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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (16922)7/1/1998 7:26:00 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69762
 
Healthy Rivalry Grows For
Top Virus Hunters

Date: 7/1/98
Author: Lisa Wirthman

The view from Network Associates Inc.
headquarters includes an amusement park ride that
takes thrill seekers 200 feet into the air - and then
drops them straight down.

It's an experience similar to working at the
company, says Gene Hodges, a vice president for
the Santa Clara, Calif.-based maker of security
software. ''We're like a billion-dollar start-up,''
Hodges said. ''It's the fastest-moving company
I've ever worked at.''

Formerly called McAfee Associates Inc., the
company is on an expansion spree in a quest to be
a security powerhouse. It has bought 12
companies in four years - half of them since
October, when it merged with Network General
Corp. and changed its name.

The company's main rival, Symantec Corp., is only
about 10 miles away. But in corporate cultures, the
companies are worlds apart.

Symantec doesn't have an amusement park near
its Cupertino, Calif., offices. But it does have a lot
of noise - the buzz of construction on its new
headquarters across the street. The steel is rising
steadily.

''We don't look for short-term bumps,'' said Chief
Executive Gordon Eubanks. He says he's more
interested in steady growth.

''We have set goals that we think are important,
meaningful (and) obtainable,'' Eubanks said.

Eubanks is a contrast to Network Associates
counterpart Bill Larson. Eubanks is calm and
deliberate when he speaks. Inside Symantec, he
uses the symbol of an arrow to get everyone
pointed in the same direction.

Larson, whose motto is ''Drive fast and take
chances,'' speaks off the cuff. Inside Network
Associates, he has a conference room labeled
''Who's next?''

''It's a giggle with meaning,'' Hodges said.

The two companies are the leading sellers of
anti-virus software, which finds and kills computer
viruses.

In the first quarter, the two sold almost four of
every five units of anti-virus software, says
Reston, Va., market researcher PC Data Inc.
Total U.S. sales of anti-virus software surpassed
$40 million in the first quarter.

But the companies say their paths are diverging.

''We find ourselves strategically at a point where
the guys we used to compete with most
aggressively, like Symantec, are really not the
focus anymore,'' Hodges said.

Network Associates is combining anti-virus
software with the other security software it's
acquired, such as firewalls and encryption
programs. It will incorporate all these into a suite
of products it will sell to businesses. Firewalls
protect corporate networks, while encryption
scrambles data for security reasons.

The move to sell suites to large companies will pit
Network Associates against network management
companies such as Computer Associates
International Inc., which also sells security
software.

Larson says businesses already are a big market
for the company. Retail sales account for less than
5% of revenue, he says. But retail sales are
important for building brand recognition, he says.
He won't abandon that channel to Symantec.

So when Symantec in June said it's licensing IBM
Corp.'s anti- virus technology and patents,
Network Associates responded.

Network Associates a week later said it would
buy Dr. Solomon's Group, the fourth- biggest
maker of virus detection software in the U.S.

''On one hand, (anti-virus) is a smaller piece of the
total Network Associates story,'' said Steve
Frankel, an analyst with Adams, Harkness & Hill
Inc. in Boston. ''On the other hand, Bill Larson is a
tough competitor and he's not going to walk away
from a fight.''

Symantec won't directly compete against Network
Associates' security products such as firewalls and
encryption software, Eubanks says.

''The difference is, we're going to partner with the
firewall vendors, the network management
platforms and broad (encryption software)
infrastructures,'' he said. ''We compete (with
Network Associates) in anti-virus, but more and
more our businesses don't really compete head to
head.''

Network Associates will concentrate more on
firewalls, says Larson. The company is working on
new ''active firewall'' technology that can detect
intrusions into corporate networks and set off
security alerts. (See related story, next page.) The
technology is slated to be included in products next
year.

Symantec, on the other hand, will stick with what it
knows best, says Enrique Salem, vice president of
the security and assistance division. ''We'll look at
how to develop the next generation of anti-virus
products, which are really core to our business.''

Symantec is using research it got from IBM to
create a virus ''immune system'' in the next year,
Salem says.

The company is creating a ''disease control
center'' that connects to corporate networks via
the Internet. Software installed on those networks
will be able to detect viruses it hasn't seen before
and send them back to the control center, Salem
says.

The center would then research the virus and send
back the ''antidote.'' Symantec also will send the
antidote to all its corporate customers as
preventative medicine. ''It's like giving all of our
customers flu shots,'' Salem said.

Symantec extends its products beyond the
anti-virus market with utility software that helps
PCs uninstall programs and recover from crashes.
In this area, it competes most directly with
CyberMedia Inc. and Quarterdeck Corp.

Symantec also is pushing into the corporate arena,
Eubanks says. Sales to large and midsize
businesses account for about half of the
company's revenue, he says.

And analysts say the main value of Symantec's
deal with IBM is the access the company gains to
IBM's large corporate customers.

To broaden its corporate offerings, Symantec in
June bought a product called Ghost from New
Zealand's Binary Research Ltd. for $27.5 million.
The product is a disk cloning utility that helps
companies configure PCs.

