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- TidBITS#65/10-Jun-91
- ====================
-
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-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/10-Jun-91
- SevenBITS/10-Jun-91
- Window Gadgets
- HAM Sandwich
- More Apple News
- Reviews/10-Jun-91
-
-
- MailBITS/10-Jun-91
- ------------------
- Tom Fitch writes, "In TidBITS#58, you mention that the Magnavox
- color monitor is a Trinitron, when in fact it is made by Phillips.
- Still a pretty good screen for the money. Also, if you are
- concerned about the expense of the Excel 3.0 upgrade, you may want
- to mention the Claris "sidegrade" offer, $99 for Resolve.
- Congratulations on the matrimony!" [Thanks, Tom!]
-
- A quick clarification. Last week I said something about how Claris
- was designing all of its products to share the same interface, but
- I accidentally included HyperCard in that list, which simply isn't
- true. HyperCard shares no features with the other Claris products,
- though it would be interesting if they modified the program so it
- did share some features. However, I'm not betting on a HyperCard
- 2.5 or 3.0 anytime soon. See More Apple News for the dirt.
-
- Information from:
- Tom Fitch -- 70007.1304@compuserve.com
-
-
- SevenBITS/10-Jun-91
- -------------------
- Lots of new utilities will be coming out to take advantage of
- System 7 and all that can be done with Apple Events and the like.
- From the sound of it, one of the most useful and powerful will be
- CE's QuicKeys 2.1 (besides I should say something nice about them
- after hassling them about not making QuickMail Server 2.5 System
- 7-compatible two weeks ago). CE has come up with something called
- CE/IAC, which allows QuicKeys 2.1 to receive IAC events from other
- applications. That's the heart of QuicKeys's new System 7-
- studliness, which encompasses the Apple Events Extension, the
- Finder Events Extension, the UserLand Extension, and the Frontier
- Extension. The Apple Events Extension lets QuicKeys send Apple
- Events to other applications, even over a network if desired. The
- UserLand Extensions works like the Apple Events Extension, but
- supports UserLand IAC-aware applications. The Finder Events
- Extension sends Apple Events to the Finder, which can be useful
- for automating tasks involving the Finder. Included events are
- Show Clipboard, Show, Print, Open (Document, Application, DA,
- Control Panel, Alias, etc.), Sleep, and Get Info. The Frontier
- Extension can send scripts to UserLand's Frontier program, which
- is a scripting language for controlling applications via IAC. It
- strikes me that some of this might be a tad redundant, but the
- worse that can happen is that you'll have a choice in how to
- implement certain IAC actions. QuicKeys 2.1 is a $15 upgrade and
- should be out soon.
-
- For those of you who use MacX, Apple has an upgrade to version
- 1.1, appropriately titled 1.1.7, since the only people who will
- upgrade are those who use MacX and want to use System 7 as well.
- Do note that if you use MacX in A/UX, you should NOT upgrade since
- A/UX is not compatible with System 7. The other reason not to
- upgrade if you use A/UX is that A/UX has come with MacX since A/UX
- version 2.01, so you'd be wasting your money. The System 7-
- compatible version of A/UX will incorporate MacX 1.1.7. The main
- enhancement to MacX in terms of System 7 capabilities is that you
- can now use virtual memory, which is handy with X applications.
- You also get 30 days of Technical Answerline support from Apple
- for your $95 upgrade fee (which Apple claims is 34% less than the
- cost of the previous upgrade fee). The full price is $295, and
- MacX will be available from authorized Apple resellers in August.
-
- If you don't have System 7 yet and really dislike working with
- floppies, you can get it on CD-ROM from the May 27 issue of
- Metatec's NAUTILUS, but the catch is that you have to subscribe to
- Nautilus's monthly CD-ROM magazine, which is a tad pricey at $9.95
- per issue, although they do say that you can pay $19.95 for a
- single issue. You will find a second catch in that you will need a
- CD-ROM player. If neither the cost nor the hardware limit you, you
- might want to check out NAUTILUS. I haven't see too many issues,
- not having a CD-ROM drive regularly, but I do approve of
- electronic publishing.
-
- Jackie Promes, Apple -- 408/974-3609
- Mary Vaughn, Metatec -- 614/761-2000
-
- Information from:
- CE propaganda
- Apple propaganda
- NAUTILUS@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Window Gadgets
- --------------
- This is absolutely no good. It must stop, and soon! Companies have
- begun to release Windows utilities that don't exist as a higher
- life form on the Mac. Sheesh, how will we Mac chauvinists maintain
- our self respect? Ah, well, it's probably good for us all.
