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- TidBITS#36/14-Jan-91
- ====================
-
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Couple of Things
- MacUser's Editors' Choice Awards
- TidBITS Macworld Expo Briefs
- Filling the Portable Gap
- Stupid Net Tricks
- Reviews/14-Jan-91
-
-
- Couple of Things
- ----------------
- Once again I have a few interesting items that don't quite merit
- their own articles. Since San Francisco's Macworld Expo just
- ended, I figured you would wish to read about what was there and
- what was not. I couldn't go for various reasons - not the least of
- which was 3000 miles of intervening continent - but Mark Anbinder,
- a local Macophile and president of MUGWUMP, the Ithaca Macintosh
- Users' Group, volunteered to send back some articles. Aren't Mac
- Portables nice? This is good stuff, and Mark even managed to get
- press badge because he was writing for TidBITS. If anyone wishes
- to cover other shows that I can't go to, like Macworld Timbuktu,
- let me know and I'll write you a note on TidBITS letterhead saying
- that yes indeed, you are an authorized TidBITS Cub Reporter and
- should get a press badge. Next thing you know we'll have TidBITS
- Secret Decoder Rings. Seriously, though, if you wish to do this,
- I'll send along article guidelines as well, because a trade is a
- trade and I would expect decent articles in return for a press
- badge.
-
- We recently received some nice brochures from Cork about the Cork
- System 30 (exactly as we reported a few weeks ago). Cork was a
- little premature in printing their brochures, though, as someone
- had to hand correct the price ($2999 up from $2299, unfortunately)
- and the operating system (Apple instead of Cork). Curious. On a
- related note, if you want more information about the Cork, you
- must call or write them. Through an unfortunate formatting
- happenstance, Doug Davenport's name and address were listed in our
- article in a way that made it seem as though he is related to
- Cork. He isn't and can't even reply to email sent to that address.
- So please, don't ask Doug for Cork information, instead, call Cork
- in Texas and talk to them. They're quite friendly, though we'll be
- even fonder of them if they send us a review unit. In the
- interests of science, of course :-). One final note. If you order
- a Cork System 30 before the end of January, you get a $200 rebate,
- though there's no telling when Cork will actually ship their IIci
- clone.
-
- Cork Computer Corp.
- 9430 Research Blvd. Bldg. II Suite 250
- Austin, TX 78579
- 512/343-1301 (voice)
- 512/345-5059 (fax)
-
- Right around Christmas (nice timing) we received a disk from who,
- of all people, but Ashton-Tate. You know, the people who do dBASE
- and can't remember that they have any Macintosh products for a
- minute or so when you call them on the phone. When they do
- remember, they make you call all around California looking for
- help. We were pleasantly surprised to find that the disk contained
- a free upgrade of Full Impact 2.0. Ashton-Tate claims that the
- upgrade fixes some slow recalculation times and also improves the
- memory management to make Full Impact more stable. We haven't had
- any problems with it, but we don't bother to save most of our
- spreadsheets, not being much in the way of serious number people
- and having very little in the way of important numbers.
-
- If you have problems with Full Impact, Ashton-Tate says that
- they've moved their Technical Support for Macintosh products to
- Northern California to improve customer service. I'm not sure I
- see the connection, but perhaps it helps if you've been to
- Northern California, which I haven't. If you're curious, or if
- you're having trouble with Full Anything (shorthand for the whole
- product line and the name they could use for an integrated
- package) call the number below.
-
- Ashton-Tate -- 408/927-0880
-
-
- MacUser's Editors' Choice Awards
- --------------------------------
- The evening before Macworld Expo opened, MacUser announced this
- year's winners of its series of coveted industry awards. 1990 was,
- the editors' introduction tells us, "a year of great beginnings in
- areas such as 24-bit color, cross-platform connectivity, virtual
- reality, 3-D modeling, and video." Each category has a winner and
- two honorable mention recipients; we will only provide a list of
- the winners themselves. MacUser will publish its own list
- containing all three finalists for each category, along with
- descriptions of the products and the reasons they came out on top.
