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- TidBITS#05/14-May-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Some PostScript Fax
- Developers Conference
- CheckFree Security Checks
- SUMming Peter Norton
- Mac Educational Prices Drop
- Next from NeXT
- Zebra's Works
- Radio Netting
- Reviews/14-May-90
-
-
- Some PostScript Fax
- -------------------
- Fax machines are useful in certain situations, no doubt, but
- indiscriminate use of fax machines strikes some as problematic,
- especially considering that thermal fax paper cannot be recycled.
- Fax quality is poor in comparison to output from a PostScript
- laser printer. In addition, it seems to be a waste of machinery to
- have a scanner, a laser printer, a modem, and a fax modem or
- machine when the capabilities of all of them can be combined into
- one unit. Some companies have come close to such combined
- machines, but not one has come up with one that works well in all
- modes.
-
- New chips from National Semiconductor might help the process along
- by combining fax and scanner abilities with PostScript printing.
- Should the new chips be put on a controller board, the board could
- then control a scanner and fax modem transparently to the user.
- Look for announcements of implementations using these chips in the
- future as companies build hardware around them.
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 14-May-90, Vol. 7 #19, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 02-Jul-90, Vol. 7 #26, pg. 112
-
-
- Developers Conference
- ---------------------
- Apple handed out CD-ROMs containing alpha release 9 of System 7.0
- to developers last week. Some interesting features of System 7.0
- will include (if you haven't seen this everywhere already) a new
- and improved Finder, built-in file sharing capabilities, file
- aliases, outline fonts, application communication abilities, and
- virtual memory. Neat bonuses include optional dialog balloons
- containing context-sensitive help. System 7.0 will also see the
- demise of the Font/DA Mover (finally!) and the rise of a new
- version of HyperCard that will take advantage of inter-application
- communication features to produce stacks that are almost
- indistinguishable from applications.
-
- System 7.0 is not all that Apple is talking about these days.
- Apple executives John Sculley and Michael Spindler both emphasized
- that Apple is trying to sell more Macs and would lower prices to
- do so. Lower prices on Macs and will mean lower margins for Apple,
- but may help Apple win over computer purchasers from purchasing
- low-priced PC-clones and Windows 3.0. In some respects Windows 3.0
- will not directly compete with lower-end Macs because it runs well
- only on higher-end IBM-style machines (at least earlier versions
- of Windows required high-end machines; Windows 3.0 has not been
- released for long enough to know for sure how well it runs). In
- addition, Windows has yet to become popular among users who
- receive it free with their machines. Between 65 and 75 percent of
- these people never even use Windows because of the performance
- toll and the cost of buying Windows-specific applications.
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 15-May-90, Vol. 4 #19, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 14-May-90, Vol. 12 #20, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 14-May-90, Vol. 7 #19, pg. 19
-
-
- CheckFree Security Checks
- -------------------------
- Recently the CheckFree electronic banking service has become
- available on the Mac after being available on the PC for some
- time. Based on reports from subscribers also on Usenet, CheckFree
- might be an expensive proposition. People are complaining about
- the security level offered by CheckFree. Evidently each user is
- assigned a four digit account password by the company that the
- user cannot change and which the customer is informed of by normal
- mail. With only 10,000 passwords to choose from, it would be
- relatively easy for a criminal to break into an account (the
- criminal would also need the person's address and social security
- number). Users of CheckFree have unlimited liability should anyone
- break into their accounts.
-
- CheckFree's software doubles as a checkbook manager and has
- received favorable, if brief reviews from Usenet. It evidently
- uses the Macintosh interface well and allows the user to assign
- IRS form and line numbers to certain expenses. That information
- can be exported to MacInTax at the end of the year. Currently, the
- electronic funds transfer (EFT) part of the software (on one end
- or another, it wasn't quite clear) is broken and will be fixed
- soon after you read this. Considering the security problems with
- CheckFree, though, not being able to use EFT may be a feature, not
- a bug.
-
- Information from:
- Dave Yost -- yost@esquire.UUCP
- Dan Dlugose -- dlugose@uncecs.edu
- Walter Bays -- walter@garth.UUCP
- B. S. Oplinger -- oplinger@minerva.crd.ge.com
-
-
- SUMming Peter Norton
- --------------------
- In a news item that was completely missed by the trade magazines
- this week, Symantec and Peter Norton Computing announced plans to
- merge. A number of people on Usenet saw the news in the LA Times
- and the NY Times (sorry, no specific references were mentioned).
