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- TidBITS#164/15-Feb-93
- =====================
-
- This issue ranges widely, from a warning about our recently
- published ATM hack to a look at a pending lawsuit against
- Microsoft for thoroughly unpleasant behavior. Also check out
- reviews of four Internet books, the free Macintosh Hardware
- System Update and a MODE32-like Enabler, an upgrade to
- AppleShare 3.0.1, CE's Test Drive program for user groups,
- humorous notes from Macworld SF, and an open letter concerning
- Apple's questionable policy on repair parts.
-
- Copyright 1990-1993 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 - email for details.
-
- 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:
- MailBITS/15-Feb-93
- Font Folder Hack Warning
- CE Test Drives User Groups
- LaserWriter Pro 600 Upgraded
- Apple's Unfair Parts Policy
- AppleShare 3.0.1 Upgrade
- Macworld Quotes
- Apple Software Enhancements
- DOS 6.0 and Compression?
- Internet Books, In Review
- Reviews/15-Feb-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-164.etx; 28K]
-
-
- MailBITS/15-Feb-93
- ------------------
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-
- Font Folder Hack Warning
- ------------------------
- by Matt Deatherage -- 76703.3030@compuserve.com
-
- In TidBITS#162, there's a second part of a hack started in
- TidBITS#157 to make ATM 2.0.2, 2.0.3, and 2.0.4 work under System
- 7.1. The hack in TidBITS#157 involves replacing the Folder Manager
- identifier 'extn' with 'font', so ATM looks in the Fonts folder
- instead of the Extensions folder when seeking Type 1 fonts to
- render. Of course, System 7.0 and System 7.0.1 don't have the
- 'font' selector for the Fonts folder, so you can't take this
- hacked version of ATM back to those older systems and expect it to
- work.
-
- The second part of the hack adds the 'font' selector to these
- earlier systems by modifying the 'fld#' resource in your system
- file - this makes the Folder Manager create and subsequently use
- whatever folder name in the System Folder you add to the 'fld#'
- resource with the selector 'font'. Now, since you've hacked ATM to
- use the 'font' selector to FindFolder (instead of 'extn') and
- since you've added that selector to your 'fld#' resource, ATM will
- look in the folder you specified for your Type 1 fonts.
-
- (Editing the 'fld#' resource does change how FindFolder works, but
- the next time you install something it could get rewritten, and
- Apple doesn't guarantee any of this.)
-
- Unfortunately, the LaserWriter driver won't do the same thing - it
- will still look in the Extensions folder while ATM is looking in
- this new folder, so you could wind up with ATM working but
- printing broken. Only LaserWriter driver 7.1.2 (which comes with
- System 7.1) or later (like version 7.2, which comes with the
- LaserWriter Pro) will use the 'font' selector to find fonts, so
- you either have to use those drivers or hack the LaserWriter
- driver to make _it_ look in your new folder (can you detect an
- increasing chain here?).
-
- Also, the hack is of limited use - since you have to have 7.1 (or
- a LaserWriter Pro, or more hacking nerve) to have a LaserWriter
- driver that will find your fonts in the same place that your
- hacked ATM will, you probably won't need one copy of ATM that
- works under both 7.0 and 7.1 (unless you revert to 7.0 often from
- 7.1). It just seems easier to take advantage of Adobe's upgrade
- offer to ATM 3.0 unless you really like this kind of two-bit
- surgery.
-
-
- CE Test Drives User Groups
- --------------------------
- Mark H. Anbinder, our ever-vigilant Contributing Editor, reported
- on CE Software's innovative Test Drive program in TidBITS#161. The
- program recompenses dealers for sales lost to mail order vendors
- and direct sales. Under the program, dealers demo QuicKeys to
- users, then give them a crippled version of QuicKeys that works
- temporarily. At the end of that time, if the user orders the full
- version directly from CE, CE compensates the dealer who generated
- the sale by tracking the serial number on the Test Drive disk. We
- asked if the same program would apply to user groups, and although
- it didn't at the time, CE has now instituted a similar program for
- user groups.
