home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-06-19 | 19.8 KB | 433 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- TidBITS#46/04-Mar-91
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 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. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
- Internet: ace@tidbits.uucp -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Colorized Pivot
- The Crocodile's Smile
- Unicode
- Word 5.0 Wishes
- Reviews/04-Mar-91
-
-
- Colorized Pivot
- ---------------
- Finally. Despair almost crept over me when I heard that Radius had
- not introduced a color version of its Pivot monitor at Macworld in
- San Francisco. After all, I try to include rumors that eventually
- come true. I've been in this game for almost year now, and I'm
- still getting the hang of the timing rumors (I'm sure it's a game
- since real life is not nearly this much fun though it does pay a
- lot better). Sooner or later I'll figure it out.
-
- For those of you who either weren't reading TidBITS then or have
- forgotten, I wrote about the possibility of a color Pivot
- appearing at Macworld in the 10-Dec-90 issue. It looks like I will
- be off by three or four months. I've heard that the Color Pivot
- will appear sometime in the middle of this month, possibly at the
- CeBIT expo in Germany. Short of that information, I don't know a
- great deal. I had fun reading the articles in MacWEEK and
- InfoWorld though, because they didn't particularly agree. MacWEEK
- claims that the Color Pivot will work with the onboard video of
- the IIsi and IIci and that the price will be "under $3000."
- InfoWorld, in contrast, claims that the price will come in about
- $2200 and that Radius will have two versions, one with a video
- card and one without for Macs with internal video (although
- InfoWorld gives the LC as one example of a Mac with internal
- video, which, while true, the Pivot won't work without a VRAM
- upgrade at the bare minimum).
-
- Whatever the details turn out to be, I think that the Color Pivot
- will be a great success as long as the price isn't too high. Even
- at educational and discount prices, an Apple 13" color monitor
- with a 4*8 video card runs about $1200 and the Apple 15" portrait
- display is about $100 more. So if the Color Pivot comes in with a
- list price around $2200 and discounts down to the $1600 range, it
- would be a serious contender with existing systems. And the
- concept of full page color is wonderful, although I'll admit that
- I've become extremely fond of my combination of the SE/30 internal
- monitor and an external Apple color monitor hooked to a Micron
- Xceed card.
-
- Radius -- 800/227-2795
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 26-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #8, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 25-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #8, pg. 8
-
-
- The Crocodile's Smile
- ---------------------
- by Harry Skelton -- harry@usrgrp.uniforum.org
-
- [Editor's Note: Many thanks to Harry Skelton for sending us this
- article. It's not the sort of thing I have the expertise to write
- about personally, yet I suspect that a number of people will be
- interested. By the way, that means that you should direct
- questions about this directly to Harry. Also, to be fair, I gather
- that there are other gateways, though as I said, I don't know
- anything about them. Oh, and for you budding biologists out there,
- I bloody well do know the difference between a crocodile and an
- alligator - it just sounded like a nice title.]
-
- In dealing with the Unix marketplace, and having a need internally
- for a Macintosh gateway product, I made a startling discovery!
-
- GATORBOX IS NOT ALONE!
-
- If you purchase a GatorBox with GatorShare and GatorMail-Q, you'll
- spend $7,200. If you purchase a Sony NEWS system with AppleShare,
- you'll spend $6,800. BUT! the NEWS system gets its connectivity
- via uShare Plus from Information Presentation Technologies (IPT).
- uShare Plus will run under SCO Unix and SCO Xenix and costs $395
- for server software and $59 (presumably each) for client software.
- For that, you get complete file sharing, print services, email
- services, telnet, ftp, and other items. I believe that uShare Plus
- also runs under other platforms as well. Hardware-wise, they sell
- a LocalTalk card for $295 for your PC and hardware for
- VME/SBus/MicroChannel and Sony Bus.
-
- I called Cayman Systems regarding this "problem," and, taken
- aback, they drilled me for details regarding uShare Plus. They
- wanted to know what box this ran on, how fast it worked, what
- Apple format it used. (GatorBox will store the file in both Apple
- I or Apple II format [*ACK**PHHHTT*] which makes it near
- impossible to download the file from your Unix host from home.)
- IPT explained to me that they support those formats as well as
- MacBinary II (the normal file format for us BBS junkies).
-
- After about an hour of grilling, I told Cayman the price. Silence.
- Then they told me that they wanted to transfer me to someone else
- regarding this. It was their Marketing Director. (Gee, wonder if I
- hit a nerve?) After I explained the services and support that IPT
- is willing to provide, he could only explain that Cayman is
- expanding their services (they have been talking about this for at
- least two years now) and that they are looking into changing their
- code to support MacBinary II format (this claim also checks in at
- about two years old). After talking about services and speed, he
- explained that he knew the overhead on the GatorBox and they were
- working on trying to make it run faster. He even went so far as to
- explain that a newer and bigger box with better DMA and other
- things was to show up later in the year. But just as in trying to
- judge religion, the talk regarding these two Mac products got
- nowhere fast. He hung up. I started grinning.
