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- TidBITS#184/12-Jul-93
- =====================
-
- Matt Neuburg returns to rescind some of the negative points he
- made about the Now Utilities 4.0.1 when it came out last year,
- and Rick Sutcliffe editorializes on the future of distribution
- in the Information Age. In the practical world, James Brigman
- offers tips and information about refilling DeskWriter
- cartridges, we announce a prototype setext viewer for Unix,
- and lots of other bits about SCSI, ZipIt, Communicate Lite,
- ClarisWorks, and QM-PAGE.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
-
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- 71520.72@compuserve.com
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, memory, and accessories.
-
- For the latest APS price list, send email to: <-- New prices!
- aps-prices@tidbits.com
-
-
- 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
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- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 1106 North 31st Street -- Renton, WA 98056 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/12-Jul-93
- Now Utilities Palinode
- Unix Setext Viewer
- DeskWriter Cartridge Refilling
- A Distribution Paradigm for the Fourth Civilization
- Reviews/12-Jul-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-184.etx; 28K]
-
-
- MailBITS/12-Jul-93
- ------------------
-
- **SCSI Confusions** -- Don Norman of Apple writes: At the last
- Computer Bowl contest, the question of "how many SCSI IDs" was
- asked. One of the contestants said "eight," but this was ruled
- wrong by the judges who said "seven." The audience yelled. I
- myself called out, "number 0 is one of the ports." The question
- was turned over to the referees, and after consultation, they very
- carefully, in a measured tone of voice, announced, "The highest
- number is 7." This is, of course, correct, so the answer of
- "eight" was ruled wrong. Poor show by all involved.
-
-
- **Communicate Lite** may replace some of the abysmal programs
- currently bundled with modems. The communications program from
- Mark/Space Softworks uses a document-oriented approach along with
- support for Apple's Communications Toolbox, which allows users to
- add power by adding tools. Communicate Lite is available for
- bundling, and costs $49.95 for single copies direct from
- Mark/Space. A more-powerful version due this summer, Communicate,
- will add more communications tools, Apple events scripting for
- Frontier and AppleScript, automated virus detection, and
- integrated In and Out boxes that simplify file transfer.
- Mark/Space Softworks -- 408/982-9781 -- 408/982-9780 (fax) --
- mspace@netcom.com
-
-
- **ZipIt Wires** -- Jacob Ahlqvist <jacob.ahlqvist@compart.fi>
- writes, "In TidBITS #182_, Jim Wheelis, in his review of ZipIt,
- failed to mention one great advantage of ZipIt - it is Apple
- event-aware and ties in completely with Kem Tekinay's Freddie
- 1.2.5 (and only 1.2.5) to provide automated
- decompression/opening/reading of PC .QWK files downloaded from a
- PC BBS for off-line reading. Now you can just drop the .QWK file
- onto Freddie and leave it for a few minutes to do the trick rather
- than unzipping manually with UnZip or StuffIt Deluxe.
-
-
- **ClarisWorks has expanded** to the Windows market, with Claris
- announcing that IBM and Toshiba will bundle ClarisWorks for
- Windows with certain computer models. If you have to buy
- ClarisWorks for Windows (a good way to achieve cross-platform
- compatibility), you can buy it for $99 until 15-Aug-93. Claris --
- 800/3CLARIS -- 408/727-8227
-
-
- **Wolf Creek Technologies** recently slashed the price on QM-PAGE,
- their alphanumeric pager gateway for QuickMail, dropping it to
- $995 for 20 users and adding 10 and 5 user packs for $595 and
- $325, respectively. Wolf Creek Technologies -- 407/334-0448 --
- 407/334-2303 (fax)
-
-
- Now Utilities Palinode
- ----------------------
- by Matt Neuburg -- clas005@csc.canterbury.ac.nz
-
- A while back (November '92, in TidBITS #152_, to be exact) I said
- some positive things and some negative things about Now Utilities
- 4.0.1. Now I'd like to take back a substantial portion of the
- negative things. I have three reasons why:
-
- * I complained that despite the purported fixes between 4.0 and
- 4.0.1, Super Boomerang and NowMenus together still caused some
- crashes on my machine when the Standard File Dialog tried to come
- up. (Since this usually happened when I tried to save a document
- for the first time, I wasn't too pleased.) However, it has been a
- long time since my Macintosh has had one of these crashes. I think
- rebuilding my desktop may have helped; also, turning off Keep Show
- Info and Remove Unmounted in Super Boomerang's Control Panel may
- have had something to do with the change. Whatever the reason, I
- now regard the pair as more stable than I used to.
