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- TidBITS#44/25-Feb-91
- ====================
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-
- Topics:
- Excel Turns Three
- Guerilla Marketing
- Snazzier Graphics
- Lotus Tries Harder
- Reviews/25-Feb-91
-
-
- Excel Turns Three
- -----------------
- Microsoft has always led the Macintosh world by its spreadsheet
- nose, although other companies have come out with more powerful
- programs over the years. Wingz and Full Impact both addressed
- limitations in Excel, but neither made much of a dent in Excel's
- market share. Excel for Windows is currently available, and will
- be released for the Mac when System 7.0 ships, although it runs
- fine under 6.0.x. Microsoft is waiting for System 7.0 so the Mac
- version of Excel can have the same IAC capabilities that the
- Windows version has through Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE).
-
- I saw the two versions of Excel recently and was quite impressed,
- although it's not the end-all of spreadsheets. I saw plenty of new
- features that should motivate many people to upgrade. This release
- of Excel looks almost identical between Windows, OS/2, and the
- Mac, can easily retain market share, and now requires less work to
- update, since over three quarters of the code is shared among the
- three versions.
-
- I was most impressed by the thought that Microsoft put into the
- new interface. There is a "best fit" feature which automatically
- resizes all the columns so that all the data shows, no matter what
- the size of individual entries. Microsoft added a camera tool that
- takes a snapshot of an area of the spreadsheet or even another
- spreadsheet. Once you've taken the snapshot, you can move it to
- where you're working, and any numerical changes will be updated in
- the snapshot so you can watch the numbers change as you work. The
- camera tool is available from the Toolbar, which provides several
- common commands and actions in iconic form, (similar to Full
- Impact's implementation). Unlike Full Impact, Excel's Toolbar
- doesn't change to reflect likely commands for the mode that you're
- in. Still, it's a big help. One icon on the Toolbar is Sum, which
- you use by selecting a cell and clicking the Sum icon. Excel then
- guesses at which cells you want to add (usually the horizontal or
- vertical range that makes sense - it guessed well when I saw it),
- asks you if it has guessed correctly, and adds the numbers if you
- agree with it. Not earth-shattering, but helpful nonetheless.
- Other nice features include easy non-contiguous cell selection
- within formulas, word processor-like styles for consistent
- formatting, simple drawing tools for creating graphic objects that
- sit on top of the spreadsheet, and text samples before you click
- OK when you're changing the formatting.
-
- Charting is perhaps the most changed part of Excel. No more
- nonsense with having to open a separate chart document. Excel can
- now (like Wingz and Full Impact) position charts anywhere on the
- worksheet and allow you to move and resize them easily. Many more
- chart types are included, most notably 3D charts. Excel provides a
- decent method of changing the rotation and aspect of the 3D graphs
- so you can find the best viewing angle. Full Impact does this by
- forcing you to enter the numbers and see what happens, whereas
- Excel works in the same way DeltaGraph does, with a graphical
- model to manipulate. For USA Today-style graphics, you can even
- designate a graphic object from which Excel can build the bars of
- a bar chart. One of the more impressive charting features worked
- only with bar charts. You could select a bar of data and drag it
- up or down, changing the data in the spreadsheet and any other
- parts of the graph that would be affected by the resulting numeric
- change. I would have liked such a feature back in high school when
- I used VisiCalc to fudge experimental data from primitive
- chemistry labs. I learned so much more by having to numerically
- model the appropriate equations - just think what I could have
- done with this solver technology. Scary thought, eh?
-
- The other big addition to Excel is something Bill Gates himself
- wanted. It is an outlining feature much like that in Word. By
- creating an outline, you can hide or show different levels of
- detail, so if you create a spreadsheet of travel expenses for your
- boss, you have to enter each one, but he only wants to see the
- category totals. Then, your boss's boss wishes to only see the
- bottom line. In each case, using the outlining feature allows you
- to trade one spreadsheet around, merely collapsing different
- levels for different people. I think I personally prefer Full
- Impact's View feature, which allows you to switch easily to
- different views of the same spreadsheet, but outlining is
- certainly powerful and useful.
