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(NEWS)(GOVT)(HKG)(00001)
Microsoft Smashes Counterfeit Ring In Taiwan 08/31/92
TAIPEI, TAIWAN, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Microsoft Corporation has
smashed a large counterfeit software syndicate in Taiwan, the second
major criminal operation the company has uncovered there this year.
The raid, the largest in Microsoft's history, was carried out with
the assistance of the Taipei County Police Station and the Anti-
Counterfeiting Committee, MOEA. More than 10,000 suspected fake
copies of Microsoft products, MS-DOS and MS-Windows, hundreds of
thousands of holograms, and a shrink-wrap machine were seized.
"This year our investigators have uncovered record amounts of fake
products and documentation," said Alix Parlour, Microsoft's
corporate attorney for the Asia region. "This latest raid clearly
demonstrates that software counterfeiting in Taiwan has reached
alarming proportions.
"These criminal syndicates, which blatantly attempt to fool our
customers into buying false goods, must be stopped. We will not
stand by while these gangs profit at the expense of our customers
and ourselves. We will prosecute."
During the raids, police arrested one suspect, Min-Shang Yang,
owner of the organization responsible for the alleged counterfeiting.
In addition to saying they found illegally copied Microsoft products, the
Female Police Division and the Bureau of Criminal Investigation in
Taipei report they discovered equipment for producing boxes, bar
codes, disk labels and user manuals at several printing houses in
the capital.
The raid follows a previous action in April which resulted in the
break-up of a syndicate believed to have been responsible for
releasing up to 75,000 counterfeit copies of Microsoft products a
month.
In three separate raids, police report that they seized more than
5,000 counterfeit packages, 20,000 fake manuals, 13,000 copied
diskettes and thousands of counterfeit holograms.
(Brett Cameron/19920829/Press Contact: Alix Parlour, Microsoft,
tel: +852-804 4240;HK time is GMT + 8)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00002)
Wordperfect Hosts Usability Conference, Opens Center 08/31/92
OREM, UTAH, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Word processing software
publisher Wordperfect Corporation thinks usability is an important
issue. So much so that it hosted a conference for usability
professionals last week.
The first Usability Professionals Association conference was held
Thursday and Friday, bringing together usability professionals
from around the country to discuss common usability issues and to
share skills.
Although few people outside the computer industry even know the
group exists, companies such as Apple Computer, American Express,
American Airlines, and GTE Laboratories employ professionals to
measure a product's ability to be used by someone else. "Developers
are committed to the usability process and became involved in early
stages of development," says Wordperfect's Jack Young. According to
Young, developers can observe their products being evaluated, and
design the software differently based on their observations.
Wordperfect spokesperson Beth Graviet told Newsbytes that airlines
use usability studies to determine if flight attendants could
perform their tasks, such as moving drink carts through the cabin,
more effectively. It's a tool for insurance companies to design
their forms so they can be filled out more easily, and retail
outlets can test check-out procedures, says Graviet.
Wordperfect has used in-house usability studies with great success.
"It's really affected the way we develop our products," said
Graviet. Until now, the company has used in-house people for the
testing, but will now ask the public to help test its products.
Wordperfect pays testers $50 for a two-hour testing session. The
test area is closely monitored, Graviet told Newsbytes, with cameras
focused on the tester's face, the computer screen, and the overall
area. In addition, each keystroke is recorded.
Wordperfect Corporation feels so strongly about the usability issue
that they opened their newly expanded usability center to the public
in conjunction with the conference. In the words of center manger
Young, "Our commitment to usability is more than just marketing
ploys to bring attention to a product; it is an honest effort to
make our products more usable for the customer."
The center, previously a two-room facility, now includes two product
evaluation rooms which include cameras and two-way mirrors for
observation, two observation and executive viewing rooms, a briefing
room, a control and editing suite, and a reception area.
Wordperfect says it began unofficial usability testing in 1987 when
small scale tests were conducted on the appeal of some product
manual designs, the ease of software installation, and the
acceptance of different interfaces. The company says usability is
now an integral part of the product development process.
The experts say that usability evaluations can result in
easier-to-understand on-screen prompts or more clearly written
documentation. Kay Chalupnik at IDS American Express says they
found that changing their statements to make them easier for
customers to fill out saved customers an average of 2.5 minutes per
statement, which translates to $7.4 million per year in time
required to review statements.
Wordperfect says more than 100 usability professionals attended the
conference, representing computer and hardware companies, government
agencies, insurance and health care companies, space and flight
institutions, drug stores, universities and churches.
The Usability Professionals Association was formed in 1991 by Janice
James at American Airlines and Jeff Schueler of Usability Sciences as
a means for usability professionals to share information and exchange
ideas about methods, tools, technology and skill development.
(Jim Mallory/19920828/Press contact: Beth Graviet, Wordperfect,
801-228-5008)
(NEWS)(IBM)(SYD)(00003)
Australia: 1992 Windows World Awards 08/31/92
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Eight Windows applications were
recognized for their performance and use to business at Windows World
Expo and Conference '92 in Sydney last week.
The awards were as follows: best word processing program -
Microsoft Word for Windows 2.0; best desktop publishing program -
Aldus PageMaker 4; best graphics creation or CAD program - Corel Draw;
best visual presentation or multimedia - Microsoft Powerpoint;
best business productivity program - Microsoft Excel 4.0;
best programming software - Microsoft Visual Basic; best utility
program - Norton Desktop; editors' choice - Intuit Quicken.
Lotus was chosen as having the best stand of the show, and
the grand prize for the overall best Windows program went to Microsoft
Excel 4.0.
Almost 10,000 attendees visited the exhibition where 80 Windows-oriented
vendors had stands. This is 120 percent up over last year. There was
also a 195 percent increase in the conference attendees with 820
delegates attending sessions by key Windows speakers including
Philippe Kahn, Paul Maritz and John Landry. Conference attendees
came from New Zealand, US, UK, Japan, Indonesia, Hong Kong and Italy.
The "rap session" was by far the most popular session in the show,
despite the fact that Borland CEO Philippe Kahn decided not to
attend as, according to an informed source, he didn't wish to appear
on a panel with only vice presidents.
(Paul Zucker/19920831/Contact: Australian IDG World Expo
Division tel +61-2-439 5133 fax +61-2-439 5512)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(HKG)(00004)
Hongkong: D&B Software Users Gather For Annual Meeting 08/31/92
CENTRAL, HONG KONG, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- More than 200 senior managers
from around the region gathered in Hong Kong from 26 to 28 August for
the second annual Southeast Asia User Conference of Dun &
Bradstreet Software.
The meeting formed the high point among users of D&B Software
products around the region, instilling an awareness of the direction
of the technology and products, as well as, offering a chance to share
experiences among themselves. This year's meeting was especially
important as D&B Software has made a number of initiatives aimed at
adding more value to their offerings.
These included products based on client-server technology, which
allow information to be shared more easily within the organization,
and "business re-engineering" -- a discipline which allows
organizations to refine their computer-based work procedures to
achieve improved productivity.
They also included the development of D&B Software's Millenium to
the Unix platform, which extends this integrated application
environment from the mainframe to a broad spectrum of open systems
hardware.
Some of the client-server products were demonstrated during the
conference. Major trends in the software industry and new product
directions were discussed. Presentations by users in the region on
how they have made maximum use of D&B Software products.
At the same time, delegates had an opportunity to take part in
application forums to share their ideas and experiences on
different issues.
The importance of this year's meeting was also noted by the presence
of D&B software Chairman John Imlay. Mr Imlay also chairs the newly
formed International Customer Council (ICC) which includes the
company's top customers. The council's mission is to maintain the
high standard of support and service available to D&B Software's
customers around the world.
Other senior D&B software executives at the conference included
Roger Evans, vice president (Asia-Pacific); David Orren, managing
director (Asia); John Hillie, director of strategy & business
development and Kim Gerdes, senior manager for client-server
technology.
The D&B Software Asia User conference was organized by an executive
committee made up of representatives from D&B Software and user
organizations throughout the region.
(Brett Cameron/19920829/Press contact: Jenifer Goh, D&B, Tel: 65-
334 2622)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(DEL)(00005)
India: High Speed Data Lines For Software Exporters 08/31/92
NEW DELHI, INDIA, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- High-speed data circuits, much
wanted by many a software export firm, are in the pipeline at last.
