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(NEWS)(TELECOM)(LON)(00001)
BT May Make Italian Telecom Investment 12/22/92
MILAN, ITALY, 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- British Telecom is reported to be
holding a series of discussions with the Italian Government regarding
a possible stake in STET, the Italian state-owned telecom company,
according to a report in Panorama, the Italian weekly publication.
According to Panorama, BT is looking to pay as much as 5,000 lire per
share, which would value the stake at around 2,500,000 million lire,
Panorama asserts that Baring Brothers has been undertaking the
negotiations on behalf of BT in Italy.
BT and STET are both refusing comment on the matter, although some
press sources have hinted that an announcement may be due very
shortly. The deal could involve a partial privatization of the Italian
telecom company.
If a privatization share issue is made, then Panorama says it expects
other companies to buy into STET. One likely candidate is AT&T,
although the publication stresses that no discussions are taking place
-- AT&T will take its chances in the public share issue.
A deal with BT would favor STET, which has said publicly it needs to
find a cash-rich partner to complete a number of deals in Italy. The
Reuters news wire service hints that, if a BT deal is forthcoming,
then STET can make a deal with Olivetti, the troubled Italian computer
and electronics company.
(Steve Gold/19921222)
(NEWS)(APPLE)(LON)(00002)
Apple Offers European Developer Support 12/22/92
UXBRIDGE, MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Apple Computer has
announced a series of European-wide support programs that it claims
will assist software developers for the Apple Macintosh range of
computers.
The developer support program is available to all third-party
developers and companies in Europe who (in Apple's words): "provide
Apple-compatible products and services."
As part of the program, Apple plans to establish a technical support
center in Munich, Germany, supplemented by help from software
laboratories at Apple centers around Europe. Some direct development
support is also planned from Apple's Cupertino headquarters.
Announcing the new programs, Soren Olsson, Apple Europe's
president, said that the company's market share has improved in Europe
in recent times.
"At the same time, the number and diversity of third parties in Europe
who have chosen the Apple Mac platform is growing rapidly. We want to
make sure we are addressing the needs of these developers and other
partners in the best possible way," he said.
Effective January 1, 1993, Apple's third-party support programs fall
into three main categories: the Apple Programmers and Developers
Association (ADPA), the Apple Associates Program and the Apple
Partners Program.
The ADPA is open to all programmers, developers and other third
parties free of charge, provided they are bona fide developers. The
scheme allows immediate access over the phone, as well with backup
materials by post, to a variety of Apple expertise.
The Associates program costs $500 per year to join. In return, Apple
will supply what it calls ongoing product information and technical
resources, access to Applelink, discounted hardware and self-help
technical support.
The Partners program is designed for what Apple describes as its
"strategic third parties, whose work supports Apple's long-term
product directions." The fee for services, which include access to
test labs and e-mail access to Apple's developers, is $1,500 a year.
What's interesting about these schemes is that they draw together a
diverse range of third-party developer schemes offered by the various
Apple country headquarters throughout Europe.
The free European market, under which most paperwork and tariff
barriers are removed, starts on January 1 -- Apple would appear to be
preparing the way for developers to take advantage of the support the
company can provide in the new market.
(Steve Gold/19921222/Press & Public Contact: Apple Computer - Tel:
081-569-1199)
(NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00003)
New For PC: Video Player For Harvard Graphics Due Soon 12/22/92
SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Projected
delivery of Software Publishing's full-screen, full-motion Video
Player for Harvard Graphics for Windows 3.1 is only a couple of
weeks away, Newsbytes has learned.
Frank Coyle, product manager for Harvard Graphics, told Newsbytes
that the company has set the first week in January as the target
shipment date for the new player, a software tool that works with
Microsoft Video for Windows or Intel ActionMedia II to let the user
add video to Harvard Graphics ScreenShow presentations.
In adding the clips, the user works directly within Video Player,
sizing and positioning a video window, selecting between manual and
auto playback modes, and setting up additional playback options.
Completed presentations are played back through the Launch
Application feature in the Harvard Graphics for Windows ScreenShow.
Prior to playback, the user employs Launch Application to select an
on-screen "button" for each desired clip.
The "button" can be assigned to a key on the keyboard, a particular
button on the mouse, or a set-up that will go off automatically
whenever a designated slide is played, the product manager told
Newsbytes. "The button can also be hidden from view, so people in
the audience are unaware that a video clip is coming up," he said.
The Video Player method provides far better results than using OLE
(object linking and embedding) to embed a dithered video image in
a slide, an alternative method for Windows applications, he added.
"All the dithered video will give you is a fuzzy, practically
frozen picture in a little one-inch box. The audience is going to
be wondering what's in the box, rather than listening to what the
presenter is saying," he added.
In contrast, when Harvard Graphics and the Media Player are used
with Intel's ActionMedia II board, the clips can be shown at any
size up to full screen, and at 30 frames per second, the same full-
motion rate used in broadcast television.
"On one side of the screen, you could have a chart, and on the
other half, a video clip of someone discussing that chart. Or, you
could blow the video up to full-screen," he said.
When the SPC products are used with Microsoft's Video for Windows
software, video can be displayed in a window only, but the quality
is still much higher than that of dithered images, the company claims.
An 80486-based PC will run Video Player clips in a 2.5-inch by 2.5-
inch window at 24 frames per second, he estimated. A 386-based
machine will run the video in a 1.5- by 1.5-inch window at 15
frames per second.
The list price for Video Player is $125. Through April 30, though,
the tool will be available to current Harvard Graphics for Windows
users for just a $15 shipping and handling fee.
(Jacqueline Emigh/19921222/Press contacts: Dorothy Meunier, Software
Publishing, tel 408-450-7637, or Victoria Paige, Software Publishing,
tel 408-450-7316; Reader contact: Software Publishing's Customer
Service Department, tel 408-988-7518)
(NEWS)(TRENDS)(WAS)(00004)
Alliance To Create Mini-CD Databases For Portables 12/22/92
GERMANTOWN, MARYLAND, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- A strategic
agreement between Online Computer Systems and AT&T's notebook
computer division aims to develop and promote the use of mini-CD
databases accessed by portable computers, an alliance which has
already produced a reference manual for a mobile computer, and
an illustrated parts catalog for a technician on the go.
Online Computer Systems, developer of multimedia and CD-ROM
(compact disk read only memory) disc titles for many Fortune 500
clients, has formed a strategic partnership with Somerset, New
Jersey-based Safari Systems, the notebook computer business division
of AT&T's NCR computer division. Under the agreement, Online will
develop applications for NCR's 3.5-inch CD data storage system.
The first data placed on the NCR 3.5-inch (8 cm) disc was a portion of
the NCR 3170 technical reference manual. The test application included
both full-text and illustrations accessible using Online's OPTI-WARE
retrieval engine. The second application was a Microsoft Windows-based
illustrated parts catalog demo database also published on the
notebook-style 3.5-inch disc.
The current applications are intended for field technicians who
will use NCR 3170 notebook computers and the 3170 Expansion
Manager with its built-in mini-CD drive.
Dennis McDonald at Online told Newsbytes that, although the
company produces a number of consumer titles, the primary market
for the 3.5-inch drive and applications will initially be in the
service and maintenance areas, particularly such clients as
appliance, auto, heavy equipment, and truck manufacturing who
need to equip their field service technicians with large amounts
of data in a portable electronic form.
