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- TidBITS#48/18-Mar-91
- ====================
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/18-Mar-91
- Input Devices, Newer and Weirder
- Apple Bargain Basement
- Learn Unix the Easy Way
- Reviews/18-Mar-91
-
-
- MailBITS/18-Mar-91
- ------------------
- Some people have suggested that we start a regular letters
- section, so we've decided that a quasi-sporadic, semi-edited
- section does make sense. Some mailfiles will come through
- complete; others we'll edit for space reasons. We will also use
- this article to inform you of TidBITS administrative trivia,
- stupid errors on our part, and the like. Hope you like it. Just so
- we don't have to mention this with every letter we print, please
- assume that we are extremely grateful for this information.
-
- Mark H Anbinder forwarded us this note from Brian Westley of
- DigiBoard "The WDEF A virus was inadvertently included on the
- driver disk for the DigiCHANNEL Nu/Xi serial port board; the disk
- is numbered PN 40000480B. The new driver is PN 40000480C; contact
- DigiBoard customer service at (612) 922-8055 to get the new driver
- (the software is the same). We are also adding the Communications
- Toolbox installer and connection tools to the release, so you can
- get these as well. Sorry for any inconvenience."
-
- Richard Johnson writes that the numbers we gave for IPT in Harry
- Skelton's article, "The Crocodile Smile," were incorrect, each by
- a single digit (bloody typos!). Here are the correct numbers for
- IPT.
-
- IPT -- 800/233-9993 -- 818/347-7791
-
- Karl Smith writes, "Your article in TidBITS about the
- Apple/Microsoft suit didn't mention the League for Programming
- Freedom, a group that is opposed to 'look and feel' copyrights.
- For more information about them, you can send email to
- league@prep.ai.mit.edu, and/or ftp to prep.ai.mit.edu and read the
- files contained in pub/gnu/lpf. Some of their ideas (such as
- boycotting Apple) may not be compatible with yours (or mine), but
- many of their goals overlap with the sentiment expressed in your
- article."
-
- Thomas Robb, an Associate Professor at the Kyoto Sangyo University
- in Japan (so he should know), writes, "A couple of comments on
- your most recent issue. Concerning the new project to develop a
- 16-bit standardized character set, you mentioned a number of
- "languages" at the end of the article. Actually, two of them are
- not languages at all, but just alphabets. Devanagari is the
- alphabet used to write classical Sanskrit as well as modern-day
- Hindi. With the population of India being what it is, it is
- probably a good idea to standardize these scripts now before India
- leaps into the personal computer age. Both Oriya and Gurmukhi are
- Indo-Aryan languages related to Hindi, but used by other areas of
- the sub-continent. Their alphabets are originally derived from
- Devanagari, but are rather different in their shapes - sort of
- like the differences between the Greek, Cyrllic and our alphabet.
- Bopomofo is an alphabet, now primarily used on Taiwan, for writing
- Chinese phonetically. I believe it is taught to the children there
- before they are started on learning the Chinese characters-proper.
- Mainland China now uses the Pinyin system which is comprised
- completely of Roman alphabetic characters, thus now a special
- character set is needed."
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
- Richard Johnson -- johnsonr@spot.colorado.edu
- Karl Smith -- ksmith@jarthur.claremont.edu
- Thomas Robb -- TROBB@JPNKSUVX.BITNET
-
-
- Input Devices, Newer and Weirder
- --------------------------------
- Cool new input devices are always a hard call - on the one hand
- you want companies to challenge the status quo and come out with
- the ultimate in control, but on the other hand, if an input device
- is too strange looking, no one will even think of buying it. There
- have been a number of introductions recently, and a few of them
- are quite interesting. As with any input device, you have to try
- it before you buy it, and it would be nice if these companies put
- a little more effort into supporting user group demonstrations
- (and sending them to TidBITS for review!) so people could get
- their hands on these beasties.
