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- TidBITS#43/18-Feb-91
- ====================
-
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Warranty Realities
- Correction Daemons
- The Latest in QuickMail
- Printer News
- Reviews/18-Feb-91
-
-
- Warranty Realities
- ------------------
- This isn't exactly news, but I think all Mac owners should know
- this important information. You do know that Apple finally
- extended its warranty period from 90 days to one year, a move
- which we at TidBITS considered to be a case of "About time!" You
- may not know that it's easy to void that wonderful one year
- warranty, at which point your friendly local dealer will be more
- than happy to fix your broken machine and take your first-born as
- a down payment on the repair bill. OK, so it's not quite that bad,
- but still...
-
- All Apple and third party hardware upgrades (basically anything
- you would want to put in your Mac, such as an internal hard drive,
- extra RAM, a PMMU, a new carburetor, etc.), must be performed by
- an Authorized Apple Service Technician. If some of my description
- sounds stilted, it's because I'm closely following the guidelines
- to avoid ambiguity. Apple figures that if you crack a compact Mac
- or generally muck about with anything inside the case, you are
- likely to screw it up, most likely by failing to properly ground
- yourself against electrostatic discharge. While this probably
- isn't true of most people who know enough to open the case, Apple
- doesn't want to pay for your mistakes just because your machine is
- still under warranty.
-
- What you can do inside your Mac is install a NuBus card if you
- have a Mac II-class machine, including the IIsi with the NuBus
- adapter (We haven't heard about the PDS adapter, but it seems that
- PDS cards shouldn't be different from NuBus cards in this
- instance. Check if you're worried.). However, you have to check
- the details for your card, because there are three criteria which
- it must meet. First, the card manufacturer must not require
- installation by an authorized reseller. Second, the NuBus card
- must meet Apple's specifications for NuBus architecture for the
- Macintosh II family. Third, the system configuration (in other
- words, the sum total of everything you've jammed in previously as
- well as this current board) must not exceed Apple's specified
- total power consumption, as noted in the system owner's manual.
- Whew. Be careful out there...
-
- This last criterion is most applicable with the new Macs, and most
- specifically with the IIsi, which has a power limitation of 15
- watts. Most cards fit within this limitation with the exception of
- some high-end graphics cards, including the Apple 8*24GC card. We
- gather that exceeding the IIsi's power limitation will result in
- overheating, though Apple says that it tested the 8*24GC card with
- the IIsi and found no troubles in normal operating temperatures
- (up to 90[deg] F or 32[deg] C). If the IIsi overheats, an internal
- thermal sensor automatically shuts the machine down. So if your
- IIsi occasionally shuts down for no apparent reason, it might be
- overheating. Or it just might be possessed with daemons, you never
- can tell.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
-
- Correction Daemons
- ------------------
- Whatever the excuse, our last issue was plagued by error daemons.
- Unlike our more staid, paper-based counterparts, when we make a
- mistake, we admit it freely and explain the problem. No one's
- perfect and the weekly deadline doesn't leave much time to check
- facts and fiction. In light of last weeks problems, this week
- seems like a good time to acknowledge and correct errors from
- previous weeks.
-
- Some time ago we accidentally released the article "Electronic
- Jabberwocky" (on getting the electronic version of the Alice in
- Wonderland books via FTP) with a typographical error. The address
- should be mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu, not mrcnext@cso.uiuc.edu. Our
- apologies to those of you who have been frustrated by our mistake.
-
- In the continuing confession series, we've received two complaints
- about TidBITS#42, our special issue on compression programs.
- First, we failed to include contact information. Sorry about that.
- Second, the tests focussed on the compression times, but failed to
- mention the equally as important expansion times. We're working to
- rectify these oversights and will release that issue again in a
- week or so when everything is complete. There will be no change in
- issue number. If you've been archiving the issues, go ahead and
- delete the old items from your TidBITS Archive, then merge the new
- issue. If you have added this issue already, it will be slightly
- out of order, but no problems will arise from that. Waiting to
- merge this issue will ensure no gaps in your archive.