The Department of Electronics (DOE) is already offering switchable,
9.6-64 KBPS, satellite channels from Delhi, Bombay and Bangalore.
One could opt for any speed, for any duration (even just for a day), as
required by smaller software companies which can ill-afford a dedicated
hook-up.
Earth stations with 64 KBPS channel (TDMA) capacities have also
arrived for the DOE's software technology parks (STP) at Bhubaneswar,
Hyderabad and Bangalore. These are due to be operational by the end of
August. Earth stations of Pune STP and that of Videsh Sanchar Nigam
Ltd. (VSNL), the overseas communications arm of the Indian telecom
department, at Calcutta are now operational. VSNL now offers direct
gateways to Intelsat from the main metros. Thus, come September,
there will be a surfeit of these high speed lines begging usage.
Currently, there are just three 64 KBPS circuits: at Texas Instruments,
Bangalore, shared by Hewlett-Packard India Software Operation as well;
Satyam Computer Services Ltd. at Hyderabad and Madras; and Tata
Consultancy Services, Bombay.
"It is to be seen as to how many software companies will really utilize
this bonanza in Satcom for their export activities," said Rusi Brij,
general manager of Satyam Computers. Satyam has been executing nearly
a million-dollar worth re-engineering jobs for John Deere corporation,
using Satcom to remotely work on Deere's IBM mainframes, located near
Chicago.
(C.T. Mahabharat/19920831)
(NEWS)(APPLE)(DEN)(00006)
New For Macintosh: The Family Doctor, A Medical Guide On CD 08/31/92
PORTLAND, OREGON, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Creative Multimedia
Corporation (CMC) has announced a new Macintosh version of the
Hypercard-based The Family Doctor, a family medical guide stored on
CD-ROM.
CMC says The Family Doctor is based on the work of Dr. Allan
Bruckheim, the author of Tribune Media's syndicated Family Doctor
column.
According to CMC, the most significant feature of the Hypercard
version of The Family Doctor is the illustrated human anatomy, which
provides three different views of five different body systems.
Users can view muscular and skeletal, digestive, respiratory and
circulatory, urinary and reproductive, and nervous systems.
The Family Doctor allows the user to invoke voice-over
pronunciations of 250 body systems and parts, with supporting text
that explains the significance of particular portions of the body.
Clicking once on a part of the body, such as the femur (the human
thigh bone) invokes the pronunciation, while double-clicking brings
up the explanatory text. A mid-size and a detail level zoom show
more detail.
CMC says nearly 500 items have been added to the "Question and Answer"
section, which now gives advice on almost 2,000 of the most commonly
asked health questions. The explanations are accompanied by almost
300 color illustrations, and a glossary of more than 100 medical
terms.
The Family Doctor also includes information about 1,600 prescription
drugs, and a listing of national and local resource and support
groups. Clicking on the drug name brings up a picture of the
capsule, and information about dosages and cautions.
CMC's Judy Grillo told Newsbytes that the company has a Multimedia
PC Windows version of The Family Doctor which enters beta testing
Monday, and is expected to ship in mid-September.
Family Doctor has a suggested list price of $79.99. The company
will upgrade existing versions of the program for $29.99, including
shipping and handling, and has a toll free number, 800-776-9277, and
a fax line, 503-452-5930, for that purpose.
(Jim Mallory/19920828/Press contact: Judy Grillo, CMC, 503-241-4351;
Reader contact: 800-776-9277 or 503-452-5933, fax 503-452-5930)
(NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00007)
New For PC: Run Atari Software On A PC 08/31/92
BELLEVUE, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Purple Mountain
Computers says you can run Atari software on your 386 or 486-based DOS
computer beginning in mid-September.
Gemulator, a hardware/software combination produced by Branch Always
Software, is being distributed by Purple Mountain. For $299.95,
users get a hardware board to install in the PC, and the necessary
software. Purple Mountain says the price for Gemulator has been
reduced from $499.95 to $299.95 because the software is now being
distributed as shareware.
Shareware is software which the user tries out, and if they like it,
pays a nominal amount to the author. According to Purple Mountain,
Gemulator users can run most major Atari software, including Calmus,
Degas, Flash, GDOS/G+Plus, Hotwire, LDW Power, PageStream, Sierra
graphic adventures, Sim City, Tempus 2, Warp 9, Word Writer, and
many more Atari programs.
Gemulator will also allow users access to all ST disks, access to
hard drive, and the ability to print from any ST program. Gemulator
is Windows compatible. To use the program you will need at least 4
MB (megabytes) of memory.
Purple Mountain says if you order by September 14 you will get
Gemulator for the introductory price of $199.95. The company is
also offering a demonstration video for $10.
(Jim Mallory/19920828/Press contact: Purple Mountain
Computers, voice and fax, 206-747-1519)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(SYD)(00008)
Australian Center To Receive Japanese Satellite Data 08/31/92
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- The Australian Surveying and
Land Information Group (AUSLIG) has announced it has signed a deal
which will see its remote sensing division receiving data from the
Japanese JERS1 satellite. The deal was signed after several months
of negotiation with Japan's National Space Development Agency
(NASDA).
AUSLIG's ACRES (Australian Center for Remote Sensing) division now
has access to data from almost all satellites which cross Australia.
The exceptions are those from the Indian Insat and the Russian
Resource programs. Agreements in place see data received from
American and European satellites orbiting above Australia. JERS
(Japanese Earth Resources Satellite), however is the first satellite
with the capability to do remote sensing with both optical and radar
sensors. The radars on JERS, particularly suited to imaging land
data, will complement the European Space Agency's ERS-1 radar
satellite, which is suited more for ocean data.
Radar satellites have been eagerly awaited by the international
remote sensing community, as their imaging is not affected by dark
and clouds, and they present a different image of the earth to
optical satellites because of the different sensors. After
additional equipment is installed in Australia to allow receipt of
the data from the satellite, it will be sent to Japan for
processing, then returned in a post-processed state. A decision is
still to be made if any local processing will be done, as it will on
the Landsat 6 data which will be received from next year.
(Sean McNamara/19920831)
(NEWS)(IBM)(TYO)(00009)
Japan: NEC To Support DOS/V On New PC-9801 08/31/92
TOKYO, JAPAN, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- NEC will support the DOS/V operating
system on a personal computer it is preparing to release this fall.
Third party software makers are now revising their applications
for the new computers, according to the Nikkan Kogyo newspaper.
An NEC spokesman has refused comment on the report to Newsbytes,
but observers have suggested that it was inevitable that NEC would give
its PCs DOS compatibility, especially if NEC wants to retain top
position in the Japanese PC market, where it currently holds a 50
percent market share.
Currently, the PC-9801 supports a 640 x 400 pixel graphic mode,
while DOS/V supports a 640 x 480-pixel graphic mode. The current
configuration does not allow English programs to run because most of
them are written in a 640 x 480-pixel mode. DOS/V compatibility would
allow them to run on the PC-9801.
Another reason for NEC's decision to support the Japanese version
of DOS is that the firm also aims to support Windows, observers
suggest.
Meanwhile, IBM Japan continues to gain ground among Japanese computer
makers. It founded the Open Architecture Developers' Group in 1990 and
planted the seeds for more IBM-compatible DOS/V computers from Japan.
Many have already released IBM-compatible DOS/V machines.
(Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19920831/Press Contact: NEC, +81-3-
3451-2974)
(NEWS)(TRENDS)(MOW)(00010)
Russia: Mobile Computers Aid In Privatization 08/31/92
MOSCOW, RUSSIA, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- A manager of major Russian
investment company has detailed to Newsbytes how mobile computing
technology has been used in privatization projects in the Nakhodka
free trade zone in Russia's Far East.
Legal experts of Rinako, or the Russian Investment Shareholders Company,
a year-old investment house in Moscow, were ordered by authorities
of Nakhodka to assist in the ongoing process of privatization of
state property in the free trade zone, Anatoly Levenchuk, a Rinako
member of the board, told Newsbytes.
A four-person team equipped with 386-based notebooks, modems, and
electronic mail access went to Nakhodka. In a week's time, experts has
developed a detailed plan for the entire city to establish the necessary
infrastructure for the coming process of state property privatization
which should start countrywide this fall.
The computers weren't equipped with wireless connections, but
only phone-based connections with the local host -- the Relcom
e-mail network -- were used.