-
- Three button devices are showing up more frequently these days now
- that Apple has A/UX and X Windows running on the Mac, since X
- Windows basically requires three mouse buttons. Logitech, a long-
- time mouse maker, has two new input devices, a mouse and a
- trackball, both with three buttons. Mouse Systems (with whom I'm
- still irritated for not releasing the PageBrush hand scanner
- already) has the $169.95 A3 (that's A cubed, but HyperCard 1.2.x
- can't handle superscripts), which like the Logitech $129 MouseMan
- and $149 TrackMan has three buttons and works with A/UX and X
- Windows. All three devices have Control Panels that allow users to
- assign macros to the buttons during normal Macintosh use, and at
- least the A3 can be configured so that left-handed people can use
- it easily. And if three buttons isn't enough for you, the $29.95
- MVP Foot Switch from Curtis works with the company's $149.95 MVP
- Mouse (which, despite the name, is really a three-button
- trackball). I've been haranguing for a long time about foot
- controls, and I'm glad that someone has finally issued one.
-
- Logitech has been busy. Aside from the MouseMan and TrackMan, they
- are working on a small trackball that works with portable
- computers. This is obviously mostly a problem for PC portables,
- since the main Macintosh compatible portables have built-in
- pointing devices, either a trackball or the Isopoint. I don't know
- offhand what Colby and Dynamac use for pointing devices, though.
- Microsoft also has a $175 trackball for portables, called the
- BallPoint, that will clip on the side of the computer and can be
- used with either hand, because it has two sets of two buttons on
- the side the unit. The Logitech trackball will probably look
- somewhat similar but will have the added advantage being able to
- work standing alone or held in the user's hand. The obvious
- problem with these devices is the slow refresh rate of portable
- LCD screens. Fast cursor movements disappear while the LCD
- displays refreshes, which is irritating and might be maddening if
- coupled with a bumpy plane trip. Nonetheless, Compaq will bundle
- Microsoft's BallPoint with its LTE and SLT portable PC clones
- between now and June 30th, 1991.
-
- Apple is almost certainly working on handwriting recognition
- software with the announcements of PenPoint and PenWindows.
- However, you may not have heard that a small company,
- Communications Intelligence Corp. (CIC) has been working with
- Apple on a tablet-like device that can recognize Kanji characters
- as well as certain gestures, much like PenPoint. In theory the Mac
- Handwriter, as the device is called, could be modified to accept
- and recognize other alphabets.
-
- EMAC has been advertising an interesting looking trackball
- recently. Called the Silhouette, the trackball is cut away on the
- top right side so you can get both your thumb and forefinger on
- the ball (which comes in a number of colors, to judge from the
- advertising). That design should provide quite a bit more control.
- The $99 Silhouette is ergonomically designed to fit the curve of
- the hand and offers well-placed buttons and a lighted lock button.
- Spark International's new trackball and mouse can't compete in the
- aesthetics department, but both are cordless, a welcome feature on
- many cord-covered desktops. The trackball will list for $185 and
- the mouse for $175, and in theory, both can operate up to 15 feet
- from the infrared receiver. Depending on the setup, an infrared
- pointing device could be very handy in a presentation setting
- because you could control the Mac from a different spot in the
- room.
-
- The BAT keyboard's entrance to the Macintosh market (which I
- talked about earlier) is delayed slightly, in great part because
- it wasn't snazzy looking and Infogrip is concerned that too many
- people will care about its appearance. Infogrip will first target
- the PC CAD market with the serial version of the BAT and then will
- release Mac and Unix versions with a fancier design. Some people
- are already using the BAT in an interesting way - to provide a
- better controller for disabled people (my apologies if I've
- offended anyone, I couldn't bring myself to write "people of the
- disabled persuasion" :-)). California State University at
- Northridge has a universal interface where you can plug whatever
- device you need, be it the BAT, a normal keyboard, or a head-
- mounted pointing device, into any of the computers they have. For
- those of you who are especially interested in access to computers
- for disabled people, there will be a conference on the topic at
- the Airport Marriot in Los Angeles on March 20th through 23rd.
- Infogrip will be in the Genovation (the people who worked with CSU
- on its system) booth if you want to see the BAT.
-
- One way or another, we at TidBITS are going to have to do
- something, because our mouse has started to skip and stick
- seriously despite rigorous cleaning. We're about ready to relegate
- it to the cats, who would enjoy it immensely, and get something
- else. Suggestions anyone?
