home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-06-19 | 31.1 KB | 638 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- TidBITS#111/16-Mar-92
- =====================
-
- Aladdin Systems has the hot new program of the week with the
- free StuffIt Expander, but Apple may have stolen everyone's
- thunder by announcing significant enhancements to the Mac
- operating system. We try to explain why you will care, and we
- also have some updated information on Macworld Expos around the
- world, followed by a review of ProVUE's blindingly fast
- database, Panorama II. Read on, Macduff!
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For more information send email to info@tidbits.halcyon.com or
- ace@tidbits.halcyon.com -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/16-Mar-92
- StuffIt Expander
- Microkernel Mac
- Macworld Modifications
- Panorama II Review
- Reviews/16-Mar-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-111.etx; 31K]
-
-
- MailBITS/16-Mar-92
- ------------------
- Kirke B. Lawton writes, "I just wanted to confirm that Casper
- [Apple's voice recognition technology] is based on a large
- database of voices. Two years ago I was "abducted" by a market
- researcher in a mall to participate in a special project. I was
- asked various questions about my geographic background, and then
- they had me read oodles of computer "commands" (i.e. "move cursor
- blue down") into a microphone. I was told this was for a
- Macintosh-related product.
-
- At least I know Casper will recognize my voice!"
-
- Information from:
- Kirke B. Lawton -- LAWK@UORVM.BITNET
-
-
- VIM explanation
- Roger D. Parish writes, "I heard a good explanation for the "VIM"
- acronym at the SHARE IBM mainframe user's group conference in
- Anaheim last week:"
-
- Vendors Ignoring Microsoft :-)
-
- Information from:
- Roger D. Parish -- U9505RP@DOEMA.BITNET
-
-
- StuffIt Expander
- ----------------
- A while back we ran an article about Downline, a utility that does
- a wonderful job at decoding Binhex files and StuffIt 1.5.1
- archives. Of course, it would be nice if Downline understood
- Compact Pro and StuffIt Deluxe as well, since many people use
- those formats. I expect that Morpheus Systems is working on adding
- these features to Downline, but in the meantime, Aladdin has
- released a free program called StuffIt Expander, which should be
- especially convenient for System 7 users.
-
- StuffIt Expander weighs in at a mere 57K and should be available
- on the major online services now. It works fine with System 6.0.4
- or later, but System 7 users can take advantage of the Finder's
- drag & drop feature by simply dropping archives on StuffIt
- Expander to have them automatically expanded. Aladdin says that
- StuffIt Expander is compatible with the 68040, 32-bit addressing,
- and virtual memory. Not only that, but it supports AppleEvents (I
- have to play with it and Frontier a bit) and has intelligent
- background processing. It works well in the background as far as I
- can tell. It even works when Nisus is the foreground application,
- and Nisus doesn't give much CPU time to background applications.
-
- StuffIt Expander does not know about Binhex files, but it can
- expand archives from Compact Pro, StuffIt 1.5.1, StuffIt Deluxe
- 2.0, StuffIt Deluxe 3.0 (not yet released), along with AppleLink
- packages. It cannot expand DiskDoubler combined files or self-
- extracting archives of any type, but there's no reason it should.
- Anyone who distributes a file compressed with DiskDoubler should
- make it a self-extracting archive, and the only reason to use an
- expansion program on a self-extracting archive is if the
- extracting code is somehow damaged but the archive itself is fine,
- an uncommon occurrence.
-
- Using StuffIt Expander is simplicity itself. Under System 7, drop
- an archive on the icon and StuffIt Expander automatically expands
- the archive. If the archive contains multiple files, the files
- will be placed in a folder. The resulting file or folder is always
- saved in the same folder as the original archive. If you use
- System 6, run StuffIt Expander and select Expand... from the File
- menu. You can't miss it; the only other choice is Quit.
-
- Some of you may wonder about the fate of UnStuffIt Deluxe. Aladdin
- is continuing to enhance it and will still freely distribute it.
- UnStuffIt Deluxe has a larger file size and fancier features than
- StuffIt Expander. The next version will support files compressed
- with StuffIt SpaceSaver, rejoin segmented files, decode Binhex
- files, and come with Aladdin's usually excellent help system. I
- believe that UnStuffIt Deluxe will be rather large in comparison
- to StuffIt Expander, so people who just want to expand most of the
- popular compression formats and nothing else can simply use
- StuffIt Expander and not worry about dealing with other programs.