Now Nakhodka Financial Shareholding Company and Rinako experts are
closely working to use portable computers in the actual process of
selling share certificates and transferring records to a remote
"depositary," or a computer system which tracks all buying and selling
transactions, according to Levenchuk.
Russian Investment Shareholders Company (Rinako), is a year-old
investment house affiliated with the Russian Commodities and Raw
Materials Exchange, of Moscow.
(Kirill Tchashchin/19920831/Press Contact: Anatoly Levenchuk, RINAKO,
phone +7 095 378-0935; Internet e-mail ailev@asmp.msk.su)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00011)
International Phone Update: Uruguay Sets ANTEL Sale 08/31/92
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Uruguay's pending
sale of most of its ANTEL phone monopoly headlined the weekend's
telecommunications news.
ANTEL has the best reputation for service in Latin America, which
in the quirky world of Third World telecom valuation, may be a
disadvantage, since it has less room to grow than other systems.
Still, nine groups expressed interest. Two -- STET of Italy and
Telefonica of Spain -- were disqualified. Uruguay authorities
gave technical reasons for disqualifying the two European
companies, but analysts feel that Uruguay wanted to assure itself
of a different partner from Chile, which works with Telefonica,
and Argentina, which works with both Telefonica and STET.
Telefonica also has a piece of Venezuela's CANTV.
Among those companies left in the bidding were Bell Canada, Cable and
Wireless of the UK, Detecon of Germany, France Telecom and Bell
Atlantic, Southwestern Bell and GTE of the US. Given what
happened to STET and Telefonica, Detecon, C&W and Bell Canada
might be expected to have the inside track.
Elsewhere, South Korean communications minister, Soon Eon-jong
offered to resign following the fiasco of awarding a mobile phone
concession to Sunkyong, then having Sunkyong turn it down over
charges of nepotism. President Roh Tae-woo turned down the
resignation offer.
And Uganda promised to sell off its telephone operation, as part
of a broad-based privatization program under President Yoweri
Museveni.
(Dana Blankenhorn/19920830)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00012)
Andrew Update: More Bargains In The Devastation 08/31/92
MIAMI, FLORIDA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Day by day, America
is learning just how bad the destruction from Hurricane Andrew
really was in South Florida. The telecommunications industry
is trying to keep attention focused on helping the area with a
string of bargains.
Southern Bell sent an International Mobile Machines' Ultraphone
portable switching station to the area, designed especially for
major disasters, to make sure it is on hand if service goes down
again. The four-trailer system includes a central office switch,
power trailer and transmission system, providing service to up to
10,000 lines. BellSouth ordered the trailer after a central
office fire destroyed a switching office in Hinsdale, Illinois a
few years ago. Southern Bell emphasized that the trailer is a
back-up, and service has been restored throughout most of the
area. IMM noted this is the same Ultraphone system which is used
to provide the equivalent of wired telephone service to rural
areas in the Third World, under a digital cellular standard
called TDMA, which is now being implemented in the US cellular
network.
AT&T, meanwhile, sent phones and free long distance services to
the Homestead area, to help victims left without a way to contact
people outside South Florida. Holders of the company's Universal
Card can get emergency increases on their credit lines by calling
800-423-4343 to discuss arrangements, and minimum payment
requirements are being waived for the next 60 days.
Not to be outdone, MCI has sent a portable communications center
with 24 phones and a satellite uplink to South Florida. The
phones will go to a Red Cross site in south Dade County and offer
free long distance calls to residents, and will travel with the
Red Cross as it moves from place to place. The company also
donated $20,000 to the American Red Cross to help in relief
efforts.
Also, the Business Wire wire service set up a nationwide program
to help in the collection of donations to help the hurricane's
victims, joining such companies as Home Depot and Amoco in that
effort. Business Wire will transmit a special message to
thousands of newspaper editors and radio and television station
news directors across the country containing detailed
instructions on how individuals and organizations may send
financial support to Dade County for the benefit of hurricane
victims. American Savings of Florida will serve as the collection
agency for all donations, which the United Way will disburse.
(Dana Blankenhorn/19920830/Press Contact: David L. Smith, IMM,
David Rogers, BellSouth 404-529-8053, Julie Spechler, AT&T, 305-
654-4107, John R. Houser, MCI, 202-887-3000)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(SYD)(00013)
Amstrad Notepad Released In Australia 08/31/92
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- The Amstrad Notepad (model N100)
has been introduced in Australia and company founder Alan Sugar
claims anyone can afford it, and anyone can use it, right out of the
box. Sugar even wrote much of the instruction book himself.
In appearance its similar to the old Tandy 100 computer, being
297 x 27 x 210mm (around 12 x 1 x 8 inches) and 1kg (2.2 lb) ready to
run. It has a full 80 character width screen, but only eight lines
of text, though this isn't a problem with this type of machine, and
keeps battery consumption down (giving 40 hours from four AA
penlight cells).
It has 64-keys, 64K RAM, two memory card slots (up to 1M each),
a serial and a parallel socket, speaker, clock, giant digit calculator,
multiple alarm, calendar/diary, address book, BBC Basic
programming language and word processing with a 48,000-word
dictionary. There are four garishly colored keys which instantly
switch the users to any of the built-in applications. It's a Z80-based
machine, so isn't PC compatible, but comes with transfer software
for swapping data with PCs. The retail price in Australia is $399
which is around US$285.
(Paul Zucker/19920831)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00014)
SoundByte News From BOCOEX 08/31/92
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- The following
report is provided by the Boston Computer Exchange.
Computer News for Business People
IBM will raise prices. Do they make their own roller-coaster? It seems
like only last week they were cutting prices. But, it's only a measly 3%
increase on some hardware and software products. But, but, but, not the
PS/1 or the PS/2's, or OS/2 or even DOS, mind you. Those prices are
stable. IBM will have a handheld to show at Comdex this fall, so now
handhelds have been blessed.
Compaq is showing off. They are on the verge of releasing some new
multiprocessor high end file server computers. The new TriFlex
architecture allows two processors to handle more than twice the
transactions of conventional designs. Meanwhile, Dell is building their new
file servers with enhanced disk arrays to improve disk performance.
Everyone is flexing the high end system muscles like boys preening for the
right to debut with Windows NT. Stay tuned.
Microsoft is touting its numbers again. 10 million copies of Windows sold.
Ten thousand copies of the Windows NT developers kits are out. That sounds
like one in a thousand of us is writing stuff for the rest. You can expect
a lot of Windows NT talk as the beta copies get out in the early fall.
Kodak released Photo CD Access to allow PC and Macintosh users to fiddle
with their photos. The Kodak Photo CD process lets you put your pictures
on a CD-ROM diskette and the new software lets you manipulate the pictures
with your PC. You can even draw a mustache on your Aunt Agnes.
Are you confused by the word RAID. Does it make you think of Bug Spray?
There is now a RAID advisory Board. That's the Redundant Array of
Inexpensive Disk Drive Advisory Board which is composed of the major makers
and consumers of disk technology. They are going to help educate you about
RAID. Watch for an exciting White Paper later this year.
More on the Intel 586 processor. At 66 Megahertz it can perform more than
100 million instructions per second. The chip has more than 3 million
transistors and will perform up to ten times better than the 33 Megahertz
486. Intel expects the new model to keep RISC computers at bay and
maintain their dominance in personal computers.
FastBytes: Wang's worse. Chapter 11 reorganization time for the star of
the recent past era. They are retrenching and pulling back. 3Com announced
new EtherNet cards that double the speed of data throughput. Cards for the
ISA type computers are out this week with the other buses arriving later.
The new free trade agreement with Mexico and Canada will effect the
computer business. So long as computers contain motherboards that have
been made in North America, they can move between the countries duty-free.
We may be our own Taiwan.
In what looks like a window into the future, Digital Equipment Corporation
is going into the clone mail order business. With PC's priced starting at
$899, it may even be called the cheap clone business. After the failure of
the DEC Rainbow line, Digital sold PC's from other makers, but now has
decided to go back into the production of their own PC's. The decision to
do it mail order is another indication that the era of the store and
distributor are about to change. Wish them luck, maybe this is the Pot of
Gold at the end of the Rainbow.
Finally, this from the Big Brother is Watching Department, Motorola and
Amtech are forming a joint venture to develop wireless electronic toll
collection and traffic management systems. The systems are designed to
allow fleet managers to monitor the coming and going of company vehicles,
and can be used for toll collection on hiways where the data about a car's
toll would be transmitted to a central computer for later billing. That's
all we need - try to reason with the computer when you get a bill for a
million dollars in highway tolls.
