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- Artisoft Research p. 1
-
-
- WHY?
-
- Q. Now that Novell has its NetWare Lite peer-to-peer network, why
- should anyone buy a LANtastic system from Artisoft ?
-
-
- A. Because in terms of price, performance and overall capability,
- the LANtastic network wins hooves down. All you need to
- remember is that we WAPPEM.
-
-
- Windows support
-
- The LANtastic Network Operating System fully supports Microsoft
- Windows, the point-and-shoot operating environment thats taken the
- DOS world by storm. Run your network as a non-Windows application
- or, with the LANtastic for Windows utility, as a full
- Windows application with icon selection, pull-down menus and
- on-line help.
-
- NetWare Lite is accessible as a non-windows application, but only
- in real mode, which addresses up to one megabyte of memory. Beyond
- that, Lite doesn't do Windows. Pity.
-
-
- Added value
-
- The LANtastic 4.0 system is a fourth-generation product with
- built-in benefits that blast Novell's newcomer network.
-
- The LANtastic network's NET_MGR program sets up highly individual
- security accounts with personal or group passwords. Limit access
- to a specific length of time, time of day, day of the week,
- available devices or file areas. Lite offers security feat
- ures in a binary mode; instead of picking and choosing the security
- you want for particular users or stations, the security feature is
- all or nothing--completely limited or wide open..
-
- A LANtastic network has electronic mail built into the system,
- including capability for voice-mail with optional Sounding Board
- adapters. If you want e-mail on NetWare Lite, be prepared to shell
- out more money for an add-on mail system.
-
- A LANtastic network has built-in, easy-to-use CD-ROM support. It
- can't be done in NetWare Lite.
-
- Full-featured LANcache , Artisoft's disk caching program, is an
- integral LANtastic component built into the system to speed
- performance. For comparable performance, you'll spend more on
- third-party disk caching software to run in NetWare Lite.
-
- The LANtastic system has built-in support for uninterruptible power
- supply (UPS) devices, warning all users when outside power has gone
- down and immediately saving data from RAM to disk to protect it
- from loss. NetWare Lite has no such feature.
-
- On a LANtastic network, you can use a more secure and less
- expensive diskless workstation, including capability for optional
- boot PEROMs to store the server's boot image. Not so with Lite.
-
- You can run a LANtastic network server without a hard drive. The
- Lite way requires hard drive megabytes.
-
- Performance
-
- Network speed tests consistently rate a LANtastic network as 25 to
- 30% faster than NetWare Lite. (See attached chart)
-
- Price
-
- List price is $99 per node for NetWare Lite software. The same $99
- buys the software for an entire LANtastic network, which can cover
- hundreds of nodes.
-
- Watch what happens to your costs as the network expands. The
- LANtastic network includes an AE-2 thin and thick Ethernet network
- interface card in each node, which has a suggested retail price of
- $299. Merisel's August 1991 catalog lists Novell's Anthem/
- Eagle 10Mbps 16-bit thin Ethernet adapter for $270 per card, or
- $369 per node for the requisite hardware and software. Look what
- happens as the network expands up to and beyond the Lite 25-node
- limit.
-
- Nodes 2 5 10 15 25 40 100
- NetWare Lite $738 $1845 $3690 $5535 $9225 NA NA
- LANtastic $697 $1594 $3089 $4584 $7574 $12,059
- $29,999
-
- Which conveniently leads us to...
-
- Expandability
-
- A NetWare Lite network is expandable up to 25 nodes. Beyond that,
- you must convert to regular NetWare and be tied to its
- straight-jacket reliance on an expensive dedicated server.
- A LANtastic system grows as you grow. You can expand to 300 nodes.
- The network can run on multiple adapters, so one computer can run
- on several networks simultaneously.
-
- Memory
-
- A LANtastic workstation uses 12K of the computer's RAM, a
- server/workstation 40K, making it 22K to 51K lighter than Lite.
- You can make more RAM accessible to your application software by
- loading a LANtastic system into high memory when using
- industry-standard DOS 5. Load the NetWare Lite program into high
- memory and watch your network crash.
-
-
-
- WHO?
-
- Q. With the industry giant and so many other companies, big and
- small, offering network products, why should I do business with
- Artisoft?
-
- A. Because Artisoft, the heavyweight champion of peer-to-peer, is
- the heavy hitter in serving the customer. In fact, matching
- corporate policy head-to-head, we SOCCEM.
-
-
- Support
-
- Artisoft prides itself not only on trouble-free products, but
- outstanding technical support when a problem does come up. Forget
- those calls that cost you $20 or even $100 per incident. Artisoft
- tech support calls are free and unlimited from 7 am to 5 pm
- Mountain Standard Time and routed directly to technicians trained
- to solve your particular problem. The Arti-Facts BBS allows users
- to download fact-filled and binary files . Our Fast Fax
- information system faxes back product information and answers to
- frequently asked questions. Both are available 24 hours a day.
-
-
- On-line referrals
-
- Members of our Artisoft Authorized Five Star DealerSM program get
- daily customer referrals directly from Artisoft headquarters. From
- the hundreds of end users who call us each day, the names and
- companies are compiled by zip codes and faxed overnight for
- quick dealer response.