-
- Aladdin Systems -- 408/761-6200 -- aladdin@well.sf.ca.us
- ALADDIN on GEnie, AOL, Connect, and AppleLink
-
- Information from:
- Aladdin propaganda
- StuffIt Expander documentation
-
-
- Microkernel Mac
- ---------------
- When NeXT or Amiga owners feel the need to disparage the Mac in
- conversation, they often mention the fact that Mac doesn't have
- "true" multitasking, tacking a little verbal sneer on the tail end
- of "true." That generally means that the Mac uses what's called
- "cooperative multitasking" instead of "pre-emptive multitasking."
-
- I'm telling you this because Apple announced last week that it
- will be remodeling the Macintosh operating system to add pre-
- emptive multitasking and other operating system goodies including
- multi-threading, memory protection, support for dynamic link
- libraries, and some new I/O (input/output) features that will help
- peripherals to keep up with the CPU. Why is this good news and not
- merely propeller-head tech-speak? Well, let me explain what each
- of those goodies will do for you and then you'll see. For those of
- you fluent in said tech-speak, I'm aware that I'm over-
- simplifying. :-)
-
-
- More multitasking
- Sooner or later, you'll need to figure out the difference between
- cooperative and pre-emptive multitasking (it's a great way to
- sound technical :-)). Please keep in mind that different people
- define this stuff differently. This is a painless-as-possible
- mainstream explanation.
-
- In a cooperative system, the foreground application cooperates by
- deciding how much CPU time (the amount of time the microprocessor
- spends executing useful commands) it wishes to give up to
- background applications, whereas in a pre-emptive situation, the
- operating system mediates among the priorities of active
- applications. For example, on the Mac, Nisus dominates the CPU and
- doesn't give other applications much CPU time. Nisus gets to make
- that decision and is perfectly within its cooperative multitasking
- rights. In a pre-emptive system, every running application has a
- priority level, and the operating system parcels out CPU time
- based on those priority levels and the number of applications
- running.
-
- A difficulty with pre-emptive multitasking is that in an ideal
- single-user interactive system, the foreground application is
- completely responsive. (If you click the Ignore button in Word 5's
- spell checker, you do not want the CPU giving priority to other
- programs since it's slow enough already!) In a pre-emptive system
- you can often manually set an application's priority level, but
- this can be a pain.
-
- That's the advantage of cooperative multitasking - the foreground
- application can appropriate an ample amount of CPU time to being
- responsive. Windowing systems on fast Unix machines are often less
- responsive because the windowing system is merely another
- application that gets its share of CPU time, no matter how much
- you may use it. On the other hand, in a cooperative multitasking
- system, the computer may not work as efficiently because the CPU
- spends lots of cycles just spinning its wheels waiting for you to
- do something. For example, I'm composing this article in Nisus,
- and Navigator was recently downloading in the background. Nisus
- took so much CPU time that I had to send Nisus to the background
- so that Navigator could finish the download. If Nisus had been
- more willing to share CPU time, Navigator could have finished up
- during some of the extra CPU cycles. If I were using a Quadra
- instead of our SE/30, the CPU would be running even faster and
- Nisus would be wasting even more of the CPU's time. Remember, a
- CPU cycles many times per second, so if priorities are set right,
- pre-emptive multitasking can work out quite well.
-
- In an ideal world, Apple might use a mixed scheduling technique
- that would give a lot of CPU time to the foreground application
- but would allow the operating system to parcel out CPU time to
- each of the background applications according to their priorities.
- That would provide fast foreground response while still allowing
- multiple background programs to do useful work.
-
-
- Multi-threading
- Multi-threading allows a single application to do multiple things
- at the same time. Using multi-threading, a spreadsheet could
- simultaneously print a document, recalculate formulas, and accept
- data entry. Each task within the application, printing,
- calculating, accepting data, acts like a little program in a
- cooperative multitasking system, allowing you to keep working
- while other parts of the program do other tasks. Both multi-
- threading and pre-emptive multitasking will be even more
- necessary when Apple releases voice and handwriting recognition
- products because the Mac will have to be continually running the
- recognition code no matter what else is happening.
-
-
- Kevlar memory
- Memory protection is an extremely useful feature that allows one
- program to bomb out of sight without disturbing its neighbors in
- memory, although it's still difficult to completely protect the
- system heap, since most applications use information in it. That
- mean that when you hit a nasty bug, such as the one that causes
- Word 5.0 to crash when using the grammar checker on 68000 Macs,
- only Word will stop working and all the other programs will
- continue working properly. As it is now, your machine restarts on
- that bug, which is a big no-no.
