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)( A Bridge over Troubled Waters Presentation )( It all started one day while I was sitting at my desk, comtemplating the load of Lotus support utilities which had been sent to me for review. I was wondering what a "spreadsheet compiler" was when the phone ring. "Mr. Spector," said the woman's voice on the other end. "I've got a hot tip for you. If you can come here right away, I can giv you the biggest news story of the year." "Where are you?" I asked. "On the telephone," she answered before hanging up. Interesting. In response to a perfectly reasonable question, she had given me an answer that was 100% correct but totally useless. I figured she worked for IBM. I got there as fast as I could. A security guard asked me for identification and I handed him my card. He glanced at it, and suddenly pulled his gun on me while pressing a button. An alarm sounded as a voice came over the PA system, "Press infiltration. Repeat: Press infiltration. Destroy all uncoded data." Before I knew it, three additional guards had me covered. At this point, I did the only thing a man of my temperament could do in this position; I fainted. When I came to, I was in a nicely appointed office, apparently unhurt. A professional-looking young woman was putting away a bottle of smelling salts. "I apologize about that reception you received," she said. "The folks in Security sometimes lose their heads about the press. They never checked to see that you had been okayed. "I'm the woman who called you," she continued as she extended her hand, "my name's Edna Purvience. Mr Spector, IBM has decided that, of all the journalists specialized in computers, your writing style best suits our corporate policy. You have therefore been selected for the major scoop everyone has been waiting for." "The Clone Killer?" I asked eagerly. "We prefer calling it 'copy protection'," she corrected me. "In fact, our original design, the IBM PC QT, required the end-user to insert a special uncopyable key chip in order to boot up." She smiled. "For added protection, the licensing agreement forbade altering the motherboard or adding any peripherals to the system." "You mention the QT in past tense," I commented. "What happened to it?" "The copy-protection proved faulty. We were on our second month of beta-testing when someone released a product called COPYAPC." "Sounds like your competitors were on the ball." "Mr. Spector, IBM doesn't have competitors, only usurpers." "Sorry," I apoligized, sufficiently rebuffed. "So if the QT was dropped, what are you releasing?" "A machine that will never be copied, the computer of tomorrow." She handed me a brochure. "Meet the IBM PC MT! Due out in three months. "Our studies have shown," she continued as I thumbed through the brochure, "that the proliferation of expansion cards for the original PC and its followers have encouraged the imitations we are trying to stop. No such boards will be necessary therefore for the MT. The motherboard will include graphics, ports, and a modem, all basted on new standards of course, plus three megabytes of RAM." "Three megabytes of RAM?" That impressed me. "Of course, our new Predatory Operating System will only address 256k, but we'll find a use for the rest." "New operating system?" I asked. "Then you're not going to be using ADOS?" "Current estimates are that fully five perfect of existing programs will work on ADOS. We are not interested in compatability." "So what new programs will work with the new system?" "Nothing at the present time, but we should have some software out by late next year. The MT's ROM BIOS, of course, will only accepted programs with our copy-righted code." "Of course. How fast will this computer be?" "We're locking it down to 6 MHz. We're figuring that if we allow it to run faster, other companies will be tempted to duplicate it." "Let me get this straight," I said. "You're releasing a computer that cannot be expanded, is not compatable with anything, can only run your software - which isn't even out yet - and runs at half the speed of others on the market?" "That's correct!" she said proudly. "We figure that way no one is likely to clone it." "Yes, but will they buy it?" I asked. "Of course they'll buy it." she said. "It's IBM." ---- Lincoln Spector is employed in the Technical Support Department of 800-Software in Berkeley, California. "Behind the Blue Door" was reprinted from the March 24-April 6 1987 edition of Computer Currents magazine without permission. Typed in by Rocky Racoon of A Bridge over Troubled Waters Presentations. [] The Dark Side AE/BBS.. 408/245-SPAM, 3/12/24, 45 megs. Located in South Sunnyvale, California Sysops: S Bunker and Someone Else :)(: (>