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- TidBITS#113/30-Mar-92
- =====================
-
- The industry continues to evolve with dramatic twists and turns.
- Microsoft spent $173 million to purchase Fox Software and its
- database products, and Apple announced products aimed directly
- at the Windows market while targeting new distribution channels.
- Rounding out the issue we have news of a difficulty with
- AutoDoubler, a review of Danny Goodman's new Mac book, and a
- warning: get Disinfectant 2.7.1 - version 2.7 has a bug!
-
- 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/30-Mar-92
- Fox Swallowed by Microsoft
- MacWindows
- AutoDoubler Controversy
- Apple Distribution Changes
- Danny Goodman's Macintosh Handbook
- Reviews/30-Mar-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-113.etx; 26K]
-
-
- MailBITS/30-Mar-92
- ------------------
- Mark H. Anbinder passes on this important bit of information. John
- Norstad of Northwestern University has released version 2.7.1 of
- Disinfectant to fix what John calls a "stupid error" in version
- 2.7, released just days earlier. John wrote, "a note to Mac C
- programmers: Assigning a pointer to a Boolean variable is rarely
- useful. Releasing your own CODE resources is also a bad thing to
- do."
-
- 2.7.1 will be available from all the usual suspects. Please
- replace your copy of Disinfectant (2.7 or earlier) with 2.7.1
- right away.
-
- The Disinfectant INIT has not changed from 2.7 to 2.7.1, but you
- should install the 2.7.1 INIT anyway to avoid getting alert
- messages about an outdated version being installed.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
-
- More RAM for IIf and IIg
- In TidBITS#108/24-Feb-92 we reported a rumor that the LaserWriter
- IIf and IIg were likely to be upgraded with extra RAM, and indeed,
- that has happened. We hoped that Apple US would follow the lead of
- Apple UK and offer free upgrades for people who already bought one
- of the printers. This has not happened, and users who wish to add
- an additional 4 MB of RAM to the either of the printers will have
- to buy a 4 MB upgrade kit, which lists for $249. Oh well, if you
- heeded our advice and waited, you can now get a IIf with 4 MB for
- $3599 list or a IIg with 8 MB for $4599 list, instead of the
- previous 2 MB and 5 MB incarnations.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
-
- Fox Swallowed by Microsoft
- --------------------------
- I once promised a friend that I would avoid allusions to baseball
- in TidBITS, but it's going to be hard to resist the comparison to
- the free agent market in this one, and if you can't grow 'em
- yourself, buy 'em. Microsoft just announced that it will be
- purchasing Fox Software for a reported sum of $173 million
- dollars. Fox Software has a well-earned reputation for solid
- database products including FoxBASE+/Mac and FoxPro for DOS, and
- it's quite obvious that Microsoft wants an immediate database
- product since it has been unable to produce a decent one for a
- number of years now, either on the high end or the low end (ever
- used Microsoft File? I hope not.).
-
- Microsoft claims that it will continue with its Cirrus database
- project, which has not been announced or discussed in any detail
- yet. It's safe to assume that Cirrus will not compete with Fox's
- products and that it won't be available for some time. I've heard
- nothing about a replacement for File, partly because Microsoft
- Works, as old and decrepit as it is, (ooh, people aren't going to
- like that statement :-)) can do much of what is needed from a
- simple flat file database with the Microsoft name on it.
-
- So what's this acquisition mean? Lots. There have been two main
- gaps in the Microsoft application suite for some time now,
- database and graphics. Microsoft still has no graphics package to
- speak of, but Fox will bring powerful relational databases on both
- the Mac and DOS platforms to Microsoft. Suddenly Claris has a big
- competitor because even though FileMaker Pro isn't as complicated
- (or powerful) as FoxBASE, a lot of people will buy the Microsoft
- FoxBASE just because. After all, no one was ever fired for buying
- Microsoft. IBM is another story these days. ACIUS must not be
- terribly happy either, since 4th Dimension suddenly has a
- competitor with Mr. Bill's money behind it, and although installed
- base is extremely important, marketing rules the world. Odesta, by
- the way, is no more, and Double Helix, a quirky but fun and
- powerful relational database has been taken over by another
- company. Many of the original employees were staying on last we
- heard, so we have high hopes for Double Helix's continued success.
