INTERNET PLAYERS TO SHAKE "WINTEL" DOMINANCE IN COMING YEAR, KPMG EXPERTS SAY; Windows 95 May Not Rule in 96; Sun/Netscape Announcement Is First Shot in Upcoming Hardware and Software Wars.SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 7, 1995--Will Windows '95 dominate '96? Not necessarily. This week's announcement by Netscape and Sun Microsystems Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ: JAVA[3]) is an American vendor of computers, computer components, computer software, and information-technology services, founded on 24 February 1982. -- of plans to develop the Javascript programming language and distribute it free of charge -- is more than a bid for Internet leadership. It's the central element of a campaign to unseat industry giants Microsoft and Intel, and to establish the Internet itself as a rival operating environment In computing, an operating environment is the environment in which users run programs, whether in a command line interface, such as in MS-DOS or the Unix shell, or in a graphical user interface, such as in the Macintosh operating system. , according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. expert consultants from KPMG KPMG Klynveld Peat Marwick Goerdeler (accounting firm) KPMG Kaiser Permanente Medical Group KPMG Keiner Prüft Mehr Genau (German) KPMG Kommen Prüfen Meckern Gehen Peat Marwick's Information, Communications and Entertainment (ICE) practice. Microsoft is due to announce its Internet counter-strategy today -- a strategy that may include licensing of Sun's Java programming language. But Microsoft's ultimate success may depend less on their Internet products, than on the larger question of whether future users will prefer to borrow computing power from the Internet or continue to own it themselves, the experts say. "Netscape, Sun and their allies are gambling that the Internet will become a complete computing environment, so that Javascript, rather than Windows, will emerge as the operating system operating system (OS) Software that controls the operation of a computer, directs the input and output of data, keeps track of files, and controls the processing of computer programs. of choice," said Mary Pat McCarthy, national director of the KPMG ICE Software practice. "Their goal is to have tomorrow's networked applications built in Javascript. "Microsoft will need to make a stand on the merits on the merits adj. referring to a judgment, decision or ruling of a court based upon the facts presented in evidence and the law applied to that evidence. A judge decides a case "on the merits" when he/she bases the decision on the fundamental issues and considers of its own Internet products, but this is a new field for Microsoft, and we know that in the past the company hasn't been universally successful in expanding into new areas -- a case in point is the failure of their attempted merger with Intuit," McCarthy said. "Of potentially more importance is the future of the Internet as a networked computing environment that could displace Windows/Intel and other platform-dependent environments. If the Internet wins out, Microsoft will not be the only company to be dealt a significant blow -- groupware publishers and products such as IBM's Lotus Notes Messaging and groupware software from IBM Lotus that was introduced in 1989 for OS/2 and later expanded to Windows, Mac, Unix, NetWare, AS/400 and S/390. Notes provides e-mail, document sharing, workflow, group discussions and calendaring and scheduling. , which runs on closed networks instead of the Net, would be particularly at risk." The outcome could profoundly affect hardware manufacturers as well. "The Internet model provides the rationale for Oracle Systems and others who are advocating the notion that users will only require the equivalent of a `$500 PC' -- a stripped-down machine that connects you to the Net, where users can quickly access operating systems Operating systems can be categorized by technology, ownership, licensing, working state, usage, and by many other characteristics. In practice, many of these groupings may overlap. and software capabilities," says Ed Rodriguez, national director of the KPMG ICE Electronic Devices practice. Oracle is a partner in the Netscape/Sun project, as are other major hardware players including AT&T, Hewlett-Packard, Apple Computer and Silicon Graphics. McCarthy, Rodriguez and other KPMG ICE experts are available to comment on this and other major computer-industry developments of 1995 and the prospects for 1996. To include them in year-end coverage, contact Andrea Gregg of KPMG ICE at (415) 951-7503 or Alan G. Ampolsk of Fleishman-Hillard, Inc. at (212) 265-9150. One of KPMG's five industry-focused lines of business, the Information, Communications and Entertainment (ICE) practice provides assurance and advisory services advisory services advisory services provided to the public, in their capacity as owners and managers of animals, are an important part of veterinary science. They may be provided by government bureaux, by commercial companies who deal in pharmaceuticals or animals or animal to clients who produce content, distribution and delivery systems for the information superhighway. KPMG is the only assurance and advisory firm to dedicate a full-service line of business to these industries as a group. KPMG Peat Marwick LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol is the U.S. practice of KPMG, the Global Leader among professional services (job) professional services - A department of a supplier providing consultancy and programming manpower for the supplier's products. firms. Worldwide, KPMG has more than 6,000 partners as well as 67,000 professional servicing clients through 1,100 office in 837 cities in 134 countries. In the U.S., KPMG partners and professionals deliver a wide range of value-added consulting, assurance, and tax services in five markets: financial services; manufacturing, retailing, and distribution; health care and life sciences; information, communications and entertainment; and public services. CONTACT: Andrea Gregg, (415) 951-7503 or Alan G. Ampolsk, (212) 265-9150 |
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