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- TidBITS#147/AppleIntros
- =======================
-
- We started writing an article about Apple's new stuff, and it took
- hold and grew into a full special issue. Past issues contain
- some of the basic information about the new machines and
- policies as well, so we held ourselves to writing about new
- topics and details unknown until this point. This is good
- stuff, so read on if you want to understand Apple's new
- machines and software.
-
- 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. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and company
- names may be registered trademarks of their companies. Disk
- subscriptions and back issues are available.
-
- For information send email to info@tidbits.com or ace@tidbits.com
- CIS: 72511,306 -- AppleLink: ace@tidbits.com@internet#
- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Apple Introduces New Hardware and Software
- Macintosh PowerBook Duos
- PowerBook 160 and 180
- PowerBook 160 and 180 RAM Issue
- Macintosh IIvi and IIvx
- Macintosh Color Display
- AppleCD 300
- System 7.1
- QuickTime 1.5
- New List Prices
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-147.etx; 27K]
-
-
- Apple Introduces New Hardware and Software
- ------------------------------------------
- Today, October 19th, was an important day for Macintosh users. If
- you don't know the significance of the date, you've been hiding
- under a non-Macintosh rock for some time. Apple today officially
- announced several much-anticipated new machines and software. We
- have already published many of the details and interesting aspects
- of the new products before these announcements, so you may wish to
- go back and check some of the previous issues, especially for
- information about the PowerBook Duos and System 7.1. In an effort
- to minimize repetition in the articles below, I will only touch on
- new or truly important features. Future issues should shed more
- light on the details in future issues too, so keep an eye out.
-
- You may have noticed that this issue bears no date, and in fact,
- we decided to limit it to articles about Apple's new products
- because we had far too much information for a single issue. Look
- for TidBITS#148/19-Oct-92 later this week with usual sort of news,
- reviews, comments, and opinions.
-
-
- Macintosh PowerBook Duos
- ------------------------
- We thoroughly covered the Duos in previous issues, but information
- has arrived from several first-hand sources who claim that the 9",
- 16-level gray-scale, backlit, supertwist, LCD screen, although not
- active-matrix, is extremely readable. One source went so far as to
- say that he preferred the Duo screen over the monochrome active-
- matrix screen used on the 170. That's entirely subjective, but
- nice to hear.
-
- The Duos use new nickel-hydride batteries that Apple claims last
- between 2 and 4.5 hours (the other PowerBooks use either NiCad
- [nickel-cadmium] or lead-acid batteries). The Duo spec sheets
- trumpet about something called EverWatch Battery Saver technology,
- but the 160 and 180 (which also have EverWatch) don't have longer
- battery life estimates, so I don't know specifically what
- EverWatch adds. Apple added an LED indicator to the Caps Lock key,
- so you can more easily see when it's engaged. Finally, the Duos
- connect to their docks via something Apple calls PowerLatch
- docking technology, and surprise, the connector is a 152-pin PDS
- connector. Can you say, "yet another slot?" I thought you could.
- Actually, Apple has a good excuse this time given the Duos' unique
- requirements.
-
- Although Apple claims the Duos are available immediately, the Duo
- Dock and MiniDock, along with the external Duo Battery Recharger
- and the new Express Modem, will not ship immediately. The Duo Dock
- and Battery Recharger will ship in November, and the MiniDock and
- Express Modem in December. The holdup on the MiniDock and Battery
- Recharger stems from the FCC not yet approving them for sale, and
- there's no messing with the FCC on that issue.