-
-
- Dynamic link libraries
- When a programmer compiles a program, the compiler will link in
- various standard libraries to perform certain standard functions,
- like displaying text on screen. Those libraries are static but
- fast because they live in the program. Dynamic link libraries are
- a set of routines that applications can use at runtime rather than
- include those routines internally. Dynamic link libraries are
- slower than static link libraries. Like extensions, you could just
- drop some dynamic link libraries into a special folder and various
- applications could then use that code, allowing those applications
- to be smaller, simpler to write, and more similar to each other,
- thus increasing ease of overall use. If implemented correctly,
- dynamic link libraries also cut down on memory consumption, since
- they only need to exist in RAM once, no matter how many
- applications use them. Dynamic link libraries would be especially
- useful for companies like Claris and Microsoft, which have
- multiple applications with similar interfaces and shared features.
- I believe that dynamic link libraries are already available in
- Windows, so in this respect Apple is playing catch-up (cleaner
- than playing with ketchup).
-
-
- DMA that SCSI!
- The two new I/O enhancements are direct memory access (DMA) and
- asynchronous SCSI. DMA has been around for a long time and many
- computers support it, including the Atari ST line. In fact, the
- Mac IIfx sports DMA in hardware, although it's somewhat useless
- since the current MacOS doesn't support it. DMA allows devices
- other than the CPU to read and write memory, thus allowing the CPU
- to spend more time on other tasks. It's not quite ideal because
- the CPU does have to check in occasionally to make sure that the
- right stuff is in memory, but it can significantly boost
- performance. DMA requires extra hardware as well as operating
- system support, so most people will need a new Mac to take
- advantage of it. Asynchronous SCSI requires DMA. When supported
- though, asynchronous SCSI allows the CPU to delegate a SCSI
- command to the SCSI controller and then stop paying attention to
- it and go perform other tasks, again increasing performance. For
- example, the CPU might tell the SCSI controller to load a sector
- from a hard disk into RAM. The controller can start this job while
- the CPU does something else.
-
-
- When will rumor become reality?
- We've heard that these features will be available at about the
- same time as the PowerPC machines being co-developed with IBM. In
- other words, this is all fantasy because by the time the PowerPC
- machines come out in late 1993, Apple could completely change its
- mind about all this stuff. None of these ideas are new and many
- have been around for years in the Unix and mainframe worlds. So
- the moral of the story is that Apple, as always, is looking for
- ways to make the Mac into a better machine. In this case, Apple is
- looking back at standard operating system concepts that it didn't
- include the first time around. It's also useful to keep in mind
- that this means that Apple is not putting all its eggs under
- Taligent's Pink chicken. That's important because in many ways
- Apple is a software company and cannot afford to rely on another
- company for such key software. Moral or no, I'm still drooling
- over this stuff!
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Doug Davenport of SNAP Technologies
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 09-Mar-92, Vol. 6, #10, pg. 1
-
-
- Macworld Modifications
- ----------------------
- Those of you who try to make it to every MACWORLD Expo possible
- have probably noticed that it's becoming harder and harder as
- World Expo increases the number of expos around the world. The
- increase in number of shows has not been without its growing pains
- though. There have been several recent changes worth noting,
- though unfortunately the cornerstone Boston and San Francisco
- expos have not been rescheduled to fall and spring respectively
- (when the weather in each city is nicer).
-
-
- MACWORLD Canada
- North American readers (at least those in the Northeast) will be
- pleased to read that MACWORLD Canada will be held for the third
- straight year in Toronto, and World Expo has rescheduled the show
- back to the autumn season, September 15th through 17th, to be
- precise. Apparently the exhibitors liked the fall timing better
- and an opening at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre made the
- switch possible. Last year's show in Toronto drew over 12,000
- people, so although it sounds like enough people to draw the
- interesting vendors, it's not quite the 50,000 person crush found
- in Boston and San Francisco.
-
-
- MACWORLD Paris
- Jean-Philippe Nicaise, our French correspondent, tells us that
- MACWORLD Paris, which was planned for March 31st through April
- 2nd, was cancelled recently. Apparently the show simply wasn't
- popular enough to make it feasible. French enthusiasts will have
- to wait until September, when Apple France puts on the Apple Expo,
- the only Macintosh-specific expo in France. Luckily there are also
- several other expos in Europe for multi-lingual Macintosh
- aficionados, including Amsterdam, Berlin, Barcelona, Birmingham,
- Helsinki, Milan, Oslo, Stockholm, and the European Summit in
- Geneva.