-
- The Mac and PC versions of Excel are similar, with only a few
- exceptions. The Mac version can print a spreadsheet, no matter how
- large, on a single sheet of paper. Irate users who always try to
- fit just a little more on the page will appreciate this feature,
- though if they print a large spreadsheet on a single page, it
- won't be remarkably readable. The PC version doesn't have that
- feature, probably because printing is more difficult in Windows
- and PostScript is less prevalent, but the PC version does have a
- well done 1-2-3 help feature for people switching to Excel. Just
- type the 1-2-3 command and Excel displays and demonstrate the
- proper Excel command. Alternately, if you are in a hurry, Excel
- performs the 1-2-3 command for you. Overall, I was impressed even
- though I seldom use spreadsheets, in part because when I do use
- them, I'm always irritated by a lot of the things that Microsoft
- has changed. Additionally, I highly approve of code-sharing
- between different platforms since rewriting code wastes time.
-
- Microsoft -- 800/426-9400 -- 206/882-8080
-
- Information from:
- Microsoft propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 08-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #1, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 14-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #2, pg. 5
- MacUser -- Mar-91, pg. 40
- Macworld -- Mar-91, pg. 101
-
-
- Guerilla Marketing
- ------------------
- No, I don't mean putting simians in your booth at Macworld Expo!
- I'm talking about the cut-rate offers that many software firms are
- using now that the economy is feeling blue. In view of the public
- interest, here's a few of the more interesting deals out there.
-
- Canvas soon turns 3.0, and to celebrate, MacDraw owners wishing to
- secede can purchase Canvas for a mere $149, which is a lot less
- than the list price of $399. Of course you wouldn't pay list (I
- hope), but Deneba's deal still comes in at $40 or so less than the
- current discount price for Canvas 2.1, which comes with a free
- upgrade to 3.0 if you buy it before May 31st, 1991. The MacDraw
- trade-in ends August 1st, 1991 and there isn't a toll-free number,
- but hey, it's still a good deal. The number is 305/594-6965.
-
- Sitka (what a strange name! - if I remember correctly, it
- originally comes from a small Alaskan village) is worried now that
- System 7.0 will include many features that TOPS alone once held.
- DataClub from International Business Software, isn't helping
- either, challenging the fading TOPS on financial and feature
- fronts. For $124.76 for a DataClub 3-pack (IBS calculates that out
- to $42 per user somehow, rather than the correct $41.59) TOPS
- owners can upgrade to DataClub. There is a limit of two per
- customer, so if you have more than six people on your network,
- you'll have to buy more at normal prices, which are a bit higher.
- To order, call 800/735-1776 with your TOPS serial number and your
- credit card number.
-
- Finally, T/Maker generously offers WriteNow 2.2, Grammatik Mac
- 2.0, and MacTools Deluxe 1.1 for a bargain at $94.45 (that
- includes shipping). All you must do is prove that you own another
- word processor. T/Maker is obviously targeting the biggies, Word,
- Write, and MacWrite II, but I'm sure they won't be upset if
- WordPerfect or FullWrite users took them up on it either. Of
- course, no Nisus user would ever switch to WriteNow :-). It's a
- good deal, and I especially like the fact that T/Maker included
- MacTools, because then buyers will have a backup program, a
- utility no one should be without. This offer is short-lived,
- ending on March 31st, 1991. To order, call 800/522-5939 and be
- prepared to send proof of ownership of another program.
-
- Deneba -- 305/594-6965
- International Business Software -- 800/735-1776
- T/Maker -- 800/522-5939 -- 415/962-0195
-
- Information from:
- Deneba propaganda
- International Business Software propaganda
- T/Maker propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 19-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #7, pg. 12, 20
-
-
- Snazzier Graphics
- -----------------
- I've put this article off for a little while because every time I
- think about it, something new happens. I'm talking about the
- epidemic of upgrades for major graphics programs that have swept
- the Macintosh world. Canvas and FreeHand have followed Illustrator
- to 3.0 and MacDraw has turned Pro. Add to that a couple of new
- programs and graphic designers should be confused and delighted
- for some time.
-
- FreeHand is Illustrator 3.0's closest competitor and while it
- hasn't changed much outwardly, Aldus (or Altsys, it's unclear
- who's responsible for the upgrade since Altsys was the developer)
- added a number of features that allow electronic artists to use
- FreeHand in a more structured way. Helping with the structure are
- a new Layers palette, which helps you create and manage layers of
- the picture, a Colors palette, which lets you create and name
- process and spot colors including Pantone colors, and finally a
- new Styles palette, from which you can save various pieces of
- information about how an object should look (stroke, fill, etc.)