- No one was sure what the significance of the merger would be, but
- several possibilities were mentioned. First, Norton Utilities for
- the Mac would disappear and SUM would acquire its unique
- capabilities. Rich Siegel of Symantec, disagreed with this,
- however. Second, SUM will go away and Norton Utilities for the Mac
- would replace it entirely. This isn't that hard to believe
- considering that SUM II was a complete rewrite of SUM, and enough
- complaints about the interface of SUM II were registered that the
- next version was mentioned as needing another complete rewrite.
- Also, Norton Utilities for the Mac has gotten rave reviews from
- people who have seen it.
-
- In any event, Symantec stands to gain by the merger. Norton
- Utilities is the dominant utility package on the PC despite some
- stiff competition from PC Tools Deluxe 6.0 (a combined desktop
- manager, DOS shell, file recovery, and backup program that stands
- at or near the top of its field in each category) so Symantec will
- become dominant in both the Mac and PC utility market. In
- addition, Peter Norton Computing has a well-organized worldwide
- dealer network that Symantec would like to use. Of course,
- Symantec also gets to use Peter Norton's new technology without
- having to duplicate it or compete with it.
-
- Information from:
- John Starta -- John.Starta@p90.f15.n114.z1.fidonet.org
- Chuq Von Rospach -- chuq@apple.com
- Ephraim Vishniac -- ephraim@think.com
- Rich Siegel -- siegel@endor.harvard.edu
- Paul Jonathan Estalilla Go -- pj@oxy.edu
-
-
- Mac Educational Prices Drop
- ---------------------------
- Those people who either attend or work at educational institutions
- are often eligible for significant discounts on computer hardware
- and software. The computer companies view the discounts as a good
- way of attracting future members of the business world to their
- products, and members of educational institutions view the
- discounts as just reward for the often-lower salaries of higher
- education in comparison to big business. Recently, though discount
- mail order houses had started to compete with the higher education
- prices. In response to that competition and to the continuing
- allegations that the Mac is too expensive in comparison to PC-
- clones, Apple just dropped the prices on the compact Mac
- significantly.
-
- Warwick Daw of UCLA mentioned some of the new prices at UCLA
- (these will vary between institutions). A Mac Plus is $699, a
- double-drive SE is $1099, an SE/30 with one floppy is $1849, and a
- Portable with one floppy is $3149. A 40 megabyte hard drive adds
- between $300 and $450 to the price. The SE/30 is particularly
- attractive in comparison to the Mac IIcx now, since the IIcx's
- price remained the same, about $2800 for the main unit without the
- monitor.
-
- Using prices from other discussions on Usenet, an impressive SE/30
- system could be put together for a total of about $2800. That
- would include a $699 external 105 megabyte Quantum from Alliance
- Peripheral Systems, a company which has recently gotten excellent
- reviews on the net, and an extra 4 megabytes of RAM from one of
- the many companies selling RAM for about $65 per megabyte.
-
- Apple hasn't achieved the low-cost Mac that will take the market
- by storm, since a Mac Plus still isn't particularly powerful for
- $699, but it appears that Apple is finally willing to try to
- compete on price in some markets.
-
- Information from:
- Barry Brown -- barry@network.ucsd.edu
- Warwick Daw -- warwick@oak.math.ucla.edu
- Marty Bies -- bies@sctc.com
- William R. Krempp -- wrk@phobos.cis.ksu.edu
- Homer Simpson -- cantie@sybil.cs.Buffalo.EDU
- Pat Stephenson -- pat@cs.cornell.edu
- Steve Goldfield -- steve@violet.berkeley.edu
-
-
- Next from NeXT
- --------------
- Manuel Bouyssou from Paris reports that the first 68040 machine on
- the market will probably be the next NeXT (perhaps the NeXT YeT?
