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-
- *---== ST REPORT INTERNATIONAL ONLINE MAGAZINE ==---*
- """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
- "The Original 16/32bit Online Magazine"
- from
- STR Publishing Inc.
- """"""""""""""""""
-
-
- April 12, 1991 No.7.15
- ==========================================================================
-
- STReport International Online Magazine™
- Post Office Box 6672
- Jacksonville, Florida
- 32205 ~ 6672
-
- R.F. Mariano
- Publisher - Editor
- -----------------------------------------
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- BBS: 904-786-4176 USR/HST DUAL STANDARD
- FAX: 904-783-3319 12 AM - 6 AM EST
- -----------------------------------------
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- privately owned & operated STReport support BBS
- ALL issues of STReport International Online Magazine
- are available along with
- A worldwide list of private bbs systems carrying STReport
- __________________________________________________________________
-
- > 04/12/91: STReport™ #7.15 The Original 16/32 bit Online Magazine!
- -------------------------
- - The Editor's Desk - CPU REPORT - ATARI MATURES!
- - NeXT - Overview - CDTV SHIPS! - GEIS & IBM Link
- - CALAMUS SL - IMAGE SPEEDER - RETOUCHE
- - Ultre*Setter - PORTFOLIO NEWS - SHERLOOK!
-
- * CEPS 1991 EYEWITNESS REPORTS! *
- * GFA IN THE USA! *
- * PAGESTREAM 2 -> HOT! *
-
- ==========================================================================
- ST REPORT INTERNATIONAL ONLINE MAGAZINE™
- The _Number One_ Online Magazine
- -* FEATURING *-
- "UP-TO-DATE News and Information"
- Current Events, Original Articles, Hot Tips, and Information
- Hardware - Software - Corporate - R & D - Imports
- ==========================================================================
- STReport's support BBS, NODE # 350 invites systems using Forem ST and
- Turbo Board BBS to participate in the Fido/F-Net Mail Network. Or, call
- Node 350 direct at 904-786-4176, and enjoy the excitement of exchanging
- information relative to the Atari ST computer arena through an excellent
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- welcome to join the STReport Crossnet Conference. The Crossnet Conference
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- welcome to actively participate. Support Atari Computers; Join Today!
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- ==========================================================================
-
-
- > The Editor's Podium
-
-
- I am back, safely, from CEPS and would you believe I have caught a
- good, old fashioned, Chicago head cold? Its a dilly. Oh well, the CEPS
- show was "enlightening" to say the least.... The powerhouse programs that
- were on display were fabulous. Of course, seeing Atari in such "good
- company" was a neat and envigorating sight. But when you're standing
- around listening to the comments that passed between the Apple and MS-Dos
- folks it became increasingly more difficult with each minute passing by to
- keep a straight face. One of the most common remarks heard was; "Gee I
- thought Atari was outta business!" then .. in the very next breath you'd
- hear; "This stuff is superb why is it being kept a secret?" I'd love a
- nickel for everytime I heard either of the two remarks, my next Comdex
- trip would be paid for.
-
- Getting serious for a moment, Atari's display area was busy all the
- time, since this was a specialty show aimed at Corporate America, (CEPS-
- Corporate Electronic Printing Show), there were no crowds of curious users
- just very serious folks trying to find the very best in Desktop Publishing
- Solutions for their company or employers. The Matrix boards and TT030
- were the "HIT" of the show, let me tell you this, there was a Mitsubishi
- 24" color monitor with a fantastic picture of gleaming motorcycles that
- literally "blew your socks off!" Yes, that's right! And it was being
- driven by a Matrixed TT030. It was very impressive. From the attitudes
- and inquiries of the folks at that display, they too felt it was notewor-
- thy as many made it their business to remain after the presentation to
- obtain further info.
-
- Elsewhere in this issue are excellent descriptions and accounts of the
- show, but I had to put my 43 cents worth in. A final observation would be
- to illustrate; "the Atari computer is growing up". The TT030 represented
- itself very well. The software on display, coupled with the new and very
- exciting third party hardware kept everyone's interest levels high.
- It would be unfair to compare any of the software being displayed to what
- we are now using, but believe me in the DTP arena, the existing software
- in use for graphical, text and document manipulation is most certainly
- surpassed by huge leaps and bounds. One item everyone will pay attention
- to is the price tags of this new hardware and software, being truly sophi-
- sticated it carries the expected pricey tags. But then, not fall into the
- "you get what you pay for" trap, it must be understood the days of the
- $49.95 program are as dead as the echo of 1985's applause for the original
- 520. These programs and hardware goodies were not and are not part of the
- basic, entry level genre, they are strictly tomorrow's technology today.
-
- In my humble opinion, the presentation put on by Atari at CEPS was far
- better than any I have been witness to. Comdex included. This show
- allowed Atari to "rub elbows with the big boys" and actually outshine them
- in many areas. It felt great to walk around listening to the amazement,
- "oohs and aahs" when the attendees saw the TT030 and these superb software
- and hardware packages perform. This issue covers those fine third party
- products and for the next few weeks each of the products will have more
- coverage as we receive the additional materials requested about them. I
- gotta say it again.... The Atari TT030 has indeed opened the new era of
- Atari. Fellow Atarians, we "SHINED" at CEPS. <<<grin>>>
-
-
- Still quite tired, but thankful to have seen CEPS with Atari there!
-
-
- Ralph..........
-
-
-
-
- TODAY'S NEWS ..TODAY!
-
- """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- > STReport's Staff The regulars and this week's contributors!
- ================
-
- Publisher - Editor
- ------------------
- Ralph F. Mariano
-
-
- Staff Editors:
- --------------
- Michael Arthur Lloyd E. Pulley, Sr. Dana P. Jacobson
- Lucien Oppler Brad Martin Walter Daniel
- Oscar Steele Robert Allbritton John Szczepanik
-
- Contributing Correspondants:
- ----------------------------
- Michael Lee Richard Covert Roger Stevens
- Brian Converse Oliver Steinmeier Ed Krimen
- Andrew Learner
-
-
- IMPORTANT NOTICE
- ================
- Please, submit letters to the editor, articles, reviews, etc...
- via E-Mail to:
-
- Compuserve.................... 70007,4454
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-
- COMPUSERVE WILL PRESENT $15.00 WORTH OF COMPLIMENTARY ONLINE TIME
-
- to the Readers of;
-
- ST REPORT INTERNATIONAL ONLINE MAGAZINE
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-
- NEW USERS; SIGN UP TODAY!
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-
- WHAT'S NEW IN THE ATARI FORUMS (April 12)
-
- NEW UPLOADS POLICY CHANGE
-
- Effective immediately, the sysops will adopt the following policy for new
- uploads to the Atari ST and 8-Bit Forums:
-
- All new uploads will be placed ONLY in the NEW UPLOADS LIBRARY for a
- period of 2-3 weeks. After this time, they will be MOVED to the appropri-
- ate long term library and deleted from LIB-1.
-
- The old policy was to immediately place 2 copies of new files online. One
- in the NEW UPLOADS LIB and another in the long-term lib, giving users the
- option to download from either location. This old policy was wasteful of
- storage and confusing to some members who downloaded both copies thinking
- they were different versions.
-
- We realize that this will require everyone to scan the NEW UPLOADS LIB in
- addition to the other LIBs when searching for a specific type of file, but
- this is a temporary problem that will be eliminated when future versions
- of the CIS software will allow members to scan all files in all LIBS from
- a single point (a feature that is on the "enhancement" list).
-
- ARCSHELL 2.4
-
- Charles F. Johnson and Little Green Footballs Software bring you ArcShell
- 2.4, the latest version of this fine program. This version provides a
- link to MaxiFile by allowing you to call up MaxiFile from ArcShell's main
- screen. See ARCS24.ARC in Library 1 of the Atari Productivity Forum (GO
- ATARIPRO).
-
-
- NEW FROM DOUBLECLICK SOFTWARE
-
- DC Right DC is another PROGRAM OF THE WEEK by Double Click Software. With
- DC Right DC installed, a QUICK right mouse button click will emulate a
- LEFT double click. See DCRTDC.ARC in Library 13 of the Atari Vendors
- Forum (GO ATARIVEN).
-
- ATARI USERS GROUP LISTING
-
- Modems are nice, but nothing beats getting together realtime with hometown
- folks who share your interest! The 1991 list of Registered Atari User
- Groups is now available in file USERGP.ARC, LIBRARY 1 of the Atari 8-Bit
- Forum (GO ATARI8).
-
- GOLDEN OLDIE FOR ATARI ST
-
- DOTS AND DASHES - This classy connect-the-dots strategy game runs in both
- color and monochrome. Match wits with the computer or up to three
- humans. Play on one computer or compete by way of modem and a phone
- hookup. Start with dots only or with some dashes in place. To introduce
- an element of luck, make beginning dashes invisible. Fun for all ages and
- IQs. Built-in, printable instructions. Available in LIBRARY 2 of the
- Atari Arts Forum (GO ATARIARTS) as DOTDAS.PRG.
-
- ATARI PORTFOLIO FORUM NEWS
-
- Don't miss Walter Daniel's FORUM NOTES files (PORTFOLIO NEWS-STReport) in
- LIBRARY 1 of the Atari Portfolio Forum (GO APORTFOLIO) for news on the
- latest happenings and events in our online community.
