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- TidBITS#52/01-Apr-91
- ====================
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-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/01-Apr-91
- A Whole New Ball Game
- Clone Cubed
- Piggyback Portable
- SentientNET
- Reviews/01-Apr-91
-
-
- MailBITS/01-Apr-91
- ------------------
- Seen on an envelope from MacConnection recently:
- "Rush. Dated material. Dated for freshness. Blind dated. Updated.
- Open immediately. Open really soon. Open as soon as you can. Open
- sesame. Open says a me. Don't fold spindle or mutilate. Many are
- called but you were chosen. This is not junk mail. Save for future
- use. Save for a rainy day. Save for a sunny day. Save for today.
- Live for today. Live for tomorrow. Search for tomorrow. No prize
- numbers enclosed. No secret decoder ring enclosed. We know where
- you live. Valuable savings inside. Handle with care. Envelopes
- love to be opened."
-
-
- A Whole New Ball Game
- ---------------------
- We've heard that, in an unexpected move, IBM plans to purchase
- Lotus Corp. IBM isn't telling how much it will pay, but we're
- betting that it will be an obscene amount of money, considering
- that Lotus is one of the largest software companies after
- Microsoft. Whew! IBM didn't say much else about the deal in true
- IBM fashion, but it will certainly shake up the computer world. If
- nothing else, who knows what will happen to the 1-2-3 palmtop with
- wireless peripheral links that HP and Lotus are working on.
-
- Think of Microsoft. One minute the company is riding high,
- controlling a good part of the microcomputer software industry;
- the next minute IBM swaggers into town, a six-shooter full of
- Lotus software at its hip. Heck, I'd be worried if I were Bill
- Gates. And think of the phone call that Jim Manzi would have made
- to Bill if he were really childish. "Hi Bill, this is Jim Manzi.
- Nyah Nyah. Click." I'm sure Jim Manzi would never do that, though,
- so at least some propriety reigns. I wonder what the Federal Trade
- Commission (FTC) will think about the deal, since it was worried
- about Microsoft before and has had run-ins with IBM in the past.
- It certainly sheds some new light on any deals IBM and Microsoft
- might have made at some point to divy up the PC operating systems.
-
- IBM will be in the antitrust spotlight again, considering that it
- has pushed OS/2 over Windows for some time but has lacked any
- software clout to enforce its preference. With the array of
- powerful (if currently unconnected) software from Lotus, IBM now
- has some of the best software on the market, which it will
- undoubtedly port to OS/2 as soon as possible. There was talk
- previously of IBM devoting $40 million to marketing OS/2 in direct
- competition to Microsoft's $10 million Windows marketing blitz.
- Now that makes a bit more sense, since IBM can ensure a decent
- software base. Sheesh, for $40 million, IBM could buy a
- professional sports team and name it after OS/2.
-
- So long as the FTC doesn't get too antsy (and remember, IBM has
- never lost that sort of lawsuit before, though they have settled
- out of court on occasion), the deal makes a lot of sense from
- IBM's perspective. Like Apple IBM now controls a line of hardware,
- an operating system for that hardware, and a line of popular
- software for that operating system. IBM has always emphasized
- complete solutions in its corporate philosophy, so this fits in
- well, although it does mean a bit of retrofitting with SAA
- (Systems Application Architecture), IBM's interoperability scheme.
- But how many people are buying big computers, even workstations,
- in comparison to microcomputers these days? Not that many, and IBM
- is bowing to the dollar figures that say the company makes a good
- chunk of its profit from microcomputer sales. You can buy bundles
- these days that include a PS/2, Windows, Word for Windows, and
- Excel. That's all fine and nice, but IBM would far prefer to see
- those bundles including OS/2 and 1-2-3 and Ami Professional of
- OS/2. Oh, and for those of you who remember's IBM's dismal
- microcomputer applications software (like DisplayWrite), those
- programs have been dropped in favor of the new Lotus Software
- Division's application suite. About time.
-
- To put the words of that wonderful author, L. Frank Baum, into the
- mouth of Jim Manzi, "I don't think we're in Cambridge any more,
- Toto."