CD-ROM has long been touted as the best way to provide field
service technicians with the large amount of data they need to
service a variety of complex machinery, but all portable
computers using standard 5.25-inch CD-ROM drives have been very
large and heavy -- indeed some were not even capable of running on
batteries and were thus not very portable.
The new 3.5-inch or 8cm CD standard uses the same data formatting
technology as the larger CD-ROM discs but are technically not CD-
ROMs because the size is wrong.
3.5-inch CD discs can usually be played in standard CD-ROM drives
or in their own much smaller drives and store only about one-
quarter as much as the 550 megabyte CD-ROMs.
(John McCormick/19921222/Press Contact: Dennis McDonald, Online,
301-601-2226)
(NEWS)(UNIX)(LON)(00005)
UK: Unipalm Reports 65% Income Surge 12/22/92
CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND, 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Who said Unix was unpopular?
Certainly not Unipalm, the Unix systems specialist, which has just
reported its best-ever half year income, which shows a 65 percent
increase over the same May-October period last year.
Because Unipalm is a privately owned company, it does not have to
disclose its results to the public. The company has announced,
however, that its first half turnover this year was UKP 3.373 million
against UKP 2.224 million for the same period of 1991.
Peter Dawe, the company's managing director, says that Unipalm's
results reflect a market trend towards integrating PCs and Unix, rather
than an upswing in the fortunes of Unix generally.
"We've established ourselves as a UK market leader within a very short
space of time," he said, adding that, in the future, he plans to focus
closely on what customers want, to maintain growth.
Set up in 1986, Unipalm is a Unix connectivity specialist that showed
a turnover of just under UKP 100,000 for its first year of operations.
Today, the company employs around 70 staff at its Cambridge
headquarters.
(Steve Gold/19921222/Press & Public Contact: Unipalm - Tel: 0223-
420002; Fax: 0223-426868)
(NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00006)
UK: DCA Enhanced Inter-Platform Connectivity 12/22/92
HEMEL HEMPSTEAD, HERTS, ENGLAND, 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Digital
Communications Associates (DCA) has announced new versions of its IRMA
Workstation for Windows (IWW) and IRMA Workstation for DOS (IWD)
software.
The new versions include support for the TN3270 terminal, popular
among users in the UK, over the TCP/IP and Netware/SAA network
protocols.
One of the biggest problems facing users of networks is how to access
different hardware platforms across those networks. Often, while
network access is available, users are reduced to using a simple
teletype terminal because of the limitations of the network protocol.
DCA claims to have solved this with IWW and IWD, both of which retain
the features of the user terminal, even over networks to quite
dissimilar computer hardware.
IWW now includes a Quickbar, which is similar to the button bar seen
on Microsoft Word for Windows. The Quickbar -- a function of the 3270
terminal -- allows rapid access to frequently used on-screen windows,
rather than have the user wade through menus and complex sets of
keystrokes.
So what are IWW and IWD used for? A typical application might be
for an accountant running either package on his or her desktop PC,
opening a link over the network to the company's 3270 mainframe. Using
the 3270 features of the software, the user could interrogate and
download data to his local PC, which can then be integrated into a DOS
or Windows spreadsheet. The Quickbar allows all this to be automated.
According to a spokesman for DCA, IWW version 2.1 is available
immediately at UKP 365. Potential IWD users will have to wait awhile,
as their version 2.1 will not ship until January, 1993. DOS users get
to save a little, however, as IWD costs UKP 313.
Earlier version users of IWW or IWD will be able to upgrade to version
2.1 very shortly, at, respectively, UKP 109 and UKP 94.
(Steve Gold/19921222/Press & Public Contact: DCA - Tel: 0442-231414;
Fax: 0442-236540)
(NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00007)
UK: Softklone Windows '93 Show Plans 12/22/92
HIGH WYCOMBE, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Christmas might
be almost upon us, but Softklone is already planning ahead to next
February, when it will unveiling three new products at the Windows '93
exhibition in London.
The three new products will be an updated version of its Talking
Windows communications package with graphics modules; an "off the shelf"
Windows-based Executive Information System (EIS); and a high-speed
network gateway.
Talking Windows 2.3, Softklone's terminal emulation package, will
include Adobe Truetype fonts, as well as two optional extra modules:
graphics and TCP/IP terminal support. The new versions of Talking
Windows will sell for UKP 249.
Show Business, meanwhile, is Softklone's EIS. According to the
company, it will allow non-computer literate users to "build"
a graphical information system in a few hours, rather than the weeks
it previously took while the users learned how to program their PC.
Show Business will have a retail price of UKP 995 for up to 300 users.
ACS2 completes the trio of new products. Pricing from UKP 849 for a
two-port system, the high speed gateway allows asynchronous connection
over a network to mini and mainframe computers, as well online
services, from a PC.
According to a spokesman for Softklone, the three new products will be
formally unveiled at Windows '93, which takes place at London's
Olympia exhibition center from the 16-18 February, 1993.
(Steve Gold/19921221)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00008)
Peachpit Readies Blizzard Of New Books 12/22/92
BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Peachpit Press is
getting ready to roll in the New Year with 14 new book titles
between now and the end of January. These titles will cover the gamut
of technical subjects from the Macintosh operating system to Word for
Windows 2 to virtual reality.
The first two books in this flurry are already out. Silicon Mirage
is the title of a 300-page book that deals with virtual reality
by Steven Aukstakalnis and David Blatner. Peachpit defines the
book as "...a popular science book for interested laymen, scientists,
and academics." The foreword to the book is written by Jaron Lanier
who is popularly known as the father of virtual reality. The book
retails for $15.00. Its ISBN number is 0-938151082-7.
The other thirteen titles that are being readied for publication
include: The Macintosh Bible Guide to System 7.1, ISBN 1-56609-030-X,
275 pages, $15.00; The Macintosh Bible Guide to MacDraw Pro, ISBN
1-56609-039-3, 414 pages, $22.00; The Macintosh Bible Guide to Excel
4, ISBN 1-56609-028-3, 200 pages, $15.00; The Best of the Desktop
Publishing Forum on Compuserve, ISBN 1-56609-064-4, 260 pages,
$25.00; QuarkXPress for Windows: Visual QuickStart Guide, ISBN 1-
56609-040-7, 200 pages, $15.00; The Macintosh Bible Guide to FileMaker
Pro, 2nd Edition, ISBN 1-56609-029-6, 464 pages, $22.00; The Little
Mac Book, 3rd Edition, ISBN 1-56609-052-0, 336 pages, $16.00; The
Smiley Dictionary, ISBN 1-56609-008-3, 96 pages, $6.95; The Windows
3.1 Bible, ISBN 1-56609-015-6, 1154 pages, $28.00; Everyone's Guide
to Successful Publications, ISBN 1-56609-027-X, 412 pages, $28.00;
The QuarkXPress Book, Windows Edition, ISBN 1-56609-003-2, 650 pages,
$28.00; Mastering CorelDraw 3 (with disks), ISBN 1-56609-006-7,
570 pages, $38.00; and Word for Windows 2: Visual Quickstart Guide,
ISBN 1-56609-043-1, 300 pages, $15.00.