-
- A standard piece of equipment on the Amiga and on certain Atari
- computers is the so-called "blitter" chip, which handles the
- graphics drawing. Did you ever wonder how those machines handle
- such impressive graphics? Well now you know. Do you wonder why the
- Mac and PC-clones don't have blitter chips? Me too. Weitek
- recently announced a User Interface Controller chip that
- intercepts graphics calls and processes them in the fast hardware
- rather than using Windows's own sluggish software. Much like a
- math coprocessor, which intercepts all the math calls and speeds
- them up, the Weitek chip should significantly increase the speed
- with which Windows draws the screen. Some operations speed up 25
- times - other only four times, but even still, that amount of
- speed will help make Windows more usable.
-
- The Mac doesn't suffer from super-slow graphics performance
- because the Apple designed its OS for graphics, but Weitek is
- apparently talking to Apple as well. Heck, System 7 zooms windows
- slowly on the slower machines, and a blitter board would smooth
- out some of those rough spots. Murph Sewall also mentioned that
- Apple is looking at Edsun's CEG (Continuous Edge Gradation, I
- think) chips, which make a standard VGA display look like it's
- working in 24-bit color. Add that chip to the Mac, and it would
- spruce up all those Apple 13" color monitors in 8-bit mode that
- will be running multimedia applications now that the QuickTime
- multimedia extensions are out. I can't remember how much the Edsun
- chip costs, though it was under $200 or so, but the Weitek chip
- should be showing up in PC boards for about $150. I think Apple
- should jump at both of these technologies, because I see no point
- in wasting CPU power on something that specialized hardware can
- handle. To be fair, Ergon just announced the XLR8-IT accelerator
- board for Windows. It does exactly what boards built with the
- Weitek chip will do, but costs a great deal more at $499.
-
- Probably the biggest news in the Windows world in the last few
- weeks has been Visual Basic from Microsoft. Put simply, it is a
- version of Basic along with a screen painter tool that allows
- programmers to quickly create full-fledged Windows applications.
- Only time will tell, but VB applications apparently run faster and
- look more professional than equivalent HyperCard applications.
- This has led to the release of a number of tools from third
- parties that add functionality to VB. Already you can get SQL
- tools, graphic tools, special effects, communications tools,
- financial and scientific functions, terminal emulation tools, and
- neural network tools to simplify your development efforts. Visual
- Basic lists for $199 and should ship in the next week or so. From
- what everyone has said (there's only been one lukewarm article in
- the magazines - everyone else has been drooling over this
- program), if you wish to develop in Windows, you'd do well to take
- a look at what Visual Basic can do for you, especially since you
- might be able to sell VB programs, unlike HyperCard (or anything
- else) stacks. Two features that don't yet exist in Visual Basic
- are support for Object Embedding and Linking (OLE) and Microsoft's
- Multimedia Extensions, although Microsoft has promised them for a
- future release.
-
- Merasoft has announced an interesting program that combines the
- best features of QuicKeys with the ability to sit in the
- background and look for certain conditions. E'vent Manager can add
- application-specific hotkeys to any application, locate files on a
- hard disk (a useful feature under Windows), launch programs, add
- an autosave feature to any application, and save and restore
- working environments of multiple applications and documents. The
- program's main claim to fame is that it can watch for certain
- events, such a pattern of keystrokes or application launches, and
- perform predefined actions, such as opening documents or changing
- default settings. Merasoft claims that creating the conditions
- requires no programming experience since users can merely select
- the statements they want from a list of acceptable commands. In my
- experience, that sort of programming (because that's what it is,
- call it what you will) is clumsy but effective.
-
- The final application that will inspire some jealousy in Mac folks
- is Relate from ObjectSoft. Relate allows users to create links
- between applications, inserting a small icon at the source end of
- the link. Clicking on the icon brings up a list of links from
- which the user can select the appropriate link, which will then
- open the document defined as the destination end of the link. I
- haven't seen this program, so I don't know how well ObjectSoft
- implemented it in ToolBook (anyone want to try doing this in
- HyperCard 2.1?), but I suspect that the entire utility rests on
- how well Relate integrates into the rest of the environment.
- Still, it's a neat idea and one that is at the heart of Ted
- Nelson's Xanadu system, although links are bidirectional in
- Xanadu, which is far more powerful.
