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- TidBITS#139/24-Aug-92
- =====================
-
- A varied catch this issue, starting with quick notes about Morph,
- Excel 4.0, and European Macintosh distribution, and continuing
- with an interesting article on gray market mail order vendors.
- We have a few more notes from Macworld about neat new products
- from Voyager and new items from Casady & Greene, and an article
- on how IBM may be close on the heels of QuickTime. Finally, the
- VRAM conundrum!
-
- 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
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- back issues are available.
-
- For information send email to info@tidbits.com or ace@tidbits.com
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- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/24-Aug-92
- Mail Order Macs
- Watch Out, QuickTime
- VRAM Problems
- More Macworld
- Reviews/24-Aug-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-139.etx; 27K]
-
-
- MailBITS/24-Aug-92
- ------------------
- Rob Managan writes, "Another use for Morph occurred to me as I
- read the article. Often in scientific work you have images from a
- simulation that are not spaced close enough in time for an
- animation. Morph might provide a way to easily get the
- interpolated frames you need to make a movie!"
-
- Information from:
- Rob Managan -- managan@llnl.gov
-
-
- Excel 4 Upgrade
- Mark H. Anbinder writes, "Microsoft Excel customers who are
- stunned by the zippy release of Excel 4.0 and are interested in
- upgrading will be pleased to learn that they can upgrade for
- pseudo-free (there is a $7.50 shipping charge) if they purchased
- Excel 3.0 after 15-Feb-92. Customers should call 800/426-9400 and
- should have their registration information handy. (Please call
- after 25-Aug-92, as Microsoft's _entire_ sales division has been
- partying hard at an annual sales meeting (we're talking Mr. Bill
- running around with a squirt gun, to judge from a second-hand
- eyewitness account) and will be swamped when they return to the
- normal routine on 24-Aug-92!)."
-
- Microsoft -- 800/426-9400
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
-
- European Distribution
- Povl H. Pedersen writes, "Apple has not dropped the PowerBook 100
- from the price list here in Denmark, but they have lowered the
- price. I am not sure about the consumer or business markets, but
- we still have it in the educational market.
-
- We also still have the Classic here, but educational resellers
- sell the Classic II for about $1.50 (yes, a dollar and a half)
- more than the Classic. This is because Apple has no special price
- on the Classic, which we have at same price as the consumer
- market, but we do have a great back-to-school discount on both the
- Classic II and the LC/monitor bundle. Somehow the LC with 12"
- color monitor ends up about $15 cheaper than the LC with 12"
- monochrome monitor.
-
- Here in Scandinavia Apple now has three competing divisions, each
- of which individually sets prices and must compete against the
- others. That's why we see such large price differences between the
- consumer, educational, and business markets.
-
- Information from:
- Povl H. Pedersen -- ECO861771@ecostat.aau.dk
-
-
- Mail Order Macs
- ---------------
- by Gene Borio -- 70511.342@compuserve.com
-
- The impetus for this article came from an online question, "Where
- do all these mail-order Macs come from anyway?" A loaded question,
- and not one I've ever seen covered. Being in the channel myself
- ("the channel" is the business term for the organizations and
- methods used by computer companies to route products to the end
- user. It encompasses distributors, resellers, VARs [value-added
- resellers], and even direct mail), I find all the undercover
- slipping and sliding and back-stabbing fascinating - and highly
- influential. The traditional magazines tend not to view such
- things as interesting to their readers, so I will try to give a
- brief, "received knowledge" overview. Keep in mind that I work at
- a dealership, so my bias should be obvious.
-
- Apple's Authorized Dealership system indirectly provides the
- impetus for mail order Macintoshes. Apple created its network of
- Authorized Dealers as a method of efficiently distributing
- Macintoshes and off-loading support. Ideally, these Apple Dealers
- would be Mac experts, qualified to turn a PC sale into a Mac sale,
- and trained not only to assist customers with their first fumbling
- attempts to work mice and menus, but also to fix a machine should
- it break down. That was the deal, and Apple implemented any number
- of plans to try to convince salespeople, most of whom had been
- selling Apple ][s or Klones or shoes, to learn a little something
- about the Mac. These attempts at training and Mac-oriented rewards
- were dismal failures. Most salespeople sold what they knew, and -
- as has been bemoaned on CompuServe and in the world at large from
- time immemorial - most Apple-authorized dealers know next to
- nothing about the Mac.