(Naor Wallach/19921221/Press Contact: Suzanne Ludlum, Peachpit Press,
510-548-4393/Public Contact: Peachpit Press, 510-548-4393)
(NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00009)
New For PC: Micrografx Designer For OS/2 12/22/92
RICHARDSON, TEXAS, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Micrografx
has announced that it is now shipping the OS/2 2.0
version of its flagship technical illustration product Designer.
The company claims that Designer for OS/2 supports all the
capabilities of OS/2's Presentation Manager (PM) including the
graphical user interface, clipboard and PM's screen and device
drivers. The package is bundled with more than 175 Type 1 fonts from
Adobe Systems and Digital Typeface Corporation, plus type fonts
licensed from International Typeface Corporation.
While some software companies have decided to support either OS/2 or
Windows, Micrografx announced in April that it would support both
platforms. Under a joint licensing and development agreement signed
in April 1991, Micrografx and IBM jointly rewrote the OS/2
Presentation Manager 32-bit graphics engine to improve the
performance of OS/2 and ported Windows applications.
The two companies also signed an agreement for joint licensing,
development and marketing of Mirrors, a software development toolkit
for porting Windows applications to O/2. Mirrors has a suggested
retail price of $495.
Registered users of Designer versions numbered through 3.1 can
upgrade to Designer for OS/2 for $159 including shipping and
handling. Designer for OS/2 has a suggested list price of $695.
The company is presently looking for a new president after George
Grayson resigned that position last month following what was reportedly
an inter-family squabble over control of the company. J. Paul
Grayson, Micrografx chairman and CEO, has assumed day-to-day
operational responsibilities until the position is filled.
(Jim Mallory/19921221/Press contact: Katrina Krebs, Micrografx,
214-994-6247; Reader contact: Micrografx, 800-733-3729)
(NEWS)(IBM)(LON)(00010)
UK: Kyocera Intros Printer Customization Utility 12/22/92
READING, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND, 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- What differentiates
one printer from another? Not a lot, you might think, despite the
manufacturer's shrill cries that their printers are better than the
rest. Now Kyocera is giving its dealers a chance to prove Kyocera
printers are better (it claims) by supplying them with its Printer
Resident Emulation Software System (PRESS) to customize the
company's printers.
The idea behind PRESS is that systems integrators (SIs -- dealers who
coordinate different manufacturers products and sell them to
customers as a single "solution") can use the software to customize the
way in which a Kyocera printer works, making it more appealing to the
customer.
The announcement of PRESS is part of Kyocera's ongoing campaign to
build up a small network of high quality value added resellers (VARs)
that will target specialist niche and vertical markets.
"By using this built-in customization tool, VARs and SIs have the
opportunity to add genuine functionality while losing none of the
standard features," explained Jamie Gryce, Kyocera's distribution
channels manager.
"This powerful feature will even help them to overcome the operational
limitations commonly associated with low-specification, commodity
printers," he added.
So, what is PRESS? According to Kyocera, it's a PC program that allows
users to customize all features of the FS series of laser printers
from the computer keyboard, without having to resort to some of the
more esoteric features of word processing and desktop publishing
software.
PRESS is actually a combination of Prescribe II, the native page
description language of the FS series of printers, and the application
programming interface (API) which allows programs to be downloaded and
subsequently executed within the printer itself. Kyocera claims that
applications which can be made to run faster using PRESS customization
include merge and fax printing, as well as multi-part stationery and
envelope printing.
(Steve Gold/19921222/Press & Public Contact: Kyocera - Tel: 0734-
311500; Fax: 0734-311108)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(SFO)(00011)
Proteon Developing New Network Technology 12/22/92
WESTBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Proteon is
working on a method which will allow IBM SNA traffic to mix with
other traffic on internetworks of different organizations. The
company's latest product, Internetworking Traffic Management
(PITM), is a step in that direction.
There are three parts to PITM: Bandwidth reservation,
NetBIOS filtering, and a Quad WAN Network Interface card.
Bandwidth reservation is by far the most significant of these new
capabilities. Routers and other network devices that have this feature
will offer a guaranteed level of performance to every channel that
uses that router. For example, if one has TCP/IP, Appletalk, and
NetBIOS channels all congregating to a single router, it is now
possible to assign a certain minimum level of bandwidth that a
particular channel will always receive when needed.
If a channel happens not to need this capacity, the system
will reallocate that bandwidth to a different channel that does need
it. When the quiet channel needs the bandwidth, the system will
immediately make the minimum bandwidth available to it. Essentially,
this guarantees that no one channel can "hog" the complete system and
that every channel will have some degree of access through the router.
The management of this capability is handled by the network
administrator who can modify channels and their bandwidth allocations
at any time. The network administrator can also make on-line
performance adjustments should the need arise, although that is
not recommended.
The other two parts of PITM are not as significant, but they do
represent Proteon's response to customer requests and concerns.
NetBIOS filtering allows the network administrator to configure
filters on NetBIOS traffic to give more efficient bandwidth
utilization.
The new Quad WAN card will initially be available only for CNX 500
users although Proteon expects to make it available to DNX 300 and
p4100+ users over the next few months. PITM will be available in
January 1993. The software components will become a standard offering
with the CNX router while the Quad WAN card will retail for $4995.
(Naor Wallach/19921222/Press Contact: David Kitchen, Copithorne &
Bellows for Proteon, 617-252-0606/Public Contact: Proteon, 508-
898-2800)
(NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00012)
New For Macintosh: More Hypertext Books 12/22/92
WATERTOWN, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Eastgate Systems
has announced the release of five new titles in its continuing series
of Hypertext "books" based on its Storyspace product.
Storyspace is a hypertext authoring system that runs on the Macintosh.
It is designed to create a complete hypertext "book" in which the
reader can jump forward or ahead or deeper into a phrase, word, or
passage, as envisioned by Ted Nelson in 1965. The user can also
navigate through a web of text, images, and sounds.
The latest set of titles include: "The In Memoriam Web" ($49.95)
which explores and examines Tennyson's work; "Its Name Was Penelope"
($19.95) which is described as "memories of artists, art, making art,
love, sex, work, of being very young and growing older;"
"Perforations" ($19.95) is a collection of hypertext and paper-based
essays on a collection of different subjects; "WOE" ($8.00) is a
special hypertext edition of "Writing On the Edge" which was
dedicated to hypertext writing; "Perseus" ($150.00) is the definitive
hypertext research product on Greek literature including such
luminaries as Homer, Aeschyleus, Sophocles, Herodotus, and
Thuycidides.
All of these titles are available now from Eastgate Systems. With the
exception of the CD-ROM-based Perseus, all of the titles are also
available on 3.5-inch disks.
(Naor Wallach/19921222/Press Contact: Mark Bernstein, Eastgate Systems
617-924-9044/Public Contact: Eastgate Systems 617-924-9044, 800-562-
1638)
(NEWS)(UNIX)(SFO)(00013)
HP, Metaphor In RISCy Business 12/22/92
PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Hewlett-Packard
(HP) has entered into joint development and marketing agreement with
Metaphor Inc., an independently managed IBM subsidiary, which calls
for the companies to provide access from Metaphor's Data
Interpretation System (DIS) software to HP 9000 Series 800 PA-RISC-
based servers.
According to the companies, DIS is a decision-support software
product used by business professionals who need to analyze
gigabytes (GB) of raw data from which they can make decisions
on a real-time basis.
