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- TidBITS#06/21-May-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Garfield Strikes Back
- Electronic Books
- Windows Hoopla Cubed
- The ToolBook Toolbox
- MacUsenet
- A/UX Grows Up
- Reviews/21-Mar-90
-
-
- Garfield Strikes Back
- ---------------------
- The Macintosh virus count increased by one last Monday when a new
- virus called either MDEF or Garfield was found at Cornell
- University. Contrary to an article in MacWEEK, the virus was
- found by Gordon Suggs of Cornell Information Technologies and Adam
- Engst of TidBITS. Tom Young, also of CIT, did an excellent job
- clarifying and distributing information about Garfield to the
- virus protection authors and the world at large.
-
- The virus is fairly simple and is partially stopped by CE
- Software's Vaccine. Chris Johnson's Gatekeeper stops it
- completely. The virus was discovered when a number of Macs
- attached to public laser printers failed to drop any menus.
- Vaccine had been reporting attempts to add an MDEF resource, but
- those attempts had been denied. Garfield's first step is to
- renumber the MDEF 0 resource in the System to MDEF 5378. Vaccine
- does not stop the renumbering, and when the System cannot find
- MDEF 0, menus no longer drop. The second step is for Garfield to
- copy itself into the System as MDEF 0, at which point it can copy
- itself to applications unnoticed since the menus still work
- (apparently it calls the original MDEF resource when necessary).
- Added evidence of the virus' simplicity is that it cannot infect
- later models of the Mac (after the SE) since the MDEF resource is
- in ROM in those machines.
-
- John Norstad's Disinfectant and the commercial programs SAM and
- Virex were updated within days to find and eradicate the Garfield
- virus. The latest version of Disinfectant is 1.8 and Virex is at
- 2.7. Symantec Corp. is publishing the methods of finding MDEF with
- SAM. If you have Jeff Shulman's Virus Detective 4.0 or later, you
- can add this search strings to look for MDEF:
-
- Resource MDEF & ID=0 & WData 4546#58EA9AB#C3F#B6048;
- To find Garfield MDEF
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Gordon Suggs -- cd7J@cornella.cit.cornell.edu
- Tom Young -- xmu@cornella.cit.cornell.edu
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 4 #20, pg. 10
-
-
- Electronic Books
- ----------------
- Bob Boynton reports on a Washington Post article that claims Sony
- will introduce the Data Discman, a portable text reading system.
- The hand-held system consists of a 3" CD-ROM drive, a ten line
- screen, and a small keyboard. The principle behind the device is
- instant access to large volumes of information, and to avoid the
- common chicken/egg problem, 18 CDs will be released along with the
- Data Discman in Japan on July 1st (overseas introduction is
- scheduled within a year). All 18 CDs are reference works, though
- other types of information such as fiction may appear later. The
- problem with fiction would be reading it on a ten line screen, but
- the unit can use a television as an alternate viewing device and
- also has a jack for headphones.
-
- No mention was made of a method of attaching the device to a
- computer, but at a price around $400, it would certainly be
- popular with computer owners looking to get into the CD-ROM world
- but scared off by the high prices of CD-ROM players. In any event,
- the Data Discman is likely to popularize the concept of easily
- accessible electronic information, and that will be a boon to the
- computer industry.
-
- Information from:
- Bob Boynton -- BLABYNPD@UIAMVS.BITNET
-
- Related articles:
- Washington Post -- 16-May-90, pgs. D9,D13
- InfoWorld -- 28-May-90, Vol. 12 #22, pg. 21
-
-
- Windows Hoopla Cubed
- --------------------
- Microsoft never formally announced Windows 3.0, so its release
- last week was not officially late, though users had been waiting
- anxiously since early this year. But now it's here and opinions
- vary widely.
-
- One person on Usenet claimed that Windows 3.0 will cure cases of
- "Mac envy" while another person disagreed, saying that he thinks
- the Mac is still easier to use and still has a better graphical
- interface even though he is an IBM hacker.
-
- The trade magazines were also unsure as to the impact of Windows.
- PC WEEK ran a separate 62 page Special Report on Windows alone and
- in one article quoted Bill Gates, chairman and cofounder of
- Microsoft, as saying "There is nothing in this industry that
- Windows 3.0 isn't going to change." Yet another article in the
- same supplement echoes the same sentiments we have heard from
- Macintosh users who have used Windows 3.0-namely "So what?"
- MacWEEK too printed statements from several Mac users that say
- basically the same thing as well.
-
- Interestingly enough, Windows destroys one of the "edges" IBM-
- clones held over the Mac for so long. Little software is written
- for Windows, and software that isn't written for Windows may not
- run or will reap none of the benefits of the Windows environment.
- So now the Windows world is playing catch up to the Mac in terms
- of powerful software. And although at least Lotus will be coming
- out with a Windows-specific version of 123, it (along with a
- Windows version of WordPerfect) doesn't exist yet. Another person
- on Usenet posted his experiences trying to run various programs
- under Windows as opposed to getting them to run under Desqview, a
- character-based multitasking program. His opinion was that
- Microsoft was unconcerned about helping with anything not written
- for Windows, whereas the Desqview people were more than happy to
- help with his problems. He and others talked about the increasing
- number of expansion busses, graphics systems, chip sets, BIOSes,
- operating systems, operating environments, and CPU's that were by
- their very existence producing incompatibilities in the PC world.
- We feel incompatibilities are inevitable with a computer
- standardized by popularity rather than company