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PUTTING DATA IN PALM OF YOUR HAND.


Byline: Evan Ramstad Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

In his speeches and book, Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates (person) Bill Gates - William Henry Gates III, Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft, which he co-founded in 1975 with Paul Allen. In 1994 Gates is a billionaire, worth $9.35b and Microsoft is worth about $27b.  paints a future filled with gee-whiz things like computerized wallets and watches and homes.

After several fitful fit·ful  
adj.
Occurring in or characterized by intermittent bursts, as of activity; irregular. See Synonyms at periodic.



fit
 starts, the company is at last closing in on a piece of software that represents its first major step toward that kind of future.

The program runs the basic functions of hand-held computers Noun 1. hand-held computer - a portable battery-powered computer small enough to be carried in your pocket
hand-held microcomputer

portable computer - a personal computer that can easily be carried by hand
, similar to personal digital assistants like Apple Computer Inc.'s Newton or the Palm Pilot of U.S. Robotics (U.S. Robotics, Inc., Schaumburg, IL, www.usr.com) A modem manufacturer highly regarded for its quality products. The company manufactures its own chipsets (data pumps) and often leads with innovations. Its HST protocol was a high-speed, reliable protocol before V.  Inc.

And its development illustrates the difficult balance Microsoft must strike - rejecting part of its past and repeating another - to stay relevant as new computerized devices come along.

Its hallmark MS-DOS MS-DOS
 in full Microsoft Disk Operating System

Operating system for personal computers. MS-DOS was based on DOS, developed in 1980 by Seattle Computer Products. Microsoft Corp. bought the rights to DOS in 1981, and released MS-DOS with IBM's PC that year.
 and Windows programs are too big for small computers. And so Microsoft must restart from a smaller base.

At the same time, Microsoft also wants to re-create in new computers a pattern of program upgrades and repeat buying that was profitable for it in personal computers.

``We aren't very interested in the businesses that represent just writing the code once and burying it in the machine, like a toaster See intranet toaster and Video Toaster.

(jargon) toaster - 1. The archetypal really stupid application for an embedded microprocessor controller; often used in comments that imply that a scheme is inappropriate technology (but see elevator controller).
 oven,'' said Craig Mundie Craig Mundie is chief research and strategy officer at Microsoft. External links
  • http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2006/jun06/06-15CorpNewsPR.mspx
  • Full text of a May 2001 speech by Mundie on Shared source
  • Mundie biography at Microsoft
, the senior vice president in charge of non-PC software development at Microsoft.

The hand-held program, known by the code name Pegasus, is something that both Microsoft and other software makers can build upon. It is due to be available late this year or early next, appearing on new machines made by other companies.

Although project leaders decline to describe it in detail, they expect Pegasus to have some basic database and communications functions, including connecting to the Internet, and fit tightly with personal computers that use Microsoft's Windows 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.
.

``What we're trying to do is bring value to these other platforms (new devices) by making them have some synergy with the established Windows computing environment,'' Mundie said.

Windows has become too big for hand-held computers because its latest version, Windows 95, requires 8 megabytes of main memory to run, 60 megabytes of hard drive space to store and works best with a 32-bit microprocessor, such as the Pentium chip of Intel Corp.

Pegasus will be a subset of Windows, able to run on an 8-bit microprocessor, the kind that ran video game systems that were new in 1989.

``We've thought about how to take the most critical functionality and scale it,'' said Jon Magill, product manager for Pegasus.

Microsoft has relied on customer surveys and interviews to help decide what functions it should have an what should be left out. But competitive forces also are shaping decisions.

U.S. Robotics' $300 Palm Pilot has been a critical and sales success since rolling out last fall. Palm Computing, which U.S. Robotics acquired last year, created the Pilot's operating software after going through much of the struggle Microsoft is now in with Pegasus.

``The approach we were all taking before was to say, `We're going to take the PC and shrink it into this little box,' '' said Donna Dubinsky Donna Dubinsky (born July 4, 1955) has played an integral role in the development of personal digital assistants (PDAs) serving as CEO of Palm, Inc. and co-founding Handspring with Jeff Hawkins. Her management skills helped keep Palm Inc. , chief executive of Palm. ``There was this implication that it had to do everything the big box did. What we realized after having some failures was there was a different approach, which was to assume the hand-held is a component of the bigger system.''

Palm designed Pilot to synchronize See synchronization.  itself with a desktop PC at the push of one button, a feature Microsoft's Pegasus designers acknowledge they also are trying to achieve.

And, as Microsoft's programmers are now doing, Palm went through some tough design decisions to keep the Pilot's operating program small. One was that it cannot print. Instead, data must be sent to a PC and printed from there.

The rise of computer networks, most prominently seen in the growing popularity of the Internet, helps software designers make such compromises by providing new places for data to reside or be processed.

Just last week, 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.  Inc.'s software unit said it had created a compact operating system based on the Java programming language that has excited Internet developers for a year.

And last month, Lucent Technologies Inc., the AT&T Corp. spinoff Spinoff

A new, independent company created through selling or distributing new shares for an existing part of another company.

Notes:
Spinoffs may be done through a rights offering.
 that includes the illustrious Bell Labs, announced an operating system called Inferno for hand-held and other specialized computers that will rely on networks.

``Maximizing all of the assets in the network are some of the key design principles in Inferno,'' said Mike Skarzynski, a Lucent vice president and general manager of the product.

The first devices to run the software will have less than 1 megabyte One million bytes, or more precisely 1,048,576 bytes. Also MB, Mbyte and M-byte. See mega and space/time.

(unit) megabyte - (MB, colloquially "meg") 2^20 = 1,048,576 bytes = 1024 kilobytes. 1024 megabytes are one gigabyte.
 of main memory and also use less powerful microprocessors. Skarzynski hopes future versions will use even less computing power, even appearing in ordinary telephones at little or no added cost.

Microsoft has the opposite idea with its futuristic software like Pegasus. As with MS-DOS and Windows, the company wants to build a ``platform,'' on which it and other companies can layer on more features that will keep customers hungry for updated versions of software.

Though it hasn't even been publicly displayed, Pegasus is far enough along that Microsoft held a conference earlier this year to share its basic design with companies that build hand-held devices and software that runs on them. In one sign of its possible direction, Microsoft also bought Aha! Inc., a creator of handwriting recognition Handwriting recognition is the ability of a computer to receive intelligible handwritten input. The image of the written text may be sensed "off line" from a piece of paper by optical scanning (optical character recognition).  software.

The failure of several earlier projects, stretching back as far as a ``modular Windows'' concept for Tandy computers nearly a decade ago, to reach the market has left some observers wondering whether Microsoft can pull off Pegasus.

Its most recent similar project, called WinPad, rose and fell during the frenzy in 1993 and 1994 over products like Apple's Newton and AT&T's failed clipboard-style EO computer. Microsoft had several large partners involved in WinPad, most notably Compaq Computer Corp., the biggest PC maker.

``We recognized the products were not going to be great products. So we hit the reset button A computer button or key that reboots the computer. All current activities are stopped cold, and any data in memory (RAM) is lost. On a printer, the reset button clears the printer's memory and readies it to accept new data. ,'' Magill said.

For now, Microsoft executives say Pegasus has become a bigger short-term opportunity than its other experiments in new kinds of computers, including a trial of interactive TV.

``This is not magic,'' said Harel Kodesh, general manager of personal electronics products. ``We know ultimately we'll get to Bill's vision.''
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:BUSINESS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 3, 1996
Words:1027
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