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- @BEGIN_FILE_ID.DIZ
- RESULTS OF THE ESCOM DISTRIBUTOR MEETING
- HELD IN PHILADELPHIA USA
- ON FRIDAY JULY 21, 1995
- -------------------------------------
- READ AND FIND OUT WHAT IS GOING ON !
- -------------------------------------
- @END_FILE_ID.DIZ
-
-
-
- RESULTS OF THE ESCOM/U.S. DISTRIBUTOR MEETING
- HELD IN PHILADELPHIA, PA USA ON FRIDAY JULY 21, 1995
-
- REPORTED BY SHANE R. MONROE
- REPRESENTING DARK UNICORN PRODUCTIONS AND BETTER CONCEPTS, INC
- (EMail: smonroe@awod.com)
-
- NOTE: A NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENT WAS ESTABLISHED AT THIS MEETING
- AND THEREFORE CERTAIN ITEMS CANNOT BE DISCUSSED HERE.
-
- This is Shane Monroe reporting on the conference held in Philly
- regarding the distribution and pricing of the Amiga computer
- platform in the United States.
-
- I will organize this in several parts, so if there is a part that
- you are not interested in you may skip over it by looking for the
- next header flanked by asterisks.
-
- ** WHO WAS THERE **
-
- Those attending the conference are listed below. The number of
- representatives present is indicated by parenthesis.
-
- Petro Tyschtschenko (1) - Senior Vice President Escom and General
- Manager of Amiga Technologies.
-
- Ed Goff (1) - Attorney, more or less leading the U.S. side of
- Amiga Technologies. The man we have all grown to
- love over the last several months! ;)
-
- Jeff (1; missed his last name) - Amiga Technologies' Engineer and
- the only one missing a tie.
-
- Better Concepts, Inc. (3) - Hardware/Software dealer
-
- Software Hut (3) - Hardware/Software dealer
-
- Lively Computers (2) - Hardware/Software dealer
-
- Micropace (1) - Hardware/Software dealer
-
- Metropolitan Computers (1) - Hardware/Software dealer
-
- CEI (2) - Hardware/Software/Misc. Amiga dealer/distributor
-
- Centaur Development (2) - Makers of the Opalvision and the most
- verbose people at the table.
-
- Several companies that were invited didn't make it, according to Mr.
- Goff. Most of the presentation was given by Petro with commentary
- by Ed and Jeff. Lively & Software Hut were very quiet for the most
- part, while Alex Amor of CEI seemed to be the meeting referee to
- keep us on topic as the day went on. Micropace had quite a bit to
- say, as did Metropolitan. The most input came from Centaur
- Development who spoke a great deal of the time. Better Concepts Inc
- (BCI) also had a lot to say and generated a lot of comment (as well
- as I think a bit of hate and discontent! ;)
-
- ** WHAT WAS SAID (OVERVIEW) **
-
- The meeting was really quite open ended, especially after lunch.
- The better part of the morning was taken with a very interesting
- overview of ESCOM as well as a round-the-table introduction of
- everyone present. A few jokes passed, like some of my previous
- comments about him when Ed introduced himself.
-
- We then discussed configuration of the new Amiga 4000T and started
- talking about everyone's favorite topic: price. Petro solicited a
- price from the attendee's and we talked a little about other Amiga
- 4000T related topics, as well as other machine distribution.
-
- We broke for lunch and returned to have Petro get to the meat of the
- meeting and give the distributors a "how do you say it? Bottom of
- the line?" price of the machines.
-
- We then discusses numbers of units the attendee's believed could be
- sold and gave input in that general topic.
-
- CEI made it VERY plain to this attendee that he was solely there for
- the distribution information of the A4000T and really didn't care a
- lot about the other topics and didn't want anyone not having some
- volume buying power to be involved in the remainder of the meeting.
- At that point, distributors interested (and capable) in signing a
- distributor contract made appointments to speak with Petro alone
- later.
-
- This is where BCI's involvement ended at the meeting. I doubt that
- any of the distributors that stayed after this would be even
- SLIGHTLY interested in discussing their end of the meeting, so this
- is more or less where the meeting ended.