-
- A recognized user group can contact CE (in the person of Michele
- Eddie, CE's User Group Coordinator) and request a Test Drive disk
- coded for that user group. The user group then distributes the
- disk to members, and when the users purchase the full version of
- QuicKeys from CE, the user group receives a bonus for generating
- that sale. Jim Sheldon-Dean, QuicKeys Product Manager, said, "We
- are including the user groups in recognition of the fact that they
- play an important role in the education and support of users. CE
- has always been a friend of user groups, and we hope that their
- involvement in Test Drive will help repay them for their support
- in the past."
-
- We're pleased to see CE's support of user groups and hope the Test
- Drive program will introduce more people to QuicKeys (which we
- rely on heavily) and generate much-needed revenue for user groups.
-
- CE Software, Michele Eddie -- 515/224-1995 -- 515/224-4534 (fax)
- 76136.2137@compuserve.com
- CE.PR on AppleLink
- CESOFTWARE on America Online, GEnie, and MCI Mail
-
- Information from:
- Jim Sheldon-Dean, QuicKeys Product Manager
-
-
- LaserWriter Pro 600 Upgraded
- ----------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers Inc.
-
- In addition to introducing its new LaserWriter Select printers,
- Apple announced last week that the basic LaserWriter Pro 600 model
- will now ship with 8 MB of RAM as a standard feature. This will
- enable LaserWriter Pro 600 owners to take advantage of the
- printer's 600 dot-per-inch resolution and PhotoGrade capability
- without having to purchase a memory expansion.
-
- Apple originally offered the memory expansion free of charge as an
- "introductory offer," and has apparently decided to make it a
- permanent change. This makes sense, as it will allow the
- LaserWriter Pro 600 to offer 600 dpi printing right out of the
- box.
-
- The LaserWriter Pro 630 still differs from the 600 model in that
- it offers an EtherTalk port in addition to the LocalTalk, serial,
- and parallel ports that are common to both printers, as well as
- two SCSI ports (one external HDI-30 connector and one internal
- connector) to allow the use of an internal or external hard disk
- for font storage.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- Apple's Unfair Parts Policy
- ---------------------------
- by Fred Condo -- CONDOF@CGSVAX.CLAREMONT.EDU
-
- Recently, my Apple CD-ROM drive's eject mechanism failed. The
- warranty had expired. I took it to my authorized Apple dealer for
- service. The technician there identified a gear, whose cost he
- estimated to be $5, as the faulty part.
-
- Apple, however, absolutely refuses to sell its dealers anything
- but the entire drive mechanism (that is everything except the
- power supply and case), whose cost is approximately $500. This
- cost is borne by the customer.
-
- A call to 800/SOS-APPL, Apple's hotline, put me in touch with
- Scott, a polite young man who confirmed that Apple would not sell
- parts, but only the entire "module," which in this case is
- virtually the whole unit. Scott cited a corporate concern Apple
- had about complex inventories as its corporate reason for this
- policy.
-
- Scott politely took a formal complaint from me to be forwarded to
- Apple management.
-
- The Macintosh is a great product. It deserves to be backed by a
- fair and reasonable service parts policy.
-
- Meanwhile, my friendly local Apple service technician is scouring
- the Earth for someone who will break the conspiracy and sell him
- the contraband $5 gear. If I sound a little bitter, I suppose I
- am, as any consumer would be in the face of a bald-faced corporate
- scam by a company he used to respect. For the $500 Apple wants me
- to pay for a $5 gear, I could easily buy a new CD-ROM drive.
- [Admittedly, at least you could get a better drive for the money,
- not that that's any consolation. -Adam]
-
- I will even concede that Apple's "modules-only" policy may make
- sense for purely electronic modules such as motherboards. It does
- not make sense, however, for mechanical devices such as CD-ROM
- drives, as their mechanical components are subject to higher
- failure rates, by their very nature, than are electronics with no
- moving parts.