-
- [Editors' note: Congratulations to the winners! Our main regret is
- that there was no category in which TidBITS could compete. Maybe
- next year. Kudos to Mark for gathering all the contact information
- at the end - it must have been a lot of work.]
-
- * Best Data-Management Product: ClearAccess 1.21, from Fairfield
- Software.
-
- * Best Data Resource: Accents & Borders, from 3G Graphics.
-
- * Best Financial-Management Package: WealthBuilder by Money
- Magazine, from Reality Technologies.
-
- * Best Communications Product: TelePort A300, from Global Village
- Communication.
-
- * Best Page-Design Program: PublishIt! Easy 2.0, from Timeworks.
-
- * Best Typographic Program: TypeStyler 1.5, from Broederbund.
-
- * Best Presentation Product: MORE 3.0, from Symantec.
-
- * Best Color Prepress: ColorStudio 1.1, from Letraset.
-
- * Best CAD Software: MiniCad+ 3.0, from Graphsoft.
-
- * Best 3-D Modeling/Rendering Package: DynaPerspective 2.0, from
- DynaWare.
-
- * Best Animation Program: FilmMaker, from Encore Development and
- Paracomp.
-
- * Best Multimedia Software: Authorware Professional for Macintosh,
- from Authorware.
-
- * Best Desktop-Video Product: RasterOps Video ColorBoard 364, from
- RasterOps.
-
- * Best Connectivity Software: Timbuktu, from Farallon.
-
- * Best Connectivity Hardware: EtherPrint, from Dayna.
-
- * Best Work-Group Project: Aspects, from Grop Technologies.
-
- * Best Executive-Information-Systems Product: Tactician, from
- Tactics International.
-
- * Best Data-Acquisition/Analysis Product: LabVIEW 2.1, from National
- Instruments.
-
- * Best Development Tool: THINK Pascal, from Symantec.
-
- * Best Utility: The Norton Utilities for the Macintosh, from
- Symantec.
-
- * Best Compression Product: Compactor, shareware from Bill Goodman.
-
- * Best Music Product: Deck, from OSC and Digidesign.
-
- * Best Education Program: Discis Books, from Discis Knowledge
- Resource.
-
- * Best Recreational Program: The Cosmic Osmo CD-ROM from Activision.
-
- * Best Input Device: Voice Navigator II, from Articulate Systems.
-
- * Best Display Product: L-*View Multi-Mode, from Sigma Designs.
-
- * Best Scanner: JX-600, from Sharp.
-
- * Best Monochrome-Output Device: QMS PS-410, from QMS.
-
- * Best Color-Output Device: Kodak XL7700, from Kodak.
-
- * Best Storage Product: SBT-1288NP, from MicroNet Technology.
-
- * Software Product of the Year: Photoshop, from Adobe Systems.
-
- * Hardware Product of the Year: RadiusTV, from Radius.
-
- * Breakthrough Product of the Year: Virtus WalkThrough, from Virtus.
-
- * John J. Anderson Distinguished Achievement Award: Bill Atkinson,
- creator of MacPaint and HyperCard, and the father of much of the
- Mac's interface standard.
-
- * Derek Van Alstyne Rising Star Award: Rand K. and Robyn Miller, two
- brothers who are responsible for The Manhole and Cosmic Osmo.
-
- (Anderson and Alstyne were the two MacUser staff members who died
- during the 1989 California earthquake.)