- and then apply that style to other objects for a consistent look.
- Improved text abilities include the ability to convert PostScript
- Type 1 fonts into editable outlines. Unlike Illustrator 3.0,
- FreeHand will not need ATM active for text handling features such
- as wrapping text around an ellipse or creating vertical text.
-
- Deneba's Canvas somehow avoids comparisons with FreeHand and
- Illustrator, but may creep into that market with the myriads of
- new features in version 3.0. Canvas offers a Smart Mouse feature
- that helps illustrators draw and align objects without having to
- position the mouse exactly right, an incredibly frustrating task
- with a dirty mouse. Other functions that bring Canvas into direct
- competition with FreeHand and Illustrator include converting any
- PostScript Type 1 font to an editable outline, binding text to
- objects and curves, fractional leading and kerning, character by
- character font-scaling, object blending (the program figures out
- the intermediate steps between pictures of Geraldine Ferraro and a
- Ferrari), support for Pantone colors, and editing multiple Bezier-
- curve anchor points. Two handy new features are a bundled four-
- color separation utility and the ability to search for graphic
- objects (I'd kill for that one on occasion!). Whew! Canvas has
- always had a few quirks, but it sounds like Deneba isn't letting
- up in the slightest in the feature wars.
-
- Canvas's main competition, MacDraw, will have a pile of added
- features when it becomes MacDraw Pro. MacDraw Pro will include
- impressive word processing capabilities (presumably borrowed from
- MacWrite II), easy creation and editing of objects using Bezier
- curves (which, though undeniably powerful, have always escaped
- me), support for Pantone colors (I'm starting to sound repetitive
- on that one), 24-bit color support, custom dithering that
- simulates almost 2000 colors on a standard 8-bit (256 color)
- monitor, color naming (Joe, Susan, Margie...), and multiple open
- color palettes. Finally, although Canvas understands a lot of
- graphic file formats, MacDraw Pro includes Claris's XTND
- technology (which Claris ought to be better about licensing along
- with the necessary filters to third parties), which allow MacDraw
- Pro to read and write various graphic file formats supported by
- Claris and third party translators.
-
- If you've always thought that electronic art doesn't quite match
- up to traditionally created art, a new paint program from the guys
- who wrote Letraset's ImageStudio, ColorStudio, and Shapes may
- change your mind. Tom Hedges and Mark Zimmer of Fractal Software
- are working on Painter, which will simulate traditional tools such
- as charcoal, pastels, chalk, and watercolors through the use of
- pressure-sensitive brushes (and yes, you would need one of Wacom's
- pressure-sensitive graphics tablets to take full advantage of the
- program). As a final perk for graphic designers, Painter comes
- with several simulated paper grains, and you can create new ones
- of your own.
-
- Alternately, if you like computer art, Pixar's new ShowPlace
- program allows you to create in three dimensions. Somewhat less
- powerful than Pixar's MacRenderMan, ShowPlace still sounds
- impressive. Basically, you take 3D clip art, import it into
- ShowPlace, add texture and a light source, and the program creates
- the proper 3D image for you. Bundled with ShowPlace is a clip art
- library called ClipObjects and a surface library called First
- Looks, which has textures for wood, metal, stone, and various
- other patterns. It doesn't sound as though you can create 3D
- objects in ShowPlace, but you can export the 3D images in TIFF and
- PICT format. ShowPlace lists for $695 and should be out right
- about now.
-
- As well as Illustrator 3.0, which was the first of the version
- 3.0's to hit the market, Adobe is working on a new version of
- Streamline, its tracing software. Streamline can now convert
- continuous tone images (the sort where there aren't distinct
- objects) into line art, and then Streamline can modify that line
- art with the same sort of effects that Painter has, including
- charcoal, pastels, woodcut, pen and ink, and woodcut. Other new
- abilities include creating a MacPaint template for the line art
- image, selecting only part of an image for conversion, and saving
- line art images so that selected pieces can be edited
- independently in a draw program.