Mary Lindmeier, a spokesperson for Metaphor, told Newsbytes that the
agreement, "gives us something for our customers that they have been
asking for...a high performance mid-range solution for data
access. That is a real key thing for our customers at this
point... plus the fact that it is a Unix-based gateway, running on HP
hardware."
Decision-support systems are claimed to be an integral part of
Fortune 1000 companies, in particular, the consumer packaged
goods, retail, pharmaceutical, insurance, transportation, utilities,
and financial services industries.
According to the companies, the joint agreement expands
database-server options for DIS users.
Metaphor recently introduced a Unix-based gateway product
enabling access to SYBASE SQL Server and the Red Brick
Warehouse, both of which are repositories for large amounts of
data.
The company claims that the gateway was the first to incorporate Unix
system-based computers in the DIS environment. With this announcement,
the company maintains that DIS users using these new data-access
options can take advantage of the performance boost and storage
capacity (up to 600GB) of the Series 800 business servers.
"The Metaphor relationship is a result of customers asking BP to
add decision support to our list of HP-UX solutions," said Franz X.
Nawratil, an HP vice president and manager of worldwide
sales and marketing for HP's Computer Systems Organization
Chris M. Grejtak, Metaphor's vice president of marketing, backed up
Nawratil's comments, saying: "The new SYBASE SQL Server database
gateway on the fast-growing high-performance HP 9000 platform
solidifies Metaphor's commitment to providing our customers with DIS
on all the platforms that they need for industrial-strength decision
support."
Metaphor claims that its DIS product combines relational
database technology with a suite of graphical software tools that
enables business professionals to gather and analyze data, as well as
transform it into useful information at the click of a mouse. DIS was
first introduced in 1984.
(Ian Stokell/19921222/Press Contact: Mary Lindmeier,
415-966-0805, Metaphor)
(NEWS)(IBM)(SFO)(00014)
New For PC And Macintosh: Electronic Cartoon Library 12/22/92
MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Many
publishers are looking toward electronic media as a new way
to distribute their wares. In keeping with the trend, Sandhill
Arts Publishing Co., a cartoon syndicator, is now offering what
the company claims is the world's largest library of cartoons.
Titled "Funny Business," the CD-ROM or disk-based library contains
hundreds of cartoons by artists who appear regularly in such
publications as The New York Times, The New Yorker, Harvard Business
Review, TV Guide, The Wall Street Journal, National Law Journal,
and The Washington Post. The CD-ROM version is sold through Educorp
and the disk-based version is sold through Sandhill Arts The price
for the whole library of 300 cartoons is $299.
Announcing the library, Mark R. Kriss, president of Sandhill, said:
"This isn't the cheap, cliched clip art sold by the megabyte (MB)...
or second-rate cartoons by no-name artists. These cartoons represent
the best work of the world's top cartoonists."
The cartoons are classified by over 40 keywords on the CD-ROM and
by category on the disks.
"When I started Funny Business," said Kriss, "I saw there was
clip art galore but a tremendous shortage of true, high-quality
art work that you'd actually be proud to include in your
publication. I wanted to make these wonderfully imaginative
cartoons available to smaller publications which otherwise
wouldn't have access to them."
The company claims that, if purchased separately, cartoons by
big-name artists run anywhere from $300 to $500 each.
Cartoons are available on disks for either the IBM PC or Apple
Macintosh platforms. At least two megabytes (MB) of RAM is
recommended, and a PostScript or non-PostScript laser printer.
The cartoons comes as either Encapsulated PostScript or
Graphics Metafile files.
There is also a subscription plan for those who want to use the
newest cartoons.
Mark Kris tells Newsbytes that in the first quarter of 1993, the
company will offer shrink-wrapped theme packs devoted to such
topics as business in government, office scenes and computers,
lifestyles and "off the wall," and greetings and occasions.
These will be $89 each and will be on diskette for Macintosh or
PC; the whole bunch will retail together for $299.
(Ian Stokell/19921222/Press Contact: Mark Kris, 415-327-0845, Sandhill
Arts Publishing Company)
(NEWS)(TRENDS)(ATL)(00015)
Video By Phone Gets Boost With New DEC Alliance 12/22/92
CENTURY CITY, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Hoping to
cash in on the growing interest by large telephone companies like
Bell Atlantic in sending video signals on their wires, Digital
Equipment signed a strategic alliance with USA Video Corp.
USA Video has what it calls a patented technology called Store
and Forward Vision Video-on-Demand. The project involves delivery
of video by either fiber or coaxial cable starting in the third
quarter of 1993, along with interactive services such as home
shopping, video games, and financial services. Large-scale
deployment throughout the United States is scheduled for the
second quarter of 1994. USA Video's technology was featured in a
demonstration of video dialtone technology sponsored by the
Federal Communications Commission on October 28, 1992.
In recent years Digital Equipment, best known for its troubled
VAX line of mini-computers, has pushed hard to become a systems
integrator for computer systems serving telephone companies. The
telecommunications business is becoming increasingly
computerized, but few computer firms specialize in it, because it
demands such a high degree of reliability.
As a result of those demands, companies like Stratus Computer and
Tandem are thought to have a lead, but by concentrating on large
projects, not just hardware, and using its size to advantage, DEC has
found a place in the bidding process.
Earlier, USA Video announced an agreement with Rochester
Telephone to test-market USA Video's services on fiber cables
used by Rochester Telephone. The field test is due to begin next year
in one of Rochester Tel's 37 telephone service territories, and
Rochester Tel will be USA Video's exclusive marketing agent for
local telephone exchange companies, except for the seven regional
Bell Operating Companies.
That doesn't sound like much of a concession on USA Video's part,
since the RBOCs hold the vast majority of the wired phone market, and
GTE has its own system. However, a Rochester spokesman noted that
small independent phone companies covered by the exclusive agreement
have over 20 million customers. Rochester itself has 800,000 phone
lines in 15 states, although its largest system is around its
headquarters in Rochester, New York.
(Dana Blankenhorn/19921222/Press Contact: USA Video, Ed Molina,
800/888-8433; Digital Equipment, Paul Henderson, 214/404-6359;
Rochester Telephone, Zoe Piliero, 716/777-1092)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00016)
Digital Cellular Marches Ahead 12/22/92
RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Consolidation
continued in the SMR business this week as Fleet Call, the second
largest licensee of such frequencies, announced an agreement to buy
privately held Dispatch Communications Inc., the third largest
licensee, for $320 million in stock. The deal is due to close by next
June.
Fleet Call has been working for years to create a digital SMR
radio system that can compete with cellular telephone networks,
and the DisCom deal is a big step in that direction. When both
networks are combined and digitized, Fleet Call will control a
seamless network from Maine to Virginia covering 44 million
potential customers, as well as most of California and Arizona.
Fleet Call holds other licenses as well, covering nine of the 10
largest metropolitan regions in the US. The company today has
about 140,000 subscribers, mainly in Los Angeles, San Francisco,
New York, Chicago, Dallas and Houston.
The introduction of its digital mobile technology, called ESMR,
is due to start in Los Angeles next summer, with San Francisco,
New York and Chicago to follow in 1994 and Dallas/Fort Worth and
Houston in 1995. ESMR technology is based on a Motorola system
called Motorola Integrated Radio Systems, or MIRS, which divides
each 25 MHz calling channel into 6 parts, using a version of the
Time Division Multiple Access, or TDMA, technology pioneered by
InterDigital Communications Corp., and approved for use in US
cellular networks. Motorola remains the largest holder of SMR
licenses.
