home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-06-19 | 18.4 KB | 396 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- TidBITS#61/13-May-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:
- MailBITS/13-May-91
- System Version News
- ACE Standards
- SevenBITS/13-May-91
- Reviews/13-May-91
-
-
- MailBITS/13-May-91
- ------------------
- Check out page 4 of the 07-May-91 issue of MacWEEK for the first
- time I've been quoted by a national magazine. Thanks to Henry Norr
- for including it.
-
- Emery Berger corrects our TechnoBITS article on Iterated Systems's
- fractal compression board since we blew it and missed the final
- sentence of the original BYTE article. "I wouldn't be pedantic if
- this weren't an important point (OK, maybe I would :-)), but this
- [our claim that fractal compression is lossless] is incorrect.
- From the horse's mouth "Fractal transformation throws away some
- information, because it's a lossy method, but it tends to throw
- away noise, rather than data you need." (But it's still pretty
- damn neat!)"
-
- Yet another correction from Joseph Pinner. "Latest TidBITS in
- MailBITS says that AccessPC does not work under System 7.
- According to the Update notes on the current release (1.1), this
- is NOT true - it does work under 7."
-
- Mark H. Anbinder forwards this bit from the Seattle Times, 30-Apr-
- 91. "A lucky Macintosh user had the Talking Moose program
- (Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.) working on his Macintosh when
- burglars broke into his home while he was away. Presumably
- thinking there was someone in the home, the burglars left the room
- with the Macintosh alone." [A new module called Screaming Bjarne
- (in which this wild eyed person appears on the screen and screams
- periodically) for After Dark might be even more effective. :-)]
-
- Also from Mark: "Just so you all know, the Apple 400K External
- Floppy Disk Drive is no longer supported on the new Macintosh CPUs
- (the Classic, LC, and IIsi). The 800K drive is supported. Users
- who have old 400K drives who want to bring 'em over to their new
- Macs... tough."
-
- Will he never stop? I hope not. Once more from Mark: "Seen in a
- reseller update memo... "Effective immediately the following
- Radius products have experienced a price reduction." Talk about
- your existential peripherals!"
-
- Information from:
- Emery Berger -- emery@cs.texas.edu
- Joseph W. Pinner -- 76146.3356@compuserve.com
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
-
- System Version News
- -------------------
- System system, who's got the system? Apple has a couple of them
- that you might be interested in, so pay attention. You thought
- that System 7 was going to be the only System Software released in
- the next few months, but you weren't counting on 6.0.8. It's not
- exactly interesting, since 6.0.8 has no added features and no bug
- fixes (not that there were any bugs in 6.0.7 - read on for more
- about that), but it does contain System 7-compatible printing
- software. You'll want that software because otherwise you'll be
- reinitializing laser printers right and left every time a Mac with
- different System Software prints. As of July 1st, 6.0.8 will also
- ship with all Macs that can't run System 7 because they don't have
- enough memory (the Mac Classic, floppy-drive LC, and a few other
- options). So those of you that don't have enough memory for System
- 7 can rest easy - Apple hasn't forgotten about you yet (and I
- emphasize the 'yet'). Apple wants everyone to upgrade to System 7,
- but if you can't, 6.0.8 replaces 6.0.7 as the version of choice,
- particularly for networks that want to standardize. However, if
- you don't share a printer and can't upgrade to 7, there's no
- reason to change what works for you now.
-
- Apple has released a statement concerning "bugs," to use Apple's
- quotes, in 6.0.7. A number of people have complained about various
- problems in 6.0.7 that may not indeed be Apple's fault. The three
- main problems that seemingly implicate 6.0.7 are faulty 2 MB SIMMs
- from some third party manufacturers, that confusing "Co-processor
- not installed" message, and an incompatibility with the WDEF
- virus.
-
- You can check problems possibly caused by bad 2 MB SIMMs by
- removing them and running without extra memory for a bit. Then
- contact the manufacturer for more information. The "Co-processor
- not installed" messages are usually due to errors in programs that
- would previously have bombed with a "System Error ID = 10" message
- - with the new message Apple attempts to be more informative, even
- though in this case it's not all that helpful. Finally, if you
- have the WDEF virus and use 6.0.7, you'll run into serious system
- crashes until you remove the infection. Apple recommends running
- Disinfectant 2.4 on all your disks in order to ferret out WDEF,
- which otherwise spreads like wildfire.