-
- Well, in lieu of knowledge, how about bucks? A highly effective
- sales-incentive method rewarded dealers for selling lots of Macs,
- in the form of "cheaper by the dozen" discounts. The more you
- bought, the deeper your discount. In such a viciously competitive
- market, this meant that in order to stay in business, many dealers
- had to buy far more than they could possibly legitimately sell.
-
- Some resellers then got the bright idea to open their own little
- side-business at another location and sell Macs to a national
- audience at cut-rate mail-order prices. The mail-order house's
- overhead would be low - no retail location, service department, or
- salesperson training necessary - so they could dramatically
- increase volume with only the expenses of telephone bills,
- personnel, advertising, shipping, and accounting. If the mail
- order outlet needed even more stock or certain hard-to-find items,
- it could work out a deal with other resellers looking to reduce
- inventory and build up their own discounts. Some mail order houses
- are totally independent of a reseller and simply provide the
- service for - and get the products from - a number of resellers.
-
- So: dealers over-buy to increase their discounts, and sell the
- excess to a mail-order house. It's not exactly kosher, but not
- strictly illegal either. It's not the black-market, but the gray-
- market. Naturally, Apple tries to protect its legitimate dealers
- and will yank a dealer's authorization if it finds evidence of
- this practice. Apple has done this on occasion, but not often as
- far as I know. Policing costs are high. But dealers do want to be
- careful, so some dealers will alter or completely deface the
- serial numbers on the Macs they sell gray-market so they can't be
- traced back to that dealer. Be sure to check for a damaged serial
- number if you buy a grey-market Macintosh because dealers can
- refuse to provide warranty service for a Mac with a missing or
- defaced serial number. In the unhappy event that a legitimate Mac
- has lost its serial number sticker (possible if it was a demo
- model, for instance), make sure to get that serial number on the
- invoice so you have a record of it for potential warranty
- problems.
-
- When I worked with Mac Emporium in New York City I wondered what
- could be so wrong with having a whole network of small stores
- stuffed with Mac Fanatics who in aggregate would be incredibly
- influential in selling the Mac? We all loved it so, you would
- hardly even have had to feed us; we'd work for peanuts and
- proselytize our little hearts out. But no. Apple demands an
- impossible amount of sales (thus further aggravating the need of
- stores to "move boxes") and has requirements that work against a
- small neighborhood store becoming authorized.
-
- Thus mail order houses get their Macintosh equipment from Apple.
- Apple's dealer and discount policies created this Frankenstein
- monster of the "reseller channel" and the whole raison d'etre for
- the gray-market. It fascinates me that Apple has done nothing but
- slap their monster in the face over the last year. Apple demanded
- that education resellers stop selling competing (DOS) systems into
- the lucrative education market. Then they announced that they were
- taking away "infrastructure" funds, extra money Apple had paid for
- years for various services the resellers could provide for Apple -
- and for many resellers the only reason they could stay competitive
- at such low selling margins. Just recently Apple sold PowerBook
- 100 4/40s to Price Club at an obscenely low price. Although Price
- Club sold the PowerBooks at close to half the price the resellers
- had originally paid for their inventory, Apple kept mum, as if the
- reseller channel was so unimportant that it didn't even deserve
- notice. [It now appears that the dealers will get similarly good
- deals on other models of the PowerBook 100, so look for prices in
- the mid $700 range from your local dealer. -Adam] The monster, the
- reseller channel, that Apple created is clearly about to be kicked
- out into the world to fend for its feeble, lumbering self, while
- The Wiz and Circuit City and other consumer electronics outlets -
- and who knows, maybe even Apple, through its own mail order
- division - pour Macs to the world at large.