-
- CIC -- 415/328-1311
- Curtis Manufacturing -- 603/532-4123
- EMAC -- 415/683-2222
- Infogrip -- 504/336-0033
- Logitech -- 415/795-8500
- Mouse Systems -- 415/656-1117
- Spark International -- 708/998-6640
-
- Information from:
- Lots of propaganda
- Ward Bond of Infogrip
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 29-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #4, pg. 10
- InfoWorld -- 11-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #10, pg. 21
- InfoWorld -- 04-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #5, pg. 3
- InfoWorld -- 21-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #3, pg. 38
- PC WEEK -- 11-Mar-91, Vol. 8, #10, pg. 15
- PC WEEK -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #1, pg. 4
-
-
- Apple Bargain Basement
- ----------------------
- A lot of people had to quiet down when Apple introduced the
- Classic, LC, and IIsi because those machines aren't priced to
- compete with workstations. They are quite affordable (though it's
- still easy to find PC users bellyaching about how expensive Macs
- are), and Apple has lowered prices on a number of other machines
- to spread the savings across the product line.
-
- New Suggested Retail Price Reduction
- Mac IIfx 4/floppy $7,369 $1,600
- Mac IIfx 4/80HD $8,069 $1,800
- Mac IIfx 4/160HD $8,669 $2,300
-
- Mac IIci 4/floppy $5,269 $700
- Mac IIci 4/80HD $5,969 $700
-
- Mac SE/30 4/40HD $3,369 $1000
- Mac SE/30 4/80HD $3,869 $1700
-
- Personal LaserWriter NT $2,599 $700
- LaserWriter II NT $3,999 $500
- LaserWriter II NTX $4,999 $1000
-
- In addition to these new prices, Apple is increasing the standard
- memory for the IIsi to 3 MB (we think that Apple will accomplish
- this using 512K SIMMs in the IIsi) and for the IIci to 5 MB. With
- the price of RAM these days, the move allows Apple to get rid of
- some 256K SIMMs in the IIci's and make a few friends in the
- process.
-
- And finally, Apple officially dropped IIcx and IIx. Considering
- how useful they still are to those who own them, I doubt that
- muttering anything to the effect "Rest in peace" would be
- appropriate, especially considering that you can upgrade a IIcx to
- a IIci and a IIx to a IIfx.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- Learn Unix the Easy Way
- -----------------------
- by Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
-
- Undoubtedly many reviewers have heralded the epic and factual
- qualities of Cliff Stoll's book "The Cuckoo's Egg." Indeed, his
- account of how he first discovered and then dealt with an
- anonymous intruder in the computer system that he managed is a
- potent read, and I found it difficult to lay down the book to
- attend to everyday chores. By virtue of being the first
- extensively documented case, "The Cuckoo's Egg" has largely
- dispelled the doubts about whether or not such intrusions occur,
- what proportions they take, and what possible consequences they
- may lead to. On the side it has also effectively killed the
- Hollywood myth of computer break-ins being some kind of War Games
- scenario: a pair of well-scrubbed suburban teenagers guess a
- secret password to a super-duper military computer in a Pentagon
- basement (complete with an array of randomly-blinking lights),
- start a make-believe thermonuclear war, then succeed in tracking
- down the computer's elusive chief scientist just prior to the
- initial ICBM launch. This killing of a Technicolor[tm] myth should
- be considered Stoll's major achievement, literary and otherwise.
- And for that reason alone the book cannot be recommended highly
- enough, the best $5.95 US/ $6.95 CAN (paperback) investment one
- could ever make.
-
- Another side to this book has hardly been mentioned because it
- feels so, well, mundane. I'm thinking of its value as a textbook
- for teaching the basics of computer networking, software,
- hardware, and everyware. This applies for both the computer-
- illiterati and those with more varied electronic experiences.
- Stoll manages to clearly explain the interdependencies of a
- computer's operating system and its managed programs, the very
- principles of computer security, and the basics of what it takes
- to maintain a complex, many-tentacled computer system. Indeed,
- over the years having read a great many books about computer-
- basics (not to mention 'hacking') I can think of no other that
- approaches "The Cuckoo's Egg" in terms of clarity of thought and
- presentation of complex knowledge. All this while retaining the
- tension of a good spy thriller. Remembering my first, very
- frustrating months of learning Unix on my own, I'm sure that I'd
- have it much easier had I'd been able to read the book prior to my
- initial login.
