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- TidBITS#114/01-Apr-92
- =====================
-
- This week we've got more Microsoft corporate deal news, and it's
- not even as strange as Apple and IBM. Tune in also for a new
- method of protecting all your data from harm and a new program
- that could eventually replace the Finder. Finally, for those of
- you with compact Macs, there may still be hope for keeping up
- with the Gateses and the Sculleys.
-
- 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/01-Apr-92
- Remote Backup
- Microsoft & NeXT?
- Future Finder
- New Life for Old Macs
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-114.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/01-Apr-92
- ------------------
- Ralph Amundesen wrote with some interesting information about IBM.
- Evidently, IBM is so worried about OS/2 that the company has
- expanded its battalion of salesbots by drafting the entire
- company. I don't know if this will go as far as dark-suited IBM
- folks out pounding the pavement ("Excuse me, Ma'am, may I come in
- and demonstrate what OS/2 2.0 can do for you today?"), but all
- 344,000 employees are in it for fun and prizes. It's a step up
- from grade school, but IBM employees could win medals, IBM
- software, IBM hardware, or even cold hard cash. I sure hope they
- don't stop in here since I don't have 30 MB free under SoftPC to
- test it. Sheesh, wouldn't you think it would be easier to just buy
- a few TV spots like Microsoft is doing?
-
- Information from:
- Ralph Amundesen -- rna4637@afdnet.uucp
-
-
- Remote Backup
- -------------
- I'm beginning to like living in a metropolitan area - there's so
- much more happening here in terms of computers. At a local
- computer fair put on by the University of Washington a few weeks
- ago, I came across a small local company with a product that could
- become extremely popular with anyone who doesn't like losing data.
- All hands in favor? :-)
-
- This company, BackData, was formed when a couple of guys from some
- of the local computer companies were sitting around eating Thai
- food (or so they say - apparently Thai food is a big thing in the
- computer community here in Seattle). They were talking about
- losing data and how seldom people really backed up their entire
- hard disks, even when they understood the potential consequences.
- Lots of people don't back up at all, and a significant number only
- backup up important files, thinking that it will be easy enough to
- rebuild a hard drive from original master disks.
-
- People who work on the important file backup method are depending
- on two things to make the rebuild easy. First, they hope that they
- can find and successfully restore programs from all those floppy
- disks, some of which may have gone bad in the years since they
- were last used. Second and more importantly, they rely on their
- backups surviving the unlikely event of a fire or theft. Another
- problem is that people seldom realize how much time they spend
- customizing their systems, and it can take a number of hours to
- get a system back to the way it should be. This is often even the
- case when reformatting and restoring from a complete backup.
-
- So the BackData guys realized that the best possible option is for
- all the data on your hard disk to be backed up automatically at
- night to another physical place. Short of hiring elves, the only
- way to do this is via modem, but with some of the current high-
- speed modems and sophisticated pieces of software out there, they
- figured that it would be possible with a bunch of Macs and a lot
- of storage devices.
-
- The system as they have it currently set up runs on headless LCs
- and saves all the data to 2.6 GB DAT drives. Each of the LCs has a
- fast modem attached (they have several different types so you can
- call specific numbers depending on what modem you have). In terms
- of software, you just need AppleTalk Remote Access and Retrospect
- 1.3, which can back up any volume mounted on its desktop.
-
- I haven't tried this yet, but the theory is that at some point in
- the middle of the night one of their backup Macs calls your Mac
- (which had better be on). A simple macro ensures that all your
- volumes are mounted read-only on their systems, and then
- Retrospect goes to work, backing up only the files that have
- changed according to specific selectors that you set up
- previously. This allows you to avoid backing up your System file
- all the time, even though it will almost always be marked as
- modified whether or not you've added any fonts or sounds. Once the
- backup is done, another macro copies the catalog file to your hard
- disk (so you can see what was backed up), dismounts your volumes,
- and disconnects the modems to finish the process.