-
- [MacWEEK recently reported that Claris had investigated the
- possibility of building cheap Macintosh clones overseas and
- selling them under the Claris label, and apparently Apple is
- considering either selling Macs directly itself through the mail
- or authorizing certain existing mail order vendors to sell Macs as
- well. Apple recently authorized mail order vendors like
- MacWarehouse and MacConnection to sell Apple software, and some
- wonder if hardware can be far behind. Interestingly, these places
- can all sell Macs, but few of them can adequately service or
- support Macs, which may lead to some changes in dealer programs.
- -Adam]
-
- Why Apple originally didn't want to go mail order, why they built
- the reseller channel, why they did all these things in the way
- they did is a complete mystery to me. As David Ramsey, in about
- the harshest criticism of Apple I've heard him give publicly,
- said, "Apple's marketing folks are a bunch of inept yahoos. Isn't
- this obvious after all the years of Apple's bizarre and self-
- destructive marketing practices?"
-
- If I were Apple, I'd have gone to any distribution that would take
- me. Mail order, small dealers, electronics stores - ah! Maybe they
- didn't take these venues because they wanted to play with the big
- boys; they had to combat all that "toy computer" propaganda from
- priesthood-protecting DOSsers. The marketing concept of
- "authorized resellers" for computers had been in practice for a
- long time, and selling the Mac next to a Coleco Adam or a
- MyFirstComputer display in Sears would have enforced the toy
- misconception. I'm sure they had some sort of rationale (which
- would be interesting to hear from an insider).
-
- As I said, this is mostly received knowledge. Not many history
- books cover this stuff. I expect to be corrected in some aspects,
- and hope those more knowledgeable will elaborate upon others.
-
- [Do note that this is not a black and white issue. You will find
- good dealers along with the thoroughly inept ones, and I'm sure we
- have reputable mail order firms (Maya Computer had a good customer
- support reputation, for instance) along with those that will take
- your money and run. We're not trying to make a judgement call
- here, but are rather trying explain the situation so you can
- decide for yourself. -Adam]
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 17-Aug-92, Vol. 6, #30, pg. 1
-
-
- Watch Out, QuickTime
- --------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
- Apple pushers who have enjoyed a few months of uninterrupted
- multimedia advantage thanks to QuickTime are now a bit more
- concerned about what the other side has been up to. IBM reps are
- now showing stunning full-screen, full-motion video and sound on
- the PS/2 Ultimedia Model M57 SLC... and they are understandably
- enthusiastic about what they're showing.
-
- The multimedia-oriented workstation is designed around a custom
- 386 SLC processor, essentially an enhanced 20 MHz 386 SX. It
- includes a color touch-sensitive display, CD-ROM drive, and high-
- quality audio, as well as IBM's XGA graphics standard. An upcoming
- enhancement will be a 40 MHz 486 CPU upgrade for the existing
- machine.
-
- What impressed me at a recent computer show at which both IBM and
- Apple were showing multimedia solutions was that, while Apple's
- QuickTime technology is capable of showing full-motion video on a
- fast machine in a small window, IBM's technology can actually fill
- the screen with VCR-quality 30-frame-per-second video for several
- minutes at a stretch, reading the video and sound from the hard
- disk and decompressing on the fly.
-
- This isn't to say that QuickTime is not a stunning technology; it
- is. It has a tremendous potential for providing multimedia at all
- levels, from the casual user on an LC II to the power user on a
- Quadra 950. My point is simply that Apple can't rest on its
- QuickTime laurels. The technology must move forward, because IBM's
- Ultimedia technology is at QuickTime's heels.
-
- IBM -- 800/426-9402
-
-
- VRAM Problems
- -------------
- Like most computer manufacturers, Apple uses different sources for
- its chips, and this policy, though normally unnoticed, has caused
- some difficulties in upgrading the video RAM (VRAM) in Macintosh
- LCs, Quadras, and 4*8 video cards. Apple differentiates between
- its VRAM SIMMs, so you can make sure you buy the right parts when
- upgrading. However, if already have an upgrade, you may experience
- strange problems.
