home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Hanover Messe -- 1986 CeBIT
- by Trenton Browne
-
- Oestringen, West Germany. 29 March 1986. A little back-
- ground is appropriaye for all of you on the other side of the big
- pond.
-
- The Hannover Messe has been held for many years and has been
- touted as the world's largest industrial fair. The CeBIT (a
- french acronym for Communication and Bureau Information Tech-
- nologies) section was only a small part of this huge fair but now
- has grown so large that the whole fair has been divided in two,
- each half presented about a month apart. Since last year, CeBIT
- has grown by 797 exhibitors and 800,650 square feet of display
- area to 2,105 exhibitors covering 2,200,000 square feed (or ap-
- proximately 35 football fields). There is more on display than
- could be contained in any catalog and everything is in full color
- and in 3D. It is hard to imagine and I believe impossible to
- take it all in in any one year. It only lasts seven days and
- anyone who looks at more than 10 or 12 hours worth of displays
- starts to take on a glazed look that takes about a week to wear
- off. Enough about the fair in general. Just to say it is BIG.
-
- Now to the important stuff -- ATARI! Last year my friend
- Phil and I visited the Atari stand and found a relatively small
- stand (maybe 1,500 sq. ft.), 520ST prototypes, a good number of
- interested customers, a determined Tramiel family, and a hopeful
- staff. This year the stand was at least 3,000 square feet, it
- was packed with the interested, the devoted and the newly con-
- verted. About half the area was devoted to Atari proper and of-
- fices. The other half was devoted to four-part clusters of
- third-party software and hardware representatives. I would es-
- timate there were at least 40 companies represented. It seems
- this had been choreographed by Sig Hartmann. There may be dif-
- fering opinions on this, but my opinion is: SUPER! Since this
- fair is open to the public, what a great opportunity to see a
- product running and demonstrated (many times by the author)
- before buying. What store could offer this? For the companies
- represented, it gave them the opportunity to exhibit at a fair
- where the cost of a stand may have otherwise been prohibitive.
-
- The product mix was probably 85 percent 16-bit and 15 per-
- cent 8-bit, with about the same ratio of Business/Application to
- Games (respectively). "Clone+" software was the hot theme of
- software houses. Command and file compatible with Lxxxx 1-2-3 or
- dBxxx III and they (of course) do more and do it better. I was
- surprised to see a line of third-party hard disks on the display
- with prices ranging from about 1600DM -- Deutsche Marks
- ($1=2.30DM) -- for a 10 meg to about 4400DM for 60 meg ($700 -
- $1,900).
-
- What for us was noticeably absent from the display was the
- IBM compatible "Magic Box". We had an opportunity to talk to
- Sigmund Hartmann (Pres. Software), Shiraz Shivji (VP of R & D),
- and Les Player (Technical Mngr, UK) and asked about the "MB".
- Obviously they were not ready for public release of even any
- detailed information. In fact, they seemed ready to deny its
- existence until my friend Phil pulled out his latest issue of
- CURRENT NOTES. If was like showing passports to the real world.
- They were all more at ease to talk about it. What I have heard
- from sources who went to the London show a week earlier was that
- the only real hangup right now was what to offer at what price.
-
- I don't remember seeing any 1040ST's, but Atari Germany has
- been selling a one meg 520ST for about six months already. Atari
- Germany seems to have developed many things independent of Atari
- U.S. One being, coming out with the 520ST+ (one meg), another is
- a very strong dealer support program. The 520ST was voted "Com-
- puter of the Year" by the best know computer magazines in Ger-
- many. It seems Jack Trameil has many followers from his Com-
- modore days and many very good people have come over to Atari
- from Commodore Germany. Unfortunately, the dealer support
- program has been carried to such a degree that Atari Germany
- neglects the customer and their independence seems to be a result
- of nationalist instead of internationalist thinking.
-
-
- [This report arrived too late to make it in the April issue
- of CURRENT NOTES. We will print it in the May issue.
- However, since news of Hannover has been so hard to come
- by, I thought I would upload this report well before we
- have a chance to publish it. I'm sure Atari fans are
- anxious to get whatever news they can as soon as they can.
- Newsletter Editors: feel free to (re)print if you like.]
- xxxxxxxx