-
- Information from:
- IBM & Lotus propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- COMMUNICATIONS WEEK -- 25-Mar-91, pg. 16, 38
- InfoWorld -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #12, pg. 8
-
-
- Clone Cubed
- -----------
- This is weird. We heard of a new computer from small startup
- company in Texas called TechnoWizards. Well, OK, that's not so
- weird. What's strange about this particular machine is that it's a
- hybrid, which accounts for its name, the Hybrid/3. It can run Mac
- software at about the speed of a IIcx, PC software at the speed of
- a 33 MHz 386 clones, and it sports its own operating system as
- well.
-
- TechnoWizards achieves this compatibility in an interesting way.
- Hybrid/3 includes a 16 MHz 68030 CPU (and its associated math
- coprocessor) from Motorola and a 33 MHz 80386 from Intel, along
- with a custom controller that allows either one to be used
- independently (one at a time) or can use both CPUs in tandem. This
- gives the machine three basic modes, which you control with a
- hardware switch. The first mode addresses only the 68030 and will
- use the NuTek chipset for Macintosh compatibility. It's unclear
- how well the NuTek chipset will perform as far as compatibility
- goes, but it's likely to work with most applications. For those of
- you who weren't paying attention when we talked about NuTek a
- while ago, that will mean that TechnoWizards will not be able to
- ship their machine until well into 1992, since NuTek wasn't going
- to release the chipset until late in 1991. TechnoWizards said they
- weren't committed to NuTek and could switch to another company's
- Macintosh emulation if necessary. It's possible that Apple might
- be interested in licensing the MacOS to TechnoWizards by then,
- what with Sculley's talk about licensing the ROMs.
-
- Anyway, the second mode addresses the 80386 and uses a Phoenix
- BIOS. In that mode, you pretend that you are working on a normal
- PC clone. This, being easier than the Mac stuff, already works,
- and TechnoWizards says that both Windows and various flavors of
- Unix run fine. The third mode is the most interesting by far,
- because it uses both chips simultaneously to run both Mac and PC
- software in a windowing environment as well as tools specifically
- written for the Hybrid/3's native OS. So why wouldn't you always
- want to be running in native mode? Since TechnoWizards's own
- operating system is completely different from the MacOS and DOS,
- there is a noticeable speed hit, and some ill-behaved PC
- applications might not appreciate being forced into a window.
- Those sort of programs tend not to run well under Windows either.
-
- Hardware-wise (and note that I'm no hardware whiz, so I might get
- some of this slightly wrong), the custom controller handles all
- the I/O, and a separate graphics chip handles all the screen
- displays. Each of the microprocessors, including the custom
- controller, lives on a SIMM-like card for easy upgrades, and
- TechnoWizards says that the Hybrid/3 will support the 80486 and
- 68040 at some point. In addition, the Hybrid/3 has a Motorola
- 56001 digital signal processor (DSP) chip that will aid
- telecommunications and sound applications. The Hybrid/3 uses
- SCSI-2, so you can add up to seven hard drives, each of which can
- be partitioned or combined (into one or more volumes spanning
- several physical drives) as you desire. Macintosh and DOS (or Unix
- or A/UX) files are stored in the appropriate type of hard SCSI
- partitions, which avoids the danger of a soft partitioning scheme
- that simulates a volume within a large file. TechnoWizards built
- in Ethernet (thin and thick) and included two serial ports and a
- parallel port as well. For market compatibility, the company chose
- to use Macintosh monitors, so in theory any monitor that works
- with the Mac should work fine. For expansion capabilities,
- TechnoWizards included both three NuBus slots and three ISA (AT-
- bus) slots, though it's unclear if all PC and Mac boards will
- indeed work well, especially under the native OS. You never can
- tell with strange hardware.
-
- This new operating system, appropriately called NewONS (pronounced
- "nuance" - and ONS stands Operating/Network System), is a 32-bit,
- object-oriented, windowing environment probably closest to
- PenPoint, GO's handwriting recognition operating system. There is
- a single "Overseer" that controls all of the various "Projects,"
- where a Project is considered to be a data file (but one which can
- contain multiple data types) or a stand-alone environment such as
- a game. The Overseer provides each Project with the necessary
- tools when appropriate, so if you want to create text in a data
- file, you call up the text tool and create away. Once the text is
- created, the Overseer makes sure that whenever you are in that
- area of text, the text tool is available. TechnoWizards intends
- the tools to have a very narrow purpose, so a single tool in
- NewONS is equivalent what we know as a single tool in a graphics
- program. NewONS will ship with a standard set of tools that most
- people will want, a text creation/editing tool, a line tool, a
- rectangle tool, an ellipse tool, a database tool, a calculation
- tool, and a few others. Needless to say, these tools will not be
- terribly sophisticated, which leaves room for third parties to
- develop more powerful versions, say an ellipse tool that has an
- optional modifier to constrain the ellipse into a perfect circle
- or a rectangle tool that includes size information as you draw.