-
- For instance, if you have the wrong VRAM on a 4*8 card, the
- monitor may come up after a cold boot (turning the power switch
- on) in black & white mode without the "millions of colors" option
- available in the Monitors Control Panel. Restarting (a warm boot)
- will cause that option to appear, but the problem will recur every
- cold boot.
-
- If you use inappropriate SIMMs in a Macintosh LC, a few pixels
- along the left edge of the screen may intermittently change color.
- Similarly, inappropriate SIMMs in a Quadra may cause pixels to
- drop out on large monitors.
-
- To solve the problem, buy the right VRAM expansion kit from Apple
- or make sure your dealer replaces a defective VRAM SIMM with a
- correct one. If you bought your VRAM from a third party vendor,
- complain to them to get a correct SIMM.
-
- Here are the Apple part numbers for the original VRAM SIMMs:
-
- Part Number Description
- M0517LL/A Mac LC 512K VRAM SIMM
- Use with Macintosh LC only
- M5953LL/A Macintosh VRAM Expansion Kit
- Use with Macintosh Quadra only
- 661-0609 VRAM SIMM, 256K
- Use two SIMMs to upgrade Macintosh Display Card
- 4*8 only
-
- Defective VRAM should be replaced with the following service part
- numbers:
-
- Part Number Description
- 661-0609 VRAM SIMM, 256K - use with Macintosh Display Card
- 4*8 only
- 661-0649 VRAM SIMM, 512K - use with the Macintosh LC only
- 661-0722 VRAM SIMM, 256K - use with CPUs (Quadras and LC)
- only
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- More Macworld
- -------------
- by Ilene Hoffman -- ileneh@aol.com
-
- Initially I felt Macworld 1992 was less busy than in past years,
- but on the second day I revised my opinion when I could not even
- see the booths through the people at the World Trade Center. Upon
- arriving at the Bayside Exposition Hall on the next day, an audio-
- visual assault confronted me. It was loud, hot, and many booths
- had their own flavor of music (isn't multimedia wonderful), none
- of which complemented each other. No rest for the weary in this
- building! Overall, I felt that the show, although lacking in
- hoopla such as the WingZ exhibit in 1990, was a crowded success.
-
- Due the large size of the show, I decided to write about new
- products that were announced and shipping at the show. I skimmed
- the press packages to find those few gems, and, interestingly,
- found only one company who had their press information in disk
- format. So much for the paperless office. As it turns out, few new
- products were actually announced and shipping, and some of those
- we've already covered. Here are some notes on several more.
-
-
- Voyaging Onward
- My vote for the most interesting and entertaining product goes to
- the Voyager Company for an entertainment CD ROM for adults, called
- Rodney's Wonder Window. Rodney's Wonder Window's creator, Rodney
- Alan Greenblat, calls his artistic work an interactive gallery
- exhibit. He created 23 interactive modules offering animation,
- whimsical stories, QuickTime vignettes and just plain mindless
- fun. Greenblat's humorous art draws from and reflects such varied
- sources as vaudeville, PeeWee Herman, Saturday Night Live, and
- Yellow Submarine. I found it thoroughly entertaining.
-
- Too many CD-ROMs are a compendium of unrelated art with tinny
- electronic music and boring snippets of marketing material, such
- as the Macworld ExpoCD given out free at the show. In contrast,
- Rodney's Wonder Window, as one user said, is the first art-form on
- CD-ROM which is one man's talented vision. It has unity of purpose
- (fun), focus (art), and it worked correctly. The only bugs in this
- product are Greenblat's creations. The $39 CD-ROM officially
- requires 4 MB of RAM; System 6.0.7 or later; and a 13", 256-color
- monitor (or better). However, I ran into screen redraw problems on
- a 4 MB Mac and had to add 4 MB more RAM to run it without any
- problems - so make sure you have at least 4 MB free when using
- Rodney's Wonder Window.