BoCoEx Index News
The talk of the market is a possible price cut from IBM in the early fall
and there are signs that people are repositioning their inventory in
anticipation of another market tumble. The IBM PS/2 Model 80's were off
this week down $100 from $1500, but the Model 95 took the biggest tumble
losing $900 to sell this week for $3000. Compaq notebooks were active with
stable pricing. The LTE 286 closed at $800 the SLT-286 traded at a high of
$1000 for fully loaded models and $700 for the base system. Macintosh 2CX's
were off $200 to close at $2400 while other Macintosh models were stable.
The volume in the MacMarket is all PowerBook and SE-30. Laser 2 NT's were
off $150 at $1300 in modest trading.
SoundByte News is produced by Alex Randall who is solely responsible for
its contents.
(Bocoex/19920831)
(NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00015)
BoCoEx Index 08/31/92
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Boston Computer
Exchange for the week ending August 28, 1992.
Machine Main Closing Price Ask Bid
Drive Price Change
IBM AT 339 30 MgB 450 700 200
IBM PS/2 Model 30 286 20 MgB 500 900 300
IBM PS/2 Model L40SX 60 MgB 1350 1400 900
IBM PS/2 Model 50Z 30 MgB 550 700 325
IBM PS/2 Model 55SX 30 MgB 900 1300 800
IBM PS/2 Model 60 40 MgB 600 900 325
IBM PS/2 Model 70 A21 120 MgB 1650 1900 1400
IBM PS/2 Model P70 120 MgB 1650 1900 1200
IBM PS/2 Model 80 110 MgB 1400 down 100 1600 1100
IBM PS/2 Model 80 70 MgB 1100 1200 1000
IBM PS/2 Model 95 160 MgB 3000 down 900 3500 2600
Compaq Portable II 20 MgB 425 500 375
Compaq Portable III 20 MgB 500 600 250
Compaq Portable 386 100 MgB 1300 1500 1000
Compaq SLT-286 20 MgB 700 900 400
Compaq LTE 20 MgB 550 700 400
Compaq LTE-286 40 MgB 800 900 500
Compaq LTE-386 60 MgB 1650 1800 1300
Compaq Deskpro 286E 40 MgB 500 1000 325
Compaq Deskpro 386s 40 MgB 1000 1200 700
Compaq Deskpro 386/33 84 MgB 1850 2250 1400
NEC ProSpeed 386 100 MgB 1500 1800 1000
Zenith SuperSport-286 20 MgB 550 700 525
Zenith Mastersprt-386SX 60 MgB 1350 1700 1000
Zenith SuperSport 386SX 40 MgB 900 1000 800
Macintosh Classic 40 MgB 750 875 500
Macintosh Classic II 40 MgB 975 1025 800
Macintosh SE Floppy 525 650 450
Macintosh SE 20 MgB 725 775 500
Macintosh SE-30 80 MgB 1650 1750 1300
Macintosh LC 40 MgB 1000 1300 800
Macintosh II 40 MgB 1825 1900 1300
Macintosh II X 80 MgB 2500 2850 2000
Macintosh II CX 80 MgB 2400 down 200 2800 2000
Macintosh II CI 80 MgB 3100 3600 2460
Macintosh II FX 80 MgB 4100 4900 3700
Macintosh II SI 40 MgB 1800 2300 1500
Macintosh Quadra 700 160 MgB 3650 3700 3500
Macintosh Quadra 900 160 MgB 4250 4600 4000
Macintosh Portable 40 MgB 700 800 400
Macintosh Powerbk 100 20 MgB 850 1000 700
Macintosh Powerbk 140 40 MgB 1600 1700 1400
Macintosh Powerbk 170 40 MgB 2900 3000 2800
Apple Imagewriter 2 200 up 25 225 175
Apple Laserwriter 2 NT 1300 down 150 1500 1200
HP Laserjet II 850 950 550
HP Laserjet III 1000 1200 900
Toshiba T-1000LE 20 MgB 500 600 400
Toshiba T-1200 XE 20 MgB 700 800 550
Toshiba T-1600 20 MgB 650 700 500
Toshiba T-2000 SX 20 MgB 910 1000 800
Toshiba T-3100 SX 40 MgB 1300 1500 1000
Toshiba T-3200 40 MgB 900 1300 600
Toshiba T-3200 SX 40 MgB 1300 1300 700
Toshiba T-3200 SXC 120 MgB 3700 4000 3000
Toshiba T-4400 SX 120 MgB 2450 2500 2200
Toshiba T-5100 40 MgB 1300 1700 900
Toshiba T-5200 100 MgB 1800 2000 1500
BoCoEx Index data is compiled by Market Analyst, Gary M. Guhman
Here are some current retail-oriented Seats on the Exchange, presented in a
cyclic basis.
Madison, New Jersey - CompuTrade - Howard Kroll - 201-593-0362
New Orleans, Louisiana - Audubon Computer Rental - Mike Barry - 504-522-
0348
Detroit, Michigan - CompuCycle - Walt Hogan - 313-887-2600
Dallas - Ft. Worth, TX - DFW Computer Exchange - M.B. Lee - 817-244-7833
Albuquerque, NM, Western Computer Exchange - David Levin - 505-265-1330
Fresno, California - MacSource Computers - Mike Kurtz - 209-438-6227
Escondido, Ca. - Affordable Computer Solutions - Dean Jacobus - 619-738-
4980
BoCoEx Index prices are based on complete systems with keyboard, monochrome
monitor and adapter, less the value of any software or peripherals.
Boston Computer Exchange is available at: 617-542-4414, Buyer's HotLine:
1-800-262-6399, In Alaska and Canada 1-800-437-2470,FAX: 617-542-8849.The
BoCoEx Database is on CompuServe: GO BCE, and on the Delphi system: ME BO.
(BOCOEX/19920831)
(NEWS)(BUSINESS)(DEN)(00016)
****Compaq Enters Printer Market 08/31/92
HOUSTON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Compaq Computer Corporation
has entered the network printer market, unveiling two new high speed
printers in New York today.
Under a licensing agreement with Sunnyvale, California-based Adobe
Systems, the Compaq PageMarq 20 and PageMarq 15, designed around
PostScript Level 2, are the first to incorporate several new Adobe
printing technologies, including Adobe's IntelliSelect printer
language selection software; emulation software for PCL 5; and
PostScript fax software.
The Compaq PageMarq 20 is a 20-page-per-minute (ppm) laser printer
with a 20 megahertz (MHz) Advanced Micro Devices 29000 RISC (reduced
instruction-set computer) processor and 128 kilobyte of cache. It
features four megabytes (MB) of RAM, expandable to 20MB, a
1,500-sheet capacity, and 11 by 17-inch paper-handling capability.
Compaq calls the PageMarq 20 "the world's fastest all-around desktop
printer." The two printers measure 20.4 by 17.1 by 19.4, and weigh
83 pounds, Compaq spokesperson Mike Berman told Newsbytes.
The PageMarq 15 is a 15-ppm laser printer with an AMD 29000 RISC
processor running at 16 MHz. It includes 4MB of RAM, expandable to
18MB, and features a 1,000-sheet capacity (with an optional twin
tray) and 11 by 17-inch capability. Both systems have motorized
paper trays.
Both printers are now shipping at suggested retail prices of
$5,499 and $3,999, respectively.
According to Adobe, the printers incorporate PostScript Level 2
software, the company's PCL 5 emulation software, and IntelliSelect, an
intelligent printer language sensing software that distinguishes between
print jobs in the PostScript language and PCL 5. The company says that
the software automatically switches the printers to the correct
interpreter or emulator without user intervention.
The PostScript fax software allows users to send faxes through the
printer, sending and receiving documents in "high-resolution"
PostScript identical to the original, in sizes up to 11 by 17
inches. An optional 9600 baud internal fax modem also allows users
to send and receive documents from standard Group III facsimile
machines directly from the printer. Berman told Newsbytes a Windows
driver supports sending and receiving faxes from Windows-supported
fax programs.
