| JAVA INTERNET VENTURE FUND 
 The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition -- August 21, 1996
 
 Big High-Tech Players Back
 Java Internet Venture Fund
 
 By JARED SANDBERG
 Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
 
 NEW YORK -- Ten of the most powerful high-technology
 companies are investing in a venture fund to support
 start-ups developing Internet software using the touted Java
 programming language.
 
 International Business Machines Corp., Sun Microsystems
 Inc., Compaq Computer Corp., U S West Inc.,
 Tele-Communications Inc., Netscape Communications
 Corp. and Oracle Corp. are among the investors in the
 Java Fund, a fund of $100 million that will be administered
 by venture-capital powerhouse Kleiner Perkins Caulfield &
 Byers. The widespread and ringing endorsement for the
 Java Fund, which also includes investments from
 network-gear company Cisco Systems Inc., cable giant
 Comcast Corp. and Japanese trading giant Itochu Corp.,
 marks an unprecedented rate of adoption for a single
 technology across a wide range of high-tech industries.
 
 "Nothing like this level of adoption and endorsement has
 ever happened in computing," said John Doerr, a partner at
 Kleiner Perkins. Beyond financial investment, companies
 also are planning on putting their weight behind new
 technologies in return for getting early access to any
 breakthroughs.
 
 John O'Farrell, president of U S West's Interactive services
 group, said the fund "combines a set of world-class
 corporations, which can contribute marketing muscle,
 distribution and technology with Kleiner Perkins's expertise
 in identifying promising Internet companies."
 
 Java has been hailed as a revolutionary technology because
 of its ability to create multimedia computer programs that
 work on all operating systems, whether Apple Computer
 Inc.'s MacOS or Microsoft Corp.'s Windows. Many
 industry watchers believe that may help put an end to
 Microsoft's dominance of the software industry, which has
 long relied on the Windows platform that Microsoft
 controls.
 
 But Mr. Doerr said the fund isn't an attempt to thwart
 Microsoft's Internet efforts, which include a push to make a
 versatile multimedia technology known as ActiveX an
 Internet standard. "Java isn't in competition with ActiveX.
 That's not what this fund is about. It's about encouraging
 entrepreneurs," said Mr. Doerr, who added that Microsoft
 has been one of the most staunch supporters of Java
 technology. Added Bob Stearns, senior vice president at
 Compaq: "If Microsoft wasn't a licensee of Java, I don't
 think I would be interested. They become a major driver of
 Java themselves." Mr. Stearns noted that the investment
 opportunities allow Compaq to get an early look at
 emerging technologies that can be incorporated into the
 company's products.
 
 Greg Maffei, vice president of corporate development said
 Microsoft welcomed the fund "because it furthers Web
 applications" but noted that the company has never invested
 in venture funds.
 
 While Java, which was introduced by Sun Microsystems
 more than a year ago, has taken the Internet industry by
 storm, relatively few computer programs have been created
 with the programming language. Most users are more
 familiar with goofy Java programs such as tic-tac-toe and
 on-line Rubik's cubes than mission-critical business
 software.
 
 "It would be nice if some of these applications were more
 than charm bracelets or just little trinkets," said Richard
 Shaffer, founder of high-tech publisher Technologic
 Partners. "This is to make sure Java gets plenty of funding
 from the highest level and plenty of visibility," he said. Jerry
 Michalski, managing editor of high-tech newsletter Release
 1.0, said Java "still has a ways to go before making this
 thing robust and fool proof." Java "applets," as they are
 called, still won't allow users to print off the screen or take
 advantage of simple mouse commands. The fund, he said,
 "is a nice way of creating credibility, momentum and some
 additional weight behind Java."
 
 Sponsors of the fund hope to accelerate the development of
 such programs by investing in about 25 start-ups that plan to
 use the Java language. "We've got to jump-start the
 development of these applications," said Eric Schmidt, chief
 technology officer of Sun Microsystems, which is the
 second-largest investor in the fund after Kleiner Perkins.
 "The Java fund will find the next killer app," he said,
 referring to the kinds of computer applications such as Lotus
 1-2-3 that helped ignite the fortunes of the PC industry.
 
 Mr. Schmidt said Java programs could soon provide users
 with programs that take real-time stock quotes from the
 Internet and determine, according to a user's criteria,
 whether to buy or sell a stock. Java programs could also
 run collaborative applications similar to Lotus Development
 Corp.'s Notes products to allow employees world-wide to
 share information in new, and still unconceived ways.
 Moreover, Java could create software for future cell
 phones to send and receive e-mail or help companies pull
 information from various incompatible systems, Mr. Schmidt
 said.
 
 Kleiner Perkins will be the largest investor in the Java
 Fund, followed by Sun Microsystems. All other companies
 are said to have invested between $4 million and $7 million.
 The plan is to take start-ups public and pay stock out to the
 fund's investors over a period of time.
 
 Three companies have already received funding, including
 Marimba Inc., which was founded by some of Java's
 original developers at Sun. Start-up Active Software Inc. is
 developing a Java application that allows companies to
 present information from their older incompatible
 business-software programs out onto the Internet's World
 Wide Web, while Calico Technology is developing software
 to enable a sales force to quote and order complex
 products and services.
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