-
- Voyager had a few other announcements, including their $295
- Expanded Book Toolkit, which allows Mac users to produce their own
- multimedia books. The Expanded Book Toolkit will ship this month,
- and we hope to bring you more detailed information about it in a
- later issue.
-
- [Those of you on the Internet might want to try this with some of
- the electronic texts from Project Gutenberg. You can subscribe to
- the Gutenberg LISTSERV by sending email to LISTSERV@UIUCVMD.BITNET
- with this line in the body of the mailfile: "SUBSCRIBE GUTNBERG
- your full name" For those you wanting to try this on the cheap,
- there is a freeware stack called BookBuilder available via FTP on
- <ftp.apple.com> in the /ftp/alug/hypercard directory. No
- guarantees - I haven't even downloaded it. -Adam]
-
- Voyager shipped four new Expanded Books, which are designed to be
- read on the PowerBooks, but can be read any large screen Mac.
- Voyager's most recent Expanded Books are Ken Kesey's "Sailor
- Song," and William Gibson's cyberpunk trilogy "Neuromancer,"
- "Count Zero," and "Mona Lisa Overdrive."
-
- Voyager has available two new music related CD-ROMs. "Richard
- Strauss: Three Tone Poems" and Volume 1 of So I've Heard. So I've
- Heard is music critic Alan Rich's five volume series of the
- history of music. Volume 1, "Bach and Before" covers musical
- history from ancient Greece to the mid-18th century in a nine-part
- essay with 48 music samplings. The Strauss CD is a nine-part
- HyperCard program, allowing users to explore Strauss's music
- in-depth.
-
- The Voyager Company -- 310-451-1383 -- 310/394-2156 (fax)
- voyager@applelink.apple.com
-
- Information from:
- Voyager propaganda
-
-
- A Varied Line from Casady & Greene
- Casady & Greene, makers of QuickDEX, announced six new products at
- the show, including font collections, games, and system
- enhancement utilities. Casady & Greene upgraded Fluent Laser
- Fonts, an exceptional font package, to Fluent Laser Fonts Library
- 2, adding 40 typefaces to the original 80-font library. Fluent
- Laser Fonts Library 2 now offers the fonts in PostScript or
- TrueType. Owners of Fluent Laser Fonts can upgrade to the new
- package for $30 for one type of font or $50 for both packages.
- Otherwise, the package retails for $179.
-
- In September Casady & Greene will release two other font
- collections: The Glasnost Cyrillic Library 2 and the Eastern
- European Library. Apple and Microsoft have unfortunately
- standardized on slightly different character sets for these
- libraries. Consequently, the Mac version of these fonts will
- include the Windows standard for offices which use both platforms.
- Casady & Greene will also release a library of Hebrew fonts later
- this year.
-
- Game enthusiasts will appreciate Casady & Greene's new Pararena
- 2.0, an upgraded version of a shareware offering. I can't quite
- describe the play action - it's something of a soccer/rollerball
- sports simulation. You play against the computer or another player
- on a network. Pararena 2.0 adds color graphics, six new players,
- and more skill levels to the smooth animation and challenging play
- of the original. I'm not partial to this type of game, but it
- impressed me nonetheless. With practice, the game should appeal to
- those who like (and are good at) arcade-style games.
-
- Casady & Greene has just contributed Innovative Utilities to the
- burgeoning field of bundled utilities. Innovative Utilities
- includes four System 6- and System 7-compatible utilities -
- Conflict Catcher, Color Coordinator, Whiz-Bang Window Accelerator,
- and HotDA. A fifth utility, Memory Maxer, only works under System
- 7.