-
- * I said that "the lists [in the pull-down menus] are not
- hierarchical. Documents can be attached as submenus to programs;
- but programs themselves cannot be made submenus to anything. So if
- you want a really extensive list of your programs, you get a huge
- scrolling menu." A reader wrote in immediately to inform me that
- this was false. You can include a folder in a pull-down menu, and
- this folder can contain aliases of programs. If you make a bunch
- of folders representing categories (Font, Word Process, etc.) and
- put aliases of appropriate programs inside them, you can get a
- hierarchical arrangement of your programs by category in a menu.
- Furthermore, by some miracle I don't understand, recently used
- documents appropriate to those programs automatically attach
- themselves to the names of their aliases in the menu. So much for
- accuracy in my reviews; anyhow, that objection is transmuted to
- delight.
-
- * I lamented that DroppleMenu, one of my favorite extensions,
- didn't work under NowMenus 4.0.1. That has changed, thanks to
- David Winterburn, whose latest version of Menu Dropper (7.1b6 is
- the one I saw) does work with NowMenus. This means you can drag an
- icon onto the Apple menu and right down through its hierarchical
- menus, and have the thing the icon represents be moved, copied, or
- aliased to a folder, or opened by an application. This puts Menu
- Dropper up where DroppleMenu was when I was able to use it, in my
- Top Ten category of extensions, namely, "Things so valuable and
- obvious you can't believe Apple didn't build them into the System
- (or Finder) in the first place."
-
- Since I already said in the earlier review that no one should be
- without Super Boomerang, and that the whole price of Now Utilities
- was worth it for just this one application, it remains only to say
- that those of you who still haven't bought it should (a) download
- and read the review, mentally correcting it to take account of
- these retractions; (b) try out the demo version available at most
- FTP sites right now; and then (c) run, don't walk, to your phone
- or software store and purchase Now Utilities 4.0.1 immediately.
- Better still, skip (a) and (b).
-
-
- Unix Setext Viewer
- ------------------
- Those of you who read TidBITS or other setext files on Unix boxes
- may wish to check out a prototype setext viewer now posted at
- <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> for anonymous FTP as
-
- info-mac/text/setext-viewer-02-unix.txt
-
- This 13K program, sv-02, requires System 5 and the curses library.
- It will not run on a Macintosh, except perhaps under A/UX. Oguz
- Isikli, a graduate student at Bilkent University in Turkey, wrote
- the code. Oguz ported the parsing engine from Akif Eyler's Easy
- View, and Oguz based the user interface on the Unix Gopher client.
-
- Oguz and Akif do not consider sv-02 complete, and are looking for
- comments, suggestions, and possibly source code contributions to
- the project.
-
- Although anyone who knows enough about how to compile a program
- under Unix probably knows how to deal with uudecode, uncompress,
- tar, and so on, Akif provided the following instructions for
- defunking the file. Since the sumex moderators changed the name,
- you may wish to rename it to sv-02.tar.Z.uue before starting out.