-
- ** THE AMIGA 4000T'S FUTURE IN THE U.S. **
-
- I will bring this topic up first, since this seems to be the
- question on everyone's lips. Here are the common questions and the
- answers that *I AM ALLOWED TO GIVE*. None of these are falsehoods,
- but on the other hand are as vague as I have to be to keep from
- breaking the NDA.
-
- 1. Will Amiga 4000T be available in the U.S. for sure?
-
- A. At this point, yes they will. I think that the major point of
- this meeting was to determine the very future of the machine in the
- U.S. Based on the response from the attendee's, I believe
- production will continue and machines will indeed be available.
-
- 2. When will they be available?
-
- A. The first week of September is what was said.
-
- 3. How many will be made?
-
- A. Unknown at this time. I imagine that has a lot to do with how
- many the distributors told Petro they could move. Petro mentioned
- the number 20,000. I believe that there will be a good deal ready
- to go by September. Pre-sales will have a lot to do with it also, I
- bet.
-
- 4. Will they be available to everyone or just video guru's and big
- companies?
-
- A. The distributors seemed to have plans to sell them to any dealer
- who wanted them, so companies like BCI, Software Hut, etc. should be
- carrying them.
-
- 5. How much!!!!?????
-
- A. The question on everyone's lips, isn't it? It is also one of the
- very few bits of information I cannot divulge. The bottom of the
- truth is this. Distributors and dealers will be determining the
- final costs. Everyone at the table was revealed the 'distributors
- price' for the A4000T (that is NOT negotiable and volume will have
- no impact on). Without disclosure, I can tell you that every person
- at the table could *very easily* live with the quoted price (and
- they were ALL really pissed at the $3500 tag too). That should help
- you a bit. The street price, in my humble opinion, will be under
- $3000 but I cannot be quoted. It is out of everyone but the
- distributor's hands.
-
- 6. Specifications???
-
- A. Another big question. Here is the layout. A4000T with an 040 or
- 060 processor, 512 MB or gig drive (this changed throughout the day,
- so I never got it quite right - assume it is a half gig), with 6
- megs of RAM. Basically, what we already knew.
-
- 7. Is the bottle-necked memory handling of the original A4000 still
- there?
-
- A. Unfortunately so. However, it was my impression that the 060
- board would rectify that problem.
-
- 8. Who is making the 060 card? Is it a Cyberstorm?
-
- A. This was not disclosed to the group and no one asked.
-
- 9. Is it the machine we are seeing on the Internet and in the latest
- Amazing Computing?
-
- A. No sir. The machine that is going around in picture is what I
- would call an Artist's Rendition and it is NOT what the machine
- actually looks like. Apparently the real machine is in a converted
- PC tower case. The interesting thing I heard was that the turbo
- button normally used for the PC is now an audio cutout switch.
-
- 10. Why the hell is this machine costing more now than an A4000 did
- at the end of the Commodore reign?
-
- A. This is the answer we got over and over again. This is also the
- answer to the 'why are the CD32s sitting in Philly being sold for
- $400?' question. The parts being put together just cost that much.
- This is what Jeff and Ed continued to tell us (mainly BCI who just
- can't believe it still) about the price tag. Apparently they are
- going into the old Phillipean factory and pulling certain parts off
- the motherboards for the newer model. Price, I suspect, will go
- down after the first 6-12 months or so, when the ramp up costs are
- paid, etc.
-
- 11. Where are they being made?
-
- A. They are all being made and assembled here in the U.S. As of
- now, the European market is not interested in the machine and Petro
- says that there are no orders placed there for the A4000T. If the
- machine IS brought in to Europe, they will be made in U.S.A. and
- assembled in Europe.
-
- GENERAL INFO
-
- The feeling I got was that the entire party was mainly interested in
- getting A4000T's to the people who already own Amigas and want more
- power or for existing Amiga 4000s who need the space. The primary
- reason for this feeling is that there are to be ZERO dollars spent
- on advertising in the U.S. by ESCOM/AT. Absolutely none. This was
- said by Petro himself. If this doesn't scare you, it should.