- Finally, there's Blyth, with Omnis on both the Mac and Windows,
- perhaps the most direct cross-platform competition for FoxBASE.
-
- Those rivalries aside, I think it's clear that the Mac version of
- FoxBASE is merely a condiment, and the main course is FoxPro for
- DOS (and the future FoxPro for Windows). Perhaps the most notable
- acquisition prior to this one was when Borland bought up Ashton-
- Tate and added dBASE and its massive installed base to supplement
- Borland's own technically impressive Paradox. With that move,
- Borland now owns 75% of the PC database market, and Microsoft
- hates to see Borland doing so well in that arena. What better way
- to suddenly become a force in the database market than buying Fox,
- since Fox has a good set of products currently, good people
- working on them, and good technology that can be used elsewhere in
- Microsoft products. And you too could have all that if you had
- $173 million lying around.
-
- One nasty point which may just have become moot is the lawsuit
- filed by Ashton-Tate charging Fox with various violations of
- Ashton-Tate copyrights. If I remember correctly, there was a bit
- of look and feel in that suit as well, but I would hope that
- Borland and Microsoft will let the suit go away naturally, if such
- a thing is possible, and compete head to head in the marketplace.
-
- I don't have a definite opinion whether this acquisition is good
- or bad because it depends on your point of view. If you like
- Microsoft, you'll probably like the deal because it patches a
- gaping hole in Microsoft's suite of products. If you're fan of
- other companies or, like me, are against the concept of large
- companies buying up smaller companies all the time, then you
- probably won't be quite so pleased. I dislike the concept of
- market domination because, as happened with Microsoft Works, the
- level of technology stagnates without competition. Now that Claris
- and Beagle Bros. and Symantec all have integrated packages out on
- the market, Microsoft has to scramble to clean up Works. Even the
- promised new version won't compete technologically with the
- newcomers, although current Works users will be happy for a real
- upgrade after so long.
-
-
- MacWindows
- ----------
- The computer industry is if anything incestuous. Apple can sue
- Microsoft with one hand while agreeing to further enhance TrueType
- with the other. And lest I confuse my imagery even more, a third
- hand of Apple Shiva (the many-handed Hindi god of reproduction and
- destruction, not the people who make the NetModem :-)) is reaching
- out to compete directly in the Windows market. I'd say something
- about not being able to tell the players without a scorecard, but
- that might risk a baseball reference and further muddy the issue
- at hand. :-)
-
- In any event, Apple has clearly entered the Windows market in
- several different ways in the past few weeks and months. Andrew
- Johnston of Seattle's dBUG (Downtown Business Users' Group) passed
- on this quote from an article by James Plamondon in a publication
- called MADA FrameWorks. In discussing comments by Steve Weyl,
- Apple's Chief Honcho of Development Tools at Macworld San
- Francisco, James wrote:
-
- "...Steve dropped the bombshell: MacApp would be taken cross-
- platform! And he didn't mean Quadras, either! He gave no dates, no
- specs, no promises he could later fail to deliver, but he just
- darn near chanted 'Windows, Windows, Windows.' It was a sight to
- see. I got all choked up. So did some other guys near me.
- (Actually, I found out later, the thought of programming for
- Windows was making them gag. Oh, well.)"
-
- Interesting stuff. If Apple ports its MacApp application
- development environment to Windows, I wonder how that will affect
- the suit with Microsoft. I also wonder if we won't get some
- cleaner Macintosh-style interfaces out of the resulting programs,
- although Microsoft's Visual Basic and Borland's ObjectVision have
- a pretty good lock on the graphical application development market
- in Windows.