-
- It doesn't really matter how long this takes since it's at night,
- or at least it wouldn't matter if you weren't being charged for
- all this. The BackData people have to make some money too. The
- full kit, which includes AppleTalk Remote Access, Retrospect 1.3,
- and a fast modem (I think they're using the cheap new ones from
- Supra now, but that's subject to change) will run about $800,
- although you can obviously buy the parts separately. Then there's
- a connect time charge of $10/hour, which is fairly comparable to
- many online services. Depending on the amount of data that you
- modify each day and the speed of your modem, you could get away
- with spending fifty cents to a couple of dollars per call. It
- wouldn't be economical at 2400 bps, but if you could keep it down
- to a six minute call each day, that's only a dollar per day, or
- $365 per year, which isn't all that expensive in comparison to
- buying your own hardware and software for backup. In addition, the
- various pieces of the setup are all useful for other things as
- well, so it's an extremely worthwhile combination.
-
- Retrieval is a slightly stickier issue. Essentially, the process
- works in reverse, with one important exception. You call them and
- make sure your DAT tape is in the drive of a Mac at a certain
- phone number. After your Mac calls the storage Mac, you then run
- Retrospect over the remote connection, since it won't be able to
- see the DAT drive otherwise. BackData doesn't expect everyone to
- want to do this, and if you have to restore the entire hard disk
- the phone charges may run pretty high. So for a standard
- consulting fee of $50/hour, BackData will send someone over to
- your office or home and will perform the restore there, helping to
- reformat the hard disk and do whatever else needs to be done to
- get you up and running.
-
- I expressed some doubt about the reliability of cobbling together
- these off-the-shelf programs, and the BackData folks admitted that
- they're in the process of writing several dedicated programs that
- will automate the process much more cleanly, one for DOS and one
- for the Mac. Their programs didn't sound as though they'd be as
- flexible as Retrospect, but would work much more cleanly over the
- phone lines, especially with restoring data. Interesting concept
- this, and one which could eventually go national with an 800
- number. It's basically a form of insurance, but one which could
- save a lot of important data in the event of disaster.
-
- BackData -- info@backdata.com
-
- Information from:
- BackData propaganda & representatives
-
-
- Microsoft & NeXT?
- -----------------
- Microsoft is just full of surprises these days. First Fox, what
- could be NeXT? The latest news from Redmond is that Mr. Bill has
- apparently overcome his dislike of Steve Jobs and the company will
- be porting its most popular applications to the NeXT. This move,
- which Microsoft and NeXT haven't announced publicly yet, makes a
- fair amount of sense for both companies but is rather surprising
- given Mr. Bill's words of several years ago linking the
- combination of Microsoft and NeXT with frost warnings in the
- nether worlds.
-
- As I said, though, the announcement makes a good deal of sense if
- you look at it closely. It's obviously positive from NeXT's
- perspective. The technically-neat NeXT workstations have suffered
- not from a lack of decent software, but from a lack of decent
- software from big name companies. There's Improv from Lotus as
- well as the ubiquitous word processor from WordPerfect, but not a
- lot else from the biggies. Jobs may be pushing the NeXT as the
- ideal custom application machine for business, but big business
- doesn't like to buy extra special-purpose machines and would like
- to have Excel and Word running on those NeXTs as well. After all,
- no one was ever fired for buying Microsoft, but NeXT is still
- another story.
-
- What's in it for Microsoft, though? A good question, since
- Microsoft makes most of its money on operating systems and it
- certainly won't sell so many versions of Excel and Word for the
- NeXT to really recoup the development costs, low as they may
- because of the ease of developing in NeXTstep.
-
- I've heard rumors in and around the deal that Microsoft will gain
- some rights to the NeXTstep environment, which is the main
- incentive for them. It's a known fact that the kernel in Windows
- NT is a close relative to the kernel in Mach, the Unix variant
- used by NeXT, so it could be rather easy to port NeXTstep to NT.