- However, NONE of the rest of the attendees other than BCI seemed to
- give a single care to this lack of marketing. Jeff even said that
- there was no way we could possibly take on the PC market. Pretty
- bad when your own engineer says there is no chance. This leads me
- to believe that the Amiga platform in the U.S. will remain a very
- isolated and unrespected niche market and once the demand is filled
- for immediate needs, that the market here will simply die. I could
- be wrong but that is how I see it.
-
- All attempts by myself and BCI to improve the machine's
- configuration to bring it to the 90's failed. The addition of even
- a cheap 2x speed CD-ROM STANDARDIZED into the Amiga 4000T failed
- miserably. I don't understand why these guys aren't interested in
- entering the 90's generation. Adding the equipment as an addition
- later won't demonstrate a commitment to the machine's future.
- Again, my humble opinion.
-
- ** THE A1200 **
-
- This meeting was directed mainly at the A4000T in U.S.A. but at the
- same time, we have a lot of info here for you on the A1200 as well.
- Again, we will put it in Q&A form.
-
- 1. Is the U.S. going to get A1200s?
-
- A. This was the most infuriating part of the conference. Ed said
- "There is no market in the U.S. for A1200s". Jeff and seemingly
- Petro seemed to agree. To this, BCI told all of them they needed to
- come to our offices and answer the phone for about a week and then
- tell us again that there is no market. This wasn't well received.
- In any event, there are no plans to bring this machine to the U.S.
- Ed assured us that if we needed machines we could get them, but the
- overall impression was that there is not going to be anything done
- with it here. Sad.
-
- 2. Are there any new specs for the A1200?
-
- A. Well, we all got to look at the new tech sheets (which was neat),
- but alas, there were all in German. My poor German seemed to tell
- me that the machine was the same configuration as before.
-
- 3. How many are to be made?
-
- A. The number of 100,000 was put out. 40,000 of which have ALREADY
- been sold (to whom was not revealed). Basically, it is assumed that
- 30,000 or so are for Germany, 30-40,000 for U.K., and 10,000 for
- Italy.
-
- 4. Where are they being built?
-
- A. This will likely be new news for most of you. They are being
- made in a factory near Bordeaux, France. The company who owns it,
- SELECTRON (if I understood his pronunciation) is a U.S. based
- company that has factories all over the world. Interesting note is
- that this factory also makes Silicon Graphics workstations too, as
- well as lots of other things from dental parts to automobile parts.
- The factory is handling every aspect of the A1200s including
- assembly, boxing, etc. etc. ESCOM has a sweet deal there, and IMHO,
- will not be changing anytime soon.
-
- 5. The cost?
-
- A. Not mentioned at the meeting.
-
- 6. Where will they be available and when?
-
- A. September, as the A4000T. They are planned to be in over 1200
- stores throughout Europe (a breakdown was shown, but that isn't
- really important here). They will also be available in very popular
- catalogs that have everything from frying pans to electronics in
- them. The European market will be SATURATED with A1200s. I love
- it. At least the U.K. developers (you listening OCEAN and TEAM
- 17???) will have a good reason to stay/come back.
-
- 7. What is the word on the A1200CD unit that C= U.K. halted
- production on before it was released?
-
- A. Not a priority (take that however you want to; I know how *I* am
- taking it). There was a mostly working prototype at the end, but
- the lack of FMV adaptability (and other things, I suspect) stopped
- it from hitting the market. Don't expect to ever see it, so stop
- waiting and get a Squirrel and drive 3rd party.
-
- 8. What about the A1300, and 030 based A1200s, etc.?
-
- A. Not divulged at the meeting. I really doubt that they exist at
- this time.
-
- GENERAL INFO
-
- The A1200, IMHO, will be a landmark success with the ESCOM chain and
- marketing power there in Europe (they send out almost 40 MILLION
- what they call high-flyers to the public every year for
- advertising). They owned over 50% of the Pentium market for their
- PC based side. These guys are rocking over there and what they tell
- the market to buy, the market will buy. Damn shame it isn't
- happening over here.
-
- As for the end of the A1200 in U.S.A., get your comments and letters
- ready and send them to me and I will forward them to Mr. Goff.