- This is another name that's going to be difficult, much like the
- upgrade to Symantec's MORE, which was called MORE II, but which
- many people felt should have been called Still MORE.) The 68040
- will run at 50 MHz and the black box will contain 8 megabytes of
- memory, a faster floptical drive with access times around 40 to 45
- milliseconds, and an internal 300 megabyte hard drive. Although
- Steve Jobs has said that a color NeXT will be available this year,
- it is not clear if the 68040 will include color. Upgrades will be
- available and considering the modular construction of the cubes,
- should be an easily-performed motherboard swap.
-
- Information from:
- Manuel Bouyssou -- manuel@cnam.cnam.fr
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 15-May-90, Vol. 4 #19, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 14-May-90, Vol. 12 #20, pg. 101
-
-
- Zebra's Works
- -------------
- TML Systems is developing a set of seven software modules that,
- when completed, will challenge Microsoft Works 2.0. Collectively
- called Zebra, the modules share tools with each other so
- appropriate tools are available in any module (i.e. the same text
- tools appear in most modules, giving you access to spell checking
- and style sheets even if you are not in the word processing
- module). All told, the modules include a ones for word processing,
- charting and graphing, drawing, painting, telecommunicating,
- managing databases, and using spreadsheets. Live links such as
- those promised for all software under Apple's System 7 allow
- flexible data manipulation. Zebra and Works will list for the same
- price - $295.
-
- TML Systems -- 904/636-8592
-
- Related articles:
- Macworld -- Jun-90, pg. 111
-
-
- Radio Netting
- -------------
- We at TidBITS have a fondness for interesting ways of connecting
- computers together, which accounts for a number of past articles
- on networking with radio waves and electric lines. Now it seems
- that even Apple is getting in on this. The Apple Complex Systems
- group is working on a program called MacKDT which can perform
- normal telecommunications actions over a radio-frequency modem
- made by Motorola. Motorola already has a line of hand-held
- wireless terminals that use the radio-frequency modem. The
- Motorola terminals and the Mac will communicate with other
- machines over the ARDIS (Advanced Radio Data Information Service)
- networkthe administrators of which requested that Apple develop
- MacKDT.
-
- ARDIS will supposedly go online in early April, although we have
- heard nothing about it since then, and will operate at 4800 bits
- per second (bps) at first. Later, ARDIS plans to increase speeds
- up to 19200 bits per second (roughly equivalent to baud). Even
- 19200 bps isn't that fast considering that AppleTalk runs at about
- 230,000 bps, but 19200 bps is comparable in speed to standard
- modems.
-
- The really interesting bit is that the article claims that Apple
- is investigating ways of incorporating the RF modem into the
- Macintosh hardware, particularly that of the Mac Portable. The
- only drawback would be that ARDIS may be the only provider of
- service, though it is imaginable that they could provide a gateway
- to standard telephone lines.
-
- ARDIS -- 708/913-1215
-
- Related articles:
- Macworld -- Jun-90, pg. 107
-
-
- Reviews/14-May-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Grey-scale Monitors, pg. 33
- CalComp GrayVision
- E-Machines QuickView Z21 IQ
- RasterOps ClearVue/GS
- SuperMac Spectrum/8 Series III
- E-mail Systems, pg. 46
- InBox Plus
- InBox 3.0
- Microsoft Mail 2.0
- QuickMail 2.2.2
-
- * InfoWorld
- PostScript Laser Printers, pg. 57 (not Macintosh-specific)
- Apple LaserWriter IINT
- Fujitsu RX7100PS+
- HP LaserJet IIP with Pacific Page Cartridge
- NEC SilentWriter 2 Model 290
- Texas Instruments Microlaser PS35
- Interactive Physics, pg. 68
- ADIC MacBack 8000 (tape backup device), pg. 78
-
- * PC WEEK
- Pen Plotters, pg. 83
- HP DraftPro EXL
- CalComp Artisan Model 1025
- Houston Instruments DMP-62
- Ioline Corp. LP4000
- IBM 6186 Color Plotter
- PostScript Color Printers, pg. 87
- Mitsubishi G370-10U
- NEC Colormate PS
- QMS ColorScript 100 Model 10
- Seiko CH-5504
- Tektronix Phaser CP
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 15-May-90, Vol. 4 #19
- InfoWorld -- 14-May-90, Vol. 12 #20
- PC WEEK -- 14-May-90, Vol. 7 #19
-
-
- ..
-
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