-
- Instructions for defunking:
- uudecode sv-02.tar.Z.uue
- uncompress sv-02.tar.Z
- tar -xvf sv-02.tar
- cd sv-0.2
- make
- sv tidbits-184.etx
-
- Information from:
- Akif Eyler -- eyler@trbilun.bitnet
-
-
- DeskWriter Cartridge Refilling
- ------------------------------
- by James Brigman -- jkb9709@us0u31.glaxo.com
-
- Although Hewlett-Packard does not recommend refilling their
- disposable DeskJet/DeskWriter cartridges, there is little risk and
- much profit in refilling your own model 51608A or 51626A print
- cartridges. The HP DeskJet/DeskWriter color cartridge 51625 is not
- refillable. HP made this happen by not putting vent holes in the
- top of the color cartridge. Over the course of three years
- experimentation, the following helpful hints should save pain for
- the neophyte user who plans to refill cartridges.
-
- Use only water-based ink, as alcohol-based inks will immediately
- dry up and clog the print head. Previously, the Parker "Super
- Quink" brand was the ink of choice for veteran cartridge
- refillers, but Parker no longer produces it. The remaining Parker
- ink, known simply as "Quink," will not provide good results. The
- best current brand for refills is known as "Skrip." Found in a
- yellow box, this is an extremely common brand of office ink
- generally used for stamp pads and fountain pens. You'll get the
- best results from the permanent black ink, but colored inks such
- as blue and red work fine too. When experimenting with a brand,
- keep in mind that price is no indicator of performance.
-
- You can refill the cartridges using an ordinary 3 cc diabetic
- syringe, available at most pharmacies for less than 50 cents. (In
- North Carolina, U.S., no permits or prescriptions are required to
- purchase these syringes, however that may not be true in other
- states or countries.) Wash out the needle with warm tap water and
- you can reuse it almost indefinitely. Start-up costs for your
- homemade refill kit should run less than $3: about $2 for the ink
- and less than $1 for the syringe. You can get 11 refills from a
- single 2-3 ounce bottle of ink at a cost of less than 20 cents per
- refill!
-
- Don't refill a cartridge that has sat empty. Refill cartridges
- immediately after they run out of ink. It does no good to wait and
- collect used cartridges because remnants of the original ink will
- dry up and render the unit worthless.
-
- To refill the cartridge, assemble the ink container, cartridge,
- syringe and a few absorbent paper towels on your work surface. Do
- your work on a glass-topped or ceramic surface which will not
- absorb any ink spills, and be sure to place a paper towel under
- the cartridge. Don't pour the ink into the top of the syringe;
- instead, immerse the tip into the inkwell and withdraw the
- plunger, sucking the ink into the cylinder. Plunge the syringe
- into the top of the cartridge, through the vent hole for the
- entire length of the needle and slowly press the plunger. If you
- see ink bubbles around the hole, don't let them pop, as the ink
- will splash everywhere. Hold a clean paper towel around the vent
- hole to catch the bubbles. One cartridge will hold two injections
- of ink from a 3 cc syringe.
-
- Wipe off the print head. You should have some leakage from the
- refill process, which indicates a successful refill. If you see no
- leakage, the print head may be clogged. It's possible to unclog
- the head by blowing into the vent hole (carefully!) or wiping off
- the print head with a wet paper towel. You know the refill worked
- if you can wipe the print head with a tissue or paper towel and
- get a thick band of ink on the paper.
-
- Using the right kind of printer paper with your refilled
- cartridges will provide better-than-new results. Use a paper with
- high cotton content and a tight fiber "weave." Hammermill Bond,
- Hammermill Laser Copy, St. Croix Laser/Xerographic, and Xerox 4240
- provide great looking printouts from any cartridges, refilled or
- not. Refilled units also work fine with transparencies.
-
- You can refill the HP 51608A up to ten times before the electrical
- contacts on the cartridge begin to deteriorate. I have used
- refilled cartridges in the same DeskWriter for the past three
- years with no damage to the printer.
-
- Refilled and new cartridges should be good for about 500 pages of
- printing text or light graphics. If your printer gives less than
- 200 pages from a cartridge, there is an upgrade kit available only
- to early purchasers of the DeskJet and DeskWriter that greatly
- extends the print life of any cartridge, refilled or new. This kit
- is available free for affected users from Hewlett-Packard by
- calling 800/538-8787. I don't have the serial number range handy.
