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- TidBITS#41/11-Feb-91
- ====================
-
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- The New Portable, Finally
- FCCTalk
- Let's Do MacLunch.
- ADB Oddities
- GO's Green Light
- Reviews/11-Feb-91
-
-
- The New Portable, Finally
- -------------------------
- This item snuck in just a few minutes before our deadline. Apple
- announced today that a new, backlit version of the Macintosh
- Portable is available to order. Unfortunately, the new
- backlighting reduces the battery life to between three and six
- hours. For those of you with Portables already, an upgrade
- consisting of a new screen and a ROM card will be available in
- early March. A few other changes have also been made, but the
- weight should remain about the same. The new model only comes with
- a 40MB hard drive and either two or four MB of RAM, expandable to
- eight meg. The new RAM is pseudo-static, which the original
- Portable can't use it, and the new Portable can't use the static
- RAM from the original model. Oh yeah, prices. The Feb-40 model
- will list for $4199 and the Apr-40 model will list for $4699. The
- screen upgrade will be pricey at $1095, but those active matrix
- screens are expensive. No idea what the real street or discount
- prices will be yet, sorry.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
-
- FCCTalk
- -------
- Back in October, we mentioned that Apple was talking to the FCC
- (Federal Communications Commission) about opening up part of the
- radio spectrum and creating a new class of data communications,.
- Data Personal Communications Services, as Apple calls it. Apple
- recently filed the petition and called for computer communications
- to have about 40 MHz of bandwidth between 1850-1990 MHz. Apple
- wants that space for transmitting data at high speeds over short
- distances (the petition mentioned 10 megabits per second and 150
- feet).
-
- Apple understands that the radio spectrum doesn't have that much
- free space (the frequency requested by the petition requires
- current users to relocate), which is why the petition comes now,
- before Apple or any other company has announced a product that
- might use this frequency. Motorola's WIN (Wireless Inbuilding
- Network) is scheduled to ship February 11 at NetWorld in Boston,
- but it will use much higher frequencies, offer much greater
- speeds, and require an FCC license. In comparison, if the FCC
- approves Apple's petition, anyone will be able to manufacture and
- use wireless networking products in the proposed frequency without
- a license.
-
- Apple's scheme could make wireless networking attractive for
- office buildings, and huge amounts of money previously spent on
- wiring could be saved. Individuals and entire offices will be able
- to move with a minimum of disruption in network services. This is
- not to say that no potential problems exist. People on Usenet are
- already debating security issues, since you can't control where
- radio network waves go, and they would probably make it outside of
- your building at times (putting lead shielding on all the outside
- walls is not a good solution!). Some have suggested that automatic
- encryption would be easy to implement and difficult to break. In
- addition, others mentioned that it is trivial for technologically-
- inclined no-goods to tap an Ethernet line and snag packets.
- Decoding them would be difficult, but definitely within the realm
- of possibility. It even may be possible to decode the
- electromagnetic field given off by the cabling, though that would
- require a sophisticated effort. The moral of the story is that
- nothing is completely secure without seriously expensive real-time
- encryptors and decryptors on either end of the network
- transmissions. It's like locking a bicycle. Anyone with the right
- tools and enough time can steal any bicycle, no matter how well
- locked up. Your task as the owner is to choose a comfortable level
- of protection, that is, the type of lock that deters the majority
- of thieves and does not unreasonably slow you down when unlock it.
-
- I see the transmission distance of Apple's scheme as a potentially
- serious disadvantage. While 150 feet is a decent distance for a
- network within a building, it doesn't do much for multiple
- buildings in the same city. What I'd like implemented (and my
- knowledge of radio technology is too limited to completely
- understand the requirements and ramifications of this idea) is a
- wide range transmitter that could serve as a bridge between all
- the little radio networks that will spring up like mushrooms after
- a rain. For instance, I have a number of friends in the area with
- whom I exchange email by having my QuickMail server automatically
- call their servers in the middle of the night. It certainly works,
- but has proved to be a tad too slow at times. While having my own
- radio network would be nice (I'd have to get another Mac since a
- network with a single Mac and a laser printer isn't exciting), I'd
- far rather be able to have a community-wide network that would
- link all the computers users who I know, including a link to
- Cornell's Internet site. Since none of my friends are more than
- five miles away, I wouldn't need much in the way of distance,
- though distances of up to 25 miles would be ideal for larger
- cities.