-
- In an uncommon move, Apple contracted with SuperMac to manufacture
- the Duo MiniDock and the Duo Floppy Adapter. Only Sony has
- manufactured Apple-labeled hardware before, although Sharp may
- manufacture some of the Newton devices in the future. It takes no
- great mind to add a few small, even numbers and come up with four,
- and similarly, we presume that SuperMac will soon enter the third-
- party dock market that currently contains E-Machines, Asante, and
- a company called Air Communications that is reportedly working on
- a wireless communication dock. Given SuperMac's strengths, I would
- be surprised if a dock from them did not contain accelerated
- graphics or perhaps some video capture technology taken from the
- VideoSpigot. Nothing solid here, folks, just some educated
- speculation.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Apple propaganda (like all the rest of the stuff below)
-
-
- PowerBook 160 and 180
- ---------------------
- In some ways, the 160 and 180 hold little interest - after all,
- they are merely upgraded versions of the 140 and 170, right? Yes,
- but Apple has added some new features and changed things just
- enough to keep Macintosh sales reps busy memorizing new features.
- The new 16-level gray-scale screens reportedly look very nice,
- especially the 180's active-matrix version; they sport built-in
- microphones; you can add up to 14 MB of RAM (but see below for an
- important warning about this); they ship in 120 MB hard drive
- configurations; they have more advanced battery saving technology;
- and like the PowerBook 100, they can act as SCSI hard disks for a
- desktop Mac. Last, but not least, both new models feature external
- video ports, so you won't have to purchase expensive internal
- video cards from companies like Envisio.
-
- No, the 160 and 180 don't start the juices flowing in the way the
- neat new Duos do, but in many ways they are probably better
- machines. Apple had a chance to work out the quirks in the 140/170
- design and the attention to details shows, although the 160 and
- 180 do not share the Duos' LED Caps Lock indicator. Unfortunately,
- prices on the 160 and 180, particularly a loaded 180, seem high to
- us, especially in comparison with a dockless Duo. Nonetheless,
- from all reports the 180's 4-bit active-matrix screen is stunning,
- much as the $5,500 color active-matrix displays at Macworld blew
- away any pre-conceived notions about display quality. If price
- means nothing to you, buy a PowerBook 180. Otherwise, consider the
- other new models since despite the demise of the ultra-cheap
- PowerBook 100, the current line looks extremely solid. Apple
- supposedly made $1 billion on the PowerBooks last year, and to
- judge from the improvements and new designs, the PowerBooks will
- continue to rake in the cash.
-
-
- PowerBook 160 and 180 RAM Issue
- -------------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
- Apple informed dealers this week that some third-party memory
- expansion cards designed for the PowerBook 140 and 170 models will
- not fit properly in the just-introduced PowerBook 160 and 180
- computers. Although the 160 and 180 models have the same
- specifications for their memory expansion slots, some third-party
- memory manufacturers have reportedly offered cards that don't
- quite meet the specs.
-
- The notice said that the problem occurs because of sponge heat
- sinks on certain chips in the 160 and 180, limiting the empty
- space near the memory expansion connector. The sponge heat sinks
- are in one of several "keep out" areas published by Apple in its
- specs so that third-party developers will know where their
- components can "live" and where they must not. Because of the
- apparent difficulty in designing a card that includes more than 4
- MB of RAM and still fits inside the allocated space, some
- manufacturers have sold 6 MB upgrade cards that, although they fit
- inside the 140, 145, and 170 without difficulty, take up more than
- their specified amount of space.
-
- Vendors whose memory products don't fit will need to take a closer
- look at the PowerBook developer specs (an updated copy of which
- has been sent to hardware developers) and reconfigure their cards
- to fit inside the newer machines. In the meantime, early
- purchasers of PowerBook 160 and 180 computers will need to be
- careful that any memory upgrades they buy are specifically
- guaranteed to fit the new PowerBook models.
-
- The bulletin stressed that the heat sinks should not be removed.
- Removing them voids Apple's one-year warranty on the computer, but
- more importantly, doing so creates internal heat problems. The
- excess internal heat can result in system crashes and hangs, can
- cause the computer to run hotter than it is supposed to, and its
- life span could be seriously shortened.
-
- For now, most 4 MB expansion cards should work, so users may be
- able to suffer with a little less memory in their PowerBooks.