-
-
- FileMaker Pro for Windows
- Also in the software arena, we've heard that work continues on
- FileMaker Pro for Windows, a program that is likely to do well in
- the Windows market for lack of well-known, low-end database
- competition. I'm sure there are some decent products out there,
- but FileMaker Pro would come in with a recognized name from the
- Macintosh world and with Claris clout behind it. Although Claris
- has a ways to go before attaining the kind of recognition in the
- Windows market that WordPerfect and Lotus enjoy, the fact that
- Claris now markets Hollywood, late of IBM, can't hurt. As much as
- I think FileMaker Pro is a good first port into the Windows
- market, I can't help but think that MacDraw Pro should follow
- closely, and I'd be fascinated to see how well ClarisWorks could
- do in the Windows world. I'd love to see Apple port the Finder to
- Windows to replace the awful combination of the File Manager and
- Program Manager, but I'm not putting any money on that
- possibility.
-
-
- Windows-compatible hardware
- More immediate and far less ambiguous were Apple's announcements
- last week of two products, one aimed directly at the Windows
- market and the other positioned to mix and match. Most interesting
- of the pair was the Apple OneScanner for Windows, which consists
- of the same hardware as the Macintosh OneScanner, a Windows
- version of Light Source's Ofoto scanning software, and a SCSI
- adapter for ISA and EISA buses (but not for the MCA bus, the type
- used in most IBM PS/2s). Ofoto for Windows offers the same one-
- step scanning as the Mac version and supports the common file
- formats in the PC world, such as TIFF, PC Paintbrush, Windows
- bitmap, GEM Image, Microsoft Paint, and EPS. With one click, Ofoto
- can determine if the picture is gray scale or line art, scan the
- image, and automatically straighten it. The Apple OneScanner for
- Windows stands to do quite well when it comes out in May, given
- Ofoto's sophistication and Apple's generally solid engineering.
-
- The new Personal LaserWriter NTR that Apple announced last week
- for release in April is not specifically a Windows product, but
- unlike previous printers, Apple went out of its way to ensure that
- the NTR would work well with PC compatibles. Apple gave the NTR
- LocalTalk, serial, and parallel interfaces along with intelligent
- interface switching so that the printer can determine what sort of
- print job is coming in and react appropriately. In the past, it
- has been possible to hook LaserWriters to PC compatibles, but
- we've received the impression that Apple would have you believe
- that the hookup was so hard to do that you might as well go buy a
- Macintosh or at least an AppleTalk card for your PC. (You
- generally have to locate a serial cable, add a few lines to your
- DOS AUTOEXEC.BAT file, and flip a DIP switch). This sort of
- capability combined with fast PostScript processing will
- undoubtedly make the NTR popular at the expense of the cheaper but
- non-PostScript LaserJet printers from Hewlett-Packard.
-
- All these product introductions and directions come down to the
- financial bottom line. Microsoft claims to have sold something
- like nine million copies of Windows 3.0, and even considering the
- estimates that little more than a tenth of those are actually in
- use, that's a lot of potential customers. Apple sees no reason to
- be pig-headed about its hardware and is just as willing to accept
- money from Windows users as from Macintosh users. Of course, I
- hope much of that money goes to improving the Macintosh line, and
- from some of the rumors I've heard recently, the Macintosh line
- will be around for a long time, initially in the form of faster
- Quadras and color Classics with more radical upgrades to come, as
- they always do.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Andrew Johnston
- Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
- Chuck Bartosch -- chuck@baka.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- AutoDoubler Controversy
- -----------------------
- There has been a flurry of discussion on CompuServe about a
- controversial implementation decision that Salient made when
- creating AutoDoubler. For those of you who haven't paid much
- attention to compression software, AutoDoubler is a program that
- compresses files on your hard disk while you aren't using the Mac
- and then expands them quickly when you open them. It is extremely
- transparent and quick, and promises to become even quicker and
- less obtrusive as time goes on.