-
-
- MACWORLD New York
- World Expo bought the rights to the Mac Business show that used to
- be held in New York in the spring and had scheduled a MACWORLD New
- York to take that time slot. Apparently there wasn't enough
- interest on the part of the vendors because that show was
- cancelled as well. There was also a sense that it was simply one
- show too many, that vendors didn't have much interest in another
- US show, and small companies found it difficult to keep a show
- team on the road. Another problem may be the increasing power of
- the niche applications on the Mac. World Expo also bought the
- rights to a Mac Business show in Los Angeles in late winter, but
- replaced it with Multimedia '92 instead of trying to put on yet
- another general show that would compete with San Francisco.
-
-
- MACWORLD United Kingdom
- Unlike New York and Paris, the MACWORLD United Kingdom expo in
- Birmingham is still on, although it has been merged with the Which
- Computer? Show and will now be held in the National Exhibition
- Centre in Birmingham, England from April 7th to 10th (the previous
- dates were right about now in March). Given the increasing
- tendency to make the shows more specific, as World Expo did with
- Multimedia '92, it's a bit surprising that they merged MACWORLD
- United Kingdom with a general computer show, although one has to
- assume that they felt they would get better exposure via the
- merger.
-
- Wherever you may be located, you can get more information on
- attending one of the numerous MACWORLD Expos around the world by
- sending a note of inquiry to:
-
- MACWORLD Expo
- c/o World Expo Corp.
- P.O. Box 9107
- Framingham, MA 01701 USA
- 508/875-1573 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Jean-Philippe Nicaise -- nicky@etca.fr
- World Expo propaganda
-
-
- Panorama II Review
- ------------------
- I think it's fair to say that everyone has need of some sort of
- database software, even if only for keeping track of names and
- addresses. I'll admit that I'm no database guru, although I have
- worked with Double Helix a bunch, rescued some data from an old
- version of R:Base, and fiddled with various other programs.
-
- For a long time I used HyperCard to do all my database work, but I
- was always frustrated by the way my stacks looked and worked, not
- to mention the fact that HyperCard is not exactly speedy. I'm sure
- much of that was my fault, and I know of ways that I could have
- done things better. But I didn't have to because of Panorama II
- from ProVUE Development.
-
-
- Panorama II Introduction
- Panorama II is a flat-file database, but it sports a rather
- powerful programming language called PanTalk that includes lookup
- statements to achieve much of the relational features of the
- high-end databases. I'm no expert with FileMaker Pro, but I
- believe that the two are fairly comparable in terms of abilities,
- although I think that PanTalk is more full-featured than FileMaker
- Pro's scripting language. Actually, since you can create multiple
- forms in Panorama II that correspond to FileMaker Pro's layouts
- and since both databases can run with multiple users over a
- network, the main difference I've found is that Panorama II is
- blindingly fast in comparison to FileMaker Pro. To be fair, I've
- heard people say that FileMaker Pro speeds up significantly if you
- put it in a RAM disk, but that's a kludge and may not be possible
- on a machine with only a few megabytes of RAM.
-
- Panorama II gets its speed from running directly in RAM, and even
- there it is efficient. The program is 600K on disk and prefers
- 976K of RAM, although it can run with less. ProVUE tells me that
- the default memory setting is enough RAM to open a 600K database.
- The other advantage Panorama II reaps from running in RAM is that
- it doesn't require the indexing structure that most databases use
- for fast searching. This shrinks Panorama II files so that they
- are only a third to a quarter the size of an equivalent file in
- another database.
-
- Of course, the price ProVUE had to pay the RAM devil is that
- databases cannot grow beyond the limits of memory, but I think
- that's becoming less of an issue these days with cheap RAM and
- virtual memory. I'm not going to do benchmarks, but suffice it to
- say that with my SE/30 I have yet to notice any delay in finding a
- single record in my 1000-record address database, which has quite
- a few fields. Access is simply instantaneous. Sorting the database
- on a field takes a little longer, but only a few seconds at most.
- Every action that I've performed with Panorama II from opening a
- database to saving and quitting has been similarly fast with sole
- exception of exporting text, which is a bit slower. Obviously
- ProVUE doesn't want you exporting out of Panorama II all that
- often. :-)
-
-
- Forms
- Panorama II is based on the concept of the form as a window into a
- certain set of data, much as FileMaker Pro uses layouts. You can
- create multiple layouts and customize them with relatively
- sophisticated graphical layout tools, better than are in FileMaker
- Pro but not the level of Canvas, for instance. (Picky, aren't I?)