-
- For all those users who thought NFS connectivity to a Mac with
- email, printing, virtual disk, and server abilities would cost
- $7000+++ ... guess again and check out the Sony NEWS server with
- uShare Plus.
-
- Cayman Systems -- 800/473-4776 -- 617/494-1999
- IPT -- 800/232-9993 -- 818/347-7991
- Sony Microsystems -- 800/624-8999 x 96 -- 408/434-6644
-
-
- Unicode
- -------
- I don't know how many of you have had the opportunity to view some
- of the extended ASCII characters on PC-clones, but they are pretty
- funny. You find little smiley-faces, all the suits in a deck of
- cards, and lots of other fun characters. Unfortunately, these cute
- characters are just about useless, and they aren't that easy to
- use anyway. The Mac, on the other hand, has a decent extended
- ASCII character set with useful typographical symbols like *,
- [tm],(c),[tm], and a whole slew of accented letters. Even still,
- if you are used to a foreign language, the Mac doesn't even begin
- to cut it. Even though the designers of the Mac made better
- choices than the designers of the PC, both machines (and indeed
- almost all machines) use an 8-bit character set. This means that
- you can have only 256 characters. Initially, I suspect that the
- computer designers thought that 256 characters would be more than
- enough, but these designers also thought 128K was a good amount of
- standard memory and 640K was more than anyone would ever want. So
- if you want to transfer files to a PC from a Mac, you have to be
- careful to use only the first 128 characters of the ASCII
- character set, because those are the only ones that will be the
- same. I won't even mention EBCDIC because it irritates me too
- much.
-
- Well, the companies responsible for these difficulties have banded
- together in what seems to be an unprecedented level of cooperation
- to form Unicode Inc. The Who's Who membership list includes
- Microsoft, IBM, Aldus, NeXT, Apple, GO, Sun, Metaphor, Lotus,
- Novell, and - for a little academic interest - the Research
- Libraries Group. Unicode is working on a new standard for
- character representation that will use a 16-bit character set that
- will support more than 27,000 characters out of a possible 65,000.
- Of course all applications will have to be rewritten to support
- Unicode (although Apple's Script Manager should make that process
- easier for Mac developers once it supports Unicode), but once all
- applications support Unicode the ASCII barrier will fall.
-
- The best part of Unicode is that because all the major computer
- companies are involved, it has a very good chance of being
- implemented correctly on all major platforms, including future
- versions of the Mac, OS/2, and Windows. There is a competing
- proposal, ISO 10646, the relative merits of which are being
- bandied about on a BITNET discussion list called HUMANIST (and in
- other places, no doubt). A couple of the arguments center on
- floating accents, which Unicode supports and which ISO 10646
- doesn't, and whether or not ISO's method of variable length bytes
- (8, 16, 24, or 32 bits) makes any sense at all. I don't totally
- understand the issues on either side, since I work with only one
- language that can't be represented in ASCII, but I get the gist of
- it all. My non-ASCII language is ancient Greek, and let me tell
- you, it's an incredible pain to transcribe Greek letters into a
- reasonable ASCII facsimile, working primarily on sound and visual
- similarities. Ugh.
-
- The languages that will benefit the most (or which we will benefit
- the most from, it's not clear) from Unicode are the Oriental
- ideographs, which have few visual analogues and whose
- pronunciations are often too subtle for coding in ASCII, unlike
- Greek, which can be made to sound enough like English to be
- comprehensible. I didn't see the Unicode guide to the Chinese,
- Japanese, or Korean, because they are too large to send. I do have
- a copy of the draft proposal, and I'm extremely impressed by
- Unicode's completeness. Included are a number of mathematical
- operators, geometric shapes, currency symbols, a full set of
- punctuation marks, basic dingbats, and a bunch of languages I'd
- never heard of, such as Gurmukhi, Devanagari, Oriya, and Bopomofo.
