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- Date: Mon, 07 Aug 1995 08:36:09 -0700
- To: executor@nacm.com
- From: Dennis Edgecombe <dennis_edgecombe@wsu.edu>
- Subject: Competition for ARDI???
- Sender: owner-paper@nacm.com
- Precedence: bulk
-
- Looks like ARDI has some competition... Maybe ARDI could team up with them?
- See story below.
-
- Report: Little-known Quix puts Apple software on IBM computer
-
- (c) 1995 Copyright the News & Observer Publishing Co.
- (c) 1995 Associated Press
-
- NEW YORK (Aug 7, 1995 - 08:24 EDT) -- A small Swiss company has modified
- the software that runs Apple's Macintosh so it can be used on an IBM
- personal computer ahead of the plans of either company, according to the
- trade magazine MacWorld.
-
- The development places pressure on the companies to decide whether to
- modify their plans, which currently call for the Macintosh software to be on
- an IBM PC late next year or early 1997.
-
- But it may just be a lost opportunity since it would take several months
- for the companies to make the legal and manufacturing steps to bring an IBM
- Mac clone to market.
-
- The issue is rooted in the tense cooperation since October 1991 of
- International Business Machines Corp. and Apple Computer Inc., which have
- promoted competing PC designs for 15 years.
-
- The two companies and Motorola Inc. co-developed a microprocessor called
- PowerPC to run a new generation of personal computers. Apple began using the
- chip in its Macintosh line last year.
-
- IBM just started selling a PC that uses the chip but the machine's design
- was thought to be unacceptable for Macintosh software. It instead uses IBM's
- AIX and OS-2 (though still in a test version) and Microsoft Corp.'s Windows
- NT operating programs.
-
- However, a company called Quix Computerware, based near Zurich, recently
- transferred the Macintosh software to the IBM design, MacWorld said in its
- October issue. Copies of the story were provided to news organizations in
- advance of distribution on the magazine's on-line services Monday.
-
- The magazine tested Quix's adaptation and found "near flawless
- compatibility." However, Quix cannot develop or market computers based on
- the modified software without permission from Apple.
-
- Apple had not supported Quix's work, but IBM is interested in it, the
- MacWorld article said. IBM more than a year ago asked Apple to work on such
- a transfer but Apple declined.
-
- Apple spokeswoman Laurence Clavere said Friday that Quix had demonstrated
- its innovation to Apple and the two companies are talking further. She
- declined to discuss specifics of the relationship or the MacWorld account.
-
- The magazine's story quotes Gary Griffiths, an IBM business development
- director, as saying the development "demands further evaluation." Griffiths
- could not be reached Friday and other IBM representatives were unaware of Quix.
-
- The company, which employs just six people, worked with Apple several
- years ago to transfer the Macintosh operating system to workstations
- developed by Next Corp., a company started by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.
-
- IBM and Apple in November agreed on a common hardware design for future
- versions of PowerPC-based computers. IBM machines based on that design,
- expected in late 1996 or early 1997, have been expected to be the first to
- use Macintosh software.
- --Dennis
- dennis_edgecombe@wsu.edu
-
-
-