-
- 3G Graphics -- 206/367-9321
- Activision -- 415/329-0500
- Adobe Systems, Inc. -- 415/961-4400 -- 800/344-8335
- Articulate Systems -- 617/876-5236 -- 800/443-7077
- Authorware, Inc. -- 612/921-8555
- Dayna Communications -- 801/531-0600
- Digidesign -- 415/327-8811 -- 800/333-2137
- Discis Knowledge Research -- 416/250-6537 -- 800/567-4321
- DynaWare Corp. -- 415/349-5700 -- 800/445-3962
- Fairfield Software, Inc. -- 800/522-4252
- Farallon Computing, Inc. -- 415/596-9100 -- 800/344-7489
- Global Village Communication -- 415/329-0700 -- 800/736-4821
- Group Technologies -- 703/528-1555 -- 800/476-8781
- Letraset -- 201/845-6100 -- 800/343-8973
- MicroNet Technology, Inc. -- 714/837-6033
- National Instruments -- 512/794-0100 -- 800/433-3488
- Paracomp, Inc. -- 415/956-4091
- QMS, Inc. -- 800/631-2692
- Radius, Inc. -- 408/434-1010 -- 800/227-2795
- RasterOps Corp. -- 408/562-4200
- Reality Technologies -- 215/387-6055
- Sharp Electronics Corp. -- 201/529-8200 -- 800/526-0264
- Sigma Designs -- 415/770-0100
- Symantec Corp. -- 408/253-9600 -- 800/441-7234
- Tactics International -- 508/475-4475
- Timeworks -- 708/948-9200 -- 800/535-9497
- Virtus Corp. -- 919/467-9700
-
- Information from:
- Mark Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
-
- TidBITS Macworld Expo Briefs
- ----------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
- For those of you who couldn't attend, and as a recap for those of
- you who could, here are some of the high points - and a few low
- points - from Macworld San Francisco '91. There seemed to be no
- overriding theme at the Expo this time around, which is just as
- well; most of us are tired of the Mac buzz-words of the eighties.
- In any case, there were some noteworthy items.
-
- * Slickest Display: SuperMac Technology's booth featured a wall
- covered with video displays, showing a fast-paced series of still
- photographs accompanying Billy Joel's song, "We Didn't Start the
- Fire," to promote their SuperSqueeze still-image compression
- technology. If you were curious, they weren't decompressing all
- that material on the fly, as they did with the full-motion video
- compression display last August; it was a canned demo being run
- using XCMDs under HyperCard 1.2.5, and the multiple monitors were
- being handled by a Dynair video image amplifier and splitter. This
- wall almost, but not quite, managed to overshadow SuperMac's new
- dual-mode monitors.
-
- * Best T-Shirt: Much more creative than Apple's shirts, with their
- inspirational Sculley quotes on the back, are CE Software's
- "Connecting people and productivity" shirts. No doubt it's better
- in person, but the back of the shirt is a two-by-two matrix, with
- "Productive" and "Unproductive" across the top, and "Fun" and "Not
- so fun" down the side, like so:
-
- Productive Unproductive
-
- (a whole bunch
- Fun of CE product icons) Tetris
-
-
- Not so Fun Tupperware Tetanus
-
-
- * Deepest Sigh of Relief: WordPerfect Corporation finally shipped
- WordPerfect 2.0 for the Macintosh on the first day of the Expo.
- This long-awaited upgrade offers a far-more-Maclike user interface
- than the company's first Mac offering, but still has optional
- interface features for those who really DID like the original
- WordPerfect Mac (all two of them). A $100 price hike for the new
- version, and some drastic changes for the worse to the way
- WordPerfect handles educational sales (more on this later
- perhaps), may put this product out of the reach of some, but it is
- certainly a strong contender in the diverse Macintosh word
- processing market.
-
- * It's About Time: Just a few weeks before the show, Rodime Systems
- introduced a new version of its driver software for the Cobra
- series of hard drives. This driver is finally compatible with the
- free Disinfectant antivirus utility. The new software is available
- to Cobra drive owners, directly from Rodime, or from Rodime
- dealers.
-
- * Neatest Product: The WristMac, from Ex Machina (published by
- Microseeds Publishing), is a Seiko wristwatch that stores up to 80
- two-line "screens" of data, such as phone numbers, appointments,
- and to-do lists, complete with an interface cable that connects to
- a Mac serial ports, so you can use the included HyperCard 2.0
- stack to enter and manipulate the data. You can even have the
- watch's alarm function alert you of the appointments that you've
- entered into the database.