-
-
- NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE
-
-
- ***********************************************************************
-
-
-
-
- > CPU REPORT
-
- Issue #106
-
-
-
- by Michael Arthur
-
-
-
- CPU INSIGHTS
- ============
-
-
- NEXT COMPUTERS, SPREADSHEETS, AND STEVE JOBS' NEXT ATTEMPT
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- When Steve Jobs introduced the first NeXT Workstation in 1988, it
- was praised as a revolutionary advance in desktop computing. Some of the
- computer industry's new trends, from removable disk cartridges to
- Unix-based Graphical User Interfaces, gained significant "media attention"
- from it. However, acceptance of the NeXT was slowed by complaints about
- its speed and lack of Third-Party support. This, along with Steve Jobs'
- own "crusade" to sell the NeXT mainly to universities, kept the NeXT
- Computer itself from becoming popular.
-
- Recently, NeXT Inc. began shipping its NeXTStation line of computers
- in an attempt to rectify its earlier mistakes. To gain industry support,
- NeXT's new workstations are targeted at the business market. Addressing
- complaints about its speed, the new NeXTs use a 25 MHZ 68040 chip (with a
- built-in floating point math unit) that is 3-7 times faster than its old
- 68030 chip. To end the controversy surrounding its reliance on Optical
- Cartridges, the NeXTstation Line uses an internal 2.88 Megabyte Floppy
- Disk Drive and a built-in 105 Meg Hard Drive. Also, to shore up one of
- the NeXT's greatest weaknesses, the NeXTstation line supports color
- graphics. The result: NeXT Inc., which only sold 8000 of its old NeXT
- Computer, has already gotten over 17,000 signed orders for its new
- systems.
-
- NeXT's new workstation line consists of NeXTstations, and NeXTCubes.
- The NeXTstation has a slim "pizza-box" shape, meant for use as a desktop
- PC, while the NeXTCube is a traditional "12-inch cube", being marketed as
- a network server. Here is more information on NeXT's new systems:
-
-
- 1) NeXTstation Monochrome System: This has 8 Megs of RAM, and comes
- with a 1120*832 monochrome resolution. Cost: $5000.00.
-
- 2) NeXTcube Monochrome System: Like the original NeXT Computer,
- this computer has four NuBus Slots and 8 Megs of RAM. It also has a
- monochrome 1120*832 resolution. Cost: $8000.00.
-
- 3) NeXTstation Color System: This version of the NeXTstation has 8
- megs of RAM, and can display 4096 colors out of a 16-bit (or 65,536 color)
- palette. It also has a 1120*832 resolution. Cost: $8000.00.
-
- 4) NeXTcube Color System: This version of the NeXTcube has 8 Megs
- of RAM, can display 4096 colors out of a 16-bit color palette, and has a
- 1120*832 resolution. Cost: $10,000.00.
-
- 5) NeXTcube Plug-in Motherboard: Like the original NeXT Computer,
- the NeXTcube's motherboard is actually a NuBus Expansion card. As such,
- NeXT Inc. is selling the NeXTcube's motherboard to owners of the original
- NeXT Computer, as an upgrade. Cost: $2000.00
-
- Along with its new computers, NeXT Inc. has introduced Version 2.0
- of its NeXTStep Operating system. Along with support for its systems' new
- features, NeXTStep now comes with a version of Display Postscript that can
- display color and monochrome graphics. Display Postscript is a device-
- independent imaging model that displays documents and text in a WYSIWYG
- fashion.
-
- Many of the supporters of the old NeXT Computer wanted it to support
- 24-bit color. In response, NeXT Inc. is selling the NeXTdimension color
- board for the new systems. The NeXTdimension board can display 16 million
- colors simultaneously at a 1120*832 resolution, using Intel's 80860 RISC
- chip as a graphics coprocessor, in order to provide a quick display. It
- also has video-capture capabilities. Cost: $3000.00.
-
- The NeXTdimension board also features real-time image compression,
- using the CL550 chip, developed by C-Cube Microsystems. The CL550 chip
- is the first VLSI chip implementation of the JPEG image compression
- standard. Developed by the ISO and CCITT International standards
- organizations, the JPEG standard allows graphics images to be compressed
- up to 1/100th of their normal size. The CL550 can compress still color
- images in real-time (at a rate of 30 frames per second), for "full-motion"
- animations. "True-color" animations (or those using 24-bit color graphics
- to display up to 16 million colors simultaneously) have previously been
- very difficult for computers, since such files can easily take up over
- several hundred megabytes (if not several gigabytes) of disk space. With
- the NeXTdimension board, one would be able to store a realistic, "full-
- motion" color animation that ordinarily took up 1 gigabyte of disk space
- on a 20 Megabyte hard disk.
-
- With the introduction of the NeXTstation systems, NeXT Inc. hoped to
- eliminate the reasons that its original NeXT Computer had fared poorly in
- the computer industry. While the NeXTstation addressed the flaws in the
- NeXT Computer's hardware, it had to have much more support from Software
- Developers than the old NeXT Computer. Now, several software companies
- have introduced products for the NeXTstation line, including:
-
-
- 1) Ashton Tate, who has introduced a spreadsheet package called Power-
- Step. Designed using NeXT's Interface Builder utility, Powerstep
- features:
-
- - A 16,384 X 16,384 cell matrix, for the largest of spreadsheet
- needs. One can install financial, math, and string functions into
- each cell. It also can read/write Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet files.
-
- - Presentation Graphics features, allowing users to place charts,
- text, and graphics on a page that has spreadsheet data. PowerSTep
- also uses NeXTstep's support for "voice annotation", allowing
- users to insert voice messages into a spreadsheet.
-
- - PowerStep automatically updates all graphs and charts as
- spreadsheet data changes. Also, several spreadsheets can easily
- be merged (or consolidated) into one.
-
- - Over 13 types of graphs and charts, including pie, bar, line,
- scatter, and 3D-surface graphs. PowerSTep users can also adjust
- the rotation, elevation, and perspective of 3D graphs as they are
- found onscreen.
- Ashton-Tate has also built a macro language, called WILMA, into
- PowerStep. WILMA macros can be called from spreadsheet cells, and can be
- used by software developers to develop modules for Powerstep. Currently,
- Ashton-Tate is also reportedly porting dBASE IV to the NeXT Computer....
-
-
- 2) Lotus Inc., who is shipping yet another spreadsheet for the
- NeXTstation, called Lotus Improv. The result of three years of research,
- Lotus Improv can import/export spreadsheet files made with Lotus 1-2-3
- Release 3.0. It has an online, context-sensitive Help System that is
- arranged with a table of contents and an index, allowing users to look up
- the program's features through a resizable window.
-
- Like PowerStep, Lotus Improv allows users to create presentations
- using spreadsheet data and text/graphics/sound elements, and has dynamic
- "live links" between its 3D graphs and spreadsheet data. One can also
- control the perspective and view of 3D bar/stack/area graphs, but Improv
- also has built-in graphics utilities, allowing one to create pictures for
- a presentation.
-
- Improv also introduces a new concept called "Dynaview", which
- incorporates many aspects of financial modeling into a spreadsheet
- program. Spreadsheet cells and formulas can be expressed using plain
- English phrases, instead of numbers and letters. For example, a formula
- to calculate a company's Total Revenue could be expressed by typing,
- "(Price * Quantity Sold)", instead of (A1 * B1). In this way, the
- structure/logic of a spreadsheet can be understood much more easily.
-
- Dynaview can compare relationships between two sets of information
- without having to recalculate or re-enter any data, macros, or formulas.
- In addition, Improv allows users to display different views of a spread-
- sheet by manipulating icons. For example, one could first view company
- advertising expenses by clicking on an icon, and quickly switch to viewing
- the company's payroll via another icon. Improv formulas can also be
- debugged more easily than with other spreadsheets, and can be made to
- apply to all spreadsheet cells that need the formula. This allows Improv
- spreadsheets to use far less formulas than regular spreadsheets, and for
- those formulas to be reused more quickly.
-
- Lotus says that DynaView could be useful in areas like market analy-
- sis or sales forecasting, and claims that Improv is a revolution in sprea-
- dsheet technology. Improv is now shipping, priced at $700.00.
-
- WordPerfect Inc. has announced that Version 5.0 of WordPerfect will
- be available for the NeXTstation during the first part of 1991. Using the
- NextStep user interface, it (unlike WP 5.0 for DOS) will be able to dis-
- play documents in a WYSIWYG fashion, and will allow picture images on a
- document to be easily scaled, rotated, or moved.
-
-
-
-
- _____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- > CPU STATUS REPORT LATE BREAKING INDUSTRY-WIDE NEWS
- =================
-
- Issue #16
-
- Compiled by: Lloyd E. Pulley, Sr.
-
-
-
- - New York, New York COMMODORE ANNOUNCES U.S. SHIPMENTS OF
- ------------------ CDTV
-
- Commodore will begin shipping its home multimedia computer (CDTV) April
- 19th. The CDTV unit looks like an audio compact disk player and
- connects to a television set and home audio system. However, it has the
- processing power of an Amiga computer, and can be upgraded with a full
- keyboard, mouse, trackball, and disk drives. Fifty CDTV software titles
- will be available within a couple weeks of its introduction with close
- to 100 due by late summer.
-
- The first shipments will be to Chicago, Los Angeles, Sacramento, San
- Francisco, and San Jose, with shipments to New York, Boston, Atlanta,
- Minneapolis, Dallas, and Denver in May. Commodore expects the product to
- be available across the country by September. The suggested retail
- price will be $999 and will be available at Macy's in California and at
- Soft-ware Etc., Walden Soft, Future Tronics and Montgomery Ward Electric
- Avenue in Chicago.
-
-
-
- - New York, New York "PHIBER OPTIK" PLEADS GUILTY
- ------------------
-
- Mark Abene, 19, known in the hacker community as "Phiber Optik", has
- plead guilty to the reduced charge of "unauthorized use of a computer"
- and was sentenced to 35 hours of community services.