- The beauty of the way NewONS handles these tools is that you can
- put together the functionality of a current program like PageMaker
- without having to pay for or store all the parts of PageMaker you
- never use, like color printing or the Story Editor. For that
- matter, you can use a far more capable set of text tools, like the
- sort that Nisus includes, instead of the Story Editor, so you
- would get full editing power as well as powerful layout
- capabilities. Companies will no doubt break current Macintosh
- products down into sets of tools and sell them together, but it's
- up to the user to pick which ones to use.
-
- I'm extremely interested in the Hybrid/3 because it seems to play
- both sides of the fence quite well. The older standards are
- supported along with a new 32-bit operating system. No one loses.
- In addition, because the custom controller chip handles all I/O,
- interesting new forms of input devices will be easy to hook up and
- use in all three modes. I wouldn't be surprised to see devices
- like the Gold Brick (the interface controller that allows you to
- use Nintendo 3-D controllers) and the BAT chord keyboard show up,
- along with even stranger controllers, such as devices that can
- read your brain wave to move the cursor and perform simple actions
- (more on this in a few weeks). Of course, just being technically
- wonderful doesn't mean much these days. After all, I think I've
- mused before on how all the world's a marketing scheme.
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 26-Mar-91, Vol. 5, #12, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #12, pg. 5
- PC WEEK -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 8, #12, pg. 6
-
-
- Piggyback Portable
- ------------------
- We've all been waiting for Apple to announce a 68040 Mac and a
- lighter, faster portable. Well, it looks like the wait will soon
- be over, but there is an unanticipated twist. Rumour has it that
- the top 2 inches of Apple's upcoming 25 MHz 68040 Mac TX will
- actually comprise a pop-out 7.2-pound portable Mac. (I don't know
- if that weight includes the battery, but the 68040 is probably
- less power hungry than the 68030 and a coprocessor, so the battery
- will last as least long as the other high end portables that Apple
- will release this fall.) The portable contains the CPU for the TX
- and one of four memory banks. The two sections of the computer can
- share the processor and RAM due to the technology that Apple
- purchased from Outbound. A likely configuration for the portable
- unit is a 20 MB hard disk and 4 MB of RAM (neither the hard disk
- nor the RAM will be expandable, but the tower unit will hold more
- memory and additional SCSI devices). The portable's screen will be
- similar to the one in the current Mac Portable, active matrix with
- backlighting. Also thanks to Outbound, when the portable is not
- attached, the TX can still function as an AppleShare server,
- though it's useless for desktop work.
-
- The Max TX will also contain new technology from General Magic. We
- aren't certain of the details, but wireless Mac networking is
- about to become reality (a tremendous relief to everyone who has
- dealt with all that tedious wire stripping and untangling). All
- the information will now be sent via radio waves as per Apple's
- petition with the FCC (the actual speed of the network,
- practically speaking, should be about twice that of LocalTalk).
- It's still unclear how this will tie into a setup with more than
- one building, but third party vendors will certainly provide the
- necessary hardware.
-
- So essentially what you've got in the Mac TX is a killer desktop
- workstation that can convert to an AppleShare file server and a
- small portable computer by removing the portable unit. It might be
- pretty pricey, but this will be the perfect machine for a network
- administrator or high-powered engineer who has to travel a bit.
- While the portable is away, the server will play.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 26-Mar-91, Vol. 5, #12, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #12, pg. 5
- PC WEEK -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 8, #12, pg. 6
-
-
- SentientNET
- -----------
- Most everyone is in favor of networks these days. But current
- networks are quite stupid - they're nothing more than pipes
- through which information flows. That may change soon with a new
- networking application I heard of recently.