-
- If you disagree with Apple's policy, I hope you call their 800
- number or write them to let them know (politely, of course) that
- their policy is wrong. I also suggest avoiding the purchase of
- Apple peripherals with moving parts until their blatantly unfair
- and rapacious repair policy is rescinded. If this policy has
- caused you substantial, unfair costs, I hope you will join me in
- reporting it to your local consumer protection authority (in
- California, the Department of Consumer Affairs). Please also
- report your experience as I have on the net. Perhaps public
- embarrassment over a patently anti-customer policy will sway them
- to alter it.
-
-
- AppleShare 3.0.1 Upgrade
- ------------------------
- The $1,199 AppleShare Server 3.0.1 is now shipping. Enhancements
- include minor bug fixes in the file and print servers, the ability
- to run on System 7.1, improved compatibility with CE Software's
- QuickMail 2.5, increased client performance during file
- duplication, and improved compatibility with Dantz's Retrospect
- Remote.
-
- If you bought version 3.0 from an authorized Apple reseller
- between 01-Jan-92 and 01-Apr-93 you can upgrade for free until
- 01-Apr-93. Your dealer may have upgrade coupons, or they can be
- found on AppleLink in AppleLink -> Apple Sales & Mktg -> Apple
- Programs -> AppleShare Server 3.0.1 Upgrade Program. Fill out the
- coupon and mail it in with the original, dated, itemized, folded,
- spindled, mutilated, and notarized-in-blood sales invoice or your
- original AppleShare Server 3.0 File Server disk for each upgrade
- requested. Expect delivery in two or three weeks.
-
- Mail coupon and proof of purchase to:
-
- AppleShare Server 3.0.1 Upgrade Offer
- Apple Computer, Inc.
- P.O. Box 1584
- Minneapolis, MN 55440-1584
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- Macworld Quotes
- ---------------
- I thought you might enjoy these quotes and notes from Macworld San
- Francisco. Nothing serious here, or is there?
-
- "Steve Jobs is like herpes. He's never going to go away." -Guy
- Kawasaki, speaking about NeXT.
-
- "The difference between Sculley and me is that I know I don't have
- vision." -Guy Kawasaki, when asked about his opinion of John
- Sculley.
-
- "The first time is science; the second time is engineering, and
- I'm a scientist." -paraphrased from the inimitable Cliff Stoll,
- when talking about catching hackers.
-
- And finally, though not exactly a quote, we'd like to acknowledge
- MacWEEK's cleverly and ambidextrously presented awards. One hand
- gave Microsoft Word 5.1 the 1992 Diamond award for word
- processing, saying that "Microsoft has [...] made the program
- easier to use and more powerful." With its other hand, MacWEEK
- presented Microsoft with a 1992 Dubious Achievement award. This
- one was the "The Easy Way Award," which went to Word 5.1, "the
- only 'ease-of-use' upgrade that managed to make an already
- difficult program even harder to use. What do those icons mean
- anyway?" Hmm...
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 14-Dec-92, Vol. 6, #44, pg. 72
- MacWEEK -- 04-Jan-93, Vol. 7, #1, pg. 34
-
-
- Apple Software Enhancements
- ---------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers Inc.
-
- Last Friday Apple announced a set of software enhancements that
- improve the performance of a variety of Macintoshes using System
- 7.1. In addition, Apple released the long-awaited System Enabler
- that replaces MODE32 for users of System 7.1.