-
- Abene, who had computer equipment and notes seized during the execution
- of a search warrant on January 24th, 1990, was arrested on February
- 5th, 1991 and charged with felony counts of computer tampering and
- computer trespass and a misdemeanor count of theft of services, plans to
- donate time at a local hospital to fulfill the community service
- requirement.
-
-
-
- - White Plains, New York GEIS AND IBM LINK ELECTRONIC MAIL
- ----------------------
-
- The IBM Information Network and GE Information Services (GEIS), two of
- the largest commercial value-added data networks offering the ability to
- send messages and data worldwide, have announced a linkup. This link,
- will allow customers of both services to exchange electronic messages.
- The link covers messages between the IBM Information Network's IBM Mail
- Press Exchange as well as the GE's QUIK-COMM and GEnie systems
-
-
-
- - Sydney, Austrailia COLOR "BIG BLUE" RED
- ------------------
-
- In the most recent IBM quarterly review from Australia, the lead article
- profiled Big Blue's cooperation with one of Australia's leading banks -
- ANZ. The bank's chief, Brian Weeks, was interviewed, and talked of his
- bank's very large dealings with IBM, including the ground-breaking
- installation of the IBM 600J six-processor system. The article had a
- nice color picture of Brian Weeks in his crisp, efficient office,
- complete with oil painting on the wall and Apple Macintosh on the desk.
- And if that weren't bad enough, the IBM buyer is posing with his
- Macintosh mouse in hand.
-
-
-
- - Tokyo, Japan COMPUTER VIRUS INVADES JAPAN LHARC
- ------------ FILES
-
- The "winner-B" type PC virus has infected Japan's major personal
- computer network NIFTY-Serve. The virus, which has been widely pub-
- lished and who's source code is widely available, was hidden in a data
- compression program called "LHarc" and was downloaded by 27 people
- before it was removed. So far, no "casualties" have been reported.
-
-
-
- - Redmond, Washington MICROSOFT JOINS AMERICA ONLINE
- -------------------
-
- Quantum's America Online electronic service has been joined by Microsoft
- to offer the Microsoft Small Business Center. The new America Online
- service offers software templates and consulting services.
-
- "With the Microsoft Small Business Center, business professionals can
- have immediate access to experts and other small business owners any
- time they need it, day or night," said Steve Case, president of Quantum.
- "And America Online's live electronic conferencing and electronic mail
- functions allow small and home-based business owners to build a
- networking community where information can be shared."
-
- The information contained in the Microsoft Small Business Center is free
- to subscribers of America Online, which charges $9.95 per month and
- includes three hours of free time. Calls cost $10 per hour during the
- day and $5 per hour at night.
-
-
-
- - Cupertino, California APPLE REORGANIZES TO CAPTURE NEW
- --------------------- MARKETS
-
- In an attempt to capture new markets and speed up products for market,
- Apple Computer has reorganized its company into several new divisions.
- John Sculley, Apple's chief executive officer and chairman, will be
- acting head of the new Consumer division, in which the Macintosh Classic
- is assigned. Another new major division is the Enterprise division,
- which will focus on developing hardware and software for customers
- needing industry standards, larger networks, and multivendor connec-
- tivity, the company says.
-
-
-
- - Dallas, Texas TI TO TRY FOR CHEAP SOLAR ENERGY
- -------------
-
- In an attempt to develop a much needed low-cost, environmentally clean
- energy alternative, Texas Instruments (TI) and Southern California
- Edison (SCE) have announced a joint solar energy development project
- which will concentrate on the new "Solar Sphere" technology. If suc-
- cessful, this would make solar electricity as cheap as conventional
- utility company electricity.
-
- The "Solar Sphere" technology is a new approach to converting sunlight
- into electricity involves less expensive, low-purity silicon and low-
- cost manufacturing equipment. Instead of using fragile and brittle
- conventional photo-voltaic cells, the new Solar Sphere technology uses
- cells with 17,000 tiny solar spheres on aluminum foil. Because each
- sphere is an independent, working cell, the impact of individual cell
- failure, compared to today's 100 square-centimeter single- and poly-
- crystalline cells, is negligible.
-
-
-
- - Washington, D.C. TOP GAMES FOR FEBRUARY
- ----------------
-
- Sierra On-Line's "King's Quest V" is still #1 on the MS-DOS games list
- with Maxis' "SimEarth" in second and "Red Baron", also from Sierra On-
- Line, slipping to third. These figures are based on sales figures
- supplied by the Software Publishers Association (SPA) for Februrary.
-
- In the video game category, first was Konami's "Teenage-Turtle", second
- was Acclaim's "The Simpsons" and "Super Mario Land" in third.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ***********************************************************************
-
-
- :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.
-
- -> NOW! GENIE STAR SERVICE IS IN EFFECT!! <-
-
-
- ***********************************************************************
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > The Flip Side STR Feature "...a different viewpoint"
- =========================
-
-
-
-
- A LITTLE OF THIS, A LITTLE OF THAT
- ==================================
-
-
- by Michael Lee
-
-
- The re-printing of posts problem on Genie seems to have been resolved.
- According to the new rules, unless I get prior permission from the
- person who left the post and also notify the sysops, I cannot publish
- any edited posts from the ST Roundtable on Genie. However, I can re-
- print entire posts without getting written permission (except in certain
- cases). While these rules seem generally fair, they will limit the
- number of Genie ST Roundtable posts that I can print.
-
- In general, there are three main reasons why I would edit a post:
-
- 1) To make it more readable and clearer. Many of the posts are dif-
- ficult to read because of spelling, writing and grammatical errors. I
- attempt to clear up the most obvious errors in an effort to make the
- posts easier to read.
-
- 2) To keep the non-pertinent information to a minimum (called "signal-
- to-noise" in the BBS world). Sometimes there might be 10 lines of
- "Hello, how are you" type of comments before they ever get to the "meat"
- of the message. In my attempt to keep this column in the 10-13k range
- and to give you as much new information each week as possible, I edit
- out most of the extraneous stuff.
-
- 3) When several posts give much of the same information. I'll edit out
- the duplicate information and leave the non-duplicate stuff.
-
- So, the only posts that I will be able to use from the ST Roundtable on
- Genie will be ones that are fairly clear, concise and don't need
- editing. But don't despair, that just means that I'll have more room
- for the posts from Delphi and CIS.
-
- ----------------
-
- A nice hint for all users from MAURICEM on Delphi...
- ...In my many years of beta-testing I've come to the conclusion NOT
- to blame a piece of software until you run it on a totally CLEAN
- system. It's when you start putting memory-resident [NOTE: auto
- programs and accessories] stuff in that things start to fall apart.
-
- ----------------
-
- More from Joshua Mendolusky about the Reflex Graphic Card on CIS...
- After calling Titan Designs Ltd. in England, they told me that
- currently it can be used in any Mega system without modification.
- When I called about two weeks ago, they said that 520/1040 compati-
- bility was about 6 weeks away. I am supposed to be getting dealer
- information shortly, and when I do I will be calling them again to
- find out the status of the upgrade.
-
- In reference to Multi-sync monitors, If you are using one in place of
- both your b/w and color monitors, I believe it will only work in the
- high resolution mode. It will also work with an 800 by 1280 page
- screen monitor, because the board has two ports of its own for use
- with that and a 21 inch CAD monitor (Hence the need for some form of
- upgrade on the 520s and 1040s, there's just no room in the back for
- the ports.)
-
-
- JCQM (JOACQUIM Software and Peripherals)
- (wa-KEEM)
-
- ----------------
-
- Some questions about the Dream Park 1.44 meg floppy drives from Willie
- Pelzer on CIS...
- ....will it boot a 720k disk? What about 1.44? How do you format the
- floppies? If you format from the desktop, will it format 720k okay?
-
- Answer from a Dream Park 1.44 meg owner, David Leon on CIS...
- ...the 1.44 will boot a 720k or a 1.44 disk just fine. It will also
- format a 720k disk just fine from the desktop. If you want to format
- a 1.44 disk or higher...you'll have to use the bundled software for-
- matter (it's GEM operated and easy)...it works beautifully with all
- IBM software (I used it for Windows) and it works really nicely for
- regular old ST stuff (I've got PageStream with 30 fonts on one 1.77
- disk!)
-
- About the only complaint I've got is that it botches up GCR
- read/write under Spectre - the Spectre format is OK but GCR disks
- can't mount...the drive does require minor installation (addition of
- a HD port and replace of the disk drive controller chip) cost me
- about $30 to install.
-
- ---------------
-
- From JB. Davis, (DreamPark), Category 4, Topic 53, Message 66 on the ST
- Roundtable on Genie...
-
-
- ***Blowout of IB Drive cases!!!***
-
- We are blowing out all of our IB drive cases! We have a grundle of IB
- single height 5.25" cases complete with power supply. We are blowing
- these out for $29.95!!!! These make great cases for 5.25" 360 or 1.2
- meg drives, as well as 3.5" 720 or 1.44 meg drives with the use of an
- adapter. First come first serve!!!
-
- If you want a drive installed, we will sell you a 5.25" 360K unit
- complete for $119.95, or a 720k 3.5" unit for $129.95.
-
- Call us at:
-
- DreamPark Development 1390 South 1100 East Suite 104 SLC, UT 84105
-
- (801)484-9809 voice (801)466-2541 fax
-
- ----------------
-
- From Ralph Mariano (ST Report) on Delphi...
- I been using this Princeton Ultra-Sync for three years now with a
- modified monitor master and will plainly say that all three modes are
- as good as if not better than those of the SC1224 /SM124. Quality
- multirez monitors are not new but just being discovered. Anybody...