Both new printers include Adobe Type Manager and come standard with
50 fonts, including 35 PostScript fonts, 8 PCL outline fonts and 7
PCL bit-map fonts. Options include a programmable font module for
fast access storage of additional typefaces, a 60MB hard drive, and
a network interface card for direct network connectivity. The
companies say Ethernet or Token Ring can be installed simultaneously
with AppleTalk. Printer output resolution includes 800 X 400, 400 X
400, enhanced 300 X 300, and 300 X 300.
Berman told Newsbytes the PageMarq 15 and 20 "are the first of many.
We will have other printers as well," he said. No sales projections
were available, but according to Berman, "The key in this market is
you have to prove yourself. We think we know what the market
needs."
In other Compaq news, the company said today that it is still having
trouble meeting the demand for some of the notebook, desktop, and
file server products announced in mid-June due to parts shortages.
Those shortages are expected to hurt the company's third quarter
profits, according to documents filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. However, some analysts are predicting net per
share at $0.53, up 50 percent from a month ago.
Compaq President Eckhard Pfeiffer says the upward revision suggests
the company will be able to meet demand. Compaq lost $70.3 million,
or $0.82 per share in the third quarter last year, including a $135
million restructuring charge. Pfeiffer predicted that the newly
formed Peripherals Division, which is responsible for the two new
printers, will break even and turn profitable "soon."
(Ian Stokell & Jim Mallory/19920831/Press Contact: Linda Prosser,
Adobe Systems Inc., 415-962-3840; or Mike Berman, Compaq Computer
Corp., 713-374-1562)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(TOR)(00017)
Corel Design Competition 08/31/92
OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Graphics software
vendor Corel has launched its fourth annual CorelDraw World Design
Contest. The contest features more than C$1 million worth of prizes
and runs until April 15, 1993.
Michael Cowpland, Corel's founder, president, and chief executive,
told Newsbytes entries in last year's competition jumped from 1,000
to more than 3,000. "People have spent literally hours and hours on
some of these designs," he said.
A total of 72 winners in nine categories were invited to Ottawa for
the 1992 final awards. In addition to the grand prize gold bar,
there were other prizes donated by a number of computer hardware
and software vendors.
This year, there will be seven categories plus a new student
section for those 18 years old or less. Finalists will be selected
monthly. Each finalist will receive a prize package worth about
C$4,000 and will be entered in the final round of judging.
Corel recovers some of the cost of the contest by selling a CD-ROM
disk containing all the designs for $99. This provides buyers with
ideas and allows them to study the drawings to learn about the
techniques the winning artists have used, Cowpland said.
Corel launched the contest, for users of its CorelDraw graphics
software, to publicize the software, recognize designers, and
gather top-quality designs which it can then remarket to its
customers.
(Grant Buckler/19920831/Press Contact: Janie Sullivan, Corel,
613-728-8200 ext. 1672, fax 613-728-9790; Public Contact: Corel
World Design Contest, 613-728-8200 ext. 1609, fax 613-728-2891)
(NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00018)
New For PC: Lotus Organizer 1.0 08/31/92
CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Lotus
Development has announced the shipment of Lotus Organizer 1.0, the
Windows-based personal information manager (PIM) it acquired
earlier this year from the British firm Threadz.
A spokesman for the company said that while Lotus will continue
selling its DOS-based Agenda, which was one of the first personal
information managers on the market, it will not produce a Windows
version.
The Organizer looks and feels like a traditional paper organizer
such as Day-Timer or Filofax. According to the vendor, it is useful
for maintaining personal calendars, daily planning and
organization, time management, and keeping contact lists.
Lotus Organizer displays information with a notebook metaphor, on
pages that comprise tabbed sections such as Calendar, Planner, and
To-Do List. The user can turn pages and move between sections by
pointing and clicking.
Information in different sections can be cross-referenced with
"links." For example, a user may link an appointment in the
calendar with a meeting agenda or a note.
Customization capabilities range from changing tab names and colors
to deleting or duplicating any of the six default sections --
Planner, Notepad, To-Do List, Address, Calendar, and Anniversary.
Text and graphics files can be imported from other Windows products
Lotus Organizer is available from Lotus authorized resellers, with
a suggested retail price of $149 in the United States and C$179 in
Canada. Agenda 2.0 users can move to Lotus Organizer for $69 in
the United States and C$79 in Canada, including a free conversion
utility that will move items from any Agenda file to Lotus
Organizer. International English, German, French, Italian, and
Spanish versions will be available in September, Lotus said.
The software runs on any DOS PC with an 80286 microprocessor or
higher and a hard disk drive. It needs three megabytes of hard disk
space, a VGA monitor, a mouse, and Windows 3.0 or higher in
standard or enhanced mode.
(Grant Buckler/19920831/Press Contact: David Grip, McGlinchey &
Paul for Lotus, 617-862-4514; Public Contact: Lotus, 800-343-5414)
(NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00019)
Canada: IBM Subsidiary Launches "Ambra" Line Of PCs 08/31/92
TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Expercomp Services,
a subsidiary of IBM Canada, has officially launched the Ambra line
of personal computers in Canada. Also to be sold in Europe, the
Ambra line may reach the United States later this fall.
IBM created the line in an effort to compete with low-cost clone
manufacturers. The company's announcement touted the new machines
as "the first line of 'credible clones.' "
The machines immediately available are based on Intel 386
microprocessors. Prices start at C$1,479 for the 25-megahertz
Sprinta machine with two megabytes of memory, a 40-megabyte hard
drive, VGA display, keyboard, and mouse, a spokesman for the
company said. Bundled software includes DOS 5.0 and a choice of the
Microsoft Windows 3.1 or Geoworks Pro graphical operating
environment.
The Sprinta is also available with an 80-megabyte hard drive, and
memory is expandable to 16 megabytes on the main board. This model
has three Industry Standard Architecture (ISA) or AT Bus expansion
slots.
The Hurdla models are similar but have larger enclosures that
accommodate seven expansion slots, and are offered with a choice of
80- or 160-megabyte hard disk drives.
Expercomp is also offering a notebook machine called the Treka,
available with a 20-megahertz 386SL processor and a 40-megabyte
hard drive or with a 25-megahertz processor and an 80-megabyte
drive. The notebook's battery will last two and a half to three
hours in continuous use, the spokesman said, but a standby mode may
allow it to last six to eight hours in intermittent use.
All the PCs come with a one-year warranty including free on-site
service and a toll-free telephone help line.
Expercomp has signed up two major national distributors, Merisel
Canada of Concord, Ontario, and Hartco Enterprises of Montreal, to
handle the Ambra machines. Bobby Hsieh, marketing manager, said the
machines began shipping to dealers August 28, and Expercomp hopes
to put them on the shelves of about 300 outlets across Canada.
The company has also set up a toll-free information line at
800-363-0077 for callers who want more information about the Ambra
products.
(Grant Buckler/19920831/Press Contact: Gene Diamond, Goodman
Communications, 416-924-9100, fax 416-924-5709; Public Contact:
Expercomp, 800-363-0077 or 416-474-7004)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00020)
Ram Mobile Data Teams Up With Psion 08/31/92
WEST DRAYTON, MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Ram Mobile
Data, the packet radio data network provider, has signed Psion,
the portable computing specialist, as a primary systems integrator.
The deal will benefit both companies. Psion (and its customers)
will benefit from a range of modem products that will allow Psion
computers to access public and private online systems using Ram's
packet radio network. Ram, meanwhile, gets an "instant" supply of
customers for its network services.
Announcing the deal, Colin Francis, Psion's corporate sales
manager said that a trial of the network has already been
undertaken with a major customer, using specially developed
software for the client.
"This allowed job instructions to be passed to and from a central
PC in real time, greatly increasing the efficiency of the
distribution process," he said, adding that the Psion HC hand-held
computer had been used in the tests.
What's interesting about the Ram network is that it uses the
Mobitex hardware and software as seen in US packet radio
networks. Ram is part of the US-based Ram Communications group
which recently linked with Bellsouth Enterprises. Ram also
operates a packet radio network in the U.S. and, along with
Bellsouth, is currently installing similar networks in Australia
and the Netherlands.
Until recently, Ram was pitched head to head with the Dowty
Cognito packet radio network here in the UK. But now, the Cognito
network is currently being scaled down, after the Dowty parent
company was acquired by a third-party company which has no
interest in packet radio. According to informed sources, the
Cognito operation is up for sale.
The deal could mean that Ram's network will get a UK high
street presence, as Psion computers are sold through a variety of
outlets. According to Karim Khoja, Ram's corporate sales manager,
the Psion link-up could prove lucrative for the company.