In a prepared statement, Fleet Call Chairman Morgan E. O'Brien took a
swipe at the cellular industry's slow move to TDMA, and its flirtation
with a competing digital standard called CDMA, which was just
endorsed by the Telecommunications Industry Association, noting
cellular's move to digital technology "will be complicated by
competing technical standards."
Fleet Call is funding its dreams through powerful partners. It
won $120 million in funding from Comcast in June, a deal which
could give Comcast a 30 percent stake in Fleet Call, as well as
$45 million from Matsushita and $300 million in equipment
financing from Motorola and Northern Telecom, plus $112.5 million
from an initial public offering in January 1992. After the deal
was announced Fleet Call stock gained over $1 per share.
(Dana Blankenhorn/19921222/Press Contact: Fleet Call, Jack
Markell, 201/438-1400)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00017)
Cirrus Logic Buys Cellular Equipment Maker 12/22/92
FREMONT, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Pacific Communication
Sciences Inc., which is developing equipment for the packet cellular
network proposed by IBM and eight major cellular operators, has
announced it will be acquired by Cirrus Logic, a chipmaker, for about
2 million shares of stock.
PCSI's equipment for the cellular data operation is currently
undergoing field trials, with plans to begin commercial development in
the second half of 1993. The plan is to turn unused calling channels
on cellular networks into data streams running at 9,600 bits/second,
which can then be transferred via wired networks to their
destinations.
By using packet radio technology, data could be sent on a wireless
stream more economically and with improved error correction. When it
announced the idea earlier this year, IBM said it would cost just 5
percent of existing investments in cellular infrastructure to install.
PCSI also has contracts to work on wireless standards, technology
and products for PCN systems in the United States, Europe and
Japan.
Cirrus Logic is best known for video display technology,
multimedia, disk controllers, and wired systems including LAN and
modem chip sets. PCSI employs over 180 people, and had $23
million in revenues for the year through November.
(Dana Blankenhorn/19921222/Press Contact: Cirrus Logic, Paula
Jones, 510/623-8300; Pacific Communications Sciences, Michael
Lubin, 619/535-9500)
(NEWS)(TELECOM)(ATL)(00018)
Digital Cellular Standard Proposed By Industry Assn 12/22/92
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- The battle
between InterDigital Communications and Qualcomm over digital
cellular standards took another turn as Qualcomm's Code Division
Multiple Access (CDMA) scheme was approved by the Telecommunications
Industry Association TR 45.5 Subcommittee.
The CDMA system is known technically as PN3118.
The vote means that the subcommittee can now begin the validation
and verification process, a final editorial check of the baseline text
for consistency and formatting. The approved standard is consistent
with documents Qualcomm submitted in March of this year.
Qualcomm said that the vote means equipment makers can now accelerate
their development of products using its CDMA scheme, which competes
with the TDMA system approved by the Cellular Telecommunications
Industry Association a few years ago, but implemented in very few
systems, because the TDMA system approved offers just three times the
capacity of present analog systems.
InterDigital joined the committee just a few days earlier to
press a technology it calls Broadband CDMA, or B-CDMA. InterDigital
acquired its technology along with SCS Mobilecomm, and claims that B-
CDMA offers operators the chance to overlay additional digital
cellular capacity on top of existing analog and TDMA frequencies, by
using spread spectrum technology.
In its release about the CDMA approval, Qualcomm pointedly noted that
"motions were made on two separate occasions to establish a working
group to consider future standardization activities for different CDMA
approaches, including B-CDMA. Both motions were rejected by vote of
the Plenary, the highest level of the Subcommittee."
(Dana Blankenhorn/19921222/Press Contact: Qualcomm, Allen
Salmasi, 619/597-5060)
(NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00019)
New for Mac: JPEG Compression Daughterboard 12/22/92
SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Rasterops
says it is shipping the new Moviepak daughterboard which offers Joint
Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) compression/decompression for real-
time, full-screen playback of video and will work with a Rasterops
multimedia/display adapter.
Once attached to an existing Rasterops multimedia/display adapter,
Moviepak offers 30 frames-per-second, full-screen playback. The
Moviepak hardware offers a savings in time, as hardware-based
compression is always faster than software-based compression schemes,
such as those offered with Quicktime, Apple's multimedia extensions
for System 7.
Moviepak will work with a variety of Rasterops display boards
including boards that offer video displays up to 21 inches,
compact disc (CD) quality sound, or enhanced video input/output
capabilities. The basic product comes with Adobe Premiere 2.0
software for on-line and off-line video editing and retails for
$1,999. The product is compatible with all Rasterops display
boards except Videotime.
While Rasterops says the advantage for its multimedia system is
its modularity, allowing the mix and match of components, some
combinations aren't available yet. For example, you can't get
CD quality sound with support for a 21-inch display.
Users without existing Rasterops hardware are offered the
Editing Aces Suite, which includes Moviepak, Mediatime,
Videograbber II, Mediagrabber2.1, and Adobe Premiere 2.0 for a
retail price of $4,697.
While the Moviepak daughterboard requires an additional slot
for use with an existing Rasterops multimedia/display adapter,
the Editing Aces Suite has the advantage of requiring only one
slot for installation, including the Moviepak JPEG compression
capability.
(Linda Rohrbough/19921222/Press Contact: Renee Courington,
Rasterops, tel 408-562-4200, fax 408-562-4065; Michele Janin,
Cunningham Communications, 408-982-0400; Public Contact 800-
729-2656)
(NEWS)(APPLE)(LAX)(00020)
Apple Grant Gives Teachers $1.2M 12/22/92
CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- The National
Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded the Apple Classrooms of Tomorrow
(ACOT) award, together a $1.2 million grant, to three school
districts to train teachers.
The aim of the program is to educate teachers on how to use Apple
technology for instruction, and the funding is from an NSF three-year
grant. Three districts will get the money to establish Teacher
Development Centers at Dodson Elementary School in Nashville,
Tennessee; Stevens Creek Elementary School in Cupertino, California;
and West High School in Columbus, Ohio.
Nashville teachers have already had the benefits of the new
program in a pilot study conducted to see if teaching new
instructional methods and technology made a difference. It
did, Apple said, making Nashville eligible for this new award.
Plans are to have teams of teachers from around the country
attend the programs in 1994 and 1985. Apple says approximately
700 teachers will participate over the next three years.
Teachers will learn by visiting classrooms where ACOT teachers
are teaching students using Apple technology. Apple has
consistently been involved in education by offering its
products at significant price reductions to schools, educators,
and students. In fact, Cupertino, one of the cities with a
school district receiving part of the NSF funding, is the location
of Apple Computer's headquarters.
(Linda Rohrbough/19921222/Press Contact: Mary A.C. Fallon,
ACOT, tel 408-974-2941, fax 408-862-7043)
(NEWS)(TRENDS)(LAX)(00021)
Computer-Controlled PC-VCRs On Market 12/22/92
NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- GSE Electronic Systems
has revealed that its Rapid Time Code technology is being used in the
new Mitsubishi personal computer video cassette recorders (PC-VCRs)
currently being introduced into Europe by German companies
Siemens and Blaupunkt. It is due for introduction to the US and
other countries later.