- Interested in multi-sync/multirez monitors, owes it to themselves to
- make it their business to try a Princeton Ultrasync.
-
- ----------------
-
- From the Gadgets RT on Genie...
- Question by John Townsend (Atari)...
- Anyone know where I can get an Epson driver for use with Spectre? I
- am trying to use a Panasonic dot matrix printer....
-
- Answer from Jeff.G....
- ...have you tried the PrintLink collection from GDT Softworks?
-
- Answer from Diane Foley....
- ...you might try MacWarehouse at 800-255-6227
-
- Answer from Rob Woodbridge....
- ...My favorite is Mac Connection, 800-800-2222. It's currently going
- for $59. $3 gets you overnight shipping, too!
-
- ----------------
-
- There have been some reported problems with Spectre 3.0 and ICD's
- AdSpeed. The following are two (compiled) messages from STACE (Gadgets
- sysop) on what the problem exactly is, who's at fault and what to do
- about it. From the Gadgets RT on Genie...
-
- ...AdSpeed works fine with Spectre. However, due to the way SPECTRE
- checks for the amount of available memory, a problem pops up on STs
- with less than 4 megs...This is a problem with SPECTRE, not with
- AdSpeed...AdSpeed, Spectre 3.0 and 2 meg ST get along JUST FINE if
- you boot Spectre with the AdSpeed cache turned OFF (8mhz mode). Then,
- after you enter Mac mode you can turn AdSpeed back to 16mhz and all
- is well. Of course, this makes a hardware switch very desirable.
-
- -----------------
-
- How one ST user uses his system. From Ron Webber on Delphi...
- ...I use the PC at work and also use the ST at work to do editing of
- BASIC programs that will eventually end up on the PC. I use Easy-Draw
- to do illustrations for the manuals that go with the PC programs when
- we sell them (the manuals themselves are printed using Word Perfect
- on the PC), and I do the ad layouts for advertising the machines that
- use the software using PageStream and UltraScript. I have yet to see
- a DTP program that is as good as PageStream for Ad layouts, but then
- I have been using PageStream since it was Publishing Partner and am
- probably biased. I also use Microsoft C on the PC and much prefer
- Laser C on my ST, and also use Microsoft QuickBasic and sort of
- prefer GFA Basic on my ST...
-
- ----------------
-
- From JB. Davis (Dream Park), Category 4, Topic 55, Message 160 on the ST
- Roundtable on Genie...
- I have been contacted by my supplier concerning the Syquest 88, but
- the news for ST owners is *NOT* good...
-
- According to my supplier, a limited number of OEM (Original Equipment
- Manufacturers) will be recruited to sell the 88 under strict
- controls. They will be able to sell these units *ONLY* for IBMs. OEMs
- will be required to sign a statement attesting to this fact and
- Syquest has reportedly recruited a 'Cartridge Police' group to insure
- that this is enforced. As a result, we will not have access to the 88
- in the near future. I am assuming that this means Syquest has reached
- some type of agreement with an Apple OEM for sole sourcing 88s for
- the Mac.
-
- I teel ya, I don't know what the world is coming to...
-
- Brad@DreamPark
-
- ----------------
-
- Comments about defragmenting your hard drive from Wayne Dunham on
- Delphi...
- ...there is no reason to backup and restore your hard drive just
- because it has become fragmented. You can defrag the drive with a
- couple different programs I've used and still use.
-
- I highly recommend HD Sentry from Beckemeyer. I've never had any
- problem with it messing up a drive. I've also used Tune-up! from
- Michtron. I never upgraded to the version that came in the Michtron
- Toolkit, but that old version could munge a partition if there was
- less than 30% of the partition free and the drive is very fragmented.
- I don't know if the newer version exhibits the same problem or not. I
- did have problems with it several times messing up my partitions.
-
- I found the optimization routines in Tune-Up more flexible. In Tune-
- up you can optimize a partition for mostly read, or mostly write and
- it works quite well. HD Sentry doesn't offer that flexibility but
- still does an excellent job of de-fragging the drive.
-
- If you don't want to purchase a defragging program then all you have
- to do is back up the partitions, then zero the partitions with your
- HD utilities and then restore the drive. The drive is now all
- defragmented. (of course that's assuming you use a file backup and
- not an image backup program)
-
- No matter which way you go you should ALWAYS backup the partitions
- BEFORE you defrag just in case something does go wrong and you do
- have to reformat, or zero a partition.
-
- ----------------
-
- From Julius (ISD), Category 16, Topic 3, Message 68 on the ST Roundtable
- on Genie...
-
- Here are the results of some rough benchmarking that I did today.
- Basically, the land survey drawing (available in the libraries) was
- loaded into DynaCADD on the respective platform and the time to
- repaint the whole thing was measured. Error is +/- .5 seconds. The
- results are interesting...
-
- 80386 20 Mhz no FPU - 16 bit VGA 16 colors - 19s
-
- 80286 12 Mhz w/FPU - 8 bit VGA 16 colors - 13s
-
- A2500 14 Mhz 68020/68881 - 672x448 - 4 colors - 6s
- 8 colors - 6s
- 16 colors - 10s
- 640x400 - 4 colors - 5s
- 8 colors - 6s
- 16 colors - 8s
-
- TT/030 32 Mhz 68030/68882 - 1280x960 - monochrome - 3s
- 640x480 - 16 colors - 3s
- 640x400 - monochrome - 3s
-
- MegaST T16 & 68881 - 1280x960 - monochrome - 8s
- 640x400 - monochrome - 7s
-
- A3000 25 Mhz 68030/68882 - 688x440 - 4 colors - 3s
- 8 colors - 3s
- 16 colors - 5s
-
-
- ----------------
-
- Question about hard drive problems from Philip W. Payzant on CIS...
- My Atari Mega 30 hard drive was giving me intermittent errors, so I
- backed up, reformatted and partitioned it into three 10 Mb logical
- drives. The Markbad program that runs as part of the format program
- reported 28 bad sectors. Out of curiosity, I ran Markbad again.
- Drives D and E were clean, but C apparently had 8 bad sectors. I ran
- it twice more, and got 1 and 41 bad sectors respectively. Additional
- runs produced more bad sectors, but never zero...My question is: are
- these bad sectors new ones found since the last Markbad run, or is it
- the total of all bad sectors on the drive? If the former, shouldn't
- it eventually report zero bad sectors? If the latter, why do the
- numbers vary so wildly?
-
- Answer from Jeff (InterSect Software) on CIS...
- ...the markbad program will only find NEW errors. If you are finding
- new bad sectors within a few minutes of each test I would suspect a
- flakey drive or a problem with your ST's DMA port...If the problem
- shows up on C: and not D: or E: I think I would suspect the DMA port.
- The C: drive has a faster transfer rate than the D: or E: drive.
-
- RLL drives compress data on the individual tracks 1.5 times that of a
- MFM drive. This means that the data transfer rate of the RLL drive is
- 1.5 times that of the MFM drive, if there are any problems with the
- DMA port, it will show up on faster drives-partitions...Best way to
- check this is to try the Megafile 30 on a friends computer reformat
- and markbad.
-
-
- ----------------
-
- Until next week.....
-
-
-
- _____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > STR Portfolio News & Information Keeping up to date...
- ================================
-
-
-
- THE ATARI PORTFOLIO FORUM
- =========================
-
- On CompuServe
-
-
- by Walter Daniel 75066,164
-
-
- BJ Gleason is working on a calculator program for the Portfolio. If
- you would like to offer suggestions to him, reply to message #10988.
-
- Another Portfolio-versus-Wizard debate raged through the forum this
- week. There were two major points made in the thread: capability and
- price. The Wizard is a dedicated organizer and its software and hardware
- have been optimized for that purpose. While the Portfolio organizing
- software isn't as slick as that of the Wizard, the Portfolio can run many
- other programs such as text processors, BASIC interpreters, and so on.
- The high-end Wizards cost as much as $370 or so; the street price of
- Portfolios is as low as $225.
-
- Read message 10967 for an announcement of a change in the policy for
- the libraries. New files should be uploaded to Library 1 (New Uploads).
- Files will remain in Library 1 for 2-3 weeks, then be moved to the ap-
- propriate library for permanent storage.
-
- Dave Stewart uploaded a program (see TEAM.ZIP) that displays the names
- of the Portfolio design team that are stored in ROM locations $F000:4FB2
- through $F000:5141. Bruce Coleman of Atari then pointed out that you can
- access these names using a hidden feature. In one of the built-in ap-
- plications except Setup or Menu, press F1 (or the Atari key) to call the
- main menu, then press "H" to select help. Depending upon the application,
- you may need to press another key to select which help screen to display.
- With some help text on the screen, type ALT-left bracket to get the "Help
- on: Design Team" text. You can then use the down-cursor key to read all
- the names.
-
- Chris Burns uploaded several programs that allow a Portfolio to con-
- trol a Tandy PDD2 portable disk drive. The files have to be compiled with
- PowerBASIC, so most people cannot use them until the product hits the
- stores. Several of the files are small utilities that accomplish single
- functions such as renaming a file, copying from the PDD2, copying to the
- PDD2, deleting a file, reading the disk directory, or formatting a disk.
- Read PDD2.DOC for documentation of these utilities. Chris also prepared a
- PDD2 file manager (TM.BAS) that is documented by TM.DOC.
-
- A Portfolio user of a photographic bent uploaded two files of interest to
- camera users. PHOTO.BAS is a PBASIC program that performs some exposure
- calculations such as f-stop given other information. FILMS.ADR is an
- Address Book file that documents exposure, filter, and reciprocity data
- for 20 different films.