-
- * Smartest Acquisition: Connectix Corporation - the brash bunch that
- has brought us Virtual, Optima, and Maxima (an assortment of
- system-enhancing memory utilities for the Mac) and has laughed at
- System 7.0's virtual memory for the last two years - announced the
- purchase of Fred Hollander's HandOff II the day before the show.
- HandOff II, which received an Honorable Mention in this year's
- MacUser awards in the Best Utility category, offers an
- application-launching menu like that provided by OnCue, but also
- document-grouping "briefcases" and application categories, as well
- as application substitution (assigning a specific application to
- handle specific file formats, such as having SuperPaint launched
- when a MacPaint document is double-clicked). It's especially
- useful for all those MacWrite documentation files for those of us
- who don't have MacWrite around.
-
- * Best Upcoming Innovation: CE Software introduces yet another
- invaluable extension to the Macintosh interface, with their
- "Tiles" product, to be released sometime this year. Tiles product
- manager John Pence started writing the utility three years ago,
- but only started actively developing it as a product last year.
- This handy gizmo can best be described as an extension of both the
- NeXT icon dock and HandOff II. It allows launching of applications
- or opening of documents simply by clicking on "tiles," which are
- basically labelled pictures. Tiles can also hold "projects," or
- groups of documents created by any number of applications, that
- can all be launched together; as well as any kind of QuicKey
- action or sequence.
-
- * Biggest No-Shows: The Mac rumour mill isn't always right, of
- course, and this year's Expo proved that at least twice. One
- product that didn't make it under the wire is Apple's revised
- Macintosh Portable. The improved machine is rumoured to offer a
- backlit LCD screen, and a lighter battery assembly. The release
- has been postponed indefinitely; it's not clear what effect that
- may have on the upcoming joint Apple-Sony project. Not to be
- underdone, Radius has refrained from introducing a color version
- of its flippable Pivot monitor. Instead, they are offering a new
- Pivot that works with the built-in video circuitry in the Mac IIsi
- and IIci.
-
- * I-wouldn't-do-this-to-MY-drive category: Iomega drew people to its
- storage-products display booth by attaching a Bernoulli
- Transportable removable cartridge drive to a rotating machine that
- lifted it up and thumped it back down about once a second. All the
- while, an attached IIfx was reading large color images from the
- drive, without interruption. This shocking demo, which prompted
- one viewer to wonder, "If they don't want the thing, why don't
- they just give it to me?!" was intended to illustrate the drive's
- ability to withstand shock forces of 1000 G.
-
- * Cutest Give-away: Visitors to the Bay Area might not understand,
- but the "Have a drink on Mainstay" promotion actually provides a
- service. Mainstay, the publishers of such things as MarkUp,
- MarcoPolo, and a prime candidate for biggest non-product of the
- industry, AntiToxin, handed out Coast Guard-approved foil pouches
- of emergency drinking water. These 125 ml pouches (of which you
- need four per person per day) might be handy in the event of
- another earthquake (or a San Francisco Water Department four-hour
- shutoff that affects your hotel late one night during the
- Expo...).
-
- * Biggest Non-Product: What the heck, I might as well explain that.
- Mainstay's AntiToxin is an antivirus utility with two parts: an
- application that repairs files infected with known viruses, and an
- INIT that notes the presence of known viruses and prevents
- infected files from being opened. Sounds good, except that when I
- asked how it compared to John Norstad's free Disinfectant utility,
- the Mainstay rep I spoke to agreed with my assessment that the
- product didn't quite live up in terms of features, and added that
- it is not updated as quickly as Disinfectant. Oh well, thanks for
- the water, Mainstay.