-
- "ADB Oddities" and "GO's Green Light" both invoked the TidBITS
- error handlers. In "ADB Oddities" we talked about problems with
- typing certain key combinations on Mac keyboards. This isn't
- exactly a bug, but it is a design trade-off. Apparently, most, if
- not all, keyboards (the problem can occur any computer system) use
- a matrix to reduce the number of leads that must lead into the
- keyboard microcontroller. With 105-key keyboard, you would need
- close to 105 leads going into the microcontroller (the modifier
- keys don't count in the same way). Most companies, including
- Apple, organize the keyboard so that four keys share a lead, and
- are organized into a 2 x 2 matrix on their own. So the problem
- with typing "out" and getting "ou;" comes about because "o," "u,"
- "t," and ";" are all in the same 2 x 2 matrix. When the first two
- keys are down, the controller can't distinguish between the other
- two, and probably picks more or less randomly. "But I'm not
- holding down both keys at once," you say. That's true, except when
- you type very quickly, at which point the controller can't tell
- the difference. The reason more problems don't stem from this
- design is that the controller can record the keystroke on keyUp,
- which will be more distinct. If you want to play with this stuff,
- try holding down several keys at once in KeyCaps.
-
- With "GO's Green Light," we made one mistake and one omission. Our
- mistake, obviously caused by youth and inexperience, was saying
- that GO's Embedded Document Architecture was radically different
- from existing operating systems. Sak Wathanasin pointed out that
- the Xerox Star operating system did precisely this, allowing the
- user to include different types of data in a single document and
- have the appropriate tool be available when the chart or text was
- appropriately selected. I'd love to get my hands on a Xerox Star
- sometime. I would also like to ask an obvious question. How in
- hell did Xerox bungle this computer!?! It seems that only after a
- number of years have companies managed to pull themselves back up
- to the level of the Star in many respects. Sak also mentions that
- while handwriting is slow, shorthand is much faster and could be
- used for fast text input on a handwriting system. Of course, you
- have learn shorthand, but if it's speed you crave...
-
- The data that we omitted from the GO article was the contact
- information, not for any malicious reason, but simply because none
- of our sources listed it. We do have it now, so here it is.
-
- GO Corp.
- 950 Tower Lane, Suite 1400
- Foster City, CA 94404
- 415/345-7400
- 415/345-9833 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Sak Wathanasin -- sw@network-analysis-ltd.co.uk
-
-
- The Latest in QuickMail
- -----------------------
- CE's popular electronic mail package will see some significant
- enhancements when version 2.5 ships this summer. Perhaps the most
- important change, at least for those of us who must deal with
- non-AppleTalk networks, is support for AppleTalk Filing Protocol
- (AFP) compatible networks, such as Novell Netware, 3Com's 3+ Open,
- Microsoft's LAN Manager, DEC's PCSA, and Banyan VINES. With the
- QuickMail PC for PC LANs, any PC on the network can send and
- receive mail from its own file servers, though mail to or from a
- machine on an AppleTalk network must go through the QuickMail
- server on the AppleTalk network. The only two minor inconveniences
- are the fact that you can't use the QuickConference feature to
- send interactive messages, and you have to administrate the PC LAN
- clients with QM Administrator on a Macintosh. Gotta keep those
- Macs around for something :-).