- Users who tend to use the machines while near an electrical outlet
- can even keep the computers plugged in and take advantage of
- virtual memory. Until third-party developers start producing new
- expansion cards that fall within Apple's guidelines, though, it
- will be tough to find 6 MB expansion cards for the new machines.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Macintosh IIvi and IIvx
- -----------------------
- The IIvi dropped out of the news a while back, with rumors flying
- that it would only be sold outside of the US, and that proves to
- be true. The only real difference between the IIvi and IIvx is
- that the IIvi uses a 16 MHz 68030 chip in comparison to the IIvx's
- 32 MHz chip. I presume the speed hit is proportional. It appears
- that Apple didn't want the IIvi cutting into the Performa 600's
- niche, not surprisingly, but the extra machine does confuse
- matters slightly. But wait, now that I scan back through the
- TidBITS archive, we've never seriously talked about the IIvx. So
- what should you know about this machine anyway?
-
- In addition to the 32 MHz 68030, the IIvx includes a 32 MHz 68882
- math coprocessor and 32K of cache. It has 4 MB soldered on and can
- take up to 16 MB SIMMs in its four SIMM slots for a total of 68 MB
- of RAM. 8-bit internal video comes standard, and you can add more
- VRAM to support 16-bit color on the internal video, although
- 24-bit video requires a video card in one of the three NuBus
- slots. Other methods of expansion include an accelerator slot and
- room for three internal storage devices, which actually means one
- SuperDrive, one 3.5" hard disk, and another device, such as the
- AppleCD 300i double-speed CD drive. Alternately, you could
- probably use an internal SyQuest as your third storage device. The
- metal case and roomy interior give the IIvx a boxy look, but it's
- sturdy and cheap to manufacture that way, if a tad heavy at 25
- pounds or so.
-
- The IIvx probably performs comparably to the IIci but offers some
- additional niceties like the internal CD-ROM drive port. I doubt
- that the IIci will disappear immediately, but it wouldn't surprise
- me if Apple started to phase it out of production and dropped it
- at the next product introduction in the spring or summer,
- especially if that introduction resulted in a cheaper 68040
- machine joining the price lists. Although a slick, classy machine
- with proven performance, the IIci is the oldest Mac in the current
- lineup, and I believe it's the only one that does not include a
- microphone. In addition, Apple may wish to get rid of that
- particular case, much as it wanted to get away from the old SE and
- SE/30 case.
-
-
- Macintosh Color Display
- -----------------------
- This new 14" color monitor is only an incremental improvement over
- the previous one (i.e., it performs exactly the same task), but
- Apple paid a lot more attention to detail, making for a nicer
- monitor at a lower price. You get the same 13" of usable area on
- the Trinitron CRT (cathode ray tube), and the size is the same at
- 640 x 480 (resolution is 70 dpi instead of 69 dpi), but the new
- CRT offers higher brightness, high contrast, and uniform color.
- The monitor is 50% brighter than the previous model and supposedly
- uses 32% less power, a move I wholeheartedly endorse. Now if only
- the new desktop units could emulate the PowerBooks' sleep mode.
-
- Front-mounted controls and a tilt & swivel base make the monitor
- easier to use, and it complies with the strict Swedish guidelines
- for very-low frequency (VLF) and extremely low frequency (ELF)
- magnetic and electric emissions. Whether or not those emissions
- are specifically harmful (no one has conclusively proven that
- either way, as far as I've heard), I can't imagine that they're
- good for you. The monitor weighs a bit less, so it will be easier
- to lift, a major bonus to techie types who frequently have to move
- them. Finally, and I'm not sure how important this is, the monitor
- features automatic degaussing at startup. Probably akin to a stiff
- cup of espresso to start the day.
-
-
- AppleCD 300
- -----------
- The new CD player from Apple sets the standard for others to aim
- at with its double-speed technology, a speed select switch, a
- reasonable list price of $599, and support for multi-session
- PhotoCDs along with three other formats I'm unfamiliar with,
- CD-ROM XA (which apparently requires some extra hardware to play
- compressed audio), CD+G, and CD+MIDI. It of course reads all the
- ISO 9660/High Sierra and Macintosh HFS discs that the old (and
- still available) AppleCD 150 can read. The drive has an average
- access time of 295 milliseconds in double-speed mode, in which it
- can also transfer 300 KB of data per second.