-
- CE Software, Inc. -- 515/224-1995
- Mainstay Products, Inc. -- 818/991-6540
- Iomega -- 801/778-4494 -- 800/456-5522
- Radius Inc. -- 408/434-1010
- Microseeds Publishing, Inc. -- 813/882-8635
- Connectix Corp. -- 415/324-0727
- Dynair Electronics, Inc. -- 619/263-7711 -- 800/854-2831
- SuperMac Technology -- 408 245-2202
- Rodime Systems, Inc. -- 407/994-5585
-
-
- Filling the Portable Gap
- ------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
- Apple recently announced a delay in the hoped-for updated version
- of its Macintosh Portable computer system, originally scheduled
- for release at this Macworld Expo. Rumours had suggested that the
- new computer would include a lighter battery assembly and a
- backlit liquid crystal display, taking care of two of the most
- pervasive complaints about the original Portable.
-
- Other rumours in the same field focus on Apple's joint efforts
- with Sony to develop a significantly smaller and lighter portable
- Mac, and on Apple's purchase of technology developed by Outbound
- Systems and subsequent licensing of that same technology back to
- Outbound.
-
- Outbound is one of several vendors trying to fill the demand for
- portable Macintosh computing. Another vendor, with several new
- products for the portable arena, is Dynamac Computer Products,
- Inc.
-
- Taking advantage of Apple's new Macintosh LC, Dynamac has
- introduced three items that should fill many people's needs for
- portability and power. The first is the Dynamac IIsf, originally
- code named the "StarFighter"), a battery-operated laptop with a
- backlit liquid crystal Kyocera display, a built-in UnMouse[tm]
- TouchPad graphics tablet, support for external Apple 12" and 13"
- monitors, and, at its heart, a Macintosh LC logic board with a
- 68020 microprocessor. An enhanced version, the IIsf/30, offers a
- 68030 processor and 68882 math coprocessor, a data/fax modem, and
- extended video capabilities for handling external monitors.
-
- Dynamac also offers new options for users who want their LC's
- intact, but not tied to their desks, including the LCDisplay and
- the LCPortable. The LCDisplay is a 640 by 480 flat-panel display
- unit with an easel stand on the back and a recess in the front to
- hold Apple's new LC microphone. The LCPortable takes that a couple
- of steps further, including a battery in the back for three to six
- hours of operation, and the LCPower bundle of 68030 CPU and 68882
- coprocessor, to enhance the LC's performance much the same way the
- Dynamac IIsf package does.
-
- Just as revolutionary as Dynamac's new products is its three-year
- "TLC" (Traveler's Logistics Center) Warranty. For a period of
- three years from purchase, TLC offers both-way FedEx shipping of a
- covered computer if it needs repairs with one-day repair
- turnaround at the other end, or Dynamac will ship repair parts
- overnight so users can perform their own repairs.
-
- Less headline-making but still newsworthy is Outbound. Outbound
- introduced its original Outbound Laptop System in March of 1990,
- offering a compact, lightweight laptop system requiring a Mac Plus
- or SE ROM chip to make it complete. Improvements since then
- include a bundled Microsoft Mouse, for those who can't stand the
- "Isopoint[tm]" rolling-bar pointing device, an external floppy
- drive, and a "SCSI Adapter and Emulator" that allows users to
- connect the Outbound to any SCSI-equipped Mac.
-
- Outbound's new offerings at this week's Expo included a line-
- powered, 2.4 ounce, pocket-sized portable modem; a software-based
- numeric keypad emulation utility, a soon-to-be-released universal
- power supply, and Outbound support for the Mac 512KE and the Mac
- Classic.
-
- Despite the disappointment from Apple, it seems that Mac
- enthusiasts who need portability and power without the excess
- weight or premium prices won't have to wait any longer. Apple may
- not have their juggling act together, but companies like Dynamac
- and Outbound should keep the market up in the air for a while.