-
- Adobe -- 415/961-4400
- Aldus -- 206/628-2320
- Claris -- 800/544-8554 -- 408/727-8227
- Deneba Software -- 305/594-6965
- Fractal Software -- 408/688-2496
- Pixar -- 415/236-4000
-
- Information from:
- Lots of propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 12-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #6, pg. 36
- MacWEEK -- 22-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #3, pg. 8
- MacWEEK -- 08-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #1, pg. 33
- InfoWorld -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #1, pg. 30
- PC WEEK -- 14-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #2, pg. 34
- PC WEEK -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #1, pg. 13, 29
- MacUser -- Mar-91, pg. 41
-
-
- Lotus Tries Harder
- ------------------
- I'll give Lotus a lot of credit, it takes a beating and keep
- coming back for more. Unfortunately, like baseball's New York
- Yankees, Lotus insists on trying to buy success, which works
- neither in baseball nor the computer industry. The latest free
- agent purchased by Lotus (remember Lotus buying Samna just a
- little while ago? And before that Lotus bought Sybase, a database
- company, and tried to merge with Novell) is cc:Mail, a company
- that makes the email package of the same name for Macs and PC
- clones. Ideally, Lotus wants to integrate cc:Mail and Notes, its
- mega-expensive groupware software. Lotus is modifying Notes so
- that it will integrate Macs as well, though I can't imagine how
- popular it will be, considering that Notes runs about $60,000
- dollars.
-
- Here's the first sporadic TidBITS quiz. How many Lotus products
- can you name? Well, there's 1-2-3 of course and Improv for the
- NeXT machines. I just mentioned Notes and there's a graphics
- program called FreeLance Plus and a word processor whose name I
- can't remember, and then we have the products Lotus just bought,
- Ami, Ami Professional, and cc:Mail. I think Lotus also has a
- CD-search program called Bluefish, which it bought at some point
- and there's a well-reviewed DOS shell and file viewer called
- Magellan. MarketPlace is dead, but Lotus has another (if not a
- whole line) CD-ROM containing banking information, but that's
- about it. All of those products are strictly for PC clones, with
- the exception of a few versions of 1-2-3 for other platforms. Each
- time Lotus has tested the waters of the Mac market it has sunk
- miserably. A version of 1-2-3 for the Mac along with Macintosh
- support for Notes might last a little while, though I don't give
- either much of a chance. Other than 1-2-3 (which most people
- simply call "Lotus" anyway), we're not exactly talking about
- electronic household names here, nor are these products part of a
- coherent scheme.
-
- I mention Lotus's product line because it's becoming more and more
- apparent that Lotus is trying to leverage itself into a position
- to compete with Microsoft. In comparison to Lotus's hodgepodge of
- DOS products, compare Microsoft's relatively well-integrated line
- for both the Mac and PC clones. Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Works,
- Mail, DOS, Windows 3.0, OS/2, LAN Manager, a whole slew of
- programming languages, and possibly a new low-end desktop
- publishing program as well. Especially now that Microsoft is
- designing its programs to share code (Excel 3.0 for the PC and the
- Mac share about 80% of the code), Lotus doesn't stand a chance at
- competing unless it quickly whips all the acquisitions into shape.
- Lotus only has an advantage on the NeXT workstation, and despite
- its abilities, I doubt NeXT will become a major force for some
- time yet, if ever.
-
- I think Lotus should stick with its current products and devote
- its money and attention to new niches and getting everything into
- a coherent framework. Lotus has lived and will die on 1-2-3 alone,
- unless it learns how to repeat 1-2-3's success. Improv is
- certainly a good start, and its joint project with HP might help
- as well. HP and Lotus are developing a palmtop computer that will
- be an excuse to carry 1-2-3 around with you all the time, since
- the software will be coded into the firmware. It's not my idea of
- an incredibly cool machine, but I'm sure some people are getting
- sweaty palms over the concept even as I write.
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 19-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #7, pg. 1, 93
- InfoWorld -- 18-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #7, pg. 1
- COMMUNICATIONS WEEK -- 18-Jan-91, pg. 2
-
-
- Reviews/25-Feb-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- WordPerfect 2.0, pg. 37
- Ray Dream Designer, pg. 37
- P*INK SQL 1.04, pg. 42
- Presenting Now 2.0, pg. 46
- CTS-4 PlusM DAT Drive and Nightshift, pg. 49
- Mapping Programs, pg. 52
- Descartes
- MapInfo 1.02
- Color Printers, pg. 57
-
- * InfoWorld
- DiskFit 2.0, pg. 60
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 19-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #7
- InfoWorld -- 18-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #7
-
-
- ..
-
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