-
- Double-speed technology isn't new, since NEC has had the CDR-73M
- out for a while now, but it was plagued with some early problems
- that NEC only recently fixed. The AppleCD 300 hopes to avoid any
- such problems with its front-mounted speed select switch, and
- frankly, I suspect that Apple tested more carefully than NEC
- anyway, to judge from some of the less than favorable comments
- I've received about NEC. Will McCauley reported on his experience
- calling NEC, saying:
-
- Gee, it wasn't that bad. I just sat with the phone
- next to my ear for 32 minutes listening to an
- improperly synchronized recording ("are busy.
- Please hold the line. All our operato") and then I
- got to talk to two real people, one of whom said
- she would send the new driver. I asked if I could
- post the driver to an electronic bulletin board,
- and she said "Oh, no, only the PC driver is posted
- there." I said I could post it to a bulletin board
- frequented by Mac users, and she said "Well, I
- don't know anything about that." Sounds like a
- go-ahead to me.
-
- I have heard that NEC plans a ROM upgrade to support multi-session
- PhotoCDs, but it appears that NEC isn't entirely with it, because
- Povl Pedersen reports, "According to comp.sys.unix.aux the new NEC
- driver is still not A/UX compatible, so if you want to install
- A/UX someday, go for another drive like one from Toshiba, Sony, or
- Apple."
-
- Many drives now support single-session PhotoCDs, which you create
- by having camera film transferred to CD rather than printed on
- paper. Multi-session PhotoCDs come about, apparently, when you
- take that CD back to the photo store and have them add more rolls
- of film to it. I know little about PhotoCD, but if anyone out
- there has played with PhotoCD personally and has had pictures put
- on one, I'd love an article about it.
-
- Interestingly, and Apple's press propaganda was no help, the
- AppleCD 300 appears to have two modes. In mode 1 the drive can
- read 656 MB per disc, and transfer data at either 150 KB/second or
- 300 KB/second (working at normal or double speed). That jives with
- the little I know about CDs. In mode 2 the drive can read 748 MB
- per disc, and transfer data at either 171 KB/second or 342
- KB/second. That's weird. It turns out that these modes are
- standards and almost all drives support both modes. Mode 2 discs
- store more and read faster because it has less error correction
- (not a problem for audio and fast animation, where a missed bit
- wouldn't matter), but almost no discs use the mode 2 format. Many
- thanks to Cary Lu, who solved this mystery by quoting to me from
- the fourth edition of his excellent book, "The Apple Macintosh
- Book," (ISBN 1-55615-278-7, $24.95 from Microsoft Press). I need
- to get my own copy of that.
-
- Information from:
- Gary Goldberg -- og@access.digex.com
- Troy Gaul -- TAG002@ACAD.DRAKE.EDU
- Will McCauley -- will@icaen.uiowa.edu
- Povl H. Pedersen -- ECO861771@ecostat.aau.dk
- Cary Lu
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- System 7.1
- ----------
- We've talked a lot about 7.1 in the past but have missed a few
- interesting bits. You know how Apple has shipped a new version of
- the operating system for each new computer, causing a
- proliferation of that final digit in the version number? Well,
- that's about to end. System 7.1 supports drop-in software modules
- called "system enablers" that enable the standard version of 7.1
- to support whatever new features of the specific Macintosh are
- appropriate. That should eliminate the 6.0.x-syndrome, where x
- equals any arbitrarily large number. I think this is a terribly
- useful (it would be thoroughly clever if it wasn't so obvious)
- innovation, and I applaud Apple for making Macintosh life easier.
-
- System 7.1 has System 7 Tune-Up built into it, which is good, but
- may unfortunately confuse the issue more. You need System 7 Tune-
- Up 1.1.1 with System 7.0 and 7.0.1, but you do not need Tune-Up at
- all with System 7.1. Hope that settles it. Apple also increased
- File Sharing security so "guest access" is no longer the default,
- and in a move I love, Apple removed DAL from System 7.1 so normal
- people no longer have to throw it out immediately. Those who need
- it can get it in a software solution pack from Apple.