-
- Conflict Catcher, the flagship utility, is a diagnostic tool and
- system extension manager. As the name implies, it helps diagnose
- extension and control panel conflicts at startup. I particularly
- like the system extension manager because it creates a disabled
- folder, much like Extension Manager 1.6 does [as will Now Startup
- Manager 4.0, I believe -Adam]. Conflict Catcher also lets you
- change the loading order of all extensions and control panels, no
- matter where in the System Folder they reside, and will also make
- sure the startup icons wrap neatly into two or more rows as
- necessary. No telling how well it diagnoses conflicts just yet,
- but it seems to automate the process of loading startup documents
- one by one to identify conflicts, although it's also somehow
- tracing code after startup. Casady & Greene will also make a
- Conflict Catcher Key Lock version available as a stand-alone
- product for developers and software publishers to include with
- their products. This version will allow tech support people to
- give users a code to enable Conflict Catcher for three days,
- theoretically helping to track down odd extension conflicts.
-
- Michael Greene of Casady & Greene posted on CompuServe recently,
- saying:
-
- Conflict Catcher can catch crashes caused by INIT X and
- INIT Y running unless INIT Z is running. It even found a
- bug in my own QuickDEX that required Adobe Type Reunion
- 1.3 AND Suitcase 2.1.1 to be running. Any other versions
- of either INIT, there wasn't a problem. QuickDEX is a DA
- so the crash was coming well after INIT load time but was
- influenced by the presence of the two INITs. During beta
- testing, we found five way conflicts that literally
- required five specific INITs running to cause a problem.
- Drop any one of the INITs and the problem went away. Of
- course the user would think on adding the fifth INIT to
- his mix "Gee things were going just fine until I added
- this INIT, so it MUST be this INIT's fault." Depending on
- which hapless INIT was the fifth one in, it was the one
- blamed. You can image what a headache that would be to
- find by hand.
-
- Color Coordinator allows you to link different monitor bit-depths
- to different applications, so you can have the Mac automatically
- switch to black and white for a certain application, and when you
- switch back out to another program, change back to 256 colors,
- something which freely-distributable utilities do manually, but
- not automatically. Whiz-Bang Window Accelerator supposedly speeds
- up drawing of the zoom rectangles, though frankly, if you're
- concerned about zoom rectangle speed, you can easily shut them off
- entirely with ResEdit. See TidBITS#99/Finder_Fun for the
- instructions.
-
- Casady & Greene claim that HotDA allows you to open any DA with a
- hotkey, which may be useful to users who need limited automation,
- but is better accomplished with the more powerful QuicKeys from CE
- Software
-
- The remaining System 7-specific utility, Memory Maxer, holds
- somewhat more interest for the power user. It allows an
- application to request all the available memory under System 7 no
- matter what you have set its memory partition to in the Get
- Info... box. Memory Maxer can also optionally quit the Finder,
- freeing up another 300K or so for applications. These features are
- useful, especially for users of RAM hogs like Photoshop, but the
- shareware AppSizer provides the same memory setting abilities, and
- other shareware or freeware applications allow you to quit and
- restart the Finder.
-
- On first look, it appears that Innovative Utilities will appeal to
- users who dislike using multiple freely-distributable utilities or
- the similar and heavily entrenched Now Utilities, soon to be
- updated to version 4.0 (I own Now Utilities, but have never really
- liked it [unlike us :-) -Adam & Tonya].), or who deal with
- extension conflicts constantly, since only Conflict Catcher
- provides innovative features completely unavailable elsewhere. Of
- course, such commercially bundled utilities usually share similar
- interfaces and are far less likely to conflict with each other.
-
- Casady & Greene is selling the software direct to users without
- the packaging for 50% off the list price of $79. I don't know if
- the offer will continue once the packaging is ready to ship, so
- don't delay if this product appeals to you.
-
- Casady & Greene -- 408/484-9228 -- 408/484-9218 (fax)
- D0063@applelink.apple.com
-
- Information from:
- Casady & Greene propaganda
- Michael Greene -- 76327.636@compuserve.com
-
-
- Reviews/24-Aug-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 17-Aug-92, Vol. 6, #30
- LetraStudio 2.0 -- pg. 43
- Sony CVD-1000 Vdeck -- pg. 43
- Mirror Portable 80 -- pg. 51
- IdeaFisher 2.0 -- pg. 52
- OmniPage Direct 1.0 -- pg. 54
- VoxelView/Mac 1.0 -- pg. 56
-
-
- ..
-
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