-
- System 7's biggest bugaboo will be compatibility, and Apple is
- trying to ease the transition by including a Compatibility Checker
- with the release. Here are some other notes that Apple has
- released recently which might be of assistance in the process.
- Hardware-wise, System 7 works with all Macs with from the Plus up
- (the 128, 512, and 512KE need the Plus Logic Board Kit and the
- Disk Drive Kit) if and only if (I guess that's spelled iff in math
- terms) they have 2 MB of RAM and a hard disk. Of course, virtual
- memory only works on 68030 Macs and the Mac II with a 68851 PMMU.
- Networks should have no trouble iff you upgrade the printer
- drivers on the System 6 Macs.
-
- As far as software goes, it's a bit more complex. Use the
- Compatibility Checker before you install System 7. A number of
- Apple products require upgraded software to work with System 7, so
- if you have any Apple SCSI hard drive (who knows about the old
- serial drives), the 5.25" drive, Apple EtherTalk or TokenTalk
- cards, any Apple printer, or the Portable Backlight Screen
- Upgrade, you should install the new software from the System 7
- disks. If you have the AppleCD SC CD-ROM drive, the Apple Scanner,
- or Inter*Poll, see your dealer for new software that will work
- with System 7. You'll have to wait a while for upgrades to MacTCP,
- MacX 1.1, MacDFT, the Apple Coax/Twinax Card w/MacDFT (whatever
- that is :-)), A/UX 2.0.1, and Macintosh Display Card 8*24 GC (the
- software doesn't work in accelerated mode). If you've got an Apple
- Tape Backup 40SC, throw it out... oops, sorry, I meant to say that
- it won't work with System 7, but it should work with third-party
- backup software. Apple also says that you shouldn't upgrade A/UX
- configurations or server bundles to System 7, and that you
- shouldn't install AppleShare Print Server or AppleShare File
- Server 2.0 on a System 7 Mac. They work fine on a System 6 Mac and
- will talk to System 7 Macs with no trouble. Gee, do you think this
- means that AppleShare 3.0 can be too far away?
-
- Information from:
- Apple Worldwide Product Marketing Information
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
- Patrick Kuras -- KURAS@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- ACE Standards
- -------------
- I probably can't sue for the use of my initials, and a group like
- the Advanced Computer Environment probably wouldn't notice anyway
- (besides, then I'd have to consort with lawyers :-)). The ACE
- group is composed of some of the major players in the computing
- industry, companies including Compaq, DEC, Microsoft, MIPS, the
- Santa Cruz Operation, and soon, some Pacific Rim clone makers. The
- idea behind the consortium is to set a standard for RISC-based
- computing using chips from MIPS, systems from Compaq and DEC, OS/2
- 3.0 from Microsoft, a version of Unix from SCO, and cheap clones
- from the usual people who make cheap clones. Also included is
- Silicon Graphics, whose 3-D graphics technologies will show up
- somewhere in there as well. Don't expect products until sometime
- in 1993, since the MIPS R4000 chip won't appear until late this
- year and OS/2 3.0 may come well after that.
-
- The announcement of the group's formation came several weeks ago,
- but I've been holding off because it's a strange and interesting
- event that I wanted to ponder for a while. I think I've finally
- grasped some of what might be happening, and I'm less impressed
- than I was initially. Originally, it sounded pretty good. Lots of
- reputable companies banding together to set a standard that would
- carry computing through the 90's. However, looking more closely,
- the list of companies that have not joined ACE is impressive as
- well. Companies such as IBM, Apple, HP, Lotus, Adobe, Pixar, Sun,
- Novell, AT&T, NCR, Intel, and Motorola all have either declined to
- join or are waiting to see what happens. IBM, Apple, HP, and Sun
- all have competing lines of hardware that they would not want to
- give up, and that hardware is primarily based on Intel and
- Motorola chips.