-
- LOANS.BAS is a PBASIC 4.1 program that will calculate monthly payment and
- total interest for both mortgages and simple loans. The mortgage cal-
- culator includes estimates for taxes and insurance so that the payment
- includes principal, interest, taxes, and insurance (PITI in real estate
- parlance).
-
-
-
-
- __________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > CEPS-1991 STR Spotlight "...A new era of prosperity for ATARI"
- =======================
-
-
-
-
-
- CEPS April 8-April 11, 1991
- ===========================
-
- THE MIDWEST FORUM FOR DESKTOP, MULTIMEDIA & VISUAL COMMUNICATION
-
-
-
- by Andrew Learner
-
-
- An interesting metamorphosis occurred this past weekend. I saw an
- aging, "game machine" company rejuvenated, with exciting new products,
- both hardware software, and "PEOPLE".
-
- I met Greg Pratt - President of ATARI US, Mel Stevens - Show Coor-
- dinator, Diana Goralczk - Customer Relations, Adam Rabbino - Sales and
- Marketing and the brains behind the new TT030 development group, Bill
- Rehbock.
-
- Bob Brodie rounded out the group, as always helpful, "Enthusiast"
- coordinator, organizing local folk from: LCACE - Mike Brown, Steve Kostel-
- nik and J.J. Johnson, CRAG - Randy Noak, RACC - Andy Learner to help set
- up and run local errands.
-
- Through some interesting and innovative engineering,and a great deal
- of painstaking organization, the Professional Products Group from ATARI,
- was unveiled at the CEPS (Corporate Electronic Publishing Show) at McCor-
- mick Place in Chicago. This is a show where all the major players in the
- Desk Top Publishing world come out to show their hardware platforms,
- software, printers, even paper stock for laser printers. A new era of
- prosperity for ATARI, seems to be on the near horizon.
-
- With paternal like patience, ATARI guru, Bill Rehbock, has assembled a
- team of developers who quietly worked on new exciting software for the
- TT030 computer platform. We have all heard about the TT for some time
- now. But I think after showing it's Mega system over 3 years ago at this
- same show, ATARI people realized that the competition was well slightly
- ahead of them in machine speed, and software development.
-
- We have seen the maturing of such powerful DESK TOP PUBLISHING prog-
- rams as WORDFLAIR, CALAMUS, and PAGESTREAM on the old ST platform, with
- outstanding DTP results. But this new platform is a powerhouse of a
- computer. It rivals the top of the line machines of all other personal
- computer companies, in performance, speed and as we have grown to expect
- from ATARI.
-
- Of course many you will cringe at the $3000+ price tag of the TT030-
- -8/80meg machine. But, that is inexpensive compared to the $10,000+ cost
- of the MAC IIFx or the NEXT workstation. You will also be surprised at
- the price tags of the new Calamus SL Color Pro, Pagestream 2.0, and the
- new Goldleaf Photo retouching program Retouche Professional CD ($1995.95).
- But these are all new products, with powerful never before seen features,
- on any platform.
-
- Quoting one of the CALAMUS programmers from Germany, who was at the
- show, when asked what he thought of the TT030, Klaus Garms said,
-
- "This is an exciting powerful, machine. It's approach is unique, and
- in many ways, superior to it's closest competitors, the MS-DOS based
- 486, and the MAC IIFx. It has a few problems, which I am sure ATARI
- will iron out, before the machine goes into full distribution."
-
- ATARI had the booth directly next to the LINOTYPE-HELL (commercial
- high end printing printers, capable of up to 2450 DPI), and Xerox. Xerox
- has a time tested program called Ventura Publisher, which runs on PC's.
- They also had a booth that stretched the entire width of the show.
-
- I was privy to the debut of this exciting new product line, by a means
- many of you luckier loyal ATARIANS have experienced, that is the set-up of
- an ATARI booth for some type of a show. It was an eye opening experience,
- to say the least. Those of you familiar with desk top publishing, and
- ATARI products will know the names I will refer to in this article. But
- believe me, you would barely recognize the changes in their products.
-
- The most aggressive developer and entrepreneur of the ATARI group, has
- to be Lauren Flanegan-Sellers, President of Goldleaf Publishing, Lakespur,
- California. She has assembled an international team of some of the most
- brilliant programmers and technicians I have met, and came up with one of
- the most outstanding publishing solutions, I have seen on any platform.
-
- GOLDLEAF is marketing what they call a "speeder box", which "talks" to
- LINOTRONIC printers (typesetters) in their "native" language. This in-
- novation, reduces the through put time from the print command, to a com-
- pleted printed piece of film. If you are familiar with POSTSCRIPT, you
- know that is the most universal printer language in the DTP market.
- However, typesetters such as Agfa Compugraphics, or LINOTYPE-HELL, have to
- interpret Postscript. This slows down the printing process.
-
- They also have RETOUCHE - a PRO version of a photo- scanning, and
- retouching program - DIDOT a professional line art creation program -
- Sherlook - a series of optical character recognition programs, and to
- assemble all of these elements into documents, WORDFLAIR II (a remarkable
- bargain at $149.95)!
-
- I think many people came by just to take a peek at ATARI and while
- there I watched many a raised eyebrow of the seasoned MAC and MS-DOS
- professional publishers, as they poured over the offerings in the ATARI
- booth.
-
- You must understand one thing about this computer market, if you are
- unfamiliar with DTP. Printing and publishing in general, is a multi-bil-
- lion dollar a year business, which is worldwide. Desk Top Publishers are
- seriously cutting into what has traditionally been a very tough place to
- carve a niche. Printing companies (dare I say) loathe the DTP'er, because
- he is taking away a lot of their business.
-
- DTP people can now produce what large printing companies used to spend
- billions of dollars to purchase from a printer. One of the last vestiges
- of American ingenuity, and dominance of a marketplace, is the computer
- industry. Desk Top Publishing is one of the major areas we are also still
- dominant.
-
- From transistor radios to luxury automobiles, stereo, VCR, and most
- assuredly, the photographic market the Japanese and Germans have taken a
- lions share of worldwide industrial production, copied and vastly improved
- every type of technology we have ever developed. I'm sure tecno-program-
- mers in both countries, are working feverishly, to try and close the gap,
- but it seems that most of the high level computer developments still come
- from the good ole USA.
-
- Industrially and commercially Macintosh has pioneered the way for the
- computer industry into the extremely competitive world of printing and
- publishing. The printing industry, is evolving rapidly, with the intr-
- oduction of personal computers and the workstation environment taking over
- jobs that traditionally have been done manually, such as photo retouching,
- typesetting, and basic layout not to mention drawing and design. Enough
- history already, on to the meat and potatoes.
-
- I have heard a few loyal ATARI users express serious doubts as to the
- future of this company. Frankly I think with few changes/improvements,
- ATARI has a winning product on it's hands. The booth had the familiar
- display exhibits, used at other Atari shows with ten stations. Some
- computers were shown "operating" high end (2450 Dots per inch film recor-
- ders) typesetters. Although I never saw the finished output. I know it
- can be done, because I do it with a 1040ST, through a service bureau.
-
- One problem I noticed immediately, was an overall haze, to all the
- video reproduction on ATARI B&W and new color TT monitors. Outstanding
- color and B&W graphic representation showed up on NEC multisync monitors,
- which were running from the new VME port.
-
- I don't know what caused the flatness or lack of screen brilliance (it
- wasn't exactly lack of sharpness), but other platforms using the Supermac,
- or other brands of large screen monitors, did not seem to have this probl-
- em. After all, they were all there to compare each other to. I hope this
- is corrected quickly, because I overheard more than one person notice it.
- The other is the lack of a high density drive. All the competition has it
- in their machines. TT030 should have it also.
-
- One obvious absence, is the often mentioned but rarely seen, ATARI
- CD-ROM drive. Again all the competition showed 600meg CD-ROM Drives, and
- Magneto-Optical drives. I hope the TT, will be able to use these types of
- drives. After being in the DTP and graphics world, an 80Meg drive looks
- fairly puny next to a CD- ROM.
-
- Maybe with ATARI's cooperation and this new grouping of developers, we
- will see a whole group of these programs come out on a single CD-ROM disk.
- Come on ATARI, let's do it. The users are rooting for you to succeed.
- Let us see abandoned machines with the users heading for other platforms
- happen no more! And continue on with a new slogan;
-
- "ATARI - Professional Power - The Economical Alternative!"
-
-
-
- Editor Note:
- Andy Learner is the President of Rockford Atari Computer Club. He has
- been an avid ATARI user since 1983. His twenty five years as a
- Professional Photographer, Exhibit Display Producer, and Publisher,
- make him uniquely qualified to bring us this fine report.
-
-
-
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > CEPS 1991 STR Spotlight ATARI'S BOLD NEW APPROACH
- =======================
-
-
-
- PROFESSIONAL SYSTEMS GROUP
- LAUNCHES
- DIRECT TO PRESS PUBLISHING SOLUTIONS
-
-
- "Direct to Press", a complete and comprehensive array of pre-press
- publishing solutions was introduced at the Corporate Electronic Publishing
- Systems (CEPS) trade show in Chicago, Illinois. Direct to press includes
- full-featured, high quality and high performance tools for every phase of
- pre-press work from document processing and design to photo retouching and
- imagesetter film output. Tools offered as part of these publishing solu-
- tions produce film that is ready to go directly to press, including photo-
- graphic images with up to 256 levels of greyscale.
-
- Direct To Press is a collection of hardware and software tools from a
- select group of manufacturers assembled and led by the Professional
- Systems Group, a division of Atari Computer. Design and imagesetting
- workstations take advantage of the sophisticated graphics and pure proce-
- ssing power of the Atari TT030, the company's high performance computing
- platform.