-
- Apple has said that it would like it if people favoring its
- petition would share their feelings with the FCC, but I haven't
- found any appropriate addresses or phone numbers to use. In lieu
- of specific contact information, should you be a U.S.. citizen, I
- suggest contacting an appropriate elected representative and
- sharing your opinion. After all, it's your representative's job to
- listen to you and to act as your voice in government. Hey, it's
- worth a try anyway.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
- Chris Silverberg -- macman@wpi.WPI.EDU
- Jack Brindle -- jackb@MDI.COM
- Cinderella Man -- derek@coco2.albany.edu
- Michael Kerner -- mike@pyrite.SOM.CWRU.Edu
- Don Gillies -- gillies@cs.uiuc.edu
- Bernie Bernstein -- bernard@boulder.colorado.edu
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 05-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #5, pg. 17
- InfoWorld -- 04-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #5, pg. 1
- Communications Week -- 04-Feb-91, pg 6
-
-
- Let's Do MacLunch.
- ------------------
- Mitch Kapor's ON Technology gave up its grandiose idea of totally
- altering the look and feel of personal computing and instead came
- out with ON Location, a program that indexes hard disks for easy
- searching and retrieval of files. Although this is a useful
- ability, ON's new product is a programs that most everyone would
- have killed for at some point or another. Meeting Maker is a
- network application that simplifies the tedious and usually
- contentious process of scheduling a meeting. Meeting Maker keeps
- track of room schedules and everyone's personal schedule. You can
- have the program pick the first possible time for a list of
- required attendees, or you can send out invitations over the
- network (they show up as pop-up notices that can either be
- accepted or turned down). Once people start responding to your
- proposal, Meeting Maker will mark the meeting as fully confirmed,
- partially confirmed, or cancelled.
-
- Since people might not use Meeting Maker if they had to keep the
- rest of their schedules separately, the program also includes a
- number of personal scheduling features, such as alarms, a To Do
- list, and the ability to print schedules in several appointment
- book formats. One of the most useful features for those busy
- executive types is the Proxy feature. Proxy allows someone else to
- manage your schedule (over the network, not at your computer).
- Just think of the havoc potentially caused by abuse of the Proxy
- feature - I'd schedule everyone for a midnight meeting on April
- 1st.
-
- Meeting Maker isn't a complicated idea, but it is a tough
- programming job because of all of the variables in different
- schedules at different times in different rooms. I remember a long
- meeting in college to decide when I and my five co-workers could
- schedule a weekly meeting, a task complicated by trying to
- coordinate our college class schedules. We tried all the
- possibilities and finally settled on alternate weeks at different
- times. If I still went to meetings, I'd insist on Meeting Maker.
- It's pricey at $495 for five users and $895 for ten users (I
- presume you can add more than that, though nothing says what the
- limits are.), but it sounds like an excellent way to shorten
- meetings about when to meet (the ultimate in recursive
- uselessness). It works on AppleTalk networks and does not require
- a dedicated server, though check the requirements if you plan to
- run it with other programs on the same Mac.
-
- ON Technology -- 617/876-0900
-
- Information from:
- ON Technology propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 08-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #1, pg. 5
- InfoWorld -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #1, pg. 30
- PC WEEK -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #1, pg. 41
-
-
- ADB Oddities
- ------------
- I'm not a terrific typist, although my typing speed has probably
- increased by at least 15 words per minutes since I've been writing
- TidBITS. Still, every now and then a mistake appears that I'm sure
- I'm not responsible for. It's not all that common so I always
- chalked up the errors to daemons in the machine. However, a while
- ago the subject arose on Usenet and it became clear that some
- daemons actually exist.