-
- Intruder-hunter or no, Stoll excels in teaching. He explains the
- security aspects in an environment of 'multitasked processes in a
- computer' in terms of a house subdivided into many apartments,
- each of which does function and houses [sic!] people independently
- of one another, each of which can be opened by a superintendent's
- key. Steal the key and you're in, er, business. Steal a Unix super
- user's password and you're doubly in business, holding the system
- hostage whenever dark forces are in you, reading others' mail,
- peeping-tom-ing, wrecking havoc, wiping out the entire accumulated
- data contents with a single system-wide 'rm -r *' command. Such
- power at your unaccountable beck and call! The concept and
- consequences of multitasking (and multithreading [and multi-
- anything]) may be easy to explain in abstract terms to a bunch of
- future computer science students but it hardly is IOTTCO all on
- its own ("Intuitively Obvious To The Casual Observer", an acronym
- spewed out by the book's resident VMS guru to describe his
- system's command syntax superiority over Unix. Strange, Unix gurus
- find it seldom worth while to compare their systems with VMS.
- Tells a load, doesn't it?).
-
- One could argue of course that reading about computers' operating
- systems doesn't exactly sound like entertainment for the casual,
- non-hacking bystander. Not enough sex-appeal or something. Only in
- this case it does, the story being incomplete without Stoll's
- account of his attempts to find a military or counter-espionage
- government body to pursue the investigation (then being accused by
- a housemate of "dealing with people without a sense of humor"),
- nutty conversations in SMERTCH-Russian in the shower ("Ees time
- for ze secret plan 35B." "Brilliant, Natasha! Zat will vork
- perfectly! Ah, darlink... vhat is secret plan 35B?"), and a cookie
- recipe (later termed "grotesquely unhealthy" in the BYTE magazine
- review of the book [all that sugar, no doubt]). Perhaps the most
- choice nugget of cloak-and-dagger humor comes on a visit to the
- CIA headquarters. Stoll discovers a battery of lovely "Top Secret"
- rubber stamps of various shapes, which he uses to make himself a
- nice memento-mori on an otherwise empty sheet of paper, then has
- it questioned and ultimately confiscated by a guard because "they
- take security seriously around there."
-
- In short: read the book, don't wait for the movie. There aren't
- enough blinking lights on Stoll's computer for Hollywood to take
- notice. Then again, what do I know of movie making. Add a teenager
- or two and maybe it's 'hackertime-in-Hackerville' all over again.
-
- [Editors' note: Hollywood it's not, but PBS (Public Broadcasting
- Service) recently aired a one hour version of "The Cuckoo's Egg"
- called "The KGB, The Computer and Me." PBS escaped the flashing
- lights and well-scrubbed teenagers by using no professional
- actors. Everyone in the TV show plays themselves and does so
- wonderfully, all of which adds to the effect of Cliff Stoll's
- excellent narration. The show was written and directed by Robin
- Bates, so ask your local PBS station to show it. We've watched it
- three times now, and we're sorry we couldn't find out any more
- specific details.]
-
-
- References:
- Clifford Stoll, "The Cuckoo's Egg/Tracing a spy through the
- maze of computer espionage", Pocket Books (nonfiction), 1990
- Hugh Kenner, "Our man in Berkeley", Print Queue, a review of
- the book in BYTE, March 1990, pp. 360-362.
- Don Libes and Sandy Ressler, "Life With Unix/ A Guide For
- Everyone", Prentice-Hall, 1989. Should be second on a reading
- list of anyone trying to learn Unix.
- J. R. Hubbard, "A Gentle Introduction To The VAX System", TAB
- Books Inc., 1987. A concise and fairly straightforward teaching
- book of the VMS operating system.
- "The KGB, The Computer and Me," written and directed by Robin
- Bates, Public Broadcasting Service, 1990.
-
-
- Reviews/18-Mar-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Personal Press, pg. 32
- GraceLAN 1.1.1, pg. 32
- Forms Programs, pg. 38
- Fast Forms 2.0
- SmartForm series
- if:X Forms Designer 1.1
- Informed series
- Ashlar Vellum 2.0, pg. 38
- Correct Grammar 2.0, pg. 43
-
- * InfoWorld
- FileMaker Pro, pg. 72
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 12-Mar-91, Vol. 5, #10
- InfoWorld -- 11-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #10
-
-
- ..
-
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