(Steve Gold/19920831/Press & Public Contact: Sue Redman,
marketing communications manager, Ram Mobile Data - Tel: 081-890-
9090; Fax: 081-990-9110)
(NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00021)
UK: Microsoft Slashes Mouse Pricing By 20% 08/31/92
WOKINGHAM, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Microsoft UK
has slashed 20 percent off the price of its single and five-pack
packages of the Microsoft Mouse. The price reduction, which takes
effect immediately, takes a single mouse down to UKP 79, and a
give mouse pack down to UKP 349.
Why the price cuts? To get more people to move up to the
Microsoft Mouse, claims Gillian Kent, MIcrosoft's consumer and
hardware product manager, who explained that quality pointing
devices are the only way to ensure that users get the mouse out
of graphical computing.
"With more users moving over to the Windows environment, more
people are using mice. These price reductions will enable users
to invest in a higher quality device at a very competitive
price," she explained.
The Microsoft Mouse was first introduced in 1982 and has become
the industry's standard pointing device. According to Microsoft,
more than nine million mice have been sold worldwide to date.
(Steve Gold/19920831/Press & Public Contact: Microsoft UK -
Tel: 0274-270001)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(LON)(00022)
UK: Swedish Software Learning Techniques 08/31/92
LONDON, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- A new company, Softvision, which
debuts in September, specializes in video software training and
claims to be using Swedish software learning techniques to enable
novice PC users to get up to speed a lot quicker than by using
conventional methods.
According to Softvision, its range of video training programs
has been devised around an innovative Swedish idea, which uses a
teacher-pupil scenario acted out on tape to quickly familiarize
the user with a software application. The company claims that
existing users of applications will benefit from the videos, as
well as the traditional novice user.
Nigel Lovett-Turner, managing director of Softvision, claims that
the company's approach to software learning has proven to be
immensely successful throughout Europe with more than 109,000
users in Sweden alone in the company's first year of operation in
that country.
"We've found that users typically only use about 10 or even five
percent of their software's capability, whether it be word
processing, spreadsheets or graphics," he explained, adding that,
at the same time, there is a general resistance to attending
courses to improve users' software skills.
According to Lovett-Turner, he has found that many people who
attend courses comment that they find it frustrating that only
parts of the course meet their specific needs. "This means that
much of their time is wasted sitting through information they
already know," he said.
Lovett-Turner claims that Softvision's video training compresses
a day's training into a three-hour video at a cost of around a
third of a full training course. "Seeing the product's features
and listening to an expert discuss how to use them in a relaxed
environment has proven to be an ideal way to get the best out of
software quickly," he said.
Softvision's full range of UKP 99-99 videos are formally launched
at the Business Computing Show, which takes place in London on
the 15-18 September. Videos for most major applications, including
MS-Windows 3.1, MS-Word for Windows 2.0, Lotus Ami Pro 3.0 and
Wordperfect 5.1 for DOS, are available.
(Steve Gold/19920831/Press & Public Contact: Softvision U.K. -
Tel: 0705-200041)
(NEWS)(TRENDS)(LON)(00023)
Wordperfect Claims Lion's Share Of UK WP Market 08/31/92
ADDLESTONE, SURREY, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Wordperfect is
claiming that its share of the UK word processing market is
continuing to climb, citing the latest market research figures
from Context as proof.
Context's May figures show that Wordperfect's market share has
risen from 55.6 percent over the previous three months to 60
percent during May itself. The same figures show Microsoft and
Wordstar as having lost ground, with Microsoft's share dropping
from 31.2 to 29.3 percent and Wordstar seeing its share eroded
from 7.8 to 6.3 percent.
Context's figures show that Wordperfect is becoming a dominant
company in UK software terms, holding an 18 percent market
share overall, up from 15 percent over the last 12 months and
16.8 percent in the last three months.
This translates in fiscal terms to UKP 5.4 million a year for
Wordperfect, assuming that the UK is worth UKP 30.5 million in
software terms.
What's interesting about the figures is that the split between
DOS and Windows software sales is clearly beginning to be felt.
Word processing software sales for Wordperfect DOS show a rise
from 50 percent in the last three months to 53 percent in May,
while Wordperfect for Windows increased to 7 percent in May -- up
2.5 percent on the 4.5 percent reported for the previous three
months.
David Godwin, general manager for sales and marketing with
Wordperfect, claims that his company's increase in sales has been
at the expense of its two main competitors, MS-Word and Wordstar.
Context produces several monthly reports. The Software Sales report
measures UK software sales by volume and by value through indirect sales
channels. The report also indicates sales for several categories,
such as word processing, database, spreadsheet, communications
and integrated applications.
(Steve Gold/19920831/Press & Public Contact: Wordperfect U.K. -
Tel: 0932-850500; Context - Tel: 071-937-3595; fax: 071-937-1159)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00024)
UK: Sonix Prepares Ground For V.Fast Modem Standard 08/31/92
LONDON, ENGLAND, 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Sonix, a recently launched
network company, is lobbying hard to push the proposed V.Fast
modem standard through the CCITT regulatory procedures.
Over the last few weeks, Sonix has been contacting several
data communications suppliers, urging them to push the CCITT, the
international telecommunications regulatory body, for action at its next
meeting in September.
Sonix's initiative comes after several recent announcements that
modem manufacturers, including Motorola Codex in the US, and
Amber Logic plus Miracom in the UK, were "doing their own thing" and
releasing non-standard "V.Fast" modems.
"The fact that the V.Fast standard has been taken out of the
technical arena and into the political once has seriously
postponed its establishment," explained Bob Jones, Sonix's
managing director, who added that the standard, which will enable
data transmissions at speeds of up to 28,800 bits per second
(bps) should have been ratified (agreed) by now.
"Instead, political games look like delaying for up to 18 months," he said.
Jones is especially critical of those companies who are doing their
"own thing" in the V.Fast modem stakes. "They have made an investment
and are keen to get their products to market, regardless of
compatibility, just to claim a lead of their competitors," he said.
"It's inevitable that customers will lose out in the end with
non-standard modems that will not interwork at the higher speeds.
Some manufacturers recognize this is a disadvantage, and are
claiming they will provide upgrades from their present implementation
of a high speed modulation to the eventual V.Fast standard. This seems
a pretty tall order when their is no agreement what V.Fast will be," he
added.
So what does Jones recommend as the best course of action? He is
calling on other modem suppliers not to go down the proprietary
"V.Fast" route as Amber Logic, Miracom and Motorola Codex gave
done.
"It's essential that customer needs are put ahead of individual
companies' desires to be the first to get to market. Interworking
is vital: there was a similar situation several years ago when
some V.22 look-alikes were established in advance of the
standard," he said.
"It took a long time to work these incompatible devices out of
the system, to the detriment of customers. The same thing (with
V.Fast modems) is happening now: customers are being put in the
impossible situation of having to choose whether to wait or to go
non-standard and take the risk that their products will never
comply. We need customer-oriented companies to lobby the CCITT to
establish the standard quickly," he added.
(Steve Gold/19920831/Press & Public Contact: Bob Jones, Sonix -
Tel: 0285-641651)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00025)
Kansai Electric Bundles Printer Sharing Device, Utilities 08/31/92
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Kansai Electric
announced today that it is now bundling its four-user printer
sharing device with a set of six printer utilities. The automatic
printer sharing device, Quadlink, allows up to four Macintosh or
IBM-compatible computers to share the same parallel or serial
printer.
Kansai marketing and sales director Joe Hartzell says that by using
Quadlink in conjunction with the PT-Spool utility in Printools, print
jobs are automatically spooled to each PC's hard drive. Hartzell
says that frees the host computer as much as 35 times faster than
jobs printed without the spooler.
Quadlink performs electronically what mechanical switch boxes have
done for users for some time. Unlike mechanical switches, Quadlink
automatically polls the four ports to detect incoming data, and
locks PC to the printer until the job is printed. After a programmed
time-out during which Quadlink detects no incoming data, the printer
is freed up for the next print job. Kansai says Quadlink works with
laser printers, and will not void the Hewlett-Packard Laserjet warranty.
The Quadlink unit includes LED (light emitting diode) indicators to
show when the printer is in use. Several Quadlink units can be
daisy-chained together to give additional users access to the
printer.