-
- Available as custom-configurable systems, Direct To Press is targeted
- at pre-press and printing service bureaus and in-house design and produc-
- tion departments, as well as freelance designers, artists and publishers.
- Systems based on the Direct To Press platform and concept will be distrib-
- uted through a network of value-added resellers and dealers.
-
-
- PUBLISHING SYSTEM HARDWARE PLATFORM
- -----------------------------------
-
- The Atari TT030 provides an ideal computing platform for the Direct To
- Press publishing tools. It features a 32mhz Motorola 68030 microprocessor
- with on-chip cache and memory management as well as a 68882 math co-proce-
- ssor, 8mb of RAM, an 80mb hard drive and a wide range of video and storage
- expansion options. Output for proofing purposes is provided by the 300
- dpi Atari SLM605 laser printer. The SLM605 features a small footprint,
- high quality output and a fast 6 page per minute operation.
-
- "We founded the Professional Systems Group to provide the computing
- platforms that will support sophisticated application for demanding verti-
- cal market segments," said Greg Pratt, President of Professional Systems
- Group. "We're thrilled with the level of performance and output quality
- embodied in the third party products that are part of our Direct To Press
- for digital typography and image processing."
-
- The Direct To Press solutions generally follow one of three complimen-
- tary approaches:
-
- SoftLogik's PostScript based PageStream 2 provides direct compati-
- bility with that Industry Standard. The Calamus SL and tms Cranach Studio
- family of high end publishing applications, including proprietary SoftRips
- for specific models of typesetters and imagesetters deliver a wide range
- of features and fast performance. And the Retouche/Didot family of digi-
- tal lithography, line art and page layout tools uses proprietary software
- technology to create raster images of pages within the host software,
- eliminating the need for a RIP, and uses specialized hardware to greatly
- enhance output speed and quality. Files can be easily exchanged among
- tools, and with many other, industry standard, desktop publishing progr-
- ams.
-
-
- POSTSCRIPT COMPATIBILITY
- -----------------------
-
- Softlogik's PageStream 2 is a fast, powerful and easily accessible
- general purpose page layout program that can import line art, scanned or
- retouched images, or composed pages from other tools and offers full
- PostScript compatibility.
-
-
- CALAMUS SoftRIPs
- ----------------
-
- Highly acclaimed Calamus SL from ISD Marketing uses a unique modular
- approach to page layout feature integration. Modules for image managem-
- ent, graphic design, text processing, illustration and autotracing can be
- selectively loaded as needed to yield true WYSIWYG, fast printing speeds
- and extensive color support. Calamus Outline Art is a complete vector
- graphics editor for lines, Bezier curves, control paths and other vector
- shapes. ISD Marketing tms Cranach Studio is an electronic image manipul-
- ation program that uses professional level bit mapping for enhancing,
- retouching, making color corrections and making composites on greyscale
- and 24 bit color images.
-
- ISD Marketing also offers the Calamus Imagesetter SoftRIPs software
- interfaces enable the Atari TT030 to be directly connected (via the DMA
- port) to high resolution imagesetters such as those from Hell systems, all
- AGFA Compugraphic 9000 series and the Linotype L100, L300 and L500.
-
- "We're very pleased to offer our sophisticated publishing tools as
- part of the Direct to Press solution," said Nathan Potechin, president of
- ISD Marketing.
-
-
- IMAGE SPEEDER
- -------------
-
- The 3K Image Speeder, (available from Goldleaf Publishing) is an Atari
- TT030 computer configured in a tower case to accommodate a larger power
- supply and the additional add-on cards and disk storage peripherals re-
- quired. It includes a dedicated graphics display board with hardware
- based pan and zoom, a high speed scanner interface and a direct link to
- the Hell imagesetter through the VMEbus. The 3K Image Speeder currently
- supports ReTouche Professional, Didot Line Art, and Didot Professional;
- support for the Calamus and Cranach family of publishing tools is under
- development.
-
- Retouche Professional is a modular system of professional digital
- lithography tools for creating, retouching and reproducing halftone pic-
- tures. Retouche Professional's most distinguishing features are the
- quality and speed of its output that results from a library of hand-tuned
- screens that are optimized for a variety of film output devices and prin-
- ters.
-
- Retouch CD adds the dimension of color to Retouch Professional's
- digital halftone image processing capabilities, including color parameters
- and facilities for selecting, correcting and separating colors.
-
- Didot Line Art is a full featured line art creation and manipulation
- program that benefits from the same rasterizing output technology as
- Retouche Professional. Didot Professional is a full featured, object
- oriented page layout program with full color screen representation and
- color separation support. It is a superset of Ditdot Line Art and can
- manipulate block text halftone and color picture of any size, as well as
- bit images and vector graphics.
-
- Sherlook Professional is a high speed, highly accurate program for
- optical character recognition that can process up to 12,000 characters per
- minute.
-
- To create short, presentation quality, compound documents - Wordflair
- II is a single program that combines word processing, calculations, graph-
- ics, page layout, and a simple database on a screen representation of a
- printed page. Wordflair II's integration enables the user to easily
- manipulate text, data and graphics without cutting and pasting from separ-
- ate applications.
-
- For high quality presentation graphics, SCIGRAPH is a high perform-
- ance full-featured vector drawing program that can display and manipulate
- up to 256 onscreen colors or greyscale levels and create a wide variety of
- chart and graph types that can easily be imported into desktop publishing
- documents.
-
- "The Direct To Press solutions provide the best output quality at the
- best value," said Lauren Flanegan-Sellers, president of Goldleaf Publish-
- ing. "The nice thing about the Direct To Press solutions is that although
- some parts are new to the US Market, publishing systems based on the same
- elements have been very well accepted in Germany, widely known as one of
- the most demanding printing markets in the world.
-
- The Hell Systems Ultre*Setter UX-70 flatbed imagesetter generates
- press ready output on infrared sensitive RC paper or film. Utilizing a
- laser diode, pentaprism imaging system, the Ultre*Setter produces output
- resolutions ranging from 300-3000 dpi.
-
- Professional Systems Group is a new division of Atari Computer whose
- mission is to provide superior computing solutions for vertical market
- segments where output quality and execution speed are of the highest
- concerns. Professional Systems Group combines its computing platforms
- with high performance software and peripherals to meet and exceed the
- needs of these demanding audiences.
-
-
-
- ______________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > THE RIGHT WAY! STR FOCUS
- ========================
-
-
-
-
- HOW TO ATTEND A PROFESSIONAL COMPUTER TRADE SHOW
-
- - or -
-
- How not to 'Tick Off' the ATARI you love!
-
-
- by: Andy Learner - President RACC
-
-
- I went to help, but I got in the way, and was politely asked to step
- aside. How could they do this to me? I have bought every computer they
- have made since the beginning, with the 8-BIT 400. I have an extremely
- loyal, albeit somewhat jaded attitude toward ATARI the company, but an
- undying fondness for the machine itself.
-
- I know that seems awkward, but the machine is not subject to personal-
- ity clashes. An though often misused, and abused, never (unless you ask it
- to) will talk back or reject you as some people can and inevitably do. I'm
- not saying that I felt terrific about the following I am about to relate.
- I do see it as amusing, after getting over the hurt.
-
- The Thursday before the CEPS show, I get a call from my good pal, and
- Michael "Ellis" Brown. Did I want to go help set-up the ATARI booth at
- McCormick place in Chicago? "Why, absolutely!" I replied, as I had been
- pursuing Bob Brodie for some time, to do just that. A call to ATARI show
- coordinator Mel Stevens, then a return call from him reassured me that
- they wanted me to help.
-
- We met Mel on Saturday, and dove right in, helping setup all the shiny
- new TT030-8 computers, SLM605 Laser Printers, TTC1245 Color Multisync
- Monitors, and TTM195 19" B&W monitors. The purpose of this article is
- two-fold,
-
- (1) to show where an over zealous hobbyist, can really hurt the cause,
- rather than help it.
-
- (2) Apologize to any one I may have offended by offering over enthusiasm,
- as an explanation, not an excuse.
-
- We were all very excited (JJ Johnson, Mike Brown, and myself) to
- finally get to see the real TT030. Even more ecstatic to get to actually
- handle one. As these were truly fresh new machines there was no software
- on them, to "try" out. I figured there would be something, but the soft-
- ware people were to arrive the next day. I thought I should have brought
- something to "boot up" and check out the new "toy".
-
- It took a phone call from my friend Bob Brodie on Monday afternoon, to
- clue me into the fact that this new machine in fact was no toy, and any
- attempt to make that association, would be poorly received by it's develo-
- pers and programmers. Also that there would be plenty of time to check out
- the new machine at the LCACE meeting, this coming Saturday.
-
- I have been in the Exhibit and Display business for over 10 years. And
- I know the rules, when it comes to McCormick Place. You may not even plug
- a standard electrical plug into the main line, without the attendance of
- the electrician. This seems like a silly thing, until you realize the
- delicate balance of power required to power up all the lighting, and
- computers at an event like this. Everyone takes everything very seriously.
-
- I should have known, just by the fact that ATARI was right next to the
- largest booth of the show (XEROX - Ventura Publisher), that they were
- there, to do some serious business. But I didn't. After all the setup
- was completed, there wasn't much for me to do on the second day. I bro-
- ught along a few of my favorite programs, including CALAMUS, PAGESTREAM,
- and SPECTRE GCR as well as a few (ahem!!)games.