-
- Salient feels that any program that touches most of the files on
- your hard disk should be entirely reliable and safe. It is
- impossible for them to predict and test every possible setup that
- a user may have, so they opted for a couple of security techniques
- to cut down on conflicts and problems. So far, so good - no one
- minds a little extra data security. The problem comes when you
- backup the AutoDoubler Control Panel in your System Folder. It
- seems that AutoDoubler checks to make sure it has been properly
- installed from the original disk by its installer, and if you
- _reformat_ your hard disk and then restore the AutoDoubler Control
- Panel from your backup, AutoDoubler will notice that the hard disk
- has changed and will require you to reinstall from an installation
- floppy. AutoDoubler won't complain unless the hard disk has been
- reformatted, but that often accompanies the restoration process.
- Salient originally intended this feature to ensure that you always
- have a clean copy of AutoDoubler installed.
-
- This is not inherently a problem as long as your original floppy
- or a backup of that disk is at hand. Unfortunately, in some ways
- the people who have the most use for AutoDoubler are PowerBook
- users with small hard drives, and PowerBook users seldom have all
- their floppies with them. Do note that when AutoDoubler stops
- working until it is reinstalled, you can still access _all_ of
- your files, even if they are compressed. Another of Salient's
- security features is the installation of the ADExpandUtil
- application, which can expand compressed files automatically. You
- still may have trouble if you had filled your hard disk up with
- compressed files, because ADExpandUtil will not recompress them,
- so your hard disk could fill up.
-
- Salient has been taking a lot of heat for this feature, and Terry
- Morse, the president of Salient, told us that they will change the
- next version of AutoDoubler so that it merely warns you that the
- hard disk has changed and suggests that it would be best if you
- reinstalled, but continues to work after that. We're pleased to
- see companies respond to user suggestions so pleasantly, even when
- the phrasing of the original comments, like a moth to a candle,
- inclined toward the flame.
-
- For those of you who want to avoid this situation now, there is a
- simple workaround. Reinstall AutoDoubler from floppy, and _before_
- you restart, make a copy of the AutoDoubler Control Panel, lock
- it, and store it somewhere else on your hard disk, preferably out
- of the System Folder so it can be compressed. Then, if you need a
- fresh copy of AutoDoubler, option-drag (which copies the file)
- your locked copy of AutoDoubler to the Control Panels folder
- (System 7) or System folder (System 6), thus replacing the old
- one. Then unlock the new copy (keeping your locked backup
- elsewhere on the hard disk), and restart the Mac.
-
- Information from:
- Terry Morse, President of Salient -- 76174.2440@compuserve.com
-
-
- Apple Distribution Changes
- --------------------------
- You won't be able to pick up a Classic at your local fruit stand,
- but given the recent changes in Apple's distribution channels,
- that's not far off.
-
- The most recent, and in some ways most shocking, change is that
- Apple will be working with Sears to sell special Macintosh
- bundles. You won't be able to find a Mac in just any Sears though,
- because the contract includes only Sears Office Centers, of which
- there are about 70 around the country, though primarily on the
- East coast. The bundles will include the Mac Classic, LC II, IIsi,
- and PowerBook 140, along with the StyleWriter and Personal
- LaserWriters. Other pieces of hardware and software may also be
- included, most notably ClarisWorks, although that decision is
- apparently up to Sears and not Apple.
-
- Apple is probably turning to Sears for a couple of reasons. First,
- the people who would buy hardware and software at Sears most
- likely wouldn't buy it elsewhere, more through lack of knowledge
- of other sources than anything else. If this wasn't true then
- dealers would be rather upset, although the dealers aren't likely
- to be too happy about some of the other distribution changes
- anyway. Second, working with Sears is a great way for Apple to
- learn a bit more about selling in the consumer electronic market,
- a market Apple has an intense curiousity about at the moment.
- Based on our unrepresentative and extremely limited experience
- with Sears and Sears Office Centers, Apple could have picked a
- better partner, although we hope that our experiences truly were
- unrepresentative. Nonetheless, it will be extremely nice to have a
- Classic sitting next to one of those clumsy little IBM PS/1s that
- Sears already carries.
-
-
- VAR Distributors
- More likely to upset dealers are Apple's other two new
- distribution directions, first to vertical market value-added
- resellers (VARs) through three of the big distributors, and also
- to the CompuAdd superstores. The three distributors include Ingram
- Micro, Merisel, and Tech Data Corporation, and these three will
- (starting this fall) recruit VARs to resell Apple products,
- although Apple will retain the right to final authorization.
-
- Look at that, a whole paragraph of market-speak. Let me try to
- translate. The basic upshot is that these three massive
- distribution companies will be able to supply Apple hardware to
- consulting firms and suppliers who serve specific (that's what
- vertical means in this instance) markets, like legal, engineering,
- real estate, architecture, and so on. Apple wants this to happen
- because these specific markets often get stuck in a rut of having
- to use a certain program or type of computer because everyone else
- does, not necessarily because it does the job well. For instance,
- a lot of lawyers only use WordPerfect for DOS because, the phrase
- goes, all lawyers use WordPerfect. Those lawyers tend to have
- specific consultants who can sell them DOS machines and
- WordPerfect and then provide support, so if Apple can get these
- consulting firms to also sell the Mac line via the large
- distributors, then Apple stands a chance of getting a foot into
- some of the specific markets.
-
- The authorization of CompuAdd as an Apple dealer isn't so much
- interesting for the fact that CompuAdd has a rapidly-growing chain
- of superstores around the country (though primarily in Texas, I
- gather), but because CompuAdd also runs a mail order business.
- Apple has _not_ authorized CompuAdd to sell Macs through the mail,
- but I believe that CompuAdd is one of the first big companies with
- both a superstore and mail order presence to receive dealer
- authorization. If the distribution via CompuAdd's superstores
- works out well, Apple just might authorize CompuAdd to sell Macs
- via the mail as well, causing trouble for all the grey-market mail
- order companies who sell Macs now.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Danny Goodman's Macintosh Handbook
- ----------------------------------
- by Jon.Hersh
-
- Ever tried to get a gut feeling for the size of an acre? It's
- about the size of an American football field without the end
- zones. That example is from a book by Richard Saul Wurman called
- "Information Anxiety," which explains how to convey information
- easily and painlessly. Its clear, lucid thinking has just come to
- the computer book world in the form of a new general Macintosh
- book from Danny Goodman, called "Danny Goodman's Macintosh
- Handbook."
-
- Goodman's book is a real departure from the usual look and feel of
- other computer books because of the partnership with Wurman, who,
- in John Sculley's own words, is "a world-class information
- architect." I've been a fan of Wurman's work for quite some time
- now. He has done a large volume of books through his company,
- AccessPress, specializing in transmitting information to people
- about anything and everything.
-
- Wurman started with travel guides to various cities, a guide to
- the summer Olympics in LA, a guide to football, a guide to medical
- procedures (intended to help people understand what the doctor is
- saying and to codify a wide variety of medical procedures for easy
- access), the Wall Street Journal's book on money and investments,
- and Pacific West's Yellow Pages. He specializes in rearranging
- information so that it becomes easy to learn and find. OK, I gush.
- I really admire the slant this guy has taken on how to disseminate
- information and make it pleasing to the eye at the same time.
-
- Goodman's book is very Mac-like, with a heavy emphasis on visual
- presentations (that's adult-speak for "lots of pictures") that
- makes this book a solid training tool for beginners, but with
- enough high-end information to satisfy more advanced hobbyists and
- technoweenies.
-
- There's a great section on how to set up System 7 File Sharing,
- explaining in clear, concise, uh, pictures, what to do and why.
- There's information on ergonomics, hooking up equipment, maximum
- RAM loads, and a large trouble-shooting section.
-
- Each page is visually delimited with color blocks to offer
- beginner, intermediate, and advanced information. My one complaint
- is one that Wurman doesn't seem to get clear of in any of his
- publications: the type size is just a bit too small, and when he
- reverses type it often runs the risk of being hard to read; at
- least tiring to the old eyes (ask any professional graphic
- designer; like ME for instance!). But all in all, it's a gorgeous
- book and one that deserves a place on your bookshelf.
-
- I picked up my copy of "Danny Goodman's Macintosh Handbook" (1992
- Bantam Books) at Crown Books for $29.95 retail, $26.96 discounted
- at Crown. If you're a book freak like me, take a look.
-
-
- Reviews/30-Mar-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Aldus Persuasion 2.1 -- pg. 43
- MicroPhone II 4.0 -- pg. 43
- MacLabelPro 1.5 -- pg. 46
- TimeLog -- pg. 46
- Master Juggler 1.57 -- pg. 47
- Suitcase 2.0 -- pg. 47
- Retriever II -- pg. 47
-
- * MacUser
- Microsoft Word for the Macintosh 5.0 -- pg. 50
- SuperPaint 3.0 -- pg. 52
- Intouch -- pg. 56
- TouchBASE 2.0 -- pg. 56
- Aldus Gallery Effects -- pg. 58
- HP ScanJet IIc -- pg. 70
- Help! -- pg. 72
- MacInTax -- pg. 76
- Color It! -- pg. 83
- Multi-Ad Search -- pg. 91
- SuperDisk! -- pg. 91
- @Risk -- pg. 91
- Azimuth -- pg. 93
- Aqua Blooper Piper -- pg. 95
- Graphics Tablets -- pg. 98
- CalComp DrawingBoard II
- Kurta IS
- Numonics GraphicMaster
- Numonics GridMaster
- Summagraphics SummaSketch II
- Wacom SD420E
- Large Hard Drives -- pg. 108
- (too many to list)
- Email Gateways -- pg. 142
- CommGATE
- QM-Connect Gateway
- AppleShare Server 3.0 -- pg. 150
-
- *Macworld
- Color Printers -- pg. 136
- (too many to list)
- Project Management Software -- pg. 146
- (too many to list)
- Lotus 1-2-3 for Macintosh -- pg. 174
- Microsoft Word 5.0 -- pg. 175
- Voice Express -- pg. 178
- Voice Navigator II -- pg. 178
- Connections 2.0 -- pg. 178
- PowerTrax 1.1 -- pg. 178
- MacInTax 1991 -- pg. 182
- HyperTax Tutor -- pg. 182
- Aldus Gallery Effects 1.0, Volume 1: Classic Art -- pg. 185
- HAM 1.0 -- pg. 185
- PEMD DiscoVery 1.3.1 -- pg. 187
- DiskFit Pro -- pg. 187
- Carbon Copy/Mac 2.0 -- pg. 189
- Mirror 600 Color Scanner -- pg. 189
- MacGlobe 1.0 -- pg. 199
- World Atlas 1.2 -- pg. 199
- RasterOps Expresso Personal Slide Scanner -- pg. 199
- First Things First 2.0 -- pg. 200
- SimAnt 1.0 -- pg. 200
- FastBack Plus 2.6 -- pg. 202
- Color It! 1.0 -- pg. 202
- DayMaker 1.01 -- pg. 204
- QuickTel Xeba 9600 -- pg. 204
- TeMath -- pg. 206
- The Desktop Lawyer 3.0 -- pg. 206
- Legal LetterWorks -- pg. 206
- Crash Barrier 1.0.1 -- pg. 208
- QuadFlextra -- pg. 208
-
- * BYTE
- Cameo Personal Video System, Model 2001 -- pg. 51
- Graphics Programs -- pg. 226
- (too many to list)
- NEC MultiSync 4FG -- pg. 262
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 23-Mar-92, Vol. 6, #12
- MacUser -- Apr-92
- Macworld -- Apr-92
- BYTE -- Apr-92
-
-
- ..
-
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