-
- Dynamac Computer Products -- 303/296-0606 -- 800/234-2349
- Outbound Systems, Inc. -- 303/786-9200
-
-
- Stupid Net Tricks
- -----------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
- Among the product categories that were evident at Macworld, if you
- took the trouble to categorize things, were neat networking
- products. None of them were earth-shattering, but each takes us a
- step forward in Macintosh networking.
-
- Closest to earth-shattering, I suppose, is Apple's new line of
- Ethernet products, which set a new standard for ease of
- installation and flexibility. These include a Macintosh LC
- Ethernet card, new transceivers, and self-terminating cables that
- can be connected and disconnected without interrupting network
- services. Several other companies, including Ethernet veterans
- Asante and Farallon, also introduced new (and less expensive)
- products supporting Apple's new standards.
-
- Network file transfer utilities include two desk accessory and
- INIT combinations, relative newcomers Send Express, from Gizmo
- Technologies, and Mac To Mac, from Caravelle Networks Corporation.
- Send Express, written by a group of Apple alumni, allows sending
- of files, notes, or clipboard contents to one or multiple network
- users, who can then look at and file away the received
- information. Mac to Mac does not offer multiple recipients, but it
- does have the advantage of unattended bidirectional transfer and a
- split-screen chat mode reminiscent of a neighborhood BBS.
-
- Network management takes an upward turn, with an update to an
- existing product, and a few new ones. Pharos has released a new
- version of Status*Mac, which now offers direct network workstation
- profiling without depending on Microsoft Mail or a file server.
- Similar, though less powerful is Technology Works' GraceLAN, which
- we'll talk more about in an upcoming issue. CSG Technologies, a
- division of Management Science Associates, Inc., introduced
- Network Supervisor at the show. This new "network information and
- management tool," a compiled 4th Dimension database, offers real-
- time information gathering in various network environments. The AG
- Group is offering a pair of networking tools, NetAlert and
- LocalPeek, to help round out the networker's toolbox. NetAlert
- monitors various aspects of a network's performance and notifies
- the manager if something goes wrong. LocalPeek is a network packet
- monitoring and decoding tool, providing a deeper analysis of
- traffic on a network.
-
- An item that's been long awaited in the Mac industry is FaxPro,
- from Cypress Research. It's a networkable 9600 baud fax-sending
- modem with a Chooser-level interface and fax call accounting
- capability. The software works by queueing files on a network file
- server, but if you don't have one of the many compatible file
- sharing packages (including AppleShare, TOPS, 3COM, Novell, or any
- AppleShare-compatible packages including the shareware
- SingleShare), for an additional $100, Cypress will include its own
- fully-functional file sharing software.
-
- The AG Group -- 415/937-7900
- Asante Technologies -- 800/662-9686
- Caravelle Networks Corporation -- 613/596-2802
- CSG Technologies -- 412/471-7170 -- 800/FON-4-MAC
- Cypress Research Corp. -- 408/752-2700
- Farallon Computing, Inc. -- 415/596-9000
- Gizmo Technologies -- 415/623-7899
- Pharos Technologies Inc. -- 513/984-9273
- Technology Works -- 800/688-7466
-
-
- Reviews/14-Jan-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Ventura Publisher, pg. 83
- Graphing Programs, pg. 83
- CA-Cricket Graph
- DeltaGraph
- KaleidaGraph
- MacGraphX
- SQL Data Tools, pg. 94
- ClearAccess 1.2
- GQL 2.1 modules
- Data Prism
- QuickDraw Accelerators, pg. 98
- Apple 8*24 GC
- Spectrum/24 PDQ
- RasterOps Accelerator
- Radius DirectColor/GX
- RadiusTV, pg. 98
- FilmMaker, pg. 104
- The Animation Stand, pg. 104
- INIT Manager, pg. 110
- Type Manipulators, pg. 112
- Illustrator 3.0
- LetraStudio
- TypeAlign
- TypeStyler
- Org Plus, pg. 112
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 08-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #1
-
-
- ..
-
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