-
- System 7.1 users should have almost no compatibility problems,
- with two known exceptions. Networks running AppleShare on the
- server will need to upgrade AppleShare on the server to version
- 3.0.1. More commonly, if you use MacTCP for network access, you
- should upgrade to MacTCP version 1.1.1. We have no information on
- upgrade costs or procedures for AppleShare 3.0.1 and MacTCP 1.1.1
- yet, so stay tuned.
-
-
- System 7.1 Update Kit
- As we reported, Apple's press materials imply, but do not state
- clearly, that you may not copy System 7.1 freely. You can get the
- System 7.1 Update Kit if you are a System 7 user for $34.95, and
- it includes new system disks in either 1.4 MB or 800K format, a
- QuickTime 1.5 disk, and a System 7.1 Update Guide.
-
- Unlike the following two upgrades, which will certainly be
- available through dealers and software resellers, and probably
- mail order firms like MacConnection and MacWarehouse, Apple's
- press materials say that the System 7.1 Update Kit will be
- available directly from Apple, never mentioning dealers or
- software resellers. In some respects this makes sense, since after
- the middlemen take a cut of that $35 price and discount it to the
- user, Apple would probably lose money on the Update Kits. It may
- make sense, but it doesn't mean we have to like it. $35 is not a
- lot of money for most people (and yes, I know it is for students -
- I was one not long ago), but you can't buy much other software for
- $35 and as we discussed in TidBITS#143, Apple is at heart a
- software company and must transfer its money-making ventures to
- software so that it can lower the prices on its hardware. At least
- 7.1 will come with new Macs.
-
-
- System 7 Personal Upgrade Kit
- Apple aimed the (Version 7.1) System 7 Personal Upgrade Kit at
- users upgrading from System 6. It costs $99 and includes System
- 7.1 on six 1.4 MB disks, a QuickTime 1.5 disk, and a disk with the
- Compatibility Checker. Manuals include the Desktop Macintosh
- User's Guide and the System 7 Upgrade Guide. For an unspecified
- limited time, Apple will bundle At Ease with this upgrade.
-
-
- System 7 MultiPack
- Larger sites can purchase the System 7 MultiPack, which provides a
- license for a site to upgrade up to ten users from System 6 to
- System 7.1. The software comes on CD-ROM in several language
- versions, and includes QuickTime 1.5, the Compatibility Checker,
- and system enablers. You also get 1.4 MB disks containing the same
- stuff, as well as the two manuals from the Personal Upgrade Kit
- and the Administrator's Handbook. All that and more for a mere
- $499 if you call fast. No At Ease, but you might get a Ginsu knife
- if you hurry. Obviously, a ten-user upgrade won't do squat for a
- really large site, but sit tight because Apple plans to offer a
- volume-purchase plan after 30-Nov-92. Call the number below or
- hassle your Apple rep for more info.
-
-
- Picky little details
- US customers who purchased the Version 7.0 System 7 Personal
- Upgrade Kit or the Group Upgrade Kit after 01-Sep-92 can get the
- 7.1 version for free with proof of purchase. For more information
- on that, call the number below.
-
- If you purchase either the System 7 Personal Upgrade Kit or Group
- Upgrade Kit and require 800K disks, you can call and Apple will
- send them to you at no charge.
-
-
- Asian System versions
- Along with the US version of System 7.1, Apple also has KanjiTalk
- 7, the Japanese version, available immediately. It includes all
- the features of System 7.1, plus the Kotoeri input method and
- seven new Kanji TrueType fonts. Other versions of System 7.1 will
- be available soon, including the Korean version on 01-Nov-92, the
- Thai version on 15-Nov-92, the ChineseTalk II (Traditional)
- version on 15-Nov-92, and the System 7 (Chinese/simplified)
- version on 15-Jan-93.