-
- The upgrade kit is better described as a hardware patch. The early
- DeskJets and DeskWriters used a cartridge cradle that wasn't
- perfectly airtight. As a result, the cartridge could prematurely
- dry out. The classic symptom of the problem is when someone gets
- only 200-300 pages out of a cartridge instead of the 500 page
- design limit. Usually, the print quality will be terrible for most
- of those 200-300 pages.
-
- The upgrade kit consists of a new cartridge cradle and a little
- tool with which to install it. You use the tool to remove the old
- parts and to install the new parts. After you install the kit, (it
- takes about five minutes), you will notice better print quality
- and many more pages per cartridge. Refilled cartridges especially
- like the new sled.
-
- Hewlett-Packard -- 800/538-8787
-
-
- A Distribution Paradigm for the Fourth Civilization
- ---------------------------------------------------
- by Richard J. Sutcliffe -- Rick_Sutcliffe@faith.twu.ca
-
- When the seller of goods is no longer a village craftsman dealing
- with friends and neighbours on a one-to-one basis, but a
- multinational company with hundreds of products and millions of
- end users, it is impossible to deal with each customer
- individually. Thus, the late industrial civilization created
- complex patterns for the distribution of goods and services. A
- manufacturer sold to a limited number of regional distributors,
- who in turn resold in smaller bulk lots to local distributors, who
- moved product to retailers in case lots, who then sold to the end
- user in one-of quantities.
-
- The advantage of the distribution pyramid is its simplicity at
- each stage. No one level creates an unmanageable number of
- customer records. The disadvantage is that the price may increase
- by three or four hundred percent by the time an item reaches an
- end user - this without any value being added to the product along
- the way.
-
- Already, many home-based businesses are built on short-circuiting
- this process. They offer soap, jewelry, clothing, cookware, and
- other goods directly from the manufacturer to the consumer through
- in-home sales representatives. However, these schemes can still be
- improved, for most still have distribution chains, and only the
- physical overhead is really saved.
-
- Information technologies such as automated ordering/billing and
- computer assisted manufacturing (CAM) enable a better way.
- Customers could view sample goods online or in a local showroom
- licensed by a manufacturer and/or order items to personal
- specifications from a catalog. The goods would then be made to
- order on demand by automated assembly lines receiving computerized
- instructions for each item.
-
- Electronic ordering and funds transfer would enable manufacturers
- to deal directly with the millions of customers. No paperwork
- would have to be handled, for none is created, and building to
- order cuts inventory and reduces costs further. This method might
- be most fully applied to goods requiring customizing - clothing,
- automobiles, and computer hardware. There is less to gain in the
- production of general hardware, household items and tools, for
- they can be identically mass produced. However, all would benefit
- from the shortening of the distribution chain.
-
- There is nothing new in these ideas; indeed, they could be
- regarded as obvious extrapolations of current methods of doing
- business. Direct distribution coupled with automated ordering,
- manufacturing, and paperless payment is just a natural outgrowth
- of information age technology applied back to the problems of the
- industrial age. Such a development would contribute to making the
- industrial infrastructure as invisible as is the agricultural
- infrastructure today. How many people do you know who make their
- living growing food? More to the point, how many First
- Civilization people do you know - those making a living as hunter-
- gatherers? About as many as your children will know of factory
- workers and store clerks.
-
- If this is not so far revolutionary, then how will information age
- techniques create new distribution paradigms? How will information
- and the (software) tools needed to create, manipulate, and access
- it be distributed and accounted for? After all, the number of
- contributors to a particular data bank or manipulation tool may be
- legion. In an age of reusable software components, the
- intellectual creations of scores or hundreds of people may be
- employed for a single information transaction. The industrial
- paradigm was that such techniques were licensed or purchased
- outright by a manufacturer, and the cost spread out over the
- number of items. If the new product was a success, not only did no
- further payment go to the creator of the enabling techniques, but
- the law allowed the new owner of the technique to restrict its use
- in other products. This may be an acceptable stopgap for hard
- goods in a society that is limited even in its ability to record
- the sales of goods, much less the use of methods, but it is
- already feasible to propose much better.
