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To: scott blomquist who wrote ()10/29/1996 12:45:00 PM
From: LB11   of 42771
 
Two Community Financial Institutions Standardize On Windows Nt Platform

Tuesday October 29 11:00 AM EDT

With Combined Assets of More Than $2.5 Billion, a Community Bank and a Credit Union Select Microsoft
Technology to Anchor Operations, Online Banking

ATLANTA, Oct. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Reflecting a growing industry need to stay competitive and current, two community financial institutions
with combined assets of more than $2.5 billion have decided to standardize their entire operations on the Microsoft(R) (Nasdaq: MSFT)
Windows NT(R) Server network operating system. The decisions by the Richmond Savings credit union of Vancouver, British Columbia, and
the Hartford, Conn.-based Savings Bank of Manchester were announced here today during the America's Community Bankers annual
convention at the Atlanta Marriott Marquis.

"Windows NT will enable these two banks to conduct all their branch operations and home banking on a single, unified computer platform,
allowing them to add services, analyze data and embrace the Internet and intranet paradigms at will," said Mike Dusche, banking industry
manager at Microsoft.

For their part, bank officials praised the open design, security and number of applications available for the Microsoft platform. Officials also said
Windows NT would allow them to cut overhead costs and increase services.

"I look upon Windows NT as our Christmas tree," said Kirk Lawrie, president and CEO of Richmond Savings. "There are so many more
ornaments available for this tree than for any other."

Richmond's adoption of Windows NT brings Microsoft into an affiliation with the third-largest credit union in Canada (the country makes no
distinction between community banks and credit unions), whose assets total $1.7 billion. For the last nine years, the credit union has relied on
MS-DOS(R) operating system-based computers running financial systems from Vancouver-based Prologic Corp., a Microsoft Solution
Provider.

By year's end, Richmond's entire operation, and all its Prologic software, will run from a single Windows NT-based server using a Microsoft
SQL Server(TM) database. The credit union will also convert its Novell communications network to one that uses Windows NT technology,
and will replace approximately 465 MS-DOS-based PCs with those running either the Windows(R) 95 or the Windows NT Workstation
operating systems.

Satisfied with the security of Internet-based banking, Richmond's Lawrie said the credit union will have its online financial services in place within
one year. Satisfying the savvy online customer will be paramount, he said. "We might not need as many brick-and-mortar banks, but we'll still
need bankers," Lawrie said.

Lawrie also said the move to Windows NT will allow the credit union to expand its product offerings substantially, and he predicted it will fuel a
25- to 30-basis-point increase in return on average assets by fiscal 1998.

With nearly $1 billion in assets, Savings Bank of Manchester will christen its relationship with Microsoft by moving its core banking functions to
the Windows NT platform. It will then use Microsoft Internet Information Server (IIS) to bring its product offerings online. Customers can
access financial services using Microsoft Internet Explorer and bank from home using the Microsoft Money personal financial manager.

The bank will replace its mainframe computer with several Windows NT-based servers and link the servers to approximately 350 PCs running
the Windows NT operating system and networking software. To distribute software across this network, the bank will rely on Microsoft
Systems Management Server. It expects to complete its conversion to Windows NT next year. Open Solutions Inc., a Glastonbury,
Conn.-based Microsoft Solution Provider, will oversee the transition.

The move to Microsoft technologies will cut the bank's information-systems overhead significantly, said its president, Richard P. Meduski.

Bank officials said they expect Microsoft technologies to keep them current in an increasingly crowded and competitive financial services
market.

"The ability to acquire technology such as Windows NT means that a small community bank can offer new technology such as PC banking
affordably. It allows us to compete with the big banks or other financial institutions on a very sophisticated basis," Meduski said.

The winners in this competition will be the customers, said Microsoft's Dusche. "As technology continues to become the great equalizer for small
banks, the playing field will continue to become more level. That will lead to increased benefits for customers as institutions compete solely on
the basis of service, and increased efficiencies for banks themselves."

Founded in 1975, Microsoft is the worldwide leader in software for personal computers. The company offers a wide range of products and
services for business and personal use, each designed with the mission of making it easier and more enjoyable for people to take advantage of
the full power of personal computing every day.

NOTE: Microsoft, Windows NT, MS-DOS and Windows are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. in the United
States and/or other countries. SOURCE Microsoft Corp.
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