-
- There are plenty of other new features that will make everyone and
- their brothers want to upgrade to 2.5, not the least of which is
- the fact that it's a free upgrade for users of 2.2.3. Even though
- the current release of QuickMail works under System 7.0, version
- 2.5 will be 32-bit clean for System 7.0 and A/UX. We haven't heard
- if QuickMail will support System 7.0's cool IAC features, though
- such enhancements are likely to take a while as everyone gets used
- to the possibilities of IAC. A new feature I personally am going
- to love is 2.5's ability to send only a single copy of messages
- that have multiple recipients on the same server. A corollary to
- this is that only a single message will be stored on the local
- server, thus saving lots of disk space. When I send out TidBITS
- each week to the people who redistribute it, I send out about 10
- copies, which bogs down my poor 2400 baud modem. Luckily QuickMail
- is good about scheduling such tedious work for 2:00 AM. Finally,
- the remote parts of QuickMail (on which I rely heavily) now
- support Apple's Communications Toolbox, so QM-QM Bridge can now
- dial callers back to increase security. Additions to CE's remote
- QuickMail products include QM-Direct, QM-Script, and QM-Link, all
- of which help communications within large, complex telephone
- systems and international systems - and no, I don't know exactly
- what each one will do yet, but CE's press release muttered
- something about ISDN, X.25, and ADSP, for those in the acronym
- know. QM-Remote (which lets you read and write mail remotely) now
- looks like the QuickMail client, supports the Comm Toolbox, and
- lets you work off-line to minimize on-line time and connect
- charges.
-
- For those of you who don't mess with administration, CE added to
- the QuickMail client as well. All incoming mail now goes into a
- single folder until you file it somewhere else (I assume that this
- single folder differs from the current scheme in that you can
- close it, so you don't have to stare at all that mail you haven't
- read or answered yet.). There are also a number of new features
- related to sending and replying to mail, so you can now reply to
- the "sender," the "originator," or "everyone," a feature which
- will make QuickMail even better at conferencing. Forwarded mail
- can be "as-is" or "with changes" (these quoted terms are CE's, not
- mine), and pop-up address books, which will be a welcome change
- from the current clumsy method of changing address books. Finally,
- incoming mail can trigger a QuicKeys2 macro. Although I can't
- think of a good example now, (other than "Delete all mail from
- So-and So") I'm sure people will think of excellent uses for this
- feature.
-
- Information Electronics, one of the most innovative firms to
- produce add-ons for QuickMail, will soon have something for those
- of you searching to consolidate all of your email. The $129
- QMSight allows users of a Second Sight BBS (previously known as
- Red Ryder Host) to send mail through other QuickMail gateways to
- numerous other electronic services, including CompuServe,
- AppleLink, GEnie, Usenet, but not America Online. (If you wish,
- hassle the AOL folks to provide Information Electronics with the
- necessary specifications and you're likely to see a QM-AOL bridge
- shortly thereafter. QMSight also allows people on a network
- containing the Mac running the Second Sight BBS to respond
- directly via QuickMail over the network without having to dial in.
- I personally feel that QMSight's first ability is the most
- important, since a Second Sight BBS sysop can now provide local
- access to important electronic services. For many people not
- affiliated with a large business or educational institution,
- electronic access has previously been a daunting and expensive
- task.
-
- Another QuickMail developer, StarNine Technologies, will release
- two more QuickMail gateways this spring. The first one, Mail*Link
- QM-MS will allow QuickMail users and Microsoft Mail users to
- transfer messages and enclosures, though not forms or address
- books. Since QuickMail has about 55% of the market and Microsoft
- Mail has another 20% or so, linking the two packages should be a
- popular option. Mail*Link QM-MS will cost $295 for 50 users, $495
- for 100 users, and $4950 for a site license. The second gateway,
- Mail*Link MHS, will replace a CE product that provided the same
- ability to transfer messages to email systems using the MHS
- (Message Handling Service) engine from Action Technologies and
- Novell. MHS is used by programs like WordPerfect Office, cc:Mail,
- and DaVinci Mail, all popular DOS mail systems. StarNine has a
- free 50-user upgrade for users of CE's MHS gateway, and prices for
- new users are based on number of users. Now if only everyone was
- on a network...