Like its deal with IBM, Ghost gives Symantec
entry to corporate accounts, Salem says.

Network Associates, meanwhile, is taking on all
comers in an emerging market that's full of
opportunity, Larson says. ''It's just embryonic,'' he
said.

(C) Copyright 1998 Investors Business Daily, Inc.
Metadata: NETA SYMC CA



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (16922)7/1/1998 7:28:00 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Respond to of 69762
 
Syquest looks To
Win Out In Price Wars

Date: 7/1/98
Author: Michael Lyster

Two years ago, price wars among computer data
storage makers nearly ravaged SyQuest
Technology Inc. But now the Fremont,
Calif.-based company wants to turn price slashing
of a different kind into an advantage. A new round
of cuts by personal computer makers to the
sub-$1,000 level could be SyQuest's best chance
for a comeback.

''To achieve that sub-$1,000 price, PC makers
have cut corners,'' said Edwin Harper, SyQuest's
president and chief executive. ''A huge opportunity
is there for us.''

PC makers have scaled back on hard disk drive
size, thus bringing down prices, Harper says. He
hopes that will lead low-cost PC buyers to
SyQuest's add-on drives and storage cartridges to
save large Internet files, games and digital photos.

SyQuest's supplemental drives offer 1 gigabyte to
4.7 gigabytes of additional space on removable
cartridges. That compares with disk drives of 1.2
gigabytes to 2.1 gigabytes on today's cheapest
PCs.

''As a game taking up 350 megabytes is put on
there, it won't take long for people to understand
that in today's environment that is very small,''
Harper said.

Analysts say the sub-$1,000 PC trend holds
opportunity for SyQuest, as well as for archrival
Iomega Corp. of Roy, Utah.

International Data Corp. sees shipments of
so-called removable hard drives growing an
average 13% annually to 4.4 million units in '02, up
from 1.4 million last year. In that same period,
sub-$1,000 PCs are expected to go from 12% of
computer shipments to 25%, Framingham,
Mass.-based IDC says.

''History has shown us you can never have too
much hard drive space,'' said IDC analyst
Wolfgang Schlichting.

SyQuest's challenge is to seize the moment,
analysts say. Competition from Iomega and
France's Nomai SA sent the company into a
tailspin in '96. SyQuest is yet to fully recover but is
showing signs of a turnaround.

Meanwhile, industry leader Iomega is wrestling
with troubles of its own. The company outlined a
restructuring plan in June to cut costs and return to
profitability. And on Monday, Iomega announced
plans to buy a majority stake in Nomai.

''Iomega has lost a certain amount of focus,''
Harper said. ''We view an opportunity there.''

SyQuest's strategy is to move beyond its mainstay
market of graphic artists, print shops and other
specialty users. In April, the company added
Office Depot Inc., Circuit City Stores Inc. and
Staples Inc. as retailers of its products.

Analysts say SyQuest's SparQ external drive and
1-gigabyte cartridges are holding their own against
Iomega's competing Jaz product.

One reason is price. At $200, the SparQ drive is
$100 less than the Jaz. And SparQ cartridges go
for $33 apiece, compared with $75 for a
1-gigabyte Jaz cartridge.

But to keep that edge and make a profit, SyQuest
has to boost sales, analysts say.

''The SparQ is at a price where it has to ship in
significant volume,'' IDC's Schlichting said. ''It has
to go beyond the traditional niches.''

Since releasing SparQ last fall, SyQuest has
shipped more than 200,000 of the drives. The
company says it plans to more than double
production to 500,000 by year's end.

SyQuest, which sells 80% of its wares through
retailers, is talking with computer makers about
offering SparQ drives on their machines. On June
9, SyQuest signed a pact with PC market leader
Compaq Computer Corp. to offer SparQ drives as
an option on its computers.

''That Compaq feels these are the kinds of
products that their consumers are going to be
demanding gives us a stamp of credibility,'' Harper
said.

SparQ sales helped boost SyQuest's revenue by
180% to $47 million in the second quarter ended
March 31. The company lost $31.7 million, vs.
$34.4 million a year ago. The numbers look better
on a per-share basis, going from $1.31 in red ink a
year ago to a loss of 43 cents. As SyQuest has
raised money to stay afloat, it has nearly tripled its
number of shares outstanding.

SyQuest still is a shadow of its former self,
however. Back in '95, the company dominated its
market. Today, IDC says SyQuest has a 27%
market share, compared with 55% for Iomega,
which has made inroads selling to a wider range of
users.

''Iomega really changed the model in bringing this
to the consumer level,'' said Dennis Casey, analyst
for Strategic Research Corp. in Santa Barbara,
Calif. ''SyQuest just missed that consumer shift.''

Chairman Edward Marinaro, who along with
Harper took over running SyQuest in '96, says
Iomega only was a part of the company's undoing.
The flash point was a push into SyQuest's market
by Nomai with a cheaper version of its cartridge.
That led to a devastating price war and a legal
battle that was settled in October.

Marinaro says the company has learned from its
battles.