Printools, the printer utility program being packaged with Quadlink,
was developed by Insight Development, and includes six printer
utilities that are managed by a TSR (terminate and stay resident)
menu. The utilities include a printer spooler, a screen capture and
dump and PT-Plot, a program that allows uses to print HP-GL, HP-GL/2
or PCL output on their JP Laserjet III printers.
The bundled package is immediately available, and has a suggested
retail price of $229. Purchased separately, the two products would
cost $308.
(Jim Mallory/19920831/Press contact: Joe Hartzell, Kansai Electric,
408-377-7062, Reader contact: 800-733-3374)
(NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00026)
New For PC: Software for SmartFolders and Windows for Workgroups 08/31/92
NEW PALTZ, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Paper Software
has announced a set of tools for moving from DOS to Windows for
Workgroups and Windows 3.1, including a package that produces
"SmartFolders."
Michael McCue, company president, told Newsbytes that DOSagain 1.0,
Sidebar 2.1, and SmartFolders 1.0 are all being developed using the
beta version of Windows for Workgroups, and will be either
compatible with or easily updatable to the final release of the new
Windows for Workgroups operating system.
McCue said that DOSagain 1.0 is a customizable command line that
lets users familiar with the DOS prompt exercise their skills
within Windows. SideBar 2.1, another utility, combines concepts
from the DOS and GUI environments, permitting the use of either
commands and the keyboard or icons and the mouse in forming a
multilevel Windows shell.
SmartFolders 1.0, the third package, allows for the creation of
folders that can fill themselves based on user-assigned rules.
"You can establish an `Advertising' SmartFolder and then tell the
folder to fill itself with any file containing the word `ad,'
`promotion,' or `brochure,'" he explained.
DOSagain provides access to any DOS 5.0 command directly from
Windows, and also supplies configurable commands that let the user
make any Windows application command line-driven. The program
includes templates for processing DOS commands with the use of the
Windows for Workgroupgs, Windows 3.1, Norton Desktop, or XTree file
manager, according to McCue.
SideBar 2.1, an upgrade of a previous release, has been enhanced
with a new object-oriented design, launch scheduling, and
multilevel or "nested" folders, in addition to Windows for
Workgroups compatibility. McCue told Newsbytes that the program
offers the same general functionality as Norton Desktop and HP
NewWave, but at a fraction of the price.
SmartFolders 1.0 will also be compatible with both Windows 3.1 and
Windows for Workgroups, he said. The SmartFolders will be able to
fill themselves with files, directories and applications from any
OLE-compatible Windows shell or applications, including Sidebar,
Norton Desktop, HP NewWave, and programs running under Workgroups
for Windows.
A SmartFolder will also have the faculty to look for, index, and
store other SmartFolders, McCue added. "No other program yet
announced offers the capabilities of SmartFolders 1.0," he
asserted.
Under the electronic mail program in the upcoming Windows for
Workgroups operating system, a user will be able to transmit the
contents of either a SmartFolder or SideBar folder by merely
dropping the folder on to the Windows for Workgroups document, he
stated.
DOSagain 1.0 is expected to ship on September 28, SideBar 2.1 on
October 19, and SmartFolders 1.0 at the end of November. Each
package will be priced at $65.
"I don't expect to see any modifications to the Windows for
Workgroups code that would affect compatibility with our products.
But if there are any changes, they'll be something we can handle
with a very simple maintenance release," commented the company
president.
(Jacqueline Emigh/19920831; Press and public contact: Michael
Weber, Paper Software, 800-551-5187)
(NEWS)(BUSINESS)(SFO)(00027)
****90 US, 49 UK Jobs Affected By Librex Closure 08/31/92
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Management
at Librex Computer Systems, Inc., which announced on Friday that
Nippon Steel would be closing down the company, is attempting
to find an interested party willing to buy the business. The retreat
by the steelmaking giant from the computer industry affects both
Librex businesses in the US and the UK.
As reported by Newsbytes previously, the company issued a
statement late Friday saying it was withdrawing from the PC market "as
a result of the intense competition and the slumping profit margins
within the industry, which makes it not feasible to continue to
support the business."
Dan Crane, spokesman for Librex in San Jose, told Newsbytes that
there will be 90 jobs affected at the San Jose, California location.
In answer to a question as to whether the San Jose operation will
be closed-down or scaled-down, Crane said: "It's doing both. It's
being scaled down in phases between the end of September and
the end of December. We are talking with some interested parties.
If we pull together one of those deals, chances are we will stop
scaling down."
The major reason of the failure of Librex was the discounting war going
on among computer makers in the US and the UK. The firm claims to have
sold only 5,000 to 6,000 personal computers in both these markets.
The UK subsidiary is called Nippon Steel Computer, which was funded
with four million pounds, and has 49 employees. This subsidiary will also
be closed by the end of the year unless a buyer is found.
Concerning support for the machines already sold, Crane said that:
"It's certainly been decided that we are going to provide warranty
and tech support to all of our users." Crane would not be drawn on
who was going to provide the services though. "That's something
we are going to be real careful with and try and do a real good
job on," he said.
Librex was selling its 16 and 32-bit computers through US distributor
Ingram Micro, among others. The firm was planning to release an 80486-based
notebook this fall, but scrapped the plan due to the slump in sales.
The firm was also planning to sell these personal computers in the
Japanese market, but will no longer do so. Also, Librex has abandoned
the CAI (computer-aided instruction) business, Newsbytes was told.
Librex Computer Systems was incorporated in June 1990 as an independent,
wholly owned subsidiary of Shin Nippon Steel Corporation with a
capitalization of $15 million and 92 employees. At that time, the
firm projected sales of 30,000 personal computers per year would
make 10 billion-yen ($80 million) per annum. Librex had projected
sales to 20 to 30 billion yen (about $200 million) within several years.
(Wendy Woods & Ian Stokell & Masayuki "Massey" Miyazawa/19920831/Press
Contact: Librex Computer Systems Inc., Daniel Crane, 408-894-6800;
Shin Nippon Steel Corp., +81-3-3242-4111)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(LAX)(00028)
GTE, Philips Experiment W/ Interactive TV At Cerritos 08/31/92
CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- GTE Imagitrek
and Philips Interactive Media Systems have said they are implementing
the interactive television technology the companies announced in
April at GTE's Cerritos, California experimental site. The April
announcement detailed a type of interactive television that will
allow television programs to interact with material printed on
compact discs (CDs).
GTE has been experimenting with applications for digital media in
Cerritos for several years. The company has "guinea pig" home users
there who are trying out digital television, interactive telephones,
pay by view digital TV, and interactive services over optical cable,
broadcast, telephone lines, and combinations of all of the delivery
methods.
The interactive viewing would combine television and Philips'
existing compact disc-interactive (CD-I) system that already
uses a television for the display screen. Richard Robinson,
general manager of GTE Imagitrek, said the combination could
present viewers with opportunities to garner more information
about something they are watching. "For instance, a viewer
using a 'baseball' disc, cued to the appropriate position on
the compact disc by an encoded signal in the broadcast, could
retrieve the image of a baseball player to review personal
statistics, whenever that player came to bat," Robinson said in
a prepared statement.
However, baseball is not the subject of the new technology experiment,
but instead the Discovery Channel and World Book will be partnered
with GTE and Philips for the test, GTE Imagitrek said.
In related news, Philips just announced lower prices for the
CD-I player, now available in Sears stores throughout the US.
However, criticisms of the system include resolution of images
on some CD-I titles is too poor for viewer enjoyment.
Philips is also facing major competition from Tandy, Zenith,
and Microsoft, who just announced a similar system, VIS, for
introduction this fall that is compatible with standard audio
CDs as well. Tandy said the VIS player is to also connect to a
television and in addition to a home stereo system, and is
based on DOS and Modular Windows, a version of Windows 3.1
developed by Microsoft.
While it appears the type of interactive service Philips is
experimenting is unique to Philips, Tandy made hints at the
announcement of the VIS about interactivity and a modem can be
attached to the VIS player. Also a number of software developers for
the IBM DOS and Windows platform, such as Broderbund, have already
committed to moving their titles to the VIS, hopefully in time for
sale to consumers this fall.
Also in the running is TV Answer, which has announced it will
offer a "cellular" based interactive digital television service
controlled in the home by a TV Answer box. The TV Answer box is
based on a Motorola microprocessor chip and Hewlett-Packard has
already committed to manufacturing the TV Answer boxes, which
have been projected to go on sale to consumers in 1993.