-
- Apple System Software Upgrades -- 800/769-2775
-
-
- QuickTime 1.5
- -------------
- If you don't know what QuickTime is yet, go directly to
- TidBITS#73, do not pass GO, and do not collect $200. QuickTime 1.5
- offers significant enhancements over QuickTime 1.0, and anyone
- serious about QuickTime will want it. You can now play movies in
- screen sizes up to 320 x 240 pixels at 15 frames per second (fps)
- on an LC II-class machine. If you shrink the window to the old
- standard, 160 X 120, you can double your frames per second to 30
- fps. QuickTime 1.5 includes integrated support for the new Kodak
- PhotoCD format for storing your 35 mm pictures on a CD-ROM. You
- can easily view thumbnails of your images, see a QuickTime
- overview movie of your images, and paste PhotoCD images into any
- Mac application that accepts PICTs (PhotoCD format is not the same
- as PICT, so QuickTime does the translation for you). Other
- software tweaks include a better interface and generic media
- handlers, which allow developers to create new track types, much
- as Apple did in creating the new text track.
-
- In the hardware world, QuickTime 1.5 will support some upcoming
- third-party, full-screen, full-motion, digital video cards from
- companies like SuperMac, NuVideo, and RasterOps. Captured video
- will be higher quality and hardware-assisted playback will double
- playback rates. QuickTime movies on CD-ROM will play better with
- version 1.5, and those of us with color-capable machines with
- monochrome monitors (SE/30, Classic II, and anything with a
- monochrome monitor) will enjoy faster 1-bit dithering, which will
- improve the speed and quality of color movies viewed in
- monochrome.
-
- QuickTime 1.5 requires, like 1.0, a Macintosh with at least a
- 68020 processor, 2 MB of RAM, and System 6.0.7 or later.
-
- Interestingly, Apple says that QuickTime 1.5 is available now, and
- "will be distributed via a wide variety of bulletin boards and
- user groups." The press release goes on to say, "Apple recommends
- that the QuickTime 1.5 extension be available free of charge.
- Bulletin boards, user groups and resellers may charge a nominal
- fee for materials, labor and connect time." Straight from the
- Cupertino-based horse's mouth, folks.
-
-
- New List Prices
- ---------------
- I know that list prices aren't as useful as the street prices, But
- we don't know what the street prices will be, and they are likely
- to fluctuate until distribution settles down and everything is
- readily available. For what it's worth, then... (compare with the
- table in TidBITS#143 - you do use Easy View so it's easy to go
- back to old issues, no?). The prices that interest me the most are
- the relatively low prices for the Duos, especially in comparison
- to the 145, 160, and 180. It makes sense because the Duos have no
- floppy drives and fewer ports, but I'm still slightly surprised
- Apple didn't increase the price for them simply because they are
- new and cool.
-
- Suggested Retail
- Macintosh IIvx 4/80 $2,949
- Macintosh IIvx 4/230 $3,319
- Macintosh IIvx 5/80, CD $3,219
-
- (no prices available for IIvi configurations, sorry)
-
- Macintosh PowerBook 145 4/40 $2,149
- Macintosh PowerBook 145 4/80 $2,499
- Macintosh PowerBook 160 4/40 $2,429
- Macintosh PowerBook 160 4/80 $2,789
- Macintosh PowerBook 160 4/120 $3,149
- Macintosh PowerBook 180 4/80 $3,869
- Macintosh PowerBook 180 4/120 $4,229
-
- Macintosh PowerBook Express Modem Kit $319
-
- Macintosh PowerBook Duo 210 4/80 $2,249
- Macintosh PowerBook Duo 230 4/80 $2,609
- Macintosh PowerBook Duo 230 4/120 $2,969
-
- Macintosh Duo Dock $1,079
- Macintosh Duo MiniDock $589
- PowerBook Duo Floppy Adapter $135
- Macintosh Duo Floppy Disk Drive $199
-
- Macintosh Color Display (14") $589
-
- AppleCD 300 $599
- Macintosh CD 300i Internal Upgrade $469
-
-
- ..
-
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