- ProVUE has obviously put a lot of time and effort into their
- layout tools, and while they are very good on the whole, I'd kill
- for movable guides like PageMaker has. Snapping grids and a cursor
- with tracer lines to the rulers just don't quite match up. I
- wonder if Aldus has a patent on those guides?
-
- It always takes some effort to design a nice screen layout, but
- Panorama II helps you out with its internal scrapbook, called the
- Flash Art Scrapbook. Once an image is in there, using it only
- generates a pointer rather than an image, saving disk space. The
- scrapbook can even hold imported EPS graphics. For those of you
- who prefer to click buttons and choose things from pop-up menus,
- Panorama II does all those things (including checkboxes and radio
- buttons) and the buttons especially are trivial to set up. For
- those of you with newer Macs or MacRecorders, Panorama II even has
- Flash Audio, which lets you include sound in your database.
-
-
- Data & Design
- Things you won't find in FileMaker Pro include the Data Sheet and
- the Design Sheet, both of which are holdovers from previous
- versions of Panorama and even go back to OverVUE. The Data Sheet
- is a spreadsheet-like view of your database with the fields in
- columns and the records in rows. It's fast to move around in,
- faster than a list view you could create in a form, and has the
- added advantage of working much like a spreadsheet, which can be
- powerful and confusing. The power becomes apparent when you want
- to group the records by a certain field or total a row of numbers.
- Then you just click in that field and select the appropriate
- command from a menu. New users may find this confusing though,
- because some actions take place in the Data Sheet, like sums and
- averages, that cannot be done in PanTalk in a form. When you
- combine this with the lack of something like Double Helix's inert
- fields, which merely display data and don't save anything, it can
- be hard to get Panorama II to calculate and display statistics in
- a single result form. I get the impression I can do it, but I'm
- just not sure how at the moment. Panorama II and PanTalk combine
- to create a rich environment and I'm not surprised that it takes a
- while to fully understand it.
-
- The Design Sheet also looks like a spreadsheet, but in this case,
- each row holds a field definition with each option for that field
- in a column. I see why ProVUE stuck with their spreadsheet
- metaphor here, but frankly, I think a custom interface to
- modifying and creating fields would be easier to use, and in fact,
- there is a Field Properties Dialog box (though it doesn't have
- options for three of the least used field options). There are 17
- options for each field (name, data type, etc.). A few of the
- options are especially useful - output pattern for number and date
- display, input pattern for social security numbers and the like,
- ranges for defining sets of allowable data, choices for defining
- specific acceptable values, link for setting links to other
- databases, Clairvoyance for reading your mind, dups to prevent or
- allow duplication, default values, and equations that will
- activate when the field changes.
-
-
- Clairvoyance
- The feature that sets Panorama II apart from all other databases
- that I've used is Clairvoyance. Simply put, Clairvoyance quickly
- scans the data you've previously entered (in another database
- even, if you like) as you're typing and tries to finish off the
- entry for you. It waits until it has a good chance of getting the
- entry right, but you can always just keep typing. It's a little
- disconcerting at first, much like having a small child destroy you
- at a video game, but after a while you can't remember how you did
- data entry without it (unlike a small child). The added advantage
- is that because it always enters an existing value, there is far
- less chance for typos and errors to creep in. It's almost worth
- buying Panorama II for Clairvoyance alone.
-
-
- Macros, Formulas, and Crosstabs
- As I said, much potential programming can be done directly in the
- Data Sheet rather than in a macro. Once you've figured out what
- sort of thing is best done where, you can start creating formulas
- and macros. Formulas are relatively simple statements using built
- in functions to modify data in some way. For instance, I have a
- database to keep track of my running, and although it's not
- entirely trivial to calculate pace per mile, a formula does that
- fine. A formula also strips out the area code from local phone
- numbers before dialing, which is in turn controlled by a simple
- macro. Macros can do more sophisticated stuff like looking up
- values from other databases, and power users can even create menus
- in ResEdit and access them through macros, thus creating turnkey
- systems. The macro syntax is relatively easy to use, but like most
- other languages is extremely picky about the details of field
- types and punctuation. For those that don't want to write simple
- macros, Panorama provides a Macro Recorder for registering mouse
- clicks and menu commands. It's hard to say much more about macros
- except that you can probably get them to do what you want with a
- little work.