One of the newest computer peripherals, a PC-VCR allows control
of its functions through a PC adapter board that uses a
serial (RS-232) interface. GSE claims to have developed the adapter
board and the technology so the PC-VCR can advance or return
accurately to a single frame on a videotape. The idea is to
use the VCR as a storage device for the editing and production
of video, also known as desktop video production (DVP).
DVP is becoming increasingly popular and is predicted to become
as commonplace as desktop publishing is now.
Eric Gebaide of GSE Electronic Systems told Newsbytes that, while
there are other similar technologies out there, GSE's is the only one
that uses a time code so specific frames can be isolated. Gebaide
claims that the technology can even be used for production of
animation, or even interactive learning tapes for replay on any VCR.
The technology can replace a compact disc or hard disk drive for
storing the massive amounts of data generated in video.
Retail prices on the European units are about $US2,000. The VCR
without the GSE adapter is about $US1,600 -- on the subject of pricing,
Gebaide explained it takes a high-end VCR to successfully perform
quality video editing. GSE is currently working with Mitsubishi in the
US to offer a PC-VCR on the NTSC system for around $1,100. The company
will be demonstrating the Mitsubishi PC-VCR at the Infocom show held
in January in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Test marketing of the Mitsubishi PC-VCRs in Europe started in
May of this year and reports are the units have been well-
received. Europeans can expect to see Siemens model FM 709 and
the Blaupunkt RTV 950 early in 1993.
(Linda Rohrbough/19921222/Press Contact: Eric Gebaide, GSE
Electronic Systems, tel 212-308-2243, fax 212-832-1407)
(NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00022)
****IBM Calls Back Rizzo, Cassani To Help 12/22/92
WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- IBM has
brought two of its former vice-chairmen back from retirement to
help with the process of reshaping the company into a group of nearly
autonomous operating units.
Paul Rizzo and Kaspar Cassani will rejoin IBM on January 1 for an
unspecified length of time, acting as consultants "as we continue
to make our individual business units more independent," company
spokesman Rob Wilson confirmed.
Rizzo will assist John Akers, chairman of IBM, in the United
States. Cassani, who headed IBM's European operations for seven
years in the 1980s, will work with the company's present European
boss, Renato Riverso.
Both men are 64-years-old. Rizzo, who had once been considered a
likely candidate for the chairman's job, retired in 1987 after
being passed over in favor of Akers. Cassani retired in 1989.
Wilson said that Akers, and not the company's board of directors, made
the decision to recruit the two IBM veterans as consultants. The move
has fuelled speculation that Akers' job might be in jeopardy as IBM
continues a struggle to regain profitability.
The company recently announced plans to cut another 25,000
jobs during 1993, and hinted it may resort to involuntary
layoffs, which it has avoided throughout its history. IBM stock
is trading at its lowest level in 11 years.
In 1991, IBM reported a $2.8-billion annual loss and its first
year-over-year revenue drop in 45 years. Revenues fell 6.1
percent to $64.8 billion. In the fourth quarter of 1992, IBM is
taking a $6-billion charge against earnings to cover the cost of
cutting jobs and manufacturing capacity, and has said it expects
to about break even on operations.
(Grant Buckler/19921222/Press Contact: Rob Wilson, 914-765-6565)
(NEWS)(IBM)(BOS)(00023)
Cheaper New 80486 PC 12/22/92
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Diamond Technologies
is shipping a Cyrix 80486-based PC that is said to be more powerful
but less costly than an Intel-based equivalent. Newsbytes has learned
that an even faster local bus configuration is slated for release
January 1.
"We've had a lot of tests done on our DT486 DLC-40, and it outperforms
models using the Intel 486DX-33 chip on every measure," K.C. Shabak,
the company's president, said in an interview with Newsbytes.
The high-speed PCs are based on the inexpensive 486DLC-40 chip from
Cyrix. In the currently available EISA-bus configuration, an entry-
level 80 megabytes (MB) desktop, mini-tower, or medium-tower model, is
priced at $1299, some $300 less than an entry-level 486DX-33 system.
A slightly more expensive model of the Cyrix-based machine,
complete with a math coprocessor and Microsoft Windows 3.1, starts
at $1395 for an 80 MB version, about $200 less than an Intel-based
equivalent.
The Cyrix-based systems can also be equipped with a 120 MB, 170 MB,
200 MB, or 340 MB hard drive, a 2.5 MB ID cache controller, and a
Windows accelerator card. All models will be sold for only $75
more in the upcoming local bus configuration.
The addition of the math coprocessor is not necessary for all
users, said Shabak. Entry-level systems can be outfitted with Windows
3.1 alone, without a math coprocessor, for an extra $35.
"But the math coprocessor is essential to anyone performing
spreadsheet or graphics operations," he commented.
The math coprocessor also brings overall performance to levels that
outshine Intel-based systems, Shabak told Newsbytes. Unlike the
Cyrix 486DLC-40 chip, the Intel 486DX-33 chip includes a built-in
math coprocessor, he explained. But even without a math coprocessor,
the Cyrix chip is more powerful for most functions, he added.
Although the Cyrix processor is available at 33 MHz, Diamond
Technologies has opted to use the 40 MHz version, he said. In
contrast, 33 MHz is the top limit for the Intel 486DX.
In addition, the Cyrix 486DLC comes with a built-in internal
multiplier that is not included in the Intel 486DX. This
capability contributes to speed by performing integer
multiplications.
The local bus configuration will boost performance further by
enabling the bus to run at central processor speed, he maintained.
"If you're using a 40 MHz chip, that means your bus is also going to be
operating at 40 MHz," he said.
Diamond Technologies also offers PCs based on the Intel 486DX2 50
MHz and 486DX2 66 MHz chips. Models equivalent to the entry-level
Cyrix-based system are priced at $1750 for a 50 MHz DX2 processor
and $1899 for a 66 MHz processor.
(Jacqueline Emigh/19921222/Reader contact: Diamond Technologies,
tel 714-252-1008; Press contact: Melissa Rabin, S & S Public
Relations for Diamond, tel 708-291-1616).
(NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00024)
New For Windows: Word For Word 12/22/92
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Mastersoft has
announced the release of a Microsoft Windows edition of its document
conversion program, Word for Word.
"We had a strong demand for a Windows-based application from both
our OEM customers and our end-users," said Lisa Lambert, Mastersoft's
VP of sales and marketing.
She added that the company took the best of the professional version
of Word for Word and incorporated it into a Windows interface. "This
is an addition to our product line, not a replacement for our DOS
product," she said.
Word for Word Windows edition supports document conversion
between more than 100 PC and Macintosh word processing, spreadsheet,
mail merge, and data formats. Some of the popular programs supported
include Word for Windows, Wordperfect for Windows, Ami Pro, Windows
Write, Legacy, Wordstar for Windows, and Professional Write Plus.
It will also convert Lotus 1-2-3, Multimate, Q&A, Framework, and
Enable files. The company has designated the new release version
5.2.
The program also offers a file viewer that allows users to view the
file prior to conversion. Multiple viewing windows can be open
simultaneously, in order to see several files, or several application
versions of the same file. The viewer supports the original documents
fonts, color, text highlighting, and page layout. The program also
supports batch file conversions.
System requirements include Windows, and 4.8 megabytes of hard disk
space for the full set of converters.
Word for Word-Windows edition has a suggested list price of $149,
and Mastersoft is offering an upgrade to registered owners of Word
for Windows for $39.95 when purchased direct from the company.
