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Newsbytes - Internationa…ews 1983 May to 1994 June
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Newsbytes - International Computing Industry News 1994 Edition - May 1983 - June 1994 - Wayzata Technologies (5045) (1994).iso
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1983
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V04
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1991-07-11
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[***][6/19/83][***]
HOME COMPUTER WARS' FIRST CASUALTY:
Texas Instruments stock plunged $50 in two days following
the company's announcement its second quarter losses will
be $100-million dollars. Company officials attribute the
loss to unsold inventory of its 99/4 home computer. TI
competes with some 200 other brands of low-cost computers.
Officials plan to develop more personal and business
computers to hopefully turn their miserable financial
situation around.
----
CONTACT: DICK PERDUE
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
DALLAS, TEXAS
214-995-3481
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[***][6/19/83][***]
THE EVE OF ONE/THE ADAM OF ANOTHER:
Coleco has unveiled a do-everything home computer at the
Chicago Electronics Show. The "Adam" contains 80K of RAM,
Z80 CPU, 500K tape cartridge memory, CP/M in ROM and a daisy-
wheel printer, all for about $600-dollars!
----
CONTACT: COLECO
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
203-278-0280
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[***][6/19/83][***]
LAST IBM-HITACHI SPY SENTENCED:
Tom Yoshida of Santa Clara, Ca., the only American caught
in the FBI sting of Japanese operatives funnelling trade
secrets from IBM to Hitachi in Japan, was sentenced to two years
probation, fined $7500-dollars and ordered to employ 3
unemployed youths at his firm NCL Data Inc. Yoshida plead
no lo contendre to charges of conspiracy and transport of
stolen goods. 20 in all were arrested, 8 have fled back
to Japan, the others were fined and put on probation.
----
CONTACT: GREG WARD
U.S. ATTORNEY'S OFFICE, SAN JOSE, CA.
408-275-7225
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[***][6/19/83][***]
"SLEEPER" REPLAY FOR NOLAN BUSHNELL:
The robots in Woody Allen's movie resemble Atari-founder
Nolan Bushnell's new enterprise. Androbot, Inc., his new
company, has created an autonomous home robot that responds
to commands and moves without human control. Bushnell
makes his first public stock offering on the critters in
July. So far no one has successfully marketed a robot
of this type.
----
CONTACT: NOLAN BUSHNELL, PAUL KLEPAC
PIZZA TIME THEATER/ANDROBOT, INC.
SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA
408-734-8731
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[***][6/19/83][***]
HOME BANKING TERMINALS HAVE SHAKEY FUTURES:
A New York consulting firm predicts home banking via computer
will be only "marginally profitable" over the next five years.
Communications Studies and Planning (CSP) says a financial
institution needs at least 9,000 subscribers to make the
system profitable. Still, Chemical Bank's PRONTO system and
Knight-Ridder Newspaper Inc's VIEWTRON are expected to be
franchised to other banks this year. The systems will allow
consumers access to transaction services and data bases with
a home terminal.
----
CONTACT: COMMUNICATIONS STUDIES AND PLANNING INTERNATIONAL
NEW YORK CITY, N.Y.
212-599-1526
----
[***][6/19/83][***]
COMPUTERS PROMPTING NEW CLASS WARS:
New Jersey Senator Frank Lautenberg says computers pose a
threat of creating a new type of illiteracy, leaving the poor
behind as the more affluent learn to use computers and their
language. "We have the potential for new and distressing
divisions in our society," he said. Schools in poor
districts average 25-percent fewer computers than other
schools. "A school without computers," he said, "is like
a school without a library."
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CONTACT: FRANK LAUTENBERG
U.S. SENATE
WASHINGTON, D.C.
202-224-3121
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[***][6/19/83][***]
EAGLE SOARS AGAIN:
One week after the death of its founder, Dennis Barnhart, forced
cancellation of public sale of this fledgling company's stock,
Eagle's offering was back in the marketplace, producing a strong
showing. More than 3-million shares were traded, the company
selling each share for a healthy $22-dollars by Friday. One
analyst said the death of Barnhart was in a way fortunate for the
company. "They made it to the cover of the Wall Street Journal,"
said Jim McCamant of California Technology Stock Letter.
----
CONTACT: EAGLE COMPUTER
LOS GATOS, CALIFORNIA
408-395-5005
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JIM MCCAMANT
CALIFORNIA TECHNOLOGY STOCK LETTER
415-982-0125
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[***][6/19/83][***]
ARE THEY WORTH IT?
Congressional economic analysts have concluded that
robots in U.S. manufacturing, if not followed by new jobs
for humans, will cause havoc in our economy. The House
Small Business Committee forecasts massive job dislocation,
devaluation of educational skills, changes in work
schedules, and intense international competition when the
robots take over.