- Perhaps then they will see. The attractive price tag and
- performance of the A1200 (especially with some RAM and a nice drive)
- is exceptional. This is the market I think they should break open
- the U.S.A. with and I told them all so. Negative.
-
- ** CD32 **
-
- God, this is the worst part of all. Q&A time.
-
- 1. How many CD32s are we looking at getting this year?
-
- A. Absolutely none. Zilch. "No market for the CD32" either. This
- is both U.S. and Europe. I really like the CD32 and I will miss the
- development for it dearly. Even with the 70,000+ units that have
- been sold, I doubt that there will be much more use for it. Ed said
- that it isn't dead, but 'not a priority'. Figure it out.
-
- 2. So I should just throw my machine out the door?
-
- A. No, there is still the SX-1 avenue to get a basic A1200 and you
- can always network it to your existing Amiga (or even the new A4000T
- since they won't make a CD-ROM in it). I would suspect support for
- another 6 months at best (Dark Unicorn Productions has several
- projects on the way so there will be at least one developer -
- blatant advertising plug). I just hope more developers will take
- the CD-ROM route and force Amiga people to get CD-ROM drives to be
- competitive. You guys like Softwood and Digita need to take note.
-
- 3. What about the 'new' CD32 we were told about in 1st Quarter 1996?
-
- A. As Norman Bates' mother would say "Its ALL LIES!". According to
- Jeff, there is no new CD32 on the shelf, nor was there ever. The
- Amiga console days are PROBABLY over (read on).
-
- 4. What is all this talk about CD32s for kiosk use?
-
- A. This seems to be the only thing ESCOM is willing to admit the
- CD32 is good for. I believe that they will continue to make the
- boards for the CD32 if nothing else for this purpose.
-
- 5. Who is Visacorp and what do they have to do with the CD32?
-
- A. You can read about this company and their plans in detail in
- Amiga Report Issue 313. The only thing wrong with this article
- (sorry Jason), is that there is NO OFFICIAL licence yet. There are
- discussions only at this point. The basic thing is that Visacorp
- will be making a set top box with some very exciting features out of
- the CD32 box. Apparently a prototype is completed. Every developer
- should contact them and see what we can do to support them in this
- endeavor. They are likely to be the only one's successful in the
- U.S. with Amiga technology.
-
- GENERAL INFO
-
- For those of you who know me well, you realize that this was the
- most depressing part of the meeting. The CD32 while CURRENTLY isn't
- up to snuff with the latest consoles had a lot of selling points.
- In its early days, it could have owned the market. Now...Sigh.
- After all, CD-I is still selling.
-
- ** Interesting Points **
-
- Here are some very interesting tidbits I picked up from the
- conference. Take a peek.
-
- 1. Alex Amor told us that NewTek is no longer going to be making the
- Video Toaster for the Amiga once the current 140 or so are sold.
- This is due to lack of certain parts (you buy that crap?) and Alex
- said that they are working with NewTek to reverse this game plan.
- Until then, if you ever wanted one, you better get it now.
-
- 2. Centaur Development stated that the Video Processor/Roaster chip
- is DONE and ready to go, pending the results of the conference and
- the outlook for the future of the Amiga. ALthough they didn't say
- it, I believe that it will indeed ship now that there is a
- commitment to the A4000T's future. This should healthily assume the
- position of the Video Toaster in U.S. and Europe.
-
- 3. FMV seems to be a dead issue. Unless the third party developers
- such as CEI and the unknown U.K. company I mentioned in my previous
- periodicals continue development on FMV cards (looking unlikely now,
- eh?), FMV is an entirely dead issue. The rumored FMV Zorro
- compatible card of C= is also 'low priority' although a working
- prototype exists/existed, I doubt it will ever see the light of day.
-
- 4. Petro had the most best hotel room of all with no windows...
-
- 5. Service Management Group, the people responsible for some of the
- excellent service we received with the Amiga's past warranty
- service, will once again be handling warranty and repair service for
- ALL Amigas, including the new A4000T. Parts for the older machines
- should be available soon.
-
-
- That is about it. If you all have any other questions, feel free to
- send them to my EMail address at the top of this document.
-
- Shane Monroe, DUP/BCI
-