-
- So let's look at what the companies in ACE have to gain. Compaq
- can break out of the clone maker role and avoid companies like
- Dell which are out-cloning Compaq. MIPS gets a market for its
- chips, which aren't used in the major workstations as far as I
- know. Microsoft gets a foot into a new environment as usual, and
- has promised that OS/2 3.0 will run applications written for DOS,
- Windows, and earlier versions of OS/2 no matter which hardware
- platform it runs on. That's a tall order, but is certainly
- possible. DEC can compete with workstations from IBM and HP,
- something which it hasn't done all that well with in the past.
- Silicon Graphics wants its graphics technology to become a
- standard, and SCO wants its version of Unix to do the same.
-
- Looking at the group in that light, the announcement seems like a
- preemptive strike (a Microsoft specialty) to prevent users from
- buying SPARCstations and R/6000 workstations from IBM. A single
- set of standards is the obvious advantage of such a group, though
- it's unclear if the members of the group have enough market clout
- to overthrow SPARC and IBM's RISC machines, not to mention the
- increasingly powerful Macs and PC-clones based on the 680x0 and
- 80x86 chips from Motorola and Intel. We also shouldn't ignore NeXT
- in all of this, if only because it has a significant head start on
- any ACE workstation that Compaq might be working on. I'm not
- betting on ACE taking over the computer industry any time in the
- near future, if at all, since it seems to be mostly an attempt for
- the second-place companies to modify the rules in mid-race.
-
- Also keep in mind that much of ACE depends on Microsoft and OS/2
- 3.0, which might have a few more troubles now that the Federal
- Trade Commission is expanding the scope of its antitrust probe.
- IBM may hurt Microsoft somewhat as well by pushing OS/2 2.0 in
- favor of Windows 3.0 via lower prices and lots of marketing money.
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 06-May-91, Vol. 8, #18, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 15-Apr-91, Vol. 8, #15, pg. 1, 10
- PC WEEK -- 08-Apr-91, Vol. 8, #14, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 06-May-91, Vol. 13, #18, pg. 8, 33
- InfoWorld -- 22-Apr-91, Vol. 13, #16, pg. 1, 29
- InfoWorld -- 15-Apr-91, Vol. 13, #15, pg. 1, 5
- InfoWorld -- 08-Apr-91, Vol. 13, #14, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #12, pg. 1
- COMMUNICATION WEEK -- 15-Apr-91, pg. 8
- MacWEEK -- 02-Apr-91, Vol. 5, #13, pg. 6
-
-
- SevenBITS/13-May-91
- -------------------
- These pseudo-sporadic columns are fun, if only because then I
- don't have to think of new titles all the time. I'm anticipating a
- ton of news related to System 7, so this space will collect what's
- interesting.
-
- First off, Dantz was nice enough to send out a **free** upgrade of
- Retrospect a few days ago. Retrospect 1.3 improves an already
- impressive program (which we will review soon, I hope) with full
- System 7 compatibility, a maximum archive size of one terabyte,
- and network updating of the [deg]Remote INIT (which allows you to
- back up remote volumes without file sharing software like TOPS
- around). One of the neater additions to Retrospect is that if you
- drag files, folders, or disks on top of the Retrospect icon,
- Retrospect launches itself and marks those files to be archived.
- Features like this will require changes in working habits, because
- I'd have to search through about five folder levels to find
- Retrospect now, although I suppose I could create an alias for it
- in System 7.
-
- Second, the rest of this information comes from Mark H. Anbinder,
- and it sounds like extremely good advice when upgrading to System
- 7, which I'm sure many of you will do as soon as you can get your
- hot little hands on that many disks. Thanks, Mark!
-
- Here are a few hints and tips on the subject of upgrading to
- System 7. This is by no means an exhaustive list of the issues
- involved, but it should provide some useful information for you.
-
- * You really should use the Compatibility Checker on the Before
- You Install System 7 diskette before proceeding with your
- installation. Do so while your current startup drive is active, so
- it can analyze the contents of your current System Folder. LISTEN
- to what the Compatibility Checker tells you. If the report it
- generates says that one of your programs is NOT compatible with
- System 7, and you MUST have that program working in order to
- function, DO NOT UPGRADE YOUR SYSTEM to System 7. Contact the
- developer of the program to get an upgrade to a compatible version
- of their software. (The Compatibility Checker includes contact
- phone numbers for a large number of vendors.)