-
- Information from:
- The Unicode Consortium -- asmusf@microsoft.uucp
- Bill Tuthill -- tut@Eng.Sun.COM
- Michael Sperberg-McQueen -- U35395@UICVM
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 26-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #8, pg. 5
- InfoWorld -- 25-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #8, pg. 8
-
-
- Word 5.0 Wishes
- ---------------
- Last week we talked a bit about the good things Microsoft did with
- Excel 3.0 and whenever you think of Excel, Word inevitably
- surfaces as well. Little has come out of Microsoft about what Word
- 5.0 will look like or what new features will be included, but we
- can make some educated guesses about likely changes, and a recent
- discussion on Usenet indicated the places Word currently has
- trouble. We haven't heard anything about when Word 5.0 might show
- up, although it's a good bet that the time will come right after
- System 7.0 ships. Think about it - the date in the About... box on
- at least one version of Word I've seen is April 10th, 1989. Two
- years without an upgrade is a long time when competing products
- the caliber of Nisus come out.
-
- Microsoft has said that its strategy is to reuse as much code as
- possible for an application between different platforms. That's
- all fine and nice for Excel, but the Microsoft word processing
- programs (Word for the Mac, Word 5.5 for DOS, Word for Windows,
- and Write) are currently enough different that it's unlikely that
- Microsoft will be able to completely standardize a single
- interface. Nonetheless, that's the trend, so look for Word 5.0 to
- have a Toolbar like the one in Word for Windows. Word for Windows
- also has a macro facility that might show up in the Macintosh
- version, particularly since AutoMac III, the free macro program
- bundled with Word, isn't terribly impressive, to say the least.
-
- Probably the main complaint discussed on Usenet (and experienced
- by thousands of users everywhere) is Word's poor human interface.
- Microsoft ignored Apple's programming and interface guidelines,
- which is why you get such gems as "Select All" being "Move the
- mouse over to the left gutter (which is tiny on a 9" screen) so
- that it points right instead of left, then hold down the command
- key and click in the left gutter." Egads! To be fair, there is a
- keyboard equivalent, Command-Option-M, though no one has ever
- explained why they didn't use Command-A like the Finder and most
- other Macintosh applications in the known universe. Another major
- contributor the interface headaches is the "Short Menus" feature
- (I've heard an instructor in a class once say that Short Menus is
- a bug, not a feature.). With Short Menus turned on, most of the
- menu items disappear, resulting in complete and utter confusion
- when the user wants to perform an action whose menu item no longer
- exists. To quote a tire salesman with whom I once had the pleasure
- of doing business, "Scrog it."
-
- A number of Word's features were appreciated by people on Usenet,
- but they saw plenty of room for improvement. For instance, Word
- can make an automatic backup of the file you are working on when
- you save, but it can't do so automatically after a certain amount
- of time, like WordPerfect, or after a certain number of
- keystrokes, like Nisus. In addition, Word can't store the backups
- on a different volume, which is essential for data security. The
- backups also have to be started by selecting Save As... after the
- file has already been saved once since the Make Backup button
- isn't available until the file already exists. That's just sloppy,
- as are those irritating little Word Temp files that hang around in
- everyone's System Folders. Unlike most programs, that only leave
- temp files around if the Mac crashes, Word's temp files are seldom
- erased unless you use something like the freeware INIT
- Temperament. Style sheets are one of Word's most useful features,
- in part because they import directly into PageMaker and because
- Word was one of the first programs to have them. However, Word's
- style sheets are paragraph-based, so you can't define a style that
- will affect only a few words, for program name, for instance,
- because it will affect the entire paragraph. Nisus and WordPerfect
- have character-based styles and can optionally use paragraph
- styles as well, a far more powerful scheme. Finally, Word has
- extensive keyboard shortcuts, even allowing you to use them in
- dialog boxes. However, there's no way of finding out what the
- shortcuts for the dialog boxes are on the fly. Nisus solves this
- problem by displaying the keyboard shortcuts only when you press
- the Command key. And although you can change the keyboard
- shortcuts in Word, it doesn't come close to competing with the way
- Nisus allows you to assign more than one alphanumeric key to a
- shortcut, thus making Page Setup... be Command-P-S (or whatever
- you want).
-
- Suggested enhancements from Usenet include built-in print
- spooling, a facility for numbering and re-numbering sections,
- graphics, references, and the like, faster response time when
- working with tables (which are perhaps the most popular feature of
- Word 4.0 despite the fact that commands to work with them sit in
- three separate menus), and the ability for the speller to ignore a
- word for a single document, but without adding it to the
- dictionary (which is what the ~Spell style does in Nisus).
-
- These enhancements will help, but looking at the competition
- offered by Nisus and WordPerfect 2.0, Word needs a serious
- upgrade. Both of those programs offer sophisticated macro
- programming abilities and relatively powerful internal graphics
- abilities, and Nisus has PowerSearch and PowerSearch+ (GREP for
- those of you who use Unix boxes) for unparalleled searching power.
- I gather that FullWrite has one of the nicest interfaces of the
- powerful word processors, but it's the only one I've never used.