Corporate site licenses and volume purchase deals are also
available.
Mastersoft Product Marketing Manager Robert Caplan told Newsbytes
that the company also markets a Mac version of Word For Word, and
expects to ship an upgrade to that program in late January. The
upgrade is expected to carry a suggested retail price of $39.95. The
company still markets its DOS version of Word For Word, which has most
of the features of the new Word for Word Windows edition. There's also
a Word for Windows version of the program available which only
converts to and from Word for Windows, and cannot handle Mac file
conversions.
(Jim Mallory/19921222/Press contact: Robert Caplan, Mastersoft,
602-277-0900, fax 602-970-0706; Reader contact: Mastersoft,
602-277-0900, fax 602-970-0706)
(NEWS)(GENERAL)(DEN)(00025)
Digital Camera Back For Hasselblad 12/22/92
SOUTHBORO, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Leaf Systems
has announced that it will market a digital camera back, an add-on
unit that will digitize an image, for the Hasselblad model 553ELX
medium format camera in conjunction with Victor Hasselblad AB Sweden,
the camera's maker.
Hasselblad says it has been evaluating the Leaf Digital studio
camera since August. The product was previewed at the 1992 Photokina
trade show in Cologne, Germany recently.
The Leaf system produces an image with more than 16,000 shades per
color, which offers a much greater range of lens apertures than
conventional film. Using the Leaf camera back, a single image can be
saved as a master file and toned to fit the intended use for best
artistic results. A photographer using the system would not have to
bracket an image with different exposures to insure getting the
ideal picture.
The company says the system, called the Hasselblad DB 4000 is
intended for photography applications such as advertising,
magazines, point-of-purchase displays, copy work, and other graphic
arts work, with a picture resolution of 4 million pixels.
Leaf Systems is best known for its digitized photo manipulation and
transmission systems in use in many of the world's newspapers. The
system will have a suggested list price in the US of $35,500 and
$39,700 in Europe and Asia.
Originally, monochrome pro-production models were sold for just under
$30,000 and came with a manual color wheel that allowed color to be
added. The new system features a motor-driven color wheel for
automated three-pass color capabilities.
It also has additional software enhancements to support the automation
of the color wheel. Leaf Systems says it is already averaging 30-40
sales inquiries daily. Leaf Systems spokesperson Julie Gedaminsky told
Newsbytes the system is available now. "It's being marketed
differently than the 35mm systems; its for the high end," Gedaminsky
said.
Leaf is not the first company to announce a digital camera system.
In September 1990 Toshiba announced a single lens reflex camera
system with 400,000 pixel resolution with a price tag of about
$12,000.
The following month Fuji announced its similar system. In June 1991
Kodak introduced its digital camera back which works with a Nikon F3
35mm camera for about $20,000. At the low end of the price range, and
of the picture quality range, is Logitech's Fotoman, a complete
digital camera for $799. Fotoman comes with Windows-compatible
software and includes image editing software.
(Jim Mallory/19921222/Press contact: Julie Anne Gedaminsky, Sterling
Hager for Leaf Systems, 617-259-1400)
(NEWS)(IBM)(DEN)(00026)
****Microsoft Working On Secret "Calvin & Hobbes" Project 12/22/92
REDMOND, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Newsbytes has
learned that Microsoft and at least one other company are working to
develop forms routing software for use with Microsoft's Windows for
Workgroups (WFW).
The project has been on the go for about a year, Windows Watcher
Newsletter Editor Jesse Berst told Newsbytes. Another source confirmed
that the project is code-named Calvin & Hobbes, presumably after the
popular syndicated comic strip of the same name by Bill Watterson.
Electronic mail (e-mail) is rapidly growing in popularity on local
area networks and within workgroups, and a forms routing program
such as Calvin & Hobbes could allow users to electronically create a
routing program to send e-mail, faxes, and even voice mail by checking
the appropriate boxes on an electronic form just as paper routing
slips are used in many offices today to route publications and papers.
The program is expected to be built on Microsoft's Messaging
Application Program Interface (MAPI), a set of both messaging
function calls and service calls that allow developers to create
message-enabled applications, such as Calvin & Hobbes.
MAPI is built with a back-end independent architecture which allows
the developers to access to MAPI-compliant electronic mail systems and
other services such as fax and voice mail with a single version of the
application.
A spokesperson at Microsoft's public relations firm Waggener Edstrom
was unable to provide any details about the program, but when asked if
the product would ship during the second quarter of 1993, said, "much
later."
A spokesperson at Wordperfect Corporation told Newsbytes that his
company is also developing a similar product, but it will combine
the electronic preparation of forms with their distribution.
"Most forms packages on the market focus on printed output," said a
Wordperfect manager. He added that Wordperfect InForms will focus on
the electronic distribution of forms as well as the printed output.
"The product will have tight integration with the electronic mail
capabilities of Wordperfect Office," he said.
Wordperfect expects to begin shipping InForms 1.0 in the first
quarter of 1993. The package will be sold as two separate packages.
The designer module will provide tools to create and maintain the
forms, and will have direct access links to several popular database
formats.
The Filer module will give the user the ability to fill in the form's
blanks, and will be available for DOS, Windows, OS/2, Unix and
PenPoint operating systems. WP's forms will carry an "electronic
signature" protection key that will keep unauthorized users from
changing the form information.
(Jim Mallory/19931222/Press contact: Microsoft, 206-882-8080;
Wordperfect: Darin Richins, 801-228-5007, fax 801-228-5077)
(NEWS)(UNIX)(DEN)(00027)
New For Unix: 2 Versions of Wordperfect 12/22/92
OREM, UTAH, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Wordperfect Corporation has
announced that two new Unix versions of its word processing program --
Wordperfect 5.1 for SCO Unix for System V Release 3.2.4 and
Wordperfect 5.1 for SCO Xenix -- are show shipping.
Wordperfect SCO Unix version includes both a graphical user interface
(GUI) and a character-based version. The GUI version runs on Open
Desktop 2.2 and has a Motif interface. It has also been tested on
Univel's Unixware, company officials said.
The SCO Xenix version is available in a character-based version only,
runs on SCO Xenix 2.3.4 and is similar to earlier versions of
Wordperfect on Xenix, with the addition of a few new features.
The company claims that documents created in either version are
interchangeable, and are also compatible with Wordperfect 5.1 running
under DOS, Windows, VMS, and other Unix versions for Sun
SPARCstations, HP 9000, IBM RS/6000 and Data General's Aviion.
New features in the program includes tables, an equation editor,
context-sensitive help screens, and a graphics editor. The programs
also have enhanced versions of the list files feature called File
Manager, macros, and the merge language.
The program has a suggested retail price of $495 in the US and $595
in Canada for the complete package, which includes one license, the
disks, and documentation. Additional licenses are available in
single, five, ten, and 20 packs. Existing users can upgrade from
earlier versions of Wordperfect for Unix can do so by purchasing a
media and documentation kit for $40 US and $48 Canadian. An initial
upgrade license sells for $59 US/$69 Canadian.
(Jim Mallory/19921222/Press contact: Paul Eddington, Wordperfect
Corp, 801-228-5006; Reader contact: Wordperfect Corporation,
810-228-9911)
(NEWS)(IBM)(LAX)(00028)
****Intel Offers Something For Nothing -- PCI Licenses 12/22/92
FOLSOM, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Intel is offering
royalty-free licenses to original equipment manufacturers who
implement its new Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) standard in
an attempt to get the technology into widespread use.