- It may simply be worthwhile for Microsoft to gain the several
- years of real world experience that NeXT's developers have
- invested in NeXTstep. Heck, if it's worth trying with Fox, it's
- worth trying with NeXT and it's probably cheaper too.
-
- Let's face it, Windows is by no means a penultimate graphical
- interface, and in fact, it's poor in a lot of ways. The suit with
- Apple may not help in that regard. But, look, here's NeXT which
- needs some credibility in the business world and has a snazzy
- graphical interface that leaves Windows in the dust. Microsoft can
- provide the first and needs the second.
-
- Another factor we can't overlook is the faltering ACE initiative,
- since there are so many members, each with an individual agenda.
- It's hard to merge the interests of divergent but major players
- like Silicon Graphics (which I believe just bought MIPS), DEC,
- Compaq, and Microsoft, and Microsoft is certainly not one to put
- all its eggs in the same ACE basket. Apple and IBM ruled
- themselves out as allies by creating Taligent to compete directly
- with the future Microsoft, and Sun as usual is doing its own
- thing. The only semi-major player left is NeXT, and everyone
- admits that for all NeXT's marketing mistakes, they've got a great
- combination of an excellent graphical interface and a good Unix
- implementation. Everyone was astonished by the Apple/IBM deal, and
- in many ways this proposed deal isn't even as radical, although it
- could have even more far-reaching implications for the industry.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Future Finder
- -------------
- Are you happy with the Finder? Most people like it a fair amount,
- and there's people who would die before using anything else like
- DOS. But let's face it, the Finder is far from perfect, and even
- Apple knows it. Unfortunately for Apple, one of their original
- human interface gurus, Bruce Tognazzini (better known as TOG, and
- author of "TOG on Interface") has reportedly just departed for
- Sun.
-
- I don't mean to imply that the Finder is dead or dying, but from
- some plans that I've heard, it will have some real competition in
- about a year. Keisuke Hara, the author of a slick Finder-
- replacement DA called MaxFiles, is hard at work on a new program
- that will truly replace the Finder, something no other program has
- ever successfully done. It's not a trivial project, and Hara does
- not expect to finish any time soon, but here are some of the
- highlights from our discussions of his new Finder-replacement,
- currently called FileMax.
-
-
- File database
- Perhaps the main problem with the Finder is that it tries to be
- too many things to too many people. Whenever that happens, people
- become disappointed. At its base level, the Finder is a database,
- one that keeps track of the many files and folders on your hard
- disk and the various attributes that each of those files and
- folder have. On top of that database sits a graphical shell for
- working with database records (the files). That term, "working
- with" is intentionally general because so many of the Finder's
- functions seem to be rather tacked on at the end without much
- thought for how they should really act. A classic example of this
- is the awkward method of dismounting a floppy by dragging it to
- the trash.
-
- So the first thing that FileMax will have is an extremely fast
- database engine that will work with the current Desktop file(s) so
- you can always go back to the Finder if you wish. Most people will
- never mess with the database engine of FileMax simply because it
- doesn't really do all that much different from the current Finder
- database engine. The main difference is that FileMax will be
- completely wired with AppleEvents so that other programmers can
- extend the functionality of the Finder quickly and easily by
- hooking into the various events.
-
-
- New interface ideas
- This is where we get into the more interesting proposals for
- FileMax. To solve the Finder problem with dragging floppies to the
- trash, FileMax will have a DiskBox that holds aliases to all your
- floppies. (Actually this DiskBox idea is in the process of being
- implemented for System 7 already by an enterprising shareware
- author - look for it soon.) When you want to dismount a floppy,
- you simply drag it to your DiskBox icon, which is actually a tiny
- program. That program ejects the disk and saves an alias of the
- contents of that disk so that you can find its files easily later
- on. Speaking of finding files, FileMax will have a more powerful
- Find command than currently exists in the Finder today, most
- notably in that you can create what are called "collections" of
- files with the results. So if you find all your MacWrite documents
- that haven't changed in two years you can create a collection of
- them (which is optionally either the original files or a bunch of
- temporary aliases) and then do whatever you want with that
- collection.