-
- The Macintosh Hardware System Update should interest a wide
- segment of the Macintosh population - though Apple says they do
- not expect most people to require this update. This "set of
- software enhancements" (the Installer installs only the parts of
- the update that your Mac needs) improves high-speed serial
- communications reliability, system clock precision, reliability of
- floppy ejects on shutdown, and low-memory performance on specific
- Macs. We suspect Apple has underestimated the number of users who
- will value this update
-
- MODE32, created by Connectix and licensed by Apple a little over a
- year ago, allows users of the Macintosh II, IIx, IIcx, and SE/30
- to utilize 32-bit memory addressing under System 7. This allowed
- these Macs to address more than 8 MB of physical RAM, or more than
- 13 MB of virtual memory. Using 32-bit addressing, Macintosh II
- users can access up to 68 MB of physical memory when a PMMU (paged
- memory management unit) is installed, and users of the other three
- machines may access up to 128 MB of physical memory. All of the
- machines will be able to address up to one gigabyte of virtual
- memory. MODE32 wasn't fully compatible with System 7.1, but Apple
- did not have a replacement ready until now.
-
- These products are available free of charge from a number of
- online services and US readers can also order it starting 24-Feb-
- 93 from one of Apple's handy-dandy fulfillment houses for a $10
- shipping and handling charge. Readers with access to AppleLink may
- peek in Software Sampler -> Apple SW Updates -> Macintosh ->
- Supplemental System Software.
-
- Apple -- 800/892-4649
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- DOS 6.0 and Compression?
- ------------------------
- John Bittner writes:
-
- I just saw a demo of DOS 6.0 at the Infomart in Dallas Texas. It
- has many new features such as built-in backup software, undelete,
- move, transparent hard disk compression, hard disk
- defragmentation, memory management improvement, and built-in
- anti-virus software.
-
- The file compression will work with floppy disks which should
- double their capacities. I asked the rep if Apple File Exchange
- would be able to read a compressed floppy. He did not know. I
- doubt it will. DOS 5.0 will not be able to read compressed
- floppies either. Will they have to rewrite Apple File Exchange
- (AFE) to read them? Will Mac users need a new floppy drive to use
- AFE on the compressed floppies?
-
- [We don't expect Macintosh users will need new floppy drives to
- read compressed disks, but we doubt that AFE will function
- correctly with DOS 6.0 compressed disks. Apple may not update AFE
- but might instead update the commercial Macintosh PC Exchange to
- handle those compressed disks. Third-parties such as DataViz will
- probably sell solutions relatively quickly. -Adam & Tonya]
-
- Information from:
- John Bittner -- jbittner@k5qwb.lonestar.org
-
-
- Microsoft and Stac
- Stac Electronics, compression software leader in the PC world and
- soon to be a compression contender in the Mac arena with its
- driver-level compression utility Stacker, claims that the
- compression capabilities in DOS 6.0, called DoubleSpace, infringe
- on two of Stac's compression patents. Here's an abbreviated
- version of the story from Stac's lawsuit.
-
- As Stacker for DOS became popular, Mr. Bill became interested in
- the technology and asked the president of Stac to contact
- Microsoft about including it in DOS. Keep in mind that DOS's main
- competitor, DR-DOS from Novell, already includes compression
- capabilities. Stac and Microsoft negotiated licensing issues, and
- Microsoft refused to pay any royalty to Stac for the license,
- making it clear that if they didn't use Stac's technology, they
- would use someone else's, and even at one point showing Stac a
- spreadsheet outlining the adverse impact on Stacker's sales if
- this happened. As negotiations continued, it became clear that
- Microsoft wanted Stac's technology but didn't want to pay for it.
- Irritated, Stac broke off the talks. Finally, Microsoft called
- Stac again, because they determined that their own compression
- code infringed on at least one of Stac's patents. Microsoft
- promised to send Stac a licensing proposal and a beta of DOS 6.0.
- A month or so later, in January of 1993, Microsoft sent the beta,
- but included a note saying essentially "Don't worry about the
- patent stuff. We are just going to keep our changed code which
- does not infringe."