-
- CE Software -- 515/224-1995
- Information Electronics -- 607/267-5840
- StarNine Technologies -- 415/548-0391
-
- Information from:
- CE propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 12-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #6, pg. 15
- MacWEEK -- 29-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #4, pg. 15, 16
- InfoWorld -- 11-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #6, pg. 33
- PC WEEK -- 11-Feb-91, Vol. 8, #6, pg. 41
-
-
- Printer News
- ------------
- Back in November, we claimed that Apple was going to come out with
- a cheap ink-jet printer this spring, and it's looking more and
- more like we were right (in this business you have to take these
- minor victories where you can get them). Apple of course refused
- to confirm reports that they denied everything when asked about
- the printers, but we think Apple will soon release the
- StyleWriter, a sub-$600 ink-jet based on the 360 dpi Canon bubble-
- jet engine, and the sub-$1400 Personal LaserWriter LS, a 300 dpi
- laser based on the same 4 page per minute engine used by the
- Personal LaserWriter NT. Despite InfoWorld's impression that
- "other Apple LaserWriters use a SCSI connection," the Personal
- LaserWriter LS will not be unique in using the serial port (only
- the LaserWriter II SC and Personal LaserWriter SC, the latter of
- which will be discontinued in all likelihood), connect via the
- SCSI port - guess what the SC in their names stands for...). Of
- course both printers will support TrueType and QuickDraw, which
- places their release date sometime around or after the release of
- System 7.0. We have no information on whether or not either of
- these printers can be upgraded to handle True Image, though
- PostScript upgrades will not be possible. By the way, we've heard
- that the documentation for System 7.0 is completely done and Apple
- is trying to make sure it is as bug-free as possible even though
- it's stable now.
-
- Interestingly enough, we haven't heard much about True Image, the
- PostScript clone that Apple licensed from Microsoft in return for
- Apple's TrueType technology. Microsoft hasn't yet shipped the True
- Image interpreter to the companies who want to use it yet,
- supposedly because of delays with TrueType at Apple. A few
- companies, most notably LaserMAX Systems, have shipped True Image
- printers already, but those printers will have to be upgraded when
- the final release of True Image comes out. Abaton just announced a
- low-end, 6 page per minute, PostScript-compatible printer using
- the Microsoft PostScript clone. Like the QMS-PS 410, it has
- numerous input ports (one parallel, two serial, and one AppleTalk)
- and can accept data on any one without manual switching. With
- either of these PostScript clone printers, you must determine if
- the PostScript emulation is good enough for your purposes (though
- even true Adobe PostScript can't necessarily print all possible
- PostScript documents).
-
- Apple certainly isn't ignoring the high-end these days, despite
- its recent emphasis on the low-end. Work on the 68040 machines is
- going well, with a workstation using A/UX and a high-end machine
- to knock the IIfx down a rung to come out sometime this spring.
- New laser printers are coming as well to take over for the aging
- II NT and II NTX. In all likelihood, the new printers will use the
- same engine, but will have faster processors to speed output and
- will include Ethernet ports to go with all of Apple's new Ethernet
- hardware. Since PostScript printers seldom reach the engine's
- rated speed, the processor is the main bottleneck. And what better
- way to avoid a bottleneck than throwing more processor power at
- it.
-
- LaserMAX Systems -- 612/944-9696
- Abaton -- 800/444-5321 -- 415/683-2226
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 05-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #5, pg. 1, 6
- InfoWorld -- 11-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #6, pg. 101
- PC WEEK -- 04-Feb-91, Vol. 8, #5, pg. 19
-
-
- Reviews/18-Feb-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- High-resolution Laser Printers, pg. 51
- LaserMAX 1000
- TurboPS/480
- Tax Preparation Software, pg. 51
- MacInTax
- TurboTax
- Heizer Tax Series
- LCD Projection Devices, pg. 60
-
- * InfoWorld
- PenPoint, pg. 76
-
- * PC WEEK
- LocalTalk Diagnostic Programs, pg. 123
- NetMap 1.0
- InterPoll 1.02
- PhoneNET CheckNET 1.11
- TrafficWatch 1.08
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 12-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #6
- InfoWorld -- 11-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #6
- PC WEEK -- 11-Feb-91, Vol. 8, #6
-
-
- ..
-
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