-
- Define a civilization's "metalibrary" to be the set of all its
- knowledge, (information and technique) together with the means of
- storing and accessing it. "The Metalibrary" is the universal
- information store, including data, journals, magazines,
- newspapers, books, TV programs, movies, artwork, in short,
- everything there is to know on whatever media. The Metalibrary
- already exists, but it will grow and develop to become something
- much more complete.
-
- Assume that anything could be posted or read (for a fee.) Assume
- that all will be hyper-indexed in space and time, so that any kind
- of multi-media thread can be followed through the Metalibrary.
- Indexing threads could be attached by individuals or by editors,
- and a user would be free to accept for view-use any thread
- collections, or only those of certain editors. (Journals would
- become collections of threads by the responsible editor.) Every
- home and business would have Metalibrary Terminals of various
- kinds. Some would do data searches, some show publications such as
- National Geographic in full colour; large ones might display
- artwork or symphonies.
-
- Each individual would have an indexing profile, started manually,
- but maintained by a "world view daemon" that monitored usage
- preferences. Every Metalibrary item (even the world views of
- others) would have a registered UIC (Universal Information Code.)
- This would be an index to the registry of contributors to that
- item, with their percentage share in the proceeds of its use. The
- registry would be hierarchical; one UIC might refer (with
- percentages) to other UICs through many levels to individual
- accounts.
-
- One distribution technique would be to download every instance of
- an item on a rental basis from the Metalibrary store - the
- ultimate in centralization . In this system, no goods are sold;
- everything is paid for each time a local instance is created and
- used. Such a method by itself has the advantage of allowing for
- proper automatic credit to the contributor, but the disadvantage
- of requiring communication bandwidths that may not be feasible.
-
- A better (self-auditing) payment mechanism was suggested by Brad
- Cox (Journal of Object-oriented Programming; Jun-92; Dr. Dobb's
- Journal; Oct-92) in his case for reusable software components. His
- technique is here adapted to the entire range of Metalibrary
- services.
-
- Local devices would have smart hardware accessed by distribution
- code contained in every software product. This code keeps a record
- by UIC of use instances (not purchase) whether items are copied
- from the Metalibrary store directly, or obtained in some other
- way. Periodic reports would be sent to an accounting daemon, which
- would employ the UIC registry to debit user accounts and credit
- creator accounts appropriately. The accounting code would also
- have to check periodically to ensure that its results had been
- sent and properly received, and refuse the application permission
- to run otherwise. This technique could be applied to the
- components of access or production software, as well as to the
- components of the data being viewed or manipulated, for all would
- have a UIC. It has the same access and payment advantages as the
- one above, and could be used in the same way, but information or
- tools would only have to be acquired once (saving much network
- bandwidth).
-
- Software would record each use of itself and of the information it
- accesses (publications on any medium, the display of artwork, 3-D
- artistic performances, and searched data). The software creators
- and data generators would receive royalties automatically in
- proportion to their contribution to the collection. If a user
- synthesized new tools or data from old, UIC codes for each
- component would be sent to accounting with appropriate
- percentages. (If the new tool were made a public product, some
- verification of the relative value of the parts to the whole would
- be necessary before actually registering a new UIC code.) For
- instance, if the user synthesized Walter Cronkite, Marilyn Monroe,
- and Elvis Presley as the evening news anchors, their estates would
- get a cut along with the reporters who produced the items, the
- team that edited that particular news thread for the day, and
- those who created the data files for the syntheses.
-
- The making of a hard copy (where appropriate) would fetch another
- premium. Artwork (wallpaper?) displayed on the condo walls would
- generate a time-based fee to the parent museum. Symphonic,
- athletic, and other performances would generate royalties
- according to a formula agreed to by the participants and
- registered for the event along with the UIC. A percentage of each
- transaction would finance the Metalibrary itself. The hardest
- distribution problems to solve, as Cox has pointed out, would be
- tamper proofing the hardware and the software to store and
- transmit accounting information. A harder problem would be the
- initial cross indexing and storage of all available knowledge in
- every form. This task could be automated for new materials, whose
- primary medium of publication would be the Metalibrary.