Intel has already announced a three-chip set based on the PCI
architecture, which is designed to speed up the one big
bottleneck in PC systems, the bus. All data has to move through the
bus, and no matter how fast the system's components are, if the bus is
limited, the system is bottlenecked.
PCI is designed to widen the bus and offer faster data
throughput to peripherals and components. The PCI specification
is for a data path 32 bits wide, at 33 megahertz (MHz).
The implication of PCI for users, especially those in multimedia, is
instead of waiting for a photograph to be drawn slowly on their
computer screen, a process now that's slow and takes lots of memory,
display of a photograph on a computer with a PCI bus will be
practically instantaneous.
Three architectures are already on the market for the PC bus.
The oldest is the industry standard architecture (ISA) which
offers 16-bit wide data transfer capability at 8 megahertz
(MHz). The other two, the extended industry standard
architecture (EISA) and IBM's Micro Channel architecture, offer
a 32-bit wide data path, but EISA is only at 8 MHz and Micro
Channel at 10 MHz. Intel representatives told Newsbytes the
company decided not only was a 32-bit path necessary, but the
faster speed was also crucial in working with multimedia.
Intel has three patents on PCI, but says it will offer
licensees the right to make PCI-compatible systems and
components without infringing on its patent claims pertaining
to the technology. The patents are A Signaling Protocol for a
Peripheral Component Interconnect, Improved Bus With Commands
for Optimizing Bridge Buffer Management, and Configuration
Space Enable/Disable Mechanics.
In addition, the licenses will be printed and distributed with
future PCI Specification revisions, Intel said. This is so as
the technology gets "tweaked" and updated, OEMs can also
receive updates, according to Michele Bourdon of public
relations for Intel.
Newsbytes asked Bourdon if some vendors might feel a little shy
about taking Intel up on its license offer after the company's
recent wins in court battles with Advanced Micro Devices (AMD),
an Intel licensee. Bourdon said that, while it's up to each
individual vendor, it is necessary and desirable to have
everyone working with the same technology. Users will also find
it easier to add peripherals and components which have been
adapted to the PCI standard.
Bourdon also pointed out that this is not a microprocessor technology
license as the AMD case was, and licenses are free to the computer maker.
While criticism has been levied that the PCI chipset is expensive
to produce, and therefore an expensive answer to the bus bottleneck
problem, Intel argues the extra cost can be justified in the "bang
per buck" or price-performance users will get from PCI-based systems.
Intel has likened the performance of PCI systems to workstations.
Those interested may obtain a license by sending a written
request to the PCI Special Interest Group in care of Intel.
Bourdon added that users can expect to see systems with the new
Intel PCI chip set in the first quarter of 1993.
(Linda Rohrbough/19921222/Press Contact: Pam Pollace, Intel,
tel 408/765-1435, fax 408-765-1402)
(NEWS)(APPLE)(SFO)(00029)
New For Mac: Astound Multimedia Presentations 12/22/92
TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Gold
Disk Inc., maker of Animation Works and other multimedia programs,
has introduced Astound desktop presentation software
for the Apple Macintosh, a "next generation" program that
provides "a robust set of tools to add music, narration, QuickTime
video, moving text transitions, and cell animation" to a
presentation.
Michaela Brehm, spokesperson for the company, told Newsbytes
that the main difference between Astound and other products on
the market is that the product offers enhanced presentation
graphics because of the inclusion of multimedia capabilities.
"For instance," she told Newsbytes, "PowerPoint and Persuasion
have no interactivity, and have no real multimedia capabilities.
You can add QuickTime to Persuasion and PowerPoint, but with
our product you can animate QuickTime, you can move it around
the screen, so it comes in from one section of the screen, and off
another section. So it has true multimedia capabilities."
"You can animate and add multimedia to business graphs. With
PowerPoint and Persuasion, you can add graphs but you cannot animate
them," she added.
The company claims that Astound addresses cross-platform
compatibility by allowing users to create interactive and
multimedia presentations on their Macintosh and "freely
distribute their presentations to Windows users," utilizing
Astound's Windows runtime player.
Brehm told Newsbytes that the product is aimed at a number of
markets. "Obviously to the business presenter... and to people who are
sales staff that need to go out, as it runs on a PowerBook, people who
create and deliver presentations. The interactivity allows people to
stop the presentation any time they want."
"Another market segment," she said, "are market trainers.
Because they are able to save program to a Windows run-time
version, you can create a document using a Mac, and you can
distribute it to PC users (running Windows). We are the first
program to incorporate Quick-Time for Windows."
Also, she said other markets include "technical documentation,
because you are able to animate complex drawings and charts,"
and the education market.
Astound supports System 7 features and includes QuickTime
1.5 compatibility. The recommended system configuration is at
least a Macintosh Plus or later, a 68020 processor or better,
two megabytes (MB) of RAM, at least System 6.0.8 or later, and
a hard disk drive.
The company says that Astound will ship in January 1993. It will
normally retail for $399 but, until May 31, 1993, Gold Disk will offer
Astound at an introductory price of $99. The package will be shown for
the first time at MacWorld Expo on January 6, 1993, in San Francisco.
In February Newsbytes reported that Gold Disk, in an effort to win
market share from leading graphics programs CorelDraw and
Micrografx Designer, introduced Professional Draw, a Windows-
based graphics illustration and page layout product.
(Ian Stokell/19921222/Press Contact: Michaela Brehm, or Karl
Seppala, 310-320-5080, Gold Disk Inc.)
(NEWS)(IBM)(TOR)(00030)
New For PC: Look Adds Sentry System To Virus Alert 12/22/92
OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA, 1992 DEC 22 (NB) -- Look Software has
added the On-Guard sentry system to its Virus Alert software.
On-Guard checks a PC's memory, hard drive boot sectors, and root
path when the computer is turned on or before the machine is
allowed to log onto a network. If it finds a virus, it freezes
the computer's keyboard and requires the user to call a site
technician or supervisor.
This will be of particular interest to organizations that have
many computers and want to make sure any virus infections are
dealt with promptly before they spread, said Cliff Livingstone,
founder of Look Software. A home computer user can set themselves
up as the supervisor, he added.
Once the initial check is completed, a memory-resident portion of
the code checks executable programs for viruses before they run.
If a virus is found, the software stops the program from
executing and displays a warning message. The keyboard is not
locked in this case, Livingstone said, but that option may be
added later.
A collaboration between Look and Frisk Software International of
Reykjavik, Iceland, Virus Alert scans DOS-based PCs for close to
2,000 known viruses and can detect most "stealth" viruses,
according to the vendor.
Stealth viruses are those which alter their own code at random to
avoid offering a consistent pattern that antivirus programs can
be programmed to detect.
A French-language version of the software is under development
and expected to be ready by the end of January. Also, Livingstone
added, the software is shortly to be available in the United
Kingdom.
The list price of Virus Alert is $39.95 in local currency in both
the United States and Canada. The price for the British release
has not been set. Site licenses are also available.
(Grant Buckler/19921221/Press Contact: Cliff Livingstone, Look
Software, phone 613-837-2151, fax 613-837-5572; Public Contact:
Look Software 800-267-0778)