-
- Ergon -- 601/856-4968
- Microsoft -- 800/426-9400
- Merasoft -- 801/225-9951
- ObjectSoft -- 201/930-0582
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 27-May-91, Vol. 8, #21, pg. 17, 31
- PC WEEK -- 20-May-91, Vol. 8, #20, pg. 5
- InfoWorld -- 27-May-91, Vol. 13, #21, pg. 28, 31
- InfoWorld -- 20-May-91, Vol. 13, #20, pg. 5, 19, 34
- InfoWorld -- 06-May-91, Vol. 13, #18, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 18-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #11, pg. 13
-
-
- HAM Sandwich
- ------------
- One of the neatest capabilities of Finder 7 is the ability to put
- anything (including an alias) in the Apple menu by simply putting
- that item in the Apple Menu Items folder in the System Folder.
- Most people have put DAs there, and lots more immediately included
- aliases to their favorite applications, but what some people don't
- realize is that you can also put folders in that menu. When you
- select the item in the menu, the folder opens up. That's how Apple
- implemented the Control Panels item - it's merely a folder in the
- System Folder that's hardwired to appear in the Apple menu.
-
- Of course once you realize that you can get to folders via the
- Apple menu, you (well, I did and a friend did, and lots of others
- did anyway) immediately think, "I wonder if that could be a
- hierarchical menu that would list the items inside the folder?"
- Now as much as I find hierarchical menus a pain on occasion
- (especially before I cleaned my mouse so well that it could pass a
- white glove test), I can see the utility of hierarchical menus for
- often-used folders. I assume that Jorg Brown and Now Software will
- enhance Now Menus to provide this capability, but I haven't heard
- anything from them about future products yet. What has been
- bouncing around on the nets for a while is a discussion about a
- program called Hierarchical Apple Menu, or HAM. (Forgive me if I
- wallow briefly in a pigpun.) HAM is written by Chris Derossi of
- Apple and will provide either four or six levels of hierarchical
- menu from folders when it is released sometime in June. I imagine
- that many levels of hierarchy would be truly difficult to
- navigate, but it might be easier than working your way through
- that many nested folders.
-
- The only thing that Chris has yet to decide is how to distribute
- HAM, shareware or commercial. Apparently he wants to get the
- widest possible distribution for HAM, and there's been some debate
- as to which method would provide it. Since two other commercial
- products will probably provide similar functionality (Now Menus
- should, and Connectix's HandOff II 2.2 will include a similar
- utility called SuperMenu), I think that the shareware method will
- gain the widest distribution. I suspect that it will not earn as
- much money as a commercial release, but then again, commercial
- software is a lot more work and requires tech support and more
- frequent updates than shareware products generally do. All in all,
- commercial software is more work but has greater financial
- rewards. For those wondering how shareware would work, considering
- that Chris works for Apple, I gather from the net conversations
- that Claris would have nothing to do with it (which makes sense,
- since Claris doesn't sell any utilities), and Apple too is
- completely uninvolved with the project.
-
- People have said that HAM stands to be the most powerful of the
- three utilities, probably in terms of the number of levels deep it
- goes. It's unclear how deep Now Menus or SuperMenu will go, but a
- shareware HAM combined with the free Understudy (which can allow
- certain applications to open files from other applications from
- the Finder) from Larry Rosenstein of Apple could damage some of
- Hand Off's popularity. I haven't used Hand Off II, but the current
- version of Understudy requires ResEdit for configuration, not
- exactly an ideal user interface. Still, it's hard to beat free
- (although the Hand Off II upgrade will be free to registered
- users).
-
- Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/324-0727
-
- Information from:
- Ian C. Evans -- iceman@sequent.com
- Dean Yu -- nerm@apple.com
- Alexander M. Rosenberg -- alexr@apple.com
- Richard C. Long -- long@mcntsh.enet.dec.com
- Kiran Wagle -- kiran@copper.ucs.indiana.edu
- Dennis Cohen -- drc@claris.com
- Leonard Rosenthol -- leonardr@sv.portal.com
- Alan D. -- aland@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 04-Jun-91, Vol. 5, #21, pg. 15
-
-
- More Apple News
- ---------------
- Anyone who has programmed on the Mac has used Inside Mac (OK,
- maybe a few bright people can just guess at the specifics, but
- everyone else looks it up). Inside Mac is pretty clumsy these
- days, with six volumes and an index that's required to figure out
- where the information lives, often in several books. Apple has
- finally announced that it is cleaning up and rewriting Inside Mac.