----
CONTACT: HOUSE SMALL BUSINESS COMMITTEE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
WASHINGTON, D.C.
202-224-3121
----
[***][6/19/83][***]
WAR WITH JAPAN:
In yet another round of U.S.-Japanese competition, Zilog,
a semiconductor company has filed a complaint with the
International Trade Commission, intending to bar Nippon
Electric from marketing the PD780 microprocessor in the U.S.
Zilog claims it violates their copyright of the Z80 photomask.
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CONTACT: ZILOG
CAMPBELL, CALIFORNIA
408-370-8000
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INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C.
202-523-0161
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[***][6/19/83][***]
REACH OUT AND PURCHASE SOMEONE:
Right after IBM, a perennial stock favorite, announced its
purchase of 15% of ROLM Corporation, a telephone hardware
manufacturer, the smaller company's stock soared on Wall
Street, closing at $72-dollars per share, up $13 from the
previous day. IBM and ROLM plan to jointly develop
office equipment, personal computers, and communication
standards between central computers.
----
CONTACT: ROLM CORPORATION
SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA
408-988-8924
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[***][6/19/83][***]
THE BELT LOOSENS AT INTEL:
Yet another sign that the recession is over comes from
this semiconductor manufacturer which has rescinded a
10-percent pay cut and mandatory overtime program. The
company has decided to reinstitute raises, retroactively.
----
CONTACT: INTEL
SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA
408-987-8080
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[***][6/19/83][***]
VIDEO GAMES LIFT OFF:
Canadian Pacific Airlines has installed video games on some
daily flights. Donkey Kong, Black Jack and Snooper Tennis
can now be rented by passengers flying from Vancouver to
Amsterdam. The games are seated on meal trays. Not one
of the new toys depict shooting anything down!
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CONTACT: CANADIAN PACIFIC AIRLINES
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA
604-270-5211
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[***][6/19/83][***]
DRILLING ROBOTS:
Two Silicon Valley entrepreneurs think they've struck black
gold with a new oil-searching robot. The mechanism
is dropped into a well and upon reaching the bottom, looks
for oil reserves. The first test comes this summer in
California's Half Moon Bay and right now the two describe
their venture as "in the working-out-of-the-garage stage."
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CONTACT: ED BRUCE/ROBERT HORSTMEYER
ADVANCED DRILLING
MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIFORNIA
415-964-5450
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[***][6/19/83][***]
SMART CARD:
The Phillips smart card, the same size as a credit card
but with an imbedded microcomputer, will be introduced to
the public as part of the USDA's Food Stamp Program.
Currently in use by the Defense Department, it will get
a trial run in Maine. It will contain a variety of info
and act as a debit card at the same time.
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CONTACT: INPUT-OUTPUT COMPUTER SERVICES
WALTHAM, MASSACHUSETTS
617-890-2299
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U.S. DEPT OF AGRICULTURE
WASHINGTON, D.C.
202-447-2791
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[***][6/19/83][***]
SONY PROFITS DOWN:
In the volatile world of computers and consumer
electronics, even giant SONY isn't immune...second
quarter profits tumbled 56.6 percent from last year.
SONY attributes the decline to dropping sales in Central
and South America.
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CONTACT: SONY, TOKYO, JAPAN
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[***][6/19/83][***]
THREE R'S AND A C:
Computer literacy has become a graduation requirement at
one of the largest colleges in Silicon Valley. De Anza
College, better known for its English and Math graduates,
institutes an 18-hour computer literacy requirement for
its graduates this fall. At most other colleges in the
nation, computer science is an elective, or a major.
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CONTACT: VIVIAN FREDERICK
DE ANZA COLLEGE
CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA
408-996-4760
[***][6/19/83][***]
MORE ROBOTS, THIS TIME WITH VISION:
Industry observers say the machine vision market, paced by
automatic inspection of electronic components, will grow from
less than $50 million today to $750 million by 1987. Even
with all this sophisticated gagetry, seeing-robots can't beat
the eye which performs 100 billion operations per second!
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CONTACT: LAURA CONIGLIARO
ROBOT INDUSTRY ANALYST
PRUDENTIAL-BACHE SECURITIES
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
212-791-1000
[***][6/19/83][***]
THROW OUT THOSE DRAFTING PENCILS:
Because by 1987 we can also expect Cad-Cams, highly
sophisticated design equipment, to take over the draftsman's
tools in a big way. A market analyst predicts computer-aided
design will grow to $1.1-billion dollars by then, with the
trend toward single-user work stations in the $50,000-dollar
range.
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CONTACT: STRATEGIC, INC.
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
408-243-8121
----