-
- I thought as I didn't have all too much to do, I would put TT through
- its paces. "Let's just see what this puppy could do!" To shorten a long
- painful story, this turned out to be truly inappropriate behavior, at a
- show of this magnitude. After all, this was TT030's debut to the rest of
- the Corporate Publishing World. As ATARIANS, we have known about this
- terrific machine for some time now. But, very few people outside the
- ATARI world, did up until then. Thanks to this show many do now.
-
- It just wouldn't do to have HACMAN running on the TT, and fortunately
- (in a way) it didn't. I couldn't even get most of what I brought along to
- copy correctly to the hard drive. I should have known right then and
- there, something was wrong with the machine, and stop, but I kept trying
- to make something, anything run. Not that the machine couldn't run the
- programs, there was just something wrong with that particular machine.
-
- Then I tried the GCR on it. The screen went purple and white, and
- quit. "Uh-oh, now I've done it!" I killed a TT right out of the box.
- Bill Rehbock assured me GCR would work, but inside I screamed at myself,
- "please don't try anything else like that." I was really embarrassed,
- even a little indignant, at the thought that something I did, goofed up
- such a fine machine. I told him so after he told me that he didn't need
- my help for the rest of the show.
-
- I make this open apology directly to you Bill. "You were under a
- great deal of pressure to make this show a success. I think you made it
- happen. I am sorry if I caused you even one moments grief, and wish I
- could take it back."
-
- Before the story of ATARI at CEPS unfolded before my eyes, the
- "Professional Products Group" as I now know it, was kept under a tight
- veil of secrecy. One of the reasons, was to solidify all the relation-
- ships, formed in this unique arrangement between ATARI and developers.
-
- Some suggestions to user group people who may be fortunate enough to
- be "invited" to participate in an ATARI event:
-
- (1) Don't just participate solely with the idea that there will be some-
- thing in it for you.
-
- (2) Don't put "official" people on the spot with unreal or awkward demands
- for ATARI user group support. There is a time and place, and direct
- method for doing that. A trade show is NOT one of them. These people
- are here to make a living, not support our hobby.
-
- (3) Unless specifically asked to do so, do not tamper with computer equi-
- pment, especially new stuff you are unfamiliar with. What will work
- beautifully on one machine, may be the death of another.
-
- Some suggestions for ATARI Corporation, on the use of user group people as
- "volunteers" to work a trade show.
-
- (1) Have in mind that if you bring in uniformed, enthusiastic people, they
- need to know a little of what to expect. Without some specific
- guidance they will inevitably do just what you don't want them to do.
-
- (2) Develope some sort of organization for the volunteers to follow, with
- a little more specific guidelines.
-
- (3) It will certainly help to reward those who "volunteer" to "work". If
- your intention would be to reward them, make it clear what that might
- be. The professional workers who set up trade show (and are paid real
- money) find it unusual and awkward to work alongside "volunteers"
- working for "free".
-
- (4) Most of the "professional" riggers at a Trade show, are carpenters, or
- ironworkers, who don't know an RS232 plug from a banana plug. Intel-
- ligent "volunteer" riggers will be your best bet to "hire", if you
- don't keep them in the dark.
-
- (5) Make sure your everyone (including your CEO) knows just what everyone
- is supposed to do. I bet none of you really like awkward surprises
- either.
-
-
-
-
- ____________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
-
- > PAGESTREAM 2 STR Spotlight "Perfect Solution for Pro and Hobbyist"
- ==========================
-
-
-
- PAGESTREAM 2 -> HOT!
- ====================
-
-
- by Ralph F. Mariano
-
-
- The Atari STe/TT computers are poised to revolutionize the computer
- industry and in particular, the Graphics/DTP arena. Blockbuster, innovat-
- ive products like Pagestream 2 are indeed making the entire computing
- community stand up and take notice. They are being shown what many of the
- current Atari owners have known for a long, long time ie; "Atari is a very
- serious contender in the DTP area and in fact in most cases far superior
- to its closest competition." Pagestream is an excellent companion to the
- Atari DTP solution as it perfectly compliments the power, versatilty and
- value the Atari computers represent.
-
- PageStream 2 has full color support, built-in spell checker/diction-
- ary, hyphenation dictionary and an extremely large family of fonts are
- available, including Adobe type 1, afga Compugraphic Intellifont and
- PageStream format fonts. Pagestream 2 displays font outlines on your
- screen for a WYSIWYG look and then prints that outline at the maximum of
- any printer. This includes printing Adobe Type ! PostScript fonts to dot
- matrix printers (ie, Adobe Type Manager,ATM). PageStream 2 ships with
- (18) outline fonts ten (10) of which are Compugraphic hinted outlines.
- The fonts included are CS Times, Times Bold, Italic, Bold Italic - Gara-
- mond Antigua, Halbfett, Kursiv, Halbfett Kursiv - CS Triumvirate, Trium-
- virate Bold - Columbia - University Roman - Letter Gothic - Saturn - Tom
- Hudson - Creative - Oriental - Artistic.
-
- Pagestream is a real leader in graphics importing, text importing and
- in providing a super selection of printers supported. Soft-Logik supports
- almost all graphics formats, text formats and printing devices for use
- with Pagestream. Pagestream allows the importation of these graphics
- formats:
-
- Degas Neochrome Tiny GEM Metafile
- IMG IFF ILBM TIFF
- GIF Pro-Draw EPS EPSF
- Aegis DR2D MacPaint IBM
-
- Of course, there are more this is jsut to give you an idea of the
- versatilty. Importing a wide variety of graphics allows the user, Profes-
- sional or Hobbyist, flexibility and power in total graphical selection and
- implementation. After all, isn't powerful graphical control the driving
- force behind computer DeskTop Publishing?
-
- Pagestream allows the creation of documents of any page size up to
- 1200 feet by 1200 feet, the transferance of objects off the page into a
- user definable workspace, use font point sizes from .01 to 183,000 with
- variable horizontal and verticle point size. The user may also draw and
- edit Bezier curves, import all graphics, have well over 1000 pages per
- document, page number automatically, use unlimited number of columns per
- page with text routing between columns in any order, import and color
- separate 24 bit pictures, use Pantone colors, edit Professional Draw
- clips, rotate - slant - twist any text, texty column or graphic. This
- list goes on and on...
-
- The intuitive interface of Pagestream allows anyone (even neophytes)
- to create and produce outstanding documents. Pagestream 2 is a program
- that's loaded with features. The extremely friendly user interface makes
- it powerful.
-
- PAGESTREAM 2
-
- For a brochure and more info check with your local dealer
- OR.........
- Contact:
-
- Soft-Logik Corp.
- P.O. Box 290070
- St. Louis, MO. 63129
-
- 1-314-894-8608
-
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- > GFA in the USA! STR InfoFile GFA OPENS USA SUBSIDIARY
- ============================
-
-
-
-
- GFA SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES, INC. - NEWS RELEASES
- DRAMATIC RECEPTION OF COMPANY'S ANNOUNCEMENTS AT CeBIT '91
-
- Hannover, Germany. GFA Systemtechnik GmbH, headquartered in Dussel-
- dorf had very positive responses to its key announcements at CeBIT'91 this
- past week.
-
- First, the company announced the availability of GFA-BASIC for IBM
- compatible PC's. For the first time, programmers will be able to use the
- language's simple constructs to create applications that use Menu Bars,
- Windows, Alert Boxes, and Pop-up Menus under both the MSDOS and WINDOWS
- 3.0 operating systems from Microsoft. All GFA-BASIC programs written for
- Atari ST and Amiga are compatible to these new versions.
-
- The company also demonstrated for the first time the Atari TT version
- of GFA-Basic. This new version brings to the TT compatibility with all
- software that has been written for the ST. GFA-BASIC is now compatible
- to all Atari, amiga as well as IBM compatible programs.
-
- And finally, the company announced the establishment of its U.S.
- subsidiary, GFA Software Technologies Inc. to support and market its
- products in North America. demonstration versions of these products are
- available for evaluation.
-
-
- GFA SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES, INC. - NEW RELEASE
- GFA OPENS US SUBSIDIARY TO SUPPORT AND SELL GFA-BASIC!
-
- Salem, Ma. GFA Systemtechnik of Dusseldorf, Germany, publishers of
- GFA-BASIC for the ATARI ST and commodore Amiga announces the formation of
- GFA Software Technologies, Inc. a wholly owned subsidiary, to support and
- market GFA-BASIC in North America.
-
- Maurice Giguere, the President of this new subsidiary, announced
- that his goals were to "expand the use of this powerful language by
- providing call-in as well as bulletin board access to GFA technical
- personnel to assist programmers in their development efforts."
-
- The company currently publishes GFA-BASIC version 3.5 for the Atari
- ST and Amiga Computers. The current list price of the Interpreter and
- Compiler are $94.95 and $54.95 respectively.
-
- Also, GFA has recently released GFA-BASIC for MSDOS and Windows 3.0
- which will allow ST and Amiga programs written in GFA-BASIC to run also on
- these platforms. The list Prices start at $249 for the MSDOS 286 version
- and range to $495 for the 386 Windows 3.0 version.
-
- GFA is committed to helping its customers gain efficiencies and
- extend the value of their investment in ATARI ST and AMIGA programs that
- are written in GFA-BASIC.
-
-
- GFA SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
- GFA-BASIC now available for the Atari TT!
-
- Salem, Ma. GFA Software Technologies, Inc. today announced the avail-
- ability of GFA-BASIC on the Atari TT. The typical Atari user was very
- happy to see the number one BASIC for the Atari on this new generation of
- Atari computers. Frank Ostrowski, chief technologist for GFA said "this
- implementation will exhibit all the speed and functionality we have ap-
- preciated on the other Atari platforms."