-
- It's not an official product yet, but the application, code named
- SentientNET, is an interesting collaboration between CE Software
- and several Soviet programmers who are part of an organization
- called EleKlub. EleKlub isn't exactly a company, since private
- companies are still frowned upon in the USSR, but is instead a
- club of local programmers in Minsk interested in exchanging ideas
- with Western programmers. The application can determine the CPU
- load of all Macs on a network (LocalTalk is acceptable, but
- EtherTalk is better) and then have local programs execute CODE
- resources on an unused remote machine and receive the results
- back. The Soviet programmers came up with the basic idea for
- SentientNET because powerful computers are extremely rare in the
- Soviet Union, and SentientNET allows them to turn a small network
- of Macs into the equivalent of a mainframe.
-
- The practical value of SentientNET is that if I've got a
- processor-intensive application that would normally bog my Mac
- down for an hour, SentientNET would automatically divy up the
- workload between all the machines on my network, giving more work
- to those that are unused, less to those that are doing something
- else. My application would take far less time to run, because all
- the other Macs would have done a large proportion of the work and
- reported the results back to my machine. SentientNET will create
- quite a bit of network traffic and thus prefers a fast network
- like EtherTalk. However, because LocalTalk networks are so common
- and inexpensive, the programmers plan to make SentientNET self-
- configure to the network type, so if you use LocalTalk,
- SentientNET will send smaller jobs across the network so as not to
- bring down other network applications. If you're still having
- trouble visualizing this, think about DataClub from IBS. DataClub
- creates a virtual disk that everyone on the network shares.
- SentientNET does exactly the same thing, but with CPU cycles
- instead of disk space. With DataClub, if you add a hard drive,
- you've increased the size of your virtual disk. With SentientNET,
- if you add a Mac, particularly a powerful one, you've increased
- the power of your virtual CPU. Pretty snazzy!
-
- From what I can tell so far, SentientNET should work over any
- AppleTalk network, including the wireless scheme mentioned in the
- Piggyback Portable article. I guess the major restriction right
- now is that SentientNET can only work within a zone, but that
- shouldn't be a big problem for most people. Applications won't
- have to be rewritten to work with SentientNET, but it wouldn't
- help a good number of current programs because they simply don't
- require that much power. Users will retain control over their own
- Macs, so SentientNET can be configured to leave your Mac alone
- even if the CPU usage is low in case you don't want to run with
- even a small slowdown.
-
- As cool as it is, SentientNET isn't a completely new concept.
- Recently, IBM, DEC, HP, Groupe Bull, and Siemens-Nixdorf
- demonstrated a similar scheme by which an application ran in a
- network layer using the processing power of workstations from each
- manufacturer. In addition, Apple has an internal program called
- SchoolTalk, I think, which allows an instructor to run a program
- on a remote Mac over a network. Apparently, the hard part is
- executing CODE resources, which programs like Timbuktu and Carbon
- Copy can't do. I'm not positive of this, not being a network guru,
- but that's what friend who should know claims. SchoolTalk is not
- as complete as SentientNET will be, but it's a start, so Apple may
- come out with something like at some point too. It's an incredible
- selling point for Macintosh networks ("Buy five Macintosh
- computers, get one supercomputer.") and would endear Apple to the
- power hungry crowd that is thinking about switching to
- workstations from NeXT and Sun.
-
- Oh, I just thought I'd mention that everyone should read the
- entire "About..." card this week. Cheers!
-
- Information from:
- Alexandr Tchlevsky -- adt@eleklub.minsk.su
-
- Related articles:
- COMMUNICATIONS WEEK -- 25-Mar-91, pg. 20
-
-
- Reviews/01-Apr-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- StyleWriter, pg. 1
- MediaMaker, pg. 53
- Packet Analyzers, pg. 53
- NetMinder LocalTalk
- LocalPeek
- Image Archivers, pg. 55
- Mariah 1.0.4
- Multi-Ad Search
- CIS*Gallery 1.0.3
-
- * InfoWorld
- Ventura Publisher, Macintosh Edition, pg. 79
-
- * PC WEEK
- Paint Programs, pg. 85
- Adobe Photoshop 1.0.7
- Color MacCheese 2.01
- Studio/32 1.1
- ColorStudio with Shapes 1.1
- Oasis 1.0
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 26-Mar-91, Vol. 5, #12
- InfoWorld -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #12
- PC WEEK -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 8, #12
-
-
- ..
-
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