-
- Apparently the most common problems occur when typing "pro" or
- "out" rapidly. If you type "pro" too quickly (at least this worked
- for several people on Usenet - I could only reproduce it with the
- word "stop" and having it freeze on the "p") the keyboard freezes
- until you type something other than an "o", at which point
- subsequent keystrokes appear. Typing "out" rapidly will sometimes
- result in "ou;" and this one I was able to reproduce on my
- keyboard. Interestingly enough, while people thought that the
- problem lies with Apple's extended keyboard and someone was unable
- to reproduce these problems on Datadesk's Switchboard, I use Ehman
- Engineering's extended keyboard. So it's not restricted to Apple's
- keyboards, and I've heard reports of the problems on both the old
- and new extended keyboards. A developer reported the problem to
- Apple DTS, where they said it was a bug in the keyboard ROM that
- should be fixed in the next keyboard. Oh well.
-
- Speaking of strange keyboards, many people have been unhappy with
- the key placements on the keyboard that ships with the Mac LC.
- There are now two solutions to Apple's uncomfortable choice of
- placement for the Escape key, which normally lives in the
- uppermost left of the keyboard - I won't use that cliche about
- "where God meant it to be." At least some dealers, if not all, can
- now provide a version of the LC, presumably at a slightly lower
- price, that does not include a keyboard. Then it's up to you to
- find your own keyboard, a simple task these days. The second
- solution, from Beagle Bros, is a small utility called Escape! that
- either swaps the Tilde key with the Escape key, putting the Escape
- key back in the upper left of the keyboard, or moves Escape to
- Tilde, Tilde to Backslash, and Backslash to Escape. It's a bit
- like the three-man weave play I learned in high school basketball,
- but since Beagle Bros. includes key stickers with Escape! it is
- bound to be less confusing than the three-man weave.
-
- The final piece of ADB weirdness is that a number of the new ADB
- mice have failed. A friend with a IIsi had his entire ADB bus go
- dead, and when he took it in for repair (he hadn't violated any
- warranty commandments - wait 'till next week), the repair people
- said that he had a bad mouse, a common problem, and they had run
- out of replacement mice, so he had to get one from another Apple
- dealer. The second dealer's repair people said that they had
- recently noticed a surprising number of dead mice. New Mac owners
- should use caution if ADB devices stop working. Try each one
- individually, rebooting between each swap, and then try different
- combinations of plugs, where possible. Since the new Macs only
- have one ADB port, there are fewer combinations to try, but I have
- found systems that wouldn't work connected in one way, but would
- when connected another way.
-
- Beagle Bros. -- 619/452-5500
-
- Information from:
- Jeff Wasilko -- jjwcmp@isc.rit.edu
- Lee M. Thompso -- lee@soda.Berkeley.EDU
- Anthony C. Ar -- aard@sdcc13.ucsd.edu
- John T. Nelso -- jtn@ADS.COM
- Gavin Eadie -- Gavin_Eadie@UM.CC.UMich.EDU
- Michael Hoffhines -- michaelh@uhunix.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu
- Brian Patten -- patten@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 20-Nov-90, Vol. 4, #40, pg. 10
-
-
- GO's Green Light
- ----------------
- I'm a week late (I've been gathering info) on writing about GO
- Corp.'s announcement that developers will soon have access to GO's
- new PenPoint operating system. PenPoint emphasizes handwriting
- recognition, and GO has designed PenPoint from the ground up to
- support 32-bit memory and preemptive multitasking. It sports a new
- user interface based on a notebook metaphor. The first page of the
- notebook holds a table of contents and every other page can hold
- multiple documents. One of the most interesting aspects of
- PenPoint is its Embedded Document Architecture, which subordinates
- applications to the role of tools that are available when
- appropriate in any document. As such, no distinction exists
- between text documents and spreadsheet documents. Every document
- has access to all of the installed applications.
-
- Creating such a radically different operating system forced GO to
- lose application-level compatibility, but it did retain MS-DOS
- file compatibility. Additional connectivity will come from network
- links implemented in a deferred manner. A network link to a
- portable computer may not always be available, so you send email
- and faxes whenever you like, and PenPoint queues everything until
- you make the appropriate network connections. PenPoint connects
- and disconnects from networks without hassle, which may be in part
- due to GO's licensing of AppleTalk from Apple. One of AppleTalk's
- great features is that it automatically self-configures, unlike
- many other networking schemes. In addition, PenPoint will include
- TOPS client software from Sitka, which will help it integrate with
- Mac and DOS machines.