-
- All fine and nice, but when Stac examined the beta, they
- determined that it infringed on two of Stac's patents. That's not
- the end of the story though. Microsoft sent Stac a preliminary
- press release that Microsoft plans to license, for free, the
- compression code in DoubleSpace, to all comers to create an
- opportunity for third parties to enhance DOS 6.0's compression
- features with add-on boards, chips, and software. Needless to say,
- Stac was not pleased, and brought in the legal howitzers.
-
- Interestingly, although Stac seems like the poor, downtrodden
- underdog in this case, their white hat is a bit soiled. Remember
- the DoubleUp compression board from Sigma Designs that used
- Salient's DiskDoubler as an interface? Well, that board used a
- chip from Stac, and after Stac received a patent on their
- algorithms, licensing talks with Salient bogged down even though
- Salient only needed to license the expansion code since the Stac
- chip on the DoubleUp board handled compression. Although no one
- specifically identified any malice on Stac's part, we do wonder if
- Stac's forthcoming Stacker for Macintosh might have played a role
- in the talks falling apart.
-
- It's a nasty world out there - I'm amazed at how pleasant most
- people on the Internet are in comparison to what goes on in real
- life.
-
-
- Internet Books, In Review
- -------------------------
- by Ellen Hoffman, Merit/NSFNET Information Services
-
- [This review reprinted with permission from Link Letter, Vol. 5,
- #3, Nov-92. Link Letter is published by Merit/NSFNET Information
- Services. To subscribe send email to:
- <NSFNET-linkletter-request@merit.edu>.]
-
-
- Informative Internet Books Rolling Off The Presses
- The growth of the Internet has created a market for commercial
- publishers, resulting in a flurry of new books on getting started
- with the Internet. This trend is a change from the past, when most
- Internet "how-to" information was produced by unpaid volunteers
- and available at no cost online. The newest books are hardly
- mass-market paperbacks, but for those who don't have online access
- to free sources of information or just like having a one-source
- reference on their desks, these books are excellent beginning
- guides to the Internet.
-
- Three books already on the shelves include works by authors who
- have previously been active in developing online materials. They
- have their roots in academia, where the Internet has been most
- widely deployed and have brought their extensive knowledge to
- these publications.
-
-
- Zen and the Art of the Internet
- For a short and to-the-point introduction, Brendan P. Kehoe's "Zen
- and the Art of the Internet" (Prentice Hall, 112 pages, $22.00) is
- the second edition of a popular online work issued earlier this
- year. It provides updates to the earlier document and some minor
- corrections. The primary focus is what resources are out on the
- Internet, and how to find out more about using them. This work is
- ideal for individual users who have questions about using the
- Internet. Kehoe initially developed his publication while a
- college system administrator who found himself answering the same
- questions again and again. When he developed this piece to resolve
- his frustrations, he also wrote an excellent and friendly summary
- that benefits all beginning users.
-
-
- The Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog
- Ed Krol's 1989 paper, "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet," was
- one of the first general introductions to the Internet for the
- non-technically inclined. He has followed that success with his
- new book, "The Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog" (O'Reilly
- & Assoc., 376 pages, $24.95). Krol's book goes beyond Internet
- resources to provide an overview of the network's history,
- technical foundations, and policies. The book evokes the culture
- of the Internet to help the network novice get a feel for the
- network's structure which can be useful background for
- understanding how to best use the Internet. Like Krol's earlier
- work, the breezy style makes for pleasant reading on what could
- have been a very heavy-weight topic. The old-time woodcut
- illustrations in the catalog resource list at the end contribute
- to the charm of this work.
-
-
- The Internet Companion: A Beginner's Guide to Global Networking
- The third book comes from Tracey LaQuey with Jeanne C. Ryer, "The
- Internet Companion: A Beginner's Guide to Global Networking"
- (Addison-Wesley, 196 pages, $10.95). LaQuey's previous book,
- "User's Directory of Computer Networks" (Digital Press, 653
- pages), has been a primary resource on network providers since its
- publication two years ago, although rapid changes in networking
- have dated some of the material - a problem with any book covering
- this subject. LaQuey brings her knowledge to her newest work and
- provides a well-researched introduction to Internet resources and
- uses.