Reston, Virginia-based TV Answer says the boxes, which are
about the size of a VCR, will communicate digitally with "cell
sites" that will transmit the digital data to a central computer via
satellite that will then disseminate the information to its
destination. TV Answer says users will be able to order pizza, check
their bank balance, program their VCR, answer surveys, and participate
in live events.
Whatever interactive television unit consumers choose, they all
will be priced about the same. Philips lowered its price to
$699, the TV Answer boxes are expected to cost consumers about
$700 each, and Zenith has mentioned the same $700 price range
for the VIS Player. Titles for all three systems will cost
consumers more, between $30 and $80 more each, the companies
predict.
Other competitors on the interactive television scene include
NTN Communications, best known for its QB1 football game, which
is trying to offer electronic gambling via a Cable Wagering
Service. The new game is based on a test run of "Triples," an
interactive horse racing game on the GTE Mainstreet Service in
California. The California Federation of Racing Associations
Inc., has introduced legislation that would permit interactive
television wagering, which is already being done in California
at local "tavern" type sites. However, the NTN System proposes
use of the television remote control to allow a consumer to
chose a race, horse, and wager from an interactive menu on a
home television.
(Linda Rohrbough/19920831/Press Contact: Thomas Byker, GTE,
203-965-2822, Gary Johnson, Philips, tel 615-521-3342, fax 615-
521-3242)
(NEWS)(UNIX)(LAX)(00029)
Quarterdeck Announces Desqview/X X11 & Motif Toolkits 08/31/92
SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Quarterdeck
announced Desqview/X, its graphical user interface
for data and application sharing between Unix-based X Window
workstations networked with personal computers (PCs), said it
will now offer X11 and Motif Software Development Toolkits.
The announcement was made at the end of the Desqview/X
Developer's Conference held in Santa Monica, California last
week. The company said those who attended the full conference
will receive a copy of the new X11 toolkit.
The complete X11 Toolkit includes: X11 R4 programming
libraries, the Desqview/X system library with Berkeley Socket
Interface, sample programs, make files and library support for
Microsoft C, Borland C++, Zortech C++, Rational Instant C,
Watcom C/386, Metaware High C and GNU C/C++ compilers, the
DESQview/X Roadmap, O'Reilly X Reference and Programming Guides
(Volumes 1, 2, 4 and 5), Rational Systems DOS/4GX DOS extender
and tools, Instant C development environment, Oxygen, and
Quarterdeck's Developer Passport Support, the company said. The
complete X11 Toolkit is retail priced at $750.
Quarterdeck highlights its Developer Passport Support which the
company says designates a specific Quarterdeck technician/programmer
to provide technical support for individual developers. Developers are
provided with direct-dial phone access to their designated support
technician, as well as standard electronic bulletin board system (BBS)
support. The company added that those enrolled in the Developer Passport
Support are also entitled to use the new Quarterdeck Porting
and Programming Labs, staffed by company technicians and
developers, located in Santa Monica and Chelmsford, England.
A $50 X11 Starter Toolkit is also offered, but is limited to
use with the GNU C/C++ compiler only. The company says the
starter kit includes disks containing the full X11 R4 programming
libraries, the Desqview/X system library with Berkeley Socket
Interface, sample programs, make files for GNU, the Desqview/X
Roadmap documentation, and the GNU C/C++ compiler.
The OSF/Motif (v. 1.1.5) Development Toolkit is priced at $150
and includes: Motif Widget libraries, Motif Resource Management
library, Motif User Interface Language (UIL) compiler, sample
programs, O'Reilly Volume 6, Motif Programming Manual, the
Desqview/X OSF/Motif Roadmap, and the DESQview/X end user
OSF/Motif Window Manager.
Quarterdeck also announced at the conference a Desqview/X beta
test program for users who have Sun PC-NFS, Wollongong and
Beame & Whiteside TCP/IP network drivers and also announced it
licensed Novell's TCP/IP Transport for DOS for its DESQview/X
Network Manager.
Desqview/X, announced in March of this year, is a graphical
user interface that can run Windows 3.0 and 3.1 and is geared
toward a 386 or 486-based IBM or compatible PCs. With the
Desqview/X Network Manager software, the product can share data
and X Windows applications with workstations on a network. The
company has announced plans to introduce a 286 version of the
product, but says it doesn't know when that will take place.
(Linda Rohrbough/19920831/Press Contact: Gary Pope,
Quarterdeck, tel 310-392-9851, fax 310-314-3212)
(NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00030)
New For Mac: SuperMac Graphics Card, 17-Inch Monitor 08/31/92
SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 AUG 31 (NB) -- Hoping to
appeal to high-end Macintosh graphics users, SuperMac Technology
has introduced the 24-bit ThunderLight color graphics card. At the
same time the company has also introduced the SuperMatch 17 T
Trinitron color display for the Macintosh.
The new ThunderLight card carries a suggested retail price of
$2,399, and according to the company, offers Macintosh color-
publishing customers a 1200 percent increase in QuickDraw
acceleration for true-color graphics on displays up to 21 inches.
Volume shipments are slated for later this month.
Laurie McLean, spokesperson for the company, told Newsbytes
that the "ThunderLight is a downward extension of the Thunder
family. Thunder/24 is their best-selling graphics card. ThunderLight
is an extension of that chip-set. It's not quite as fast as the
Thunder card, but its pretty fast. And it's a lot faster than their
lower priced cards. It's that medium range of price performance that
people will like."
Christopher Kryzan, SuperMac's director of product marketing,
said: "Our Thunder technology has fueled exceptionally strong,
24-bit color sales in SuperMac's high-end prepress market, and
now we're setting a new price/performance standard for
QuickDraw acceleration with ThunderLight."
According to SuperMac, Macworld, MacWEEK, and MacUser all rated
the Thunder/24 as the industry's fastest 24-bit card. The company
says that, by offering the Thunder technology at a lower price,
ThunderLight is "ten times faster than its nearest competitor for
the QuickDraw operations used by applications like Adobe
Photoshop, QuarkXPress, and Aldus FreeHand."
ThunderLight offers support for more than 16.7 million colors.
Other features include "Virtual Desktop," which provides up to an
eight-foot-square workspace for opening poster-size layouts in
their entirety, and hardware-accelerated pan and instantaneous
zoom by 200 percent.
The SuperMatch 17 T Trinitron color display, available October 1,
is a large-screen, small-footprint, multimode, that carries a
suggested retail price of $1,299.
McLean told Newsbytes that customers, "Really wanted to see
a Trinitron version of...(the SuperMatch 17). This is there
response to that. Also it is the first time that they can find a
Trinitron version that looked really good that was low enough
in price, because Trinitrons carry such a premium attach to it."
SuperMatch 17 T offers a choice of three preset resolutions: a
20-inch mode with a 1024 by 768 pixel resolution at 87 dots-per-
inch (dpi); a 17-inch WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get)
mode with a 832 by 624 pixel resolution at 70 dpi; and a 13-inch
magnified viewing mode with a 640 by 480 pixel resolution at 54
dpi.
"SuperMatch 17 T combines the popular features of our SuperMatch
17 Multimode color display with Trinitron technology and added
ergonomic features," said Kryzan. "It capitalizes on the tremendous
success we've enjoyed with the SuperMatch 17 - it's widely
perceived as the perfect upgrade for 13-inch customers - while
adding features that our growing business customer base value,
all at an aggressive price."
According to the company, the SuperMatch 17 T features a 6500
Kelvin white point to assure color accuracy. Based on a Sony
Trinitron CRT (cathode ray tube), the SuperMatch 17 T offers a
.31 millimeter shadow mask, while a dynamic-focus electron gun
delivers uniform focus.
The SuperMatch 17 T provides anti-reflection coating for
viewing and, according to the company, meets the stringent MPR
II standards of the Swedish Council on Metrology for VLF/ELF
emissions.
Just last week Newsbytes reported that, barely three months
after going public, and one month after posting record-breaking
earnings for its second quarter, SuperMac Technology was
following up its price cuts earlier in the year with a new
round of reductions that cut up to 30 percent off its Macintosh
color-publishing, business productivity, and desktop video
products.
(Ian Stokell/19920831/Press Contact: Stephanie Bryant,
SuperMac Technology, 408-773-4446; or Laurie McLean, McLean
Public Relations, 415-358-8535)