-
- GO has a good deal of support from large companies like IBM, NCR,
- GRiD, Lotus, Borland, and WordPerfect. Such support will be
- helpful, since completely new applications must be written for
- PenPoint, and especially since GO decided not to build any
- machines on its own. Leaving the hardware end of things to the
- hardware companies is a smart move, because GO can't spread itself
- too thin. Of course, with allies must come competitors, and
- Microsoft and Apple have already joined that camp. Microsoft's Pen
- Windows (or Windows H, for Handwriting) is coming along, and rumor
- says that Apple might show handwriting recognition capabilities
- for System 7.0 next January. At least Bill Campbell is betting on
- GO, since he recently resigned as head of Claris to become the CEO
- of GO. Hmm. The computer executives are beginning to seem inbred -
- little new blood comes in and those currently in charge just move
- from corporate marriage to corporate marriage.
-
- I'm still unsure about handwriting recognition. As I've said
- before, it is a poor method of text input, though it may be ideal
- for text editing. My handwriting has degenerated inversely with my
- typing speed, but it's still easier to edit on paper than in
- Nisus. Pen-based operating systems will require new ergonomic
- considerations and design constraints. If nothing else, you have
- to look down at the screen to write on it, whereas most screens
- are currently positioned at arm's length in front of us (or at
- least I hope so) to prevent undue exposure to electromagnetic
- radiation, which causes brain fever in industry executives. Or
- maybe they're just getting too inbred.
-
- Nonetheless, I think GO has done much right with PenPoint. From
- the descriptions I've seen and heard from many sources, PenPoint
- is a state of the art operating system, representing a true step
- forward from the bug-a-boo of compatibility. Bob Woodhead's
- Reversi from 1984 still runs on my SE/30 under 6.0.5, but I'd
- prefer significant power and usability increases over the ability
- to run software from 1984. The DOS world is even worse, though
- Windows is beginning to banish the spectre of compatibility. Too
- bad it couldn't have done so more forcefully and ditched DOS
- completely. Talk about beating a dead horse. I hope that some of
- the advances in PenPoint can come to the desktop world as well. In
- the meantime, palmtop computers based on PenPoint will sell like
- hotcakes in specific niche markets until advances in portable
- technology shrink desktop machines to the point that we can wear
- computers as we wear wristwatches.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
- GO propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 22-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #3, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 28-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #4, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #1, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 28-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #4, pg. 1
- MacUser -- Mar-91, pg. 202
-
-
- Reviews/11-Feb-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Geographical Analysis Software, pg. 37
- GeoQuery 2.0
- MapMaker 4.5
- WealthBuilder, pg. 37
- For the Record 2.0, pg. 40
- OverView 2.0, pg. 42
- Stock Programs, pg. 46
- Market Analyzer
- Market Manager Plus 2.03
- Wall Street Investor 3.02
- Displays for the new Macs, pg. 51
- E-Machines T19si
- Radius Pivot for Built-In Video
- RasterOps 19" 8LC Display System
- Sigma Designs 15" PageView
-
- * InfoWorld
- DOS Mounter 2.0, pg. 82
-
- * Macworld
- Macintosh Utilities, pg. 130
- Midrange Hard Drives, pg. 136
- Personal Finance Programs, pg. 152
- FilmMaker, pg. 160
- LaserMax 1000, pg. 161
- The String Quartet: The Essence of Music, pg. 164
- MacBack 8000, pg. 171
- Sypglass Programs, pg. 172
- Dicer 1.0
- View 1.0
- Transform1.0
- Cheshire 1.0, pg. 177
- Serius Developer 2.1, pg. 179
- Color Convert 1.0, pg. 181
- Gamblin' Times 3.0, pg. 181
- TimeKey 2.0, pg. 181
- UltraKey 1.03, pg. 181
- IFS Explorer 1.02 & Fractal Clip Art, pg. 182
- Balloon Stack, pg. 182
- The Mac Is Not A Typewriter & The Little Mac Book, pg. 182
- WillMaker 4.0, pg. 182
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 05-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #5
- InfoWorld -- 04-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #5
- Macworld -- Mar-91
-
-
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