DELRINA TO SUPPORT NOVELL'S NETWARE DISTRIBUTED PRINT SERVICES ARCHITECTURE; ARCHITECTURE TO PROVIDE NEW BENEFITS FOR NETWORK FAX.PROVO Provo, city, United States Provo (prō`vō), city (1990 pop. 86,835), seat of Utah co., N central Utah, on the Provo River near Utah Lake; inc. 1851. , Utah and SAN JOSE San Jose, city, United States San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850. , Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 20, 1995-- Delrina Corporation, a leading provider of workgroup fax software with more than 375,000 users worldwide, today announced that it will build support for Novell Inc.'s NetWare Distributed Print Services (NDPS (Novell Distributed Print Services) A full-featured printing protocol co-developed by Novell, Xerox and HP that provides print services on NetWare file servers. ) architecture in future versions of WinFax PRO for Networks. WinFax PRO for Networks, which supports NetWare today, will leverage NDPS technology so a user can fax documents from his or her computer through the network, as easily as they can print them. By supporting NDPS, WinFax PRO for Networks users will gain many of the inherent benefits offered by the new architecture. These benefits include: 1) WinFax PRO for Networks will gain the ability to closely monitor the status of fax transmissions and provide greater control through the built-in services of the network operating system An operating system that is designed for network use. Normally, it is a complete operating system with file, task and job management; however, with some earlier products, it was a separate component that ran under the OS; for example, LAN Server required OS/2, and LANtastic required DOS. . 2) Through the NDPS architecture and NetWare 4, fax servers will become manageable NetWare object. This will provide network fax users with access to all of the features, tools and utilities of NetWare 4, such as administrative control Direction or exercise of authority over subordinate or other organizations in respect to administration and support, including organization of Service forces, control of resources and equipment, personnel management, unit logistics, individual and unit training, readiness, mobilization, , security, simplified installation, and ease-of-use. Novell will be able to leverage Delrina's fax expertise to ensure development of a robust network fax environment. "With NDPS, we're producing a framework that will enable ISVs such as Delrina to simplify their users' access to, and control over, shared print and fax resources," said Rob Whittle, senior product manager for Novell's NetWare Products Division. "We're excited that Delrina will support NDPS and further advance the architecture's value to network users." "We are glad to be involved with Novell to ensure that NetWare Distributed Print Services will be able to provide the basic hooks to build the next generation of network fax software," said David Wilmering, WinFax PRO for Networks product manager, at Delrina. "This will enable us to develop very robust and integrated solutions for NetWare users." Delrina Corporation designs, develops, markets and supports innovative PC software products and services in the fax, data and voice communications, electronic forms, and consumer software markets. Founded in 1988, the Company is ranked in sales among the top fifteen software publishers in North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. and is recognized as the worldwide leader in PC fax and forms. Delrina employs more than 600 people with offices in Toronto and Ottawa, Canada; San Jose, CA; Kirkland, WA; Washington, DC; Lexington, MA; the United Kingdom; France; and Germany. CONTACT: Delrina Corporation Shelly Sofer sofer or sopher In Judaism, a scholar-teacher of the 5th–2nd centuries BC who transcribed, edited, and interpreted the Bible. The first sofer was Ezra, who, with his disciples, initiated a tradition of rabbinical scholarship that is still central in 416/441-4702 Internet Internet Publicly accessible computer network connecting many smaller networks from around the world. It grew out of a U.S. Defense Department program called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network), established in 1969 with connections between computers at the : shellys@delrina.com |
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