Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!pasteur!franny.Berkeley.EDU!c8s-an From: c8s-an@franny.Berkeley.EDU (Alex Lau) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Mac-related earthquake news Message-ID: <18600@pasteur.Berkeley.EDU> Date: 20 Oct 89 18:57:44 GMT Sender: news@pasteur.Berkeley.EDU Reply-To: c8s-an@franny.Berkeley.EDU.UUCP (Alex Lau) Organization: University of California, Berkeley Lines: 58 Some Macintosh-related earthquake news (as collected here in Berkeley): - Apple gave all their employees the day off the day after the earthquake. Most other Silicon Valley companies gave theis gmployees the day off. The only Apple office open on Wednesday in the Bay Area was the Pleasanton office. U.C. Berkeley still had school. :( - Apple's mai~ problem is the loss of machines, especially at DeAnza 3. Nobody was hurt as a direct result of the quake, but the word here is that dozens if not hundreds of Macintoshes were damaged or destroyed at Apple Corporate. (sorry for the line noise) Apple San Francisco's building was perhaps severely damaged, and they may have to condemn it. They may already have condemned DeAnza 3. For those who don't know, DeAnza 3 is where System Software is developed. Therefore, the rumors that System 7.0 might be seriously delayed. - Two staffers of MacUser magazine were killed in San Francisco just after leaving the MacroMind offices. More details later. This was the wall collapse at Sixth and Townsend that crushed two-three cars and killed six-seven people. - No one here has heard from Paracomp, who has their offices in the Marina district of San Francisco. The`Marina district was the hardest hit in the City, with a major fire and power outage. Paracomp is the maker of products like Swivel 3D. - Both the S.F. Chronicle and Examiner had power outages on Wednesday and Thursday, so instead of their normal production methods they used MS-DOS laptop computers to enter the stories and brought them over to a building that had a generator in it to transfer it all over to a bank of Macintosh computers for layout and preliminary pasteup. The articles were printed out on LaserWriters and physically pasted up before being sent to the printing presses, which by then had been restored to partial power. Some of the bylines in the Examiner were in Chicago font. Strangely enough, the Chronicle mentioned Macintoshes specifically on Wednesday but not Thursday, while the Examiner mentioned Macs Thursday but not Wednesday. Do you think more newspapers will be buying Portables to keep in the closet in case of emergency? - Some Apple employees are helping with the effort to relocate the homeless in both San Francisco and Oakland, and they are coordinating with the Red Cross and BMUG. BMUG has donated as many of the office Macs as possible to the Oakland Red Cross for temporary usage. They still need help, so if you live in the area please contact BMUG at (415) 549-2684 for more details. - BMUG came out of it fine, but two events were postponed: a hardware seminar by me and Steve Costa (I was in San Francisco on my way to the World Series, so I didn't get back) and Mactoberfest (because of Apple's dearth of machines). Neither has been rescheduled, but both will probably be in November. If y'all want, I'll try to update these and other Mac-related earthquake stories throughout the coming days. If not, let me know as well. --- Alex "a little shaken up" Lau UUCP: {att,backbones}!ucbvax!franny!c8s-an INTERNET: c8s-an%franny.berkeley.edu@ucbvax.berkeley.edu FIDONET: Alex.Lau@bmug.fidonet.org (1:165/444)