-
- * Apple recommends installing System 7 onto your System 6 hard
- drive without removing the old System Folder. You can now do an
- installation while running from the target hard drive. You can,
- but you don't have to, start up from the Install 1 diskette before
- doing the installation.
-
- * DO remove any PRE-RELEASE copies of System 7 before installing
- the release version. If you have installed an alpha or beta of
- System 7, remove that System Folder before beginning the
- installation process.
-
- * REMOVE any anti-virus INITs from the active System Folder, and
- restart, before doing an installation. If you have an anti-virus
- INIT active during installation, it can create problems that may
- OR MAY NOT show up immediately. Be sure to replace the anti-virus
- INITs when you are done, making sure that you have the current
- versions.
-
- * If you have an existing Scrapbook file in your System Folder
- when you do an installation, the Installer will not replace it
- with the new file. There are some neat things in the new Scrapbook
- file, so you will want to combine the two using a utility such as
- SmartScrap, if you need to keep the contents of the old one.
-
- * The color map picture in the System 7 Scrapbook is not just a
- neat picture. If you Copy it into your Clipboard, and then open
- the Map control panel and Paste, the color map will replace the
- old black and white map in the control panel.
-
- * You can force the current foreground process (whether it's an
- application or desk accessory or whatever) to quit by holding down
- the Command and Option keys, and pressing the Escape key. This can
- be useful if your computer freezes and you can't seem to recover
- without restarting. Try a Forced Quit first. After doing this,
- IMMEDIATELY save all open documents and restart the computer; the
- system may not be in a stable state.
-
- * Several pieces of Apple software need to be upgraded in order to
- work with System 7. These include the Apple CD-SC software, which
- drives the CD-ROM drive, and the Apple Scanner software. Updates
- are available from dealers. You may also need to use the new Apple
- HD SC Setup utility to update your hard disk's driver software.
-
- * Technical support for System 7 is available from your usual
- support providers. For those who don't have expert dealers, user
- groups, or consultants nearby, or who prefer a different approach,
- Apple is providing technical support for System 7. Customers who
- purchase the official Personal Upgrade Kit or Group Upgrade Kit
- receive 90 or 180 days, respectively, of free support within the
- US via a special toll-free 800 number. After that period, or for
- people who choose to copy the System disks at their local dealer
- or user group without paying for the full upgrade kit, there is a
- 900 number that you can call from within the US. You will be
- billed $2 per minute by your telephone company. The number is
- 900/535-APPL. In addition, Apple has set up an answering system
- that will play pre-recorded answers to commonly asked questions
- about System 7. You can call this at 408/257-7700, and need only
- pay for the telephone call (it is a long distance call outside the
- immediate vicinity of Cupertino, California).
-
- Dantz Development -- 415/849-0293
-
- Information from:
- Dantz propaganda
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
-
-
- Reviews/13-May-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- MitemView 2.0, pg. 35
- EnVision 1.1, pg. 35
- SAM 3.0, pg. 42
- BridgePort, pg. 44
- Read My Lips, pg. 44
- Flat-File Databases, pg. 49
- File Force
- Panorama II
- FileMaker Pro
- Works
- RecordHolder Plus
- Retriever II
- MyDataBase
-
- * InfoWorld
- Studio/32, pg. 71
- HyperCard 2.0, pg. 76
-
- * Macworld
- ES300C Scanner, pg. 164
- Electronic Encyclopedias, pg. 168
- Grolier 1990 Edition
- Random House Electronic Edition
- Page Director 1.0, pg. 170
- A.M.E. 1.1, pg. 172
- DataLink/Mac, pg. 174
- Intouch, pg. 183
- BannerMania, pg. 185
- Org Plus for Macintosh, pg. 187
- LifeGuard, pg. 188
- Editorial Advisor 1.0, pg. 188
- ConvertIt! 1.02, pg. 192
- After Dark 2.0, pg. 195
- 3 in Three 1.0, pg. 195
- Wouldn't You Rather Be Rich?, pg. 195
- Financial Independence, As You Like It 2.0, pg. 195
- EasyKana, pg. 195
- FolderJump 1.1, pg. 196
- Fractal Attraction 1.0, pg. 196
- SmartCards, pg. 196
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 07-May-91, Vol. 5, #18
- InfoWorld -- 06-May-91, Vol. 13, #18
- Macworld -- May-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.
-