-
- The product is shipping with both an Interpreter and Compiler. The
- List Prices of each are $94.95 and $54.95 respectively.
-
-
- GFA SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES, INC. - NEWS RELEASE
- New GFA-BASIC gives MSDOS programmers a powerful tool to develop
- GUI applications
-
- Salem, Ma. GFA Software Technologies, Inc. has announced the avail-
- ability of GFA-BASIC for MSDOS. In addition to about 500 independent
- commands, the language has over 70 commands and functions for specific
- graphic and operating system operations which are SAA compatible. The
- graphic commands in particular make it possible to write MSDOS programs
- with a "Graphic User Interface" which include Menu Bars, Windows, Alert
- Boxes, and Pop-up Menus. These Simple commands replace pages of complex
- coding that would normally be required in any other programming language.
- The resulting MSDOS applications are then portable to Windows 3.0, OS/2,
- and UNIX when operated with the corresponding GFA-BASIC for these plat-
- forms.
-
- GFA-BASIC supports all graphic modes--MDA, HGC, CGA, EGA, and VGA.
- It also permits the use of EMS which allows the programs to have access
- to memory beyond 640 KB. In addition, GFA-BASIC makes use of the
- 8087/287/387 math co-processors if available.
-
- The List Price for the 8086/88/286 version is $249. The 386 version
- retails for $295. The GFA-BASIC Interpreter, Editor, and protected-mode
- Runner are being shipped immediately; the compiler will be shipped to all
- registered users when completed in the fall.
-
-
-
- GFA SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES, INC. - NEWS RELEASE
- New GFA-BASIC for WINDOWS 3.0
- Develop GUI applications without the SDK!
-
- Salem, Ma. GFA Software Technologies, Inc. has announced the avail-
- ability of GFA-BASIC for Windows 3.0. In addition to about 500 indepen-
- dent commands, this version has over 400 other commands and functions
- specifically for Windows operations. These simple commands let the progr-
- ammer use the Multiple Document Interface, load Bit-Map files, utilize
- the Clipboard, DDE, as well as run Dynamic Link Libraries. These commands
- dramatically reduce the coding that would be required in "C" and totally
- eliminate the need for the SDK.
-
- GFA-BASIC permits the use of EMS which allows the programs to have
- access to memory beyond 640 KB. GFA-BASIC will run in Real or Protected
- Mode depending on the installation of Windows 3.0.
-
- GFA-BASIC combines the intuitive syntax of BASIC with the structured
- programming of Pascal an C while possessing a speed of execution similar
- to an Assembler or compiled C programs. Routines written in C or Assem-
- bler can be bound into GFA-BASIC programs as well.
-
- The List Price for the 286 version is $449. The 386 version is $495.
- The GFA-BASIC Interpreter, Editor, and protected-mode Runner is being
- shipped immediately; the compiler will be shipped to all registered users
- when completed in the fall.
-
-
-
- GFA SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
-
- GFA Software Technologies, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of GFA
- systemtechnik of Dusseldorf, Germany. GFA Systemtechnik has been
- supplying high technology tools and solutions to companies like Mercedes
- Benz and BMW through its affiliates around the world. Based on his ex-
- perience with computer language editors and compilers, Frank Ostrowski,
- the chief technologist for GFA saw an opportunity to develop a powerful
- higher level language that would provide portability across the most
- popular PC platforms.
-
- One year ago Mr. Ostrowski began development of this product which
- would provide the basis for allowing programmers to easily create applica-
- tions which not only could run an many computers, but also would conform
- to the "Graphic User Interface" which most users would be demanding on
- PC's as they had on the Atari line of computers.
-
- The corporate goal was then apparent: give a simple, well-known lan-
- guage powerful commands to accomplish this task and bring to the PC the
- user friendliness of the applications that were possible on Atari. Mr.
- Ostrowski as the original developer of GFA-BASIC for the Atari had now
- created a tool which not only provides the power programmers need for this
- task, but also the variety of platforms needed whereby these applications
- can run effectively.
-
- GFA Systemtechnik in Germany has an attractive and aggressive group
- of bright young developers dedicated to bringing to the applications
- programmer tools which he can use to maximize the market size for the
- systems he develops. GFA Software Technologies, Inc. is the U.S.
- subsidiary responsible for supporting these products.
-
-
-
- For more information contact:
-
- GFA Software Technologies, Inc.
- 27 Congress St., Salem, Ma 01970.
- Tel: 508-744-0201
- Fax: 508-744-8041
- VISA/MasterCard accepted
-
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
-
- > Hard Disks STR InfoFile TAX TIME SPECIAL OFFERINGS!....
- =======================
-
-
-
-
- NEW LOW PRICES! & MORE MODELS!!
- ===============================
- >> INCOME TAX REFUND SPECIALS <<
- ** EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY! **
-
- 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)
-
- * ICD HOST ADAPTERS USED EXCLUSIVELY * OMTI HIGH SPEED CONTROLLERS *
- * ICD ADSCSI+ HOST ADAPTERS * FULL SCSI COMMAND SET SUPPORTED *
- * SCSI EMBEDDED CONTROLLER MECHANISMS *
-
- WE PAY SHIPPING!!! >BLUE LABEL UPS!<
-
- Conventional Shoe Box
- ADD 35.00 for 4 BAY TURBO Cabinet w/250w PS
- Model Description Autopark Price
- ==================================================
- SGN3038 31Mb 28ms 3.5" Y 419.00
- SGN4951 51Mb 28ms 3.5" Y 479.00
- SGN6277 62Mb 24ms 5.25" Y 519.00
- SGN6177 62Mb 24ms 3.5" Y 549.00
- SGN1096 85Mb 24ms 3.5" Y 649.00
- SGN1098 100mb 25ms 3.5" Y 719.00
- SGN6277 120Mb 24ms 3.5" Y 889.00
- SGN1296 168Mb 24ms 3.5" Y 1069.00
- SGN4077 230Mb 24ms 3.5" Y 1669.00
- ==================================================
-
- ****** SPECIAL - SPECIAL ******
- ---- FOR USE IN MEGA, MEGA STe & TT030 SYSTEMS ----
-
- >>>> 100mb SCSI HARD DRIVE Mech 25-28ms 3.5" ...ONLY $349.00!! <<<<
-
- ****** SPECIAL - SPECIAL ******
-
- >>> ALL ABCO DRIVES ARE HIGH SPEED UNITS <<<
- (500 - 600k per sec @ 16 - 33ms)
-
- CALL FOR SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL OUR OTHER CUSTOM UNITS
- FROM 30mb 28MS @ $419.00!
-
- --==*==--
-
- * SYQUEST 44MB (#555)>> ABCO "44" << REMOVABLE MEDIA DRIVE *
-
- - SYQUEST 44 MB DRIVE - ICD ST ADVANTAGE PLUS H/A
- - ICD Utility Software - 3' DMA Cable
- - Fan & Clock - Multi-Unit Power Supply
- (1) 44 MB Syquest Cart.
-
- WE PAY SHIPPING!!! >BLUE LABEL UPS!<
-
- COMPLETELY ASSEMBLED AND READY TO RUN!
- --->> SPECIAL NOW ONLY __$ 665.00__ <<---
- EXTRA CARTS: $ 74.95
- DRIVE MECH ONLY: $ 349.95
-
- * TWIN SYQUEST 44MB REMOVABLE MEDIA DRIVES ... PROGRAMMER'S DELIGHT *
- SPECIALLY PRICED ** $1329.00 **
-
- * SYQUEST 44MB REMOVABLE MEDIA DRIVE AND HARD DRIVE COMBINATIONS *
- - Syquest 44 Model [555] and the following hard drives -
- 50mb SQG51 $ 939.00 30mb SQG38 $ 819.00
- 65mb SQG09 $ 969.00 85mb SQG96 $1059.00
-
- LOWBOY - STANDARD - DUAL BLOWER CABINETS
- CUSTOM CONFIGURATIONS AVAILABLE
-
- WE PAY SHIPPING!!! >BLUE LABEL UPS!<
-
- 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 --> SUPERCHARGER - AT/PC SPEED - GCR
- LARGER units are available - (special order only)
-
- *>> NO REPACKS OR REFURBS USED! <<*
-
- - Custom Walnut WOODEN Cabinets - TOWER - AT - XT Cabinets -
- * SLM 804 Replacement Toner Cartridge Kits $42.95 *
- Replacement Drums; CALL
- Keyboard Custom Cables Call for Info
- ALL POWER SUPPLIES UL APPROVED
-
- -* 12 month FULL Guarantee *-
- (A FULL YEAR of COVERAGE)
-
- WE PAY SHIPPING!!! >BLUE LABEL UPS!<
-
- QUANTITY & USERGROUP DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE!
- _________________________________________
-
- DEALERS and DISTRIBUTORS WANTED!
- please, call for details
-
- Personal and Company Checks are accepted.
-
- ORDER YOUR NEW UNIT TODAY!
-
- CALL: 1-800-562-4037 -=**=- CALL: 1-904-783-3319
- Customer Orders ONLY Customer Service
- 9am - 8pm EDT
- Tues thru Sat
-
- ABCO is EXPANDING!! CALL FOR INFORMATION!
-
-
-
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- > A "Quotable Quotable"
- ====================
-
-
- "THOSE WHO LIVE IN GLASS HOUSES....
-
- ALWAYS WEAR CLOTHES!"
-
-
- ...Marvin Trottenberry
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
- STReport International Online Magazine™
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- STReport™ "YOUR INDEPENDENT NEWS SOURCE" April 12, 1991
- 16/32bit Magazine copyright © 1987-91 No.7.15
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