- Luckily for Word users, Microsoft is paying some attention, to
- judge from a Microsoft "One-To-One with Microsoft" newsletter I
- received recently. It talks about the Microsoft Word User's
- Conference held in October. Evidently Microsoft felt it got a lot
- of good feedback from the conference, though it would be better if
- Microsoft would put a representative on Usenet and America Online
- (I don't know if the company supports CompuServe) to better keep
- in touch with the people who use Microsoft programs day in and day
- out. Then people might even find out about new versions of the
- program (I seem to remember that Word is up to 4.00e, but you have
- know what the bugs are when you call to get that version from
- Microsoft).
-
- Microsoft -- 800/426-9400 -- 206/882-8080
-
- Information from:
- John F. Mansfield -- John_Mansfield@emal.sprl.umich.edu
- Dennis H Lippert -- macman@unix.cis.pitt.edu
- Stewart Tansley -- dswt@stl.stc.co.uk
- Steve Baumgarten -- baumgart@esquire.dpw.com
- Chaz Larson -- clarson@ux.acs.umn.edu
- Brian Aslakson -- aslakson@cs.umn.edu
- John T. Chapman -- ke2y@vax5.cit.cornell.edu
- David Palmer -- palmer@nntp-server.caltech.edu
- John Wilkins -- typ125m@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au
- Richard Kennaway -- jrk@information-systems.east-anglia.ac.uk
- Microsoft newsletter
-
-
- Reviews/04-Mar-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- HyperCard 2.0, pg. 31
- TelePort A300, pg. 31
-
- * InfoWorld
- FullWrite 1.5, pg. 64
-
- * PC WEEK
- Color Scanners, pg. 81
- AVR 3000/CL Plus
- Epson ES-300C
- Howtek Personal Color Scanner
- Microtek MSF-300Z
- Umax UC300
- AppleTalk Management Programs, pg. 91
- Aperture Network & Resource Manager 1.0
- Apple InterPoll 1.02
- CSG Network Supervisor 1.0
- Pharos Status*Mac 1.1
- GraceLAN 1.0
-
- * MacUser
- FilmMaker, pg. 52
- MacInTax & TurboTax, pg. 54
- MiniCad+ 3.0, pg. 56
- M.Y.O.B. , pg. 58
- Intouch, pg. 60
- Compression Programs, pg. 72
- DiskDoubler
- Compactor (now Compact Pro)
- Diamond
- Planisoft, pg. 75
- Now Utilities 2.0, pg. 78
- FileGuard and MaccessCard Reader, pg. 80
- FullWrite Professional, pg. 83
- CheckWriter II, pg. 83
- Where In Time Is Carmen Sandiego?, pg. 83
- File Director, pg. 85
- WillMaker 4.0, pg. 85
- Darwin's Dilemma, pg. 87
- KiwiFinder Extender, pg. 87
- Small Hard Drives, pg. 89
- (too many to list)
- EtherTalk to LocalTalk Routers, pg. 156
- Postal Utilities, pg. 174
-
- * Macworld
- Ethernet to LocalTalk Routers, pg. 130
- Macro Programs, pg. 138
- AutoMac III
- MacroMaker
- MasterStrokes
- QuicKeys2
- Tempo II Plus
- 24-bit Color Paint Programs, pg. 145
- Studio/32 1.0, pg. 154
- Deck 1.03, pg. 156
- Earthquest 1.0, pg. 158
- WealthBuilder, pg. 165
- ELITE Professional Flight Simulator, pg. 16
- La Cie Tsunami 80-Q and Liberty 80, pg. 171
- Software Bridge Macintosh 1.0, pg. 173
- MacGraphX 1.0, pg. 175
- Algebra 1 Homework Tutor 1.9.4, pg. 177
- Alge-Blaster Plus 1.0, pg. 177
- Your Personal Trainer for the SAT 1.0, pg. 177
- Professor Mac 1.7, pg. 177
- MusiCard Maker 1.0, pg. 178
- MacPhoneBook 3.0, pg. 178
- MacList 1.5, pg. 178
- Offline 1.01, pg. 178
- Disk Accessory Plus 1.0, pg. 178
-
- * BYTE
- E-mail Packages, pg. 222
- Mac IIsi & Mac LC , pg. 257
- DesignCAD 2D/3D, pg. 276
- Voice Navigator II, pg. 284
- VideoLogic DVA-4000/Macintosh
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 26-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #8
- InfoWorld -- 25-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #8
- PC WEEK -- 25-Feb-91, Vol. 8, #8
- MacUser -- Apr-91
- Macworld -- Apr-91
- BYTE -- Mar-91
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is encoded in the setext format. Please send email to
- <info@tidbits.uucp> or contact us at one of the above addresses
- to learn how to get more information on the setext format.
-