-
- One of the most powerful features in Panorama II is what ProVUE
- calls crosstabs. In reality, there's nothing new about crosstabs;
- they are merely rows and columns of data like you would see in a
- spreadsheet. What's neat about crosstabs though, is that they
- aren't in a spreadsheet, so you can use the database features in
- Panorama II to enter, sort, categorize, and select the data. That
- sort of thing is difficult to do in a spreadsheet, but relatively
- easy in a database.
-
-
- Problems
- So it's not perfect. I have two main gripes with Panorama II.
- First, the interface is strange, and although sometimes ProVUE has
- hit upon a great way of doing something, other times it just falls
- flat. Second, although the manual does contain all the information
- you will need and is quite well-written, it's organized in an odd
- way that makes looking for the specifics of anything rather
- tedious. The manual problems may be my personal opinion though,
- because as much as I appreciate the descriptions of _how_ to do
- something, I often have trouble flipping to the right section. It
- looks reasonable in the Table of Contents, but I often have to
- poke around in the index to find what I want. There is also a
- Picture Index that provides page references to graphical elements
- and menu commands in the interface. I haven't been using it but
- should give it a try.
-
- The interface is a tougher matter. As I said, parts of it are
- great. Whenever you click on a tool in the toolbar to the left of
- any window, not only does the icon light up, but a two word
- description pops to the right, making it easy to figure out what
- each icon does. It's not obtrusive and it works. What doesn't work
- is the input box. Whenever you click in a field, you select it,
- and copy and paste work fine. The confusion starts when you
- double-click on a field, or select it and start to type. A little
- box springs up around the field for you to enter and edit data.
- The advantage of this is that you can increase the size of the
- input box as much as you want, which is handy for large amounts of
- data that won't display fully. The problem appears when you want
- to go on to the next field. Hitting the tab key will close the
- input box as you would expect and move you to the next field.
- However, clicking in the next field or in a button will only close
- the input box, so you have to click again to select the next field
- or button. It sounds minor, but I find it can be a big pain when
- doing data entry and unfortunately encourages mouse-less design
- since the tab key works so much better. In this respect FileMaker
- is much more cleanly implemented, though perhaps not so flexible.
- I prefer clean in data entry, and it's especially distressing
- since Panorama II does so much to speed and ease data entry.
-
- Panorama II has a few other minor interface quirks, like trying to
- get a box around a field and not have that box overwritten when
- the input box pops up. Panorama II supports multiple monitors, but
- not automatically. You open forms and macros in new windows by
- command-selecting an item from a pop-down menu in each window's
- title bar, at which point you can draw out on a representative
- desktop where you want the window to go. I'd much rather have it
- know how to zoom to the current monitor and pick a default size. I
- suspect that some of these quirks are left over from previous
- versions, and I hope ProVUE is evaluating the utility and design
- of them.
-
-
- Panorama II Conclusions
- I'm happy with Panorama II. I primarily use it to keep track of my
- addresses and phone numbers because I've never seen an
- address/phone DA that I liked entirely. It took a bit more work to
- set up in Panorama II, but now I have a database that can dial
- phones and print smart envelopes with EPS graphics on them, and a
- single click will copy an entire address for use in a letter. The
- program is fast and responsive and it took me less time to figure
- out than FileMaker Pro. I've been pleased with the limited contact
- I've had with ProVUE too, since they independently sent out a free
- upgrade which added a few features and supposedly fixed a few
- bugs, although I've never had the program crash on me. When it
- comes right down to it, I have very little to complain about with
- Panorama II, and I fear only that I've been unable to completely
- do it justice in this limited space since I haven't even touched
- on things like its graphing or outline capabilities. Highly
- recommended.
-
- ProVUE Development
- 15180 Transistor Lane
- Huntington Beach, CA 92649
- 800/966-7878
- 800/541-5137 (fax)
- ProVUE on America Online
-
-
- Reviews/16-Mar-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Fileserver Comparison -- pg. 29
- AppleShare 3.0
- DataClub 2.0
- Atlas Pro -- pg. 29
- AutoDoubler -- pg. 30
- PowerView -- pg. 36
- Shredder -- pg. 36
- Nexus fx -- pg. 37
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 09-Mar-92, Vol. 6, #10
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is wrapped as a setext. For more information send email
- with the single word "setext" (no quotes) in the Subject: line to
- <fileserver@tidbits.uucp>. A file will be returned promptly.