-
-
- Internet: Getting Started
- Not all guidebooks come from commercial publishers. SRI
- International has produced an excellent introduction in "Internet:
- Getting Started" (SRI, 333 Ravenswood Ave., Menlo Park, CA 94025,
- 318 pages, $39). Edited by April Marine, this book has an
- international flavor, covering not only the US Internet, but also
- networks throughout the world. It is particularly useful for the
- beginner who is interested in connecting to the Internet, and
- provides more technical detail in addition to sections on Internet
- resources. It has an excellent list of network providers and also
- other organizations which are important to Internet administration
- and development.
-
-
- Additional resources via anonymous FTP
- A number of other books are scheduled for release early next year.
- Of course, there are still many sources of information that don't
- cost money if you have a connection to the Internet. Two excellent
- resource guides developed by the information services staffs at
- NorthWestNet and CICnet are available by Anonymous FTP, as well as
- Kehoe's "Zen and the Art of the Internet" (first edition). Both
- guides can also be purchased in hard-copy format from their
- publishers.
-
- The "NorthWestNet User Services Internet Resource Guide" online
- version (1992, 300 pages) is available only in PostScript format.
- To find out about getting the files, get the file README.nusirg in
- the directory /nic/nwnet/user-guide from ftphost.nwnet.net.
-
- The "CICNet Resource Guide" is available in both text and
- PostScript formats. For information on obtaining the Guide online,
- use Anonymous FTP to access nic.cic.net and get the file README in
- the directory /pub/resourceguide.
-
- If you are interested in obtaining "Zen" and other free, online
- introductory information on the Internet, a good source is the
- document collection found in archives around the Internet called
- introducing.the.internet. To find out more about accessing these
- publications, send a message to nis-info@nis.merit.edu with the
- first text line: send access.guide.
-
-
- Reviews/15-Feb-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 08-Feb-93, Vol. 7, #6
- In Control 2.0 -- pg. 55
- Helix Express 1.0 -- pg. 55
- WordPerfect Works 1.2 -- pg. 60
- Dayna network Management System 1.0 -- pg. 60
-
- * Macworld -- Feb-93
- Security Programs -- pg. 144
- (too many to list)
- 24-bit Color Cards -- pg. 152
- (too many to list)
- Personal Information Managers -- pg. 160
- (too many to list)
- Network Utilities -- pg. 168
- (too many to list)
- Microsoft PowerPoint 3.0 -- pg. 188
- MacroMind Director 3.1 -- pg. 190
- DateBook 1.5.1 -- pg. 192
- TypeReader 1.0 -- pg. 192
- PowerBooks 145, 160, & 180 -- pg. 196
- Action 1.0 -- pg. 202
- ElectricImage Animation System 1.5.1 -- pg. 204
- Power Portrait -- pg. 206
- PowerVision and BookView Imperial -- pg. 208
- Business Sense 1.6 -- pg. 208
- WideWriter 360 -- pg. 212
- ACT for Macintosh 1.0 -- pg. 214
- Microsoft Works 3.0 -- pg. 218
- Magnet 1.0 -- pg. 220
- Poetry in Motion -- pg. 222
- HP LaserJet 4M -- pg. 222
- Sketcher 1.0 -- pg. 224
- PhonePro 1.0.3 -- pg. 224
- Sportster 14,000 Mac & Fax -- pg. 226
- SimLife 1.0 -- pg. 226
- Inspiration 4.0 -- pg. 230
- MacGlobe 1.3 -- pg. 230
- So I've Heard, Volume 1: Bach and Before -- pg. 235
- Media Control Station -- pg. 235
- Intouch 2.0.4 -- pg. 236
- Insanity 1.0 -- pg. 236
- Expert Landscape Design -- pg. 238
- ClearVue/SD21 -- pg. 238
-
-
- ..
-
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