- I'm sure it will end up on paper, most things still do,
- unfortunately, but Apple will also make it available on CD-ROM. If
- you're interested in giving feedback, Apple is taking comments,
- suggestions, and errata from the current Inside Macintosh (as well
- as survey responses from a survey I didn't want to reprint in its
- entirety) at DEV.TECH.PUB@APPLELINK.APPLE.COM. Apple welcomes
- comments on the electronic versions, the book version, and any
- other related topics.
-
- I recently heard some nastiness from inside Apple/Claris.
- HyperCard was transferred to Claris for marketing because Apple
- felt it wasn't part of the system software. Claris claimed at the
- Developer's Conference that Apple and Claris co-developed and
- co-tested HyperCard 2.1, but the truth of the matter is that
- Claris only helped out with the testing. HyperCard 2.1 was
- engineered entirely by some of the people who worked on HyperCard
- 2.0, none of whom were, are, or will be at Claris. To me that
- means that we're going to wait a long time to see another upgrade
- of HyperCard if only because the new HyperCard team at Claris will
- have to come up to speed on the program. This is the sort of
- problem that crops up with reorganizing all the time. I've also
- heard that an extra feature in the Report dialogs was supposed to
- be "removed" because Claris didn't have time to include it in the
- manual. Since there weren't any programmers working on 2.1, no one
- noticed the extra feature, but if you've got 2.1, check around in
- the report printing stuff for an undocumented feature.
-
- Finally, Bill Leue wondered if there was any way to use System 7
- file sharing protocols over a standard modem. The closest way to
- accomplish this is Shiva's NetModem, which allows a standard modem
- to dial into a LocalTalk network. A real solution would be similar
- to SLIP (Serial Line Internet Protocol) but would use AppleTalk
- protocols rather than TCP/IP, thus bringing up SLAP (Serial Line
- AppleTalk Protocols) as the acronym. I've heard that this is very
- possible, though a decent speed over standard modems may take some
- doing. Apparently, Apple even plans to add this capability
- directly into a later release of System 7. It should join features
- like the new printing architecture and the AppleScript language in
- 7.x, where x is greater than one. x equals one is probably
- reserved for the bugs that are slowly cropping up, although most
- of them have been cosmetic so far (like the floppy icon not
- disappearing quickly when thrown in the trash).
-
- Information from:
- Mark B. Johnson -- mjohnson@Apple.com
- Pythaeus
- Bill Leue -- leue@crd.ge.com
- Jeffrey A. Sullivan -- jas@venera.isi.edu
-
-
- Reviews/10-Jun-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- TokaMac LC, pg. 45
- 88 MB SyQuest drives, pg. 45
- DataPak 88
- MR-90
- Infinity 88 Turbo
- ElectricImage, pg. 50
- Radar, pg. 54
- DynoPage, pg. 54
-
- * PC WEEK
- Wireless LANs, pg. 91
- Motorola's Altair
- NCR's WaveLAN
-
- * InfoWorld
- Animation Works, pg. 87
- HP LaserJet IIIsi, pg. 90
-
- * BYTE
- System 7, pg. 42
-
- * MacUser
- WordPerfect 2.0, pg. 56
- Radius Pivot for Built-In Video, pg. 58
- Radius Color Pivot, pg. 58
- CrystalPrint Express, pg. 70
- 4D Write, 4D Calc, and 4D XREF, pg. 72
- ConvertIt!, pg. 76
- Reports 2.0, pg. 78
- Scheduling Programs, pg. 80
- FastTrack Schedule
- MacSchedule
- MacSchedule Plus
- Digital Darkroom, pg. 83
- CalenDAr, pg. 89
- DisplayServer II-DPD, pg. 89
- SnapJot, pg. 89
- For the Record, pg. 90
- Studio Vision, pg. 91
- Oids, pg. 92
- Palmtop Computers, pg. 110
- Sharp Wizard OZ-8000
- Casio B.O.S.S. 9500
- Poqet PC
- Atari Portfolio
- IIci Cache Cards, pg. 124
- DayStar FastCache IIci
- iir Cache Card 32
- Micron Xceed IIci
- Technology Works Cache Card 64
- TMS Cache Card 64
- Total Systems QuickCache IIci
- UR Micro MacCache 64
- UR Micro MacCache LP32
- CD-ROM Drives, pg. 150
- (too many to list)
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 04-Jun-91, Vol. 5, #21
- PC WEEK -- 03-Jun-91, Vol. 8, #22
- InfoWorld -- 03-Jun-91, Vol. 13, #22
- BYTE -- Jun-91
- MacUser -- Jun-91
-
-
- ..
-
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