''You can't depend on razzle- dazzle to sell
products,'' he said. ''You have to be able to meet
the cost objectives that the market will allow. It's
not the market's responsibility to help us make a
profit. It's our responsibility to make a profit.''

(C) Copyright 1998 Investors Business Daily, Inc.




To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (16922)7/1/1998 7:30:00 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69762
 
Next Step In Network
Security: Don't Get Mad -
Get Even

Date: 7/1/98
Author: Tony Kontzer

The founders of a little-known New Mexico
company are hoping to turn the world of network
security upside down.

Larry and Lisa Wood, the couple behind
FutureVision Group Inc., have developed a data
protection system that Signal magazine called ''the
first true digital life form.''

Existing network security software is programmed
to look for certain known things, such as a
computer virus. But FutureVision's product acts
something like a digital antibody.

The software develops a ''model'' or ''blueprint'' of
the system it's protecting. Then, anything abnormal
is detected. This can be anything from an
accidentally transmitted virus to electronic
espionage.

Little-known FutureVision has gained admirers.
''This is to the technology age what the hydrogen
bomb was to the nuclear age,'' said Tom Price,
director of corporate activities for the Armed
Forces Communication Electronics Association.

''I don't exaggerate,'' said Price. ''We have here a
system - the first of its kind - that, if somebody
tries to enter your system they'll be sorry they ever
did.''

The software ''self-organizes, self-programs and
self-heals,'' said Lisa Wood, FutureVision's chief
executive.

One other thing. The software, called Lightning
Server, is aggressive. Once it detects unauthorized
activity on the network, it launches a
counterattack. That is, it might not only kill a virus,
but also kill it from the sender's system. Should
another computer system try to infiltrate, that
system could be ruined by Lightning Server.

''You literally have something that acts like an
immune system,'' said Larry Wood, the company's
chief scientist. ''Anything else out there that claims
to do network security can't even compete.''

The Woods hope to start selling the product before
year-end. Consumers will be able to download it
from the company's Web site, at
fvg.com, or have it installed by
FutureVision.

FutureVision might find it has rivals, says Chris
Christiansen, an analyst with International Data
Corp. in Framingham, Mass. He mentions such
companies as Symantec Corp. and Network
Associates Inc., which are working on similar
products. (See story, previous page.)

And Symantec and Network Associates, the two
leading sellers of anti- virus software, have many
more resources than the start-up. But analysts
don't discount the product. ''There's interest in
getting more intelligent security products,'' said
Ted Julian, an analyst with Forrester Research
Inc. in Cambridge, Mass.

The Woods haven't set a price. Larry Wood says
the cost will be related to the size of the network
it's protecting.

Price, whose association publishes Signal, so liked
the product that he begged the couple to
demonstrate Lightning Server and its military
version, Lightning War Server, at TechNet. That's
the trade show AFCEA put on June 9-11 in
Washington.

FutureVision also has attracted the attention of
Dun & Bradstreet - and the FBI. D&B came
across the company while putting together its
annual small-business survey early this year.

''We feel this is a company worth watching,'' said
D&B spokesman Michael Azzi. ''The character of
the principals is solid. They have an impressive
background.''

The FBI learned of the technology and contacted
Larry Wood during Lightning Server's
development. The bureau was interested in finding
out who might be capable of duplicating the
technology.

Wood helped the FBI set up a Web site that,
based on the questions it asked, would give an idea
of some people who were at least somewhat
familiar with the technology.

''Passing'' the test were some experts from former
communist nations, several scientists at large
corporations and a chief of information security for
a federal department that Wood wouldn't disclose.

Larry Wood's roots are in an esoteric area of
physics known as quantum measurement theory.
That science makes possible the construction of
automated systems with qualities normally
associated with living things.

Wood says he knows of only one such system
now used on a large scale. It's called the Joint
Tactical Information Distribution System, used by
the military to coordinate air, land and sea attacks.
He says it was used in the Gulf War.

Toward the end of a long stint with GTE
Government Systems, Larry Wood discovered a
formula known as the Unified General Equation of
Motion. It's the basis for all self-organization in
nature, he says. Wood was convinced the formula
could become the foundation of a successful
network security system.

Lisa Wood brings to the effort 12 years in
advertising and marketing.

In '95, the Woods moved from the East Coast to
Santa Fe, N.M., to start the company. Larry had
been a visiting scientist at the Santa Fe Institute,
and thought New Mexico would be a good place
to start a company.

Since then, the Woods have invested about $1
million in the business. The couple soon will seek
about $3.5 million in private investments. They
hope to add about 60 employees to the company's
10-person staff within the next 18 months.

Lisa Wood says the company will be profitable by
'01.

AFCEA's Price is one person who might agree.

''It has applications throughout defense, it has
applications in justice and it has applications in
electronic commerce,'' he said. ''This is something
that comes along once every other decade.''

(C) Copyright 1998 Investors Business Daily, Inc.
Metadata: SYMC NETA I/3270 I/3220 E/IBD E/SN1
E/TECH



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (16922)7/1/1998 9:01:00 AM
From: j g cordes  Respond to of 69762
 
Harry, if the programable chip area has been stronger than most then would the embedded software companies be worth a shot?