Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!uwm.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!brutus.cs.uiuc.edu!apple!netcom!ric From: ric@netcom.UUCP (Richard Bretschneider) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Re: News from Silicon Valley Message-ID: <3351@netcom.UUCP> Date: 23 Oct 89 16:21:43 GMT References: <2908@husc6.harvard.edu> Distribution: na Organization: NetCom- The Bay Area's Public Access Unix System {408 997-9175 guest} Lines: 43 siegel@endor.harvard.edu (Rich Siegel) writes: >Earthquake News from Silicon Valley: >damage from the earthquake. The exceptions are Apple and Ashton-Tate; Apple's >DeAnza 3 (hardware R&D) was condemned, Ashton-Tate sustained "major building >damage" (extend unknown) at their Mac development headquarters. I am not an official spokesperson for Ashton-Tate, I just work there. The following is information based on my personal observations and is not to be considered official Ashton-Tate released information. (Don't lawyers have enough to do without making us all too paranoid to talk to each other?) Well, I was in the Ashton-Tate building when it happened, and I would have thought that we were about to roll down the hill. The building did what it was supposed to do, most of the cracks define pieces of drywall that moved rather than broke. Air conditioning pipes broke on the roof, and leaked water in several areas. I work on the second floor, and as a writer am part pack- rat. Three years of manual drafts and technial notes left their places on my shelves and covered the floor (about a foot thick.) The top of one of my windows broke, but my Macs and Laserwriter came through like champs, as did the Supermac hard disks, all of which were turned on. The third floor was even more of a mess, bookshelves down, big file cabinets down, people down. Only one minor injury that I know of and that is another testament to the building. In general, the building lost about 5 to 10 percent of its glass, the air conditioners (big mothers) moved and will have to be fixed, much taping and painting of drywall, acoustical roofing to be replaced in many areas, nerves and composure to reestablish, and this awful stain in my pants to take care of! We were able to reenter the building on Thursday (after the inspections) and our telephone support was the first area to go back into operation. I'm going in to start cleaning up my office this morning. This all follows several days of internal Ashton-Tate programs to help the survivors in Puerto Rico. Karma. -- Richard A. Bretschneider These are my words. My employer's Ric Bret words are often spoken in haste, and RAB rarely resemble my compassionate prose.