-
- Aliases will be much improved in FileMax. If you want to create
- one, merely hold down the command key and drag the appropriate
- icon where you want the alias to be, much like option-dragging
- copies a file now. FileMax will also be better about making the
- aliases work exactly like the originals, even in places they don't
- right now. For instance, Get Info... on an alias now does not
- allow you to work on the original file, which is the main reason
- you would use Get Info on an alias in the first place.
-
- Still, this stuff is interesting, but not that radical. There are
- a few radical concepts in FileMax which may become extremely
- popular. The first is what's called a "super folder." It's a
- normal folder in which you put a set of files, then you set a
- "super folder" bit in the Get Info, and the folder no longer opens
- when you double-click on it. Instead, it runs all the applications
- contained inside and opens all the documents. Option-double-
- clicking would open the folder like a normal folder for editing of
- the contents. This feature could be especially handy for reducing
- the massive clutter that now comes with many applications. In
- addition, programs that are stupid about the locations of their
- support files like Word 5.0 (the Word Commands folder has to be at
- the same folder level as Word 5.0 itself) could simply be combined
- in a single super folder and ignored. Finally, it would be trivial
- to set up work sets of various applications and documents by
- storing aliases to the various files in different super folders.
-
- Balloon help was a neat idea, but frankly, Apple implemented it
- badly. Most people who realize that it's there turn it on briefly
- and then turn it off, and even if you want to use it on occasion,
- you're still insulted with the balloon popping up as you select
- Hide Balloons. FileMax will have balloon help too, but will also
- have a Control Panel for setting the equivalent of a user level.
- So if I consider myself to be a level three user out of a possible
- five, I would only see the balloons that are coded for more
- advanced users. There is also an exception rule for the first time
- you see something, since a simple control might need explanation,
- but only once. Like some of the shareware and freeware utilities,
- FileMax's balloon help will also be easy to toggle with a key.
- Perhaps most interesting though, will be the replacement of the
- Get Info dialog box with an editable balloon when you are pointing
- at a particular icon. This will let you view and edit comments and
- click the locked and stationery bits without having to select the
- file, choose a menu item, and then close the Get Info window when
- you're done. That's way too clumsy.
-
-
- New SFDialog
- I wrote above about the concept of the collection in terms of
- dealing with the set of found files. FileMax actually will take
- the concept of the collection further yet, patching the System in
- an area which isn't generally handled by the Finder. One of the
- oldest and most outdated parts of the Macintosh interface is the
- Standard File Dialog because it was designed for 128K Macs running
- a single application on a small screen. FileMax uses a simple
- modeless (in contrast to modal, which means that you have to exit
- that mode, i.e. close the dialog, before you can do anything else)
- dialog displaying a collection of files and any application-
- specific features like file-type selection buttons. The collection
- is displayed in an outline mode reminiscent of the Finder's
- outline mode in System 7, but much faster and with all the volumes
- as the top level. What differentiates this collection from a
- normal outline is that it respects the application's wishes in
- terms of which files to display, and since it's modeless, you can
- use FileMax's Find function or any other function while in that
- collection. It also features two special folders at the top of the
- outline hierarchy, Recent and Permanent, which track recently-
- accessed and permanent files and folders, much as Super Boomerang
- and ShortCut do. Saving is slightly different, because you have to
- assign a name and location to your file. At the top of the outline
- is the name of the current folder (which is also indicated
- graphically in the outline list but you can shrink the whole thing
- so you don't have to look at the outline) and a text entry box for
- the filename. Alongside is a Save button which is grey when no
- changes have been made. Since this Save dialog is modeless, it's a
- single click to save your file at any time. Save As is simply a
- matter of changing the name or location and saving again. I'm
- drooling for this one, and I'm sure it will become even smoother
- before release.
-
-
- Other tweaks
- Because FileMax will be completely wired with AppleEvents and is
- totally modular, some obvious openings for products appear. Many
- of you miss the Finder Sounds hack that went away with Finder 6
- because Apple removed the sound hooks in Finder 7. That, along
- with the custom icon family features of SunDesk which stopped
- working in Finder 7, will both be back in FileMax. The
- possibilities for additional customization, even with something
- like UserLand's Frontier event scripting program, are endless.
-
- Other little tweaks that will please the die-hard Mac user include
- much faster copying of files (done by another small application in
- the background if desired, as in DiskDoubler), stable file
- comments, iconization of open applications, drag & drop printing,
- and an outline list view that starts with the mounted volumes,
- which does not cut off long files names, and which allows you to
- customize the order of the fields, so if you want to have name
- followed immediately by label, date, then size, so be it. One
- thing that's not in FileMax is a hierarchical Apple menu, or an
- Apple menu at all. Instead FileMax will have a resizable floating
- palette that will list whatever the user wants to put in it,
- including running applications. One interesting feature of this
- palette is that it can turn itself into a menu if the user drags
- it up to the menu bar, satisfying both the big screen and the
- small screen users.
-
- I've talked a lot about what this program will do, based on
- various discussions, but to tell the truth, I don't think this
- program will ever make it to market. I see no reason why Apple
- won't just hire Hara and buy the rights because it's easier than
- allowing a third-party shell like FileMax to become common in the
- marketplace, something Apple doesn't really want to happen because
- it would hurt the Mac in terms of consistency. I also suspect that
- the Apple system software teams will realize that FileMax embodies
- a lot of good ideas, probably helped along by many people who have
- thought long and hard about what's wrong with the current
- Macintosh system software. I would certainly hope that they would
- be able to accept external input into what's right and wrong with
- the Finder and modify it to make it both easier and far more
- powerful at the same time.
-
- Information from:
- Kiesuke Hara, MaxFiles author
-
-
- New Life for Old Macs
- ---------------------
- As long as we're trying to get people to raise their hands this
- issue, how many of you out there have a compact Mac and would like
- to upgrade it? I thought so. If you've got a Classic you can go to
- a Classic II, and if you're the proud owner of an SE, you might be
- able to find an SE/30 upgrade lying around at some dealer's back
- room. Otherwise you're out of luck, or maybe not...
-
- We've heard some rumors of a project at Apple called Phoenix
- that's one of those labors of love carried out under the very
- noses of the Grinch-like bean counters. A group of Apple
- engineers decided that it was a shame that everyone with an older
- compact Mac was stuck with it, more or less, especially since
- Apple seems to be relegating the compact Macs to the low end of
- the product line. So they set to work designing an upgrade in
- their spare time (where do these people get that kind of spare
- time anyway?) and by the time the managers noticed and told them
- to cut it out and get some real work done, the Phoenix project was
- already pretty cool. It's not definite yet, but some of the ideas
- the Phoenix team came up with are being considered seriously
- enough that we might live to see the day that an ex-128K Mac can
- run System 7.
-
- The basic idea behind this upgrade is that the motherboards in
- these machines are old and relatively useless. However, since
- Apple has made such strides in miniaturizing the motherboard
- components, the Phoenix team was able to design a universal
- compact Mac motherboard and some extra hardware for each specific
- model to make sure it fits in correctly. The case too is a
- problem, so they came up with a universal compact case to replace
- the old ones, but most of the other components like the screen and
- power supply and internal supports are re-used. Needless to say,
- this is not the sort of thing you can install at home, and it
- probably won't be incredibly cheap.
-
- Since the Phoenix team never imagined that their work would ever
- see the light of day at Apple, they went all out in designing the
- new motherboard. Rather than cripple the machine with a narrow
- data path, they made sure it was a true 32-bit machine with a 25
- MHz 68030, and even included a coprocessor. Along with all the
- standard ports, they added a video out port and some internal
- video RAM so the Phoenix Mac can run two monitors without an
- additional card. Like the rumored new monitor that includes
- speakers and microphones, the Phoenix Mac will have two internal
- microphones and a much better speaker than was in the original
- machines.
-
- But what about slots? There was no obvious way to fit a card into
- the different internal superstructures of the various compact
- Macs. Rather than just give up on the idea of providing a PDS or
- NuBus slot, the Phoenix team took an idea from the now-defunct
- Jasmine. At one point, Jasmine marketed a drive called something
- like the Backpack, which attached to the back of the Mac and took
- up very little room. So the Phoenix team designed a slot adapter
- like the one in the IIsi and put a pop-out in the back of the case
- to access it, much as the SE and SE/30 have.
-
- Like the IIsi, you don't have to buy the backpack-style card case
- unless you want to add an extra PDS or NuBus card (both can be
- supported). If you do want to add one, you can just buy the card
- case and your card, open the card case, install the card, and then
- attach the whole thing to the Mac. It's the same general idea as
- the NuBus extenders from Second Wave, but since it fits snugly on
- the back of the redesigned case, it's easy to travel with or swap
- from machine to machine.
-
- From what we've heard, the Apple honchos liked the concept of the
- card case for the compact Macs, but they were even more taken with
- the concept of using a card case with a PowerBook. The PowerBook
- would have to have a new connector to the motherboard, so it
- wouldn't work with the existing ones, but such a solution would be
- cheaper and easier than the proposed (and now delayed, perhaps
- indefinitely) docking station. Since most people aren't likely to
- want more than video out, which the new PowerBooks will have, and
- one card, perhaps an Ethernet card, the card case is ideal, not to
- mention quite easily transported along with the PowerBook.
-
- There were apparently a few extra neat ideas in the original work
- the Phoenix team was doing (if it's anything like Seattle, they
- probably did most of this stuff in a Thai restaurant). One of the
- best, though not one which received a lot of support at the
- management level was a stand-alone LCD screen based on the active-
- matrix display in the PowerBook 170. (Interestingly, Dolch
- Computer Systems just released a color LCD projection panel that
- can double as a stand-alone screen for a mere $8500.) They
- originally wanted to put it, or a color active-matrix display,
- into the upgraded compact Macs, but decided that it would be way
- too expensive. As a stand-alone though... How much would you pay
- for a nice 640 x 480 active matrix screen with backlighting? I'd
- certainly like one for my system and would consider it up to about
- $700. Just think, if you had a six-slot Mac and a spot of extra
- cash you could set up a grid of six active matrix panels side by
- side. Since they don't interfere with each other like normal
- monitors do, it could be a single desk-sized desktop, say 1920 x
- 960 or more likely 1280 x 1440. That's a lot of pickles, er,
- pixels.
-
- I'm still surprised that the Phoenix team's work wasn't ignored at
- Apple. I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that Apple is
- going to be putting out these three operating systems for the Mac,
- the fancy new version of the current MacOS, the upgraded version
- of A/UX known as PowerOpen, and whatever Taligent makes of Pink.
- They claim that those operating systems will be scalable to all
- Macs, but I doubt a Mac Plus will be able to handle it. This
- Phoenix upgrade gets Apple out of a jam (or would that be a
- butter?) by ensuring that anyone can upgrade to a Mac capable of
- all the neat new voice and handwriting technologies and the
- operating systems behind them. Of course, as Murph Sewall says at
- the top of his Vaporware Digest, "These are rumors, folks. We
- reserve the right to be wrong." Just because you read it in
- TidBITS doesn't mean that it's going to happen (but this upgrade
- has our vote!).
-
- Dolch Computer Systems -- 408/957-6575
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 30-Mar-92, Vol. 6, #13, pg. 1, 18
-
-
- ..
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