize partitions up to a quarter gig in individual
- size and users of the newer versions of TOS, (1.4 or greater), may use up
- to half a gig for each partition. Additionally, a desktop accessory is
- included which permits the user to have any number of partitions, the acc
- will activate and deactivate partitions and change the boot pull-up
- order. After having used this software as a beta site, all we can say at
- this point is.. "If you think the ICD utilities and booter you are
- presently using is great, you ain't seen nuthin' yet!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- _____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- > A 'MOMENT' CPU/STR HUMOR™ Not quite what I was taught but cute..
- ========================
-
-
-
- The_Load_Prayer
- ---------------
- Our_program,( who art in memory, "HELLO_WORLD", be thy
- name). Thy O.S. come, thy commands be done on the screen as
- it is on disk. Give us this day our daily data, and forgive
- us our I/O errors as we forgive those whose bad sectors are
- against us. Lead us not into frustration, and deliver us
- from crashes. For thine is the application, the algorithm
- and the solution, looping forever and ever.
-
-
- .. Return
-
-
-
-
-
- ____________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > Hard Drive Info STReport InfoFile™ Affordable Mass Storage
- =================================
-
-
-
-
- NEW PRICES! & MORE MODELS!!
- ============================
-
-
- ABCO COMPUTER ELECTRONICS INC.
- P.O. Box 6672 Jacksonville, Florida 32236-6672
- Est. 1985
- _________________________________________
-
- Voice: 904-783-3319 10 AM - 4 PM EDT
- BBS: 904-786-4176 12-24-96 HST
- FAX: 904-783-3319 12 PM - 6 AM EDT
- _________________________________________
-
- HARD DISK SYSTEMS TO FIT EVERY BUDGET
- _____________________________________
-
- All systems are complete and ready to use, included at NO EXTRA COST
- are clock/calendar and cooling blower(s).
-
- -ALL ABCO HARD DISK SYSTEMS ARE FULLY EXPANDABLE-
- (you are NOT limited to two drives ONLY!)
- (all cables and connectors installed)
-
- RUGGED SEAGATE HARD DISK MECHANISMS
-
- * ICD HOST ADAPTERS USED EXCLUSIVELY * OMTI HIGH SPEED CONTROLLERS *
-
- 32mb #SG32238 549.00 42mb #SG44710 619.00
- 51mb #SGN4951 629.00 65mb #SG60101 689.00
- 80mb #SGN296 729.00 100mb #SG84011D 949.00
- 130mb #SG1244D 1099.00 145mb #SG3A421 1110.00
- 170mb #SGT41776 1389.00 260mb #SG1244Q 2169.00
- 320mb #SGN7788Q 3295.00
-
- Listed above are a sampling of the systems available.
- Prices also reflect various cabinet/power supply configurations
- (over sixty configurations are available, flexibility is unlimited)
-
- *** ALL Units: Average Access Time: 24ms - 34ms ***
-
- ALL UNITS COMPATIBLE WITH --> MAGIC SAC - PC-DITTO/II - SPECTRE/GCR
-
- LARGER units are available - (special order only)
-
- * Removable Media Devices NOW Available (44mb) Syquest 555 *
- * SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICES *
-
- BARE SYQUEST #555 W/ CARTRIDGE: $679.00
-
- EXTRA CARTRIDGES: 97.95 (anytime)
-
- * SYQUEST 44MB (#555) REMOVABLE MEDIA DRIVE *
-
- - SYQUEST 44 MB removable media drive - ICD ST Host Adapter
- - ICD Mass Storage Utility Software - 3' DMA Cable
- - Fan & Clock - Multi-Unit Power Supply
- (1) 44 MB Syquest Cart.
-
- Completely Assembled and READY TO RUN!
- in a shoebox OR under monitor cabinet
- ONLY $889.00
-
- CUSTOM CONFIGURATIONS AVAILABLE
-
- We would offer floppy drives.. but Computer Shopper has 'em at the right
- price. And.. you can plug 'em right into our cabinets and power supplies.
- Low-Boy OR Standard Case (designed with room for another 3.5 OR 5.25"
- drive) They're made for user expansion! TRUE UPGRADE-ABILITY!
-
- * TWIN SYQUEST 44MB REMOVABLE MEDIA DRIVES ... PROGRAMMER'S DELIGHT *
- SPECIALLY PRICED $1539.00
-
- * SYQUEST 44MB REMOVABLE MEDIA DRIVE AND HARD DRIVE COMBINATIONS *
- - Syquest 44 Model [555] and the following hard drives -
- 50mb SQG51 $1279.00 30mb SQG38 $1199.00
- 65mb SQG09 $1339.00 85mb SQG96 $1399.00
-
- LOWBOY - STANDARD - DUAL BLOWER CABINETS
-
- ***** COMING SOON! INSITE FLOPTICAL DRIVE *****
- August-September, 1990
-
- 20 MB 3.5 FLOPPY DISK MASS STORAGE OPTICAL DRIVE!
- uses standard 3.5" floppy disks and Floptical disks
- Will access and read your present library of floppys
-
- $789.95 approx.
-
- - Custom Walnut WOODEN Cabinets - TOWER - AT - XT Cabinets -
- Keyboard Custom Cables Call for Info
- ALL POWER SUPPLIES UL APPROVED
-
- -* 12 month FULL Guarantee *-
- (A FULL YEAR of COVERAGE)
-
- QUANTITY & USERGROUP DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE!
- _________________________________________
-
- DEALERS and DISTRIBUTORS WANTED!
- please, call for details
-
- Personal and Company Checks are accepted.
-
- ORDER YOURS TODAY!
-
- 904-783-3319 9am - 8pm EDT
-
-
-
-
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > A "Quotable Quote"™
- =================
-
-
-
- Make three CORRECT GUESSES consecutively.....
- .....you then establish yourself as an EXPERT!!"
-
-
- ... Ziggy Zagnut
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- CPU/STR™ "Your Independent News Source" February 02, 1990
- 16/32bit Magazine copyright © 1989-90 No.4.05
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Views, Opinions and Articles Presented herein are not necessarily those of
- the editors, staff, CPU NEWSWIRE™ CPU/STR™ or CPU Report™. Reprint
- permission is hereby granted, unless otherwise noted. All reprints must
- include CPU NEWSWIRE, CPU/STR or CPU Report and the author's name. All
- information presented herein is believed correct, the editors and staff
- are not responsible for any use or misuse of information contained herein.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-