-
- Though specific data searches might be done online to the
- Metalibrary (more likely a series of networked nodes than a
- central location), larger and less timely collections of data,
- artwork, performances, books, and software tools might be better
- distributed "hard," i.e. on a medium such as a CD-ROM or its
- future equivalent, the 3-D data cube. Indeed, some things might
- have to be distributed "hard" to prevent piracy, as there is
- probably no effective copy protection means in software. There
- would be no reason to charge for such distribution except for the
- out-of-pocket cost, as pay-by-use would cover the important fees.
-
- Metalibrary Terminals would take the place of the mail carrier,
- telephone, TV, book reader, journal and news reader, library card,
- computer, and personal data assistant. Equipped at a some stage
- with more sophisticated interfaces, they might eventually be known
- as "pocket brains," though there would be no need to suppose them
- to be artificially intelligent. The Metalibrary would also enable
- the creation of personal services partnerships or "metapersons" -
- like present day corporations, but of limited duration and
- changeable structure. These would be the primary vehicle for the
- assembly and sale of professional services such as education,
- training, counselling, accounting, writing, software production,
- and legal services. In no case would there be a distribution
- chain, for all consumers would directly access providers.
-
- A caveat: As in other cases, information technology only enables
- the scenario painted here. Besides the unifying aspects of these
- potentially global information paradigms, other forces are at work
- to fragment nations, stir up old hatreds, and prevent the free
- flow of information. Other paradigms may replace this one before
- it is realized. Thus, although the present distribution chain is
- already obsolete and overdue for replacement, subsuming its
- functions in the Metalibrary is only possible; it is not
- inevitable.
-
- [We welcome discussion of Rick's ideas, particularly in relation
- to software distribution, online in appropriate discussion groups,
- most notably the Info-Mac Digest <info-mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu>
- and on CompuServe in the TidBITS section (#5) of MACDVEN. -Adam]
-
-
- Reviews/12-Jul-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 05-Jul-93, Vol. 7, #27
- Astound 1.0 -- pg. 37
- Remote AppleShare Tools -- pg. 37
- Server Sentry 1.0.1
- GraceLAN Server Manager 1.0.3
- Data Desk 4.1 -- pg. 44
-
- * MacUser -- Aug-93
- PowerBook 180c -- pg. 43
- ClarisWorks 2.0 -- pg. 54
- CA-Cricket Draw III 2.0 -- pg. 56
- Apple Color Printer and Apple Color OneScanner -- pg. 60
- In Control 2.0 -- pg. 62
- TimeVision -- pg. 63
- MapInfo 2.0 -- pg. 65
- FontMonger and Incubator Pro -- pg. 71
- ColorSense -- pg. 75
- DiskFit Direct -- pg. 79
- DiskFit Pro -- pg. 79
- LinksWare -- pg. 79
- Apple Adjustable Keyboard -- pg. 80
- Small Blue Planet -- pg. 81
- QMS ColorScript Laser 1000 -- pg. 84
- Special Effects Generators -- pg. 92
- VideoFusion 1.0.1
- After Effects 1.0
- High-Speed Internal PowerBook Modems -- pg. 102
- (too many to list)
- 14" & 15" Color Monitors -- pg. 120
- (too many to list)
- Accounting Programs -- pg. 132
- (too many to list)
- Paint Programs -- pg. 149
-
- * BYTE -- Jul-93
- Quicken 4 -- pg. 40
- ClarisWorks 2.0 -- pg. 151
- PageMaker 5.0 vs. Quark XPress 3.1 -- pg. 157
- v.everything Modems -- pg. 172
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is wrapped as a setext. For more information send email
- with the single word "setext" (no quotes) in the Subject: line to
- <fileserver@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned promptly.
-
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-
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