-
-
- Cross-shipping
-
- Artisoft understands the urgency of avoiding down-time. So we ship
- replacements to the occasional defective adapter immediately on
- dealer request, or when an end user has received RMA authorization
- from technical support. Unlike other companies, we don't wait for
- the problem hardware to arrive before we ship the replacement.
-
- Enhanced marketing
-
- Artisoft is fully committed to helping our dealers market our
- products. So, in addition to the standard product literature, we
- have compiled all our product literature on SpecDisk , our
- electronic product information guide, which we update monthly in
- dealer and end user versions. We offer dealers free product
- seminars several times a year and maintain an active staff of
- Business Development Group representatives to keep dealers up to
- date. We are intensifying our efforts with end users as well,
- helping them to form LANtastic user groups to exchange information.
-
-
- Money-back guarantee
-
- We insist that the only good customer is a satisfied customer. So
- if, for any reason, a customer is dissatisfied with any Artisoft
- hardware, it carries an unconditional money-back guarantee and a
- five-year limited warranty.
-
-
- THE SCORECARD
- ArtisoftBrand N
- Support (technical) free and unlimited N/A
- On-line referrals N/A
- Cross-shipping N/A
- Enhanced marketing N/A
- Money-back guarantee N/A
-
-
-
- TOTAL SOLUTIONS
-
- Artisoft is the leader in peer-to-peer networking, dedicated to
- total solutions by providing both hardware and software for
- one-stop network shopping and devoted to advancing business
- communication through computer technology now and long into the
- future.
-
-
-
-
-
- THEY SAID IT
-
- Quotes from the war of words between LANtastic and NetWare Lite
-
- Quote:
- Unquote:
-
- "NetWare Lite focuses on small businesses that need something very
- simple to connect together two to five users. This is a market
- that Novell created back in the early 1980s, and we're coming back
- to it because of the acceptance now at the small end."
- Darrell Miller, Novell executive vice president, quoted in LAN
- Magazine, November 1991 "Novell attempted to position itself as a
- leader in peer-to-peer networking. It stated that NetWare has had
- peer-to-peer capabilities since version 1.4 and that NetWare Lite
- was part of its natural product line evolution. While it's
- undeniably the leading server-based network operating system,
- NetWare has never had peer-to-peer capabilities."
-
- Craig Burton, from Clarke Burton News Analysis, Sept. 20, 1991
-
- Artisoft comment:
- Not until Artisoft introduced the DOS-based LANtastic Network
- Operating System in 1987 were the needs of the small business
- market addressed successfully and affordably. This democratic
- peer-to-peer system, in which all PCs can share every peripheral
- and every resource on the network, has brought about many changes
- in the computer industry. Most notably, the peer-to-peer network
- has become an established connectivity alternative.
-
- "NetWare Lite helps provide an additional level of functionality
- and reduces the complexity that some of the small businesses are
- looking for."Darrell Miller, Novell executive vice president,
- quoted in LAN Magazine, November 1991 "We've followed their
- suggestions to the letter. If you do a [directory search] of
- someone else's drive across the net [under DOS], it looks like
- normal performance. When we did it under Windows, it slowed to a
- crawl."
-
- Performance improved in Windows real mode, but that solution was
- unacceptable because that mode addresses only 1 Megabyte of RAM.
-
-
- "Our machines have 8 Megabytes of RAM apiece; we can't afford to
- run Windows in real mode." Lee Boekelheide, director of Insight
- into Action, a PC and multimedia consulting firm, as quoted in CRN,
- Nov. 4, 1991,
-
- "Novell has added into NetWare Lite things no one else has done for
- peer-to-peer. We have gone overboard in making it simple."
- John Edwards, Novell director of product marketing quoted in LAN
- Magazine, November 1991
-
- "We should have known not to buy a computer product from a
- furniture store, but we thought we wouldn't need much dealer
- support for NetWare Lite. It was pretty easy to install. It just
- didn't work, and we found no path to resolve our problem. Our
- hunch is LANtastic won't have as much trouble with Windows."
- Thomas Clarkson, NetWare Lite user at Insight into Action, quoted
- in CRN,Nov. 4, 1991
-
- Artisoft is "not one of the major players in the peer-to-peer
- market. Novell created this market, and IBM came in with their
- peer-to-peer PC LAN program. TOPS [from Sitka] was also a major
- player."
-
- Darrell Miller, Novell
-
- "Artisoft was making and said go ahead and develop it,' said a
- Novell source."
-
- Jodi Mardesich, CRN, July 15, 1991
- "Novell is belatedly entering a market controlled by a number of
- small players, including Artisoft, Inc. and Sitka Corp."
- Artisoft's LANtastic is "the leader in the peer-to-peer market."
- Computer Systems News, Sept. 16, 1991
-
- "According to Artisoft, it has built up an installed base of almost
- 500,000 units in the four years LANtastic has been shipping. We
- wouldn't dismiss Artisoft so quickly."
-
- Craig Burton, Clarke Burton Analysis, Sept. 20, 1991
-
- Artisoft comment: Novell's own sales document obtained by CRN says
- some of LANtastic's current advantages over NetWare Lite are higher
- compatibility with Microsoft Windows, better support for CD-ROM and
- DOS-compatible applications, free technical support and less
- expensive upgrades.
-
-
- More quotes of note...
-
- "In a move aimed at winning a lightweight crown in the LAN market,
- Novell's new NetWare Lite takes on Artisoft's LANtastic."
-
- "Lite is spunky, but weighted down by copy protection and the lack
- of sophisticated disk caching; it can't compete with LANtastic."
-
- "At $99 per node, Novell targets NetWare Lite at the first-time
- user . . . Once you add network adapters, the price is $200 to
- $450 per node. Lite's cost-per-node is fixed; other products work
- on a sliding-cost scale. But compared to LANtastic, NetWare
- Lite falls in the middle price range for a three-to-four node
- network, and quickly grows expensive in installations with ten or
- more nodes."
-
- "Novell complicated administration with a copy-protection scheme
- that forces you to install NetWare Lite from a different disk for
- each computer. If two computers on the network have the same copy
- of NetWare Lite installed, both computers periodically report a
- ╘License Violation' on the screen. [This] poses a long-term
- management effort because someone must keep track of the pairing of
- each installation disk with each computer."
-
- "While security is simplified, the features are less robust and
- flexible than LANtastic's."
-
- "Throughput is good, but Lite's doesn't have the punch of
- LANtastic. LANtastic's superior performance can be attributed to
- its caching and its tight integration of hardware and software . .
- .. NetWare Lite's rudimentary caching service is no match."
-
- PC Magazine First Looks, Nov. 26, 1991
-
-
- "Although its name begs comparison with Miller's popular
- low-calorie beer, Novell's new NetWare Lite is more like a
- non-alcoholic brew: it has the familiar taste but none of the kick
- of the real thing."
-
- "In PC Week Labs' tests, NetWare Lite . . . was barely able to keep
- pace with other popular peer-to-peer LANs, including Artisoft,
- Inc.'s LANtastic and Performance Technology's PowerLAN."
-
- "NetWare Lite also falls short of competitors in network security
- features . . . security-conscious buyers will sleep better with
- competitive peer-to-peer LANs and not have to sacrifice ease of
- use, installation and management."
-
- PC Week Labs' First Look, Oct. 7, 1991
-
-
- "NetWare Lite is a radical departure from Novell's core technology.
- Because it's completely different, users who buy it and then need
- to move to a more advanced NetWare operating system will be in for
- administrative and upgrade headaches."
-
- "By putting the name NetWare' on a red box that contains a
- DOS-based network operating system, Novell is creating the illusion
- that NetWare Lite is part of an integrated family of operating
- system products."
-
- "Except for the fact that it uses the same transport and the
- C-Worthy interface, NetWare Lite is no more integrated with
- NetWare than are LANtastic or other DOS networks that coexist with
- NetWare . . . NetWare Lite users who need to move to a server-bas
- ed operating system will have a major transition ahead of them,
- regardless of which product they choose."
-
- "There is no upgrade discount for NetWare Lite users who need to
- make a transition to NetWare 2.2 or 3.11. In addition, users who
- buy NetWare Lite from a source other than a NetWare system
- integrator from one that doesn't sell NetWare 2.2 or 3.11╤may fin
- d it difficult to get the kind of support they need when deciding
- when and how to upgrade."
-
- "Novell's $20-per-incident technical support program may be an
- obstacle for some users. Practically all other peer-to-peer
- network vendors offer free, unlimited technical support. Artisoft,
- for example, offers free technical support and a 30-day money-back
- guarantee on its software."
-
- "We think Artisoft is in a good position to retain its leadership
- role in peer-to-peer networking, primarily because that is its main
- focus. It can continue to concentrate on making LANtastic as good
- a network operating system as possible. Novell, because of the
- conflicts in its product line and its need to dedicate research and
- development dollars to its core business, is unlikely to give
- NetWare Lite the same kind of dedicated attention."
-
- "If Novell were really serious about providing a peer-to-peer
- network operating system worthy of the NetWare name, Novell should
- have found a way to use the technology that has established NetWare
- as the leading network operating system."
-
- Craig Burton, Clarke Burton Analysis, Sept. 20, 1991
-
-
- ARTISOFT
-
- Artisoft, Inc.
- 691 East River Road
- Tucson, AZ 85704
- Sales/Customer Service 1-800-TINY RAM
- Technical Support 1-602-293-6363
- Headquarters 1-602-293-4000
- Fax 1-602-293-8065
-
- 1991 ARTISOFT, INC. All rights reserved. Artisoft, LANcache and
- Sounding Board are trademarks, Artisoft Authorized Five Star Dealer
- is a service mark and LANtastic is a registered trademark of
- Artisoft, Inc. NetWare Lite is a trademark and Novell and
- NetWare are registered trademarks of Novell, Inc. Windows is a
- trademark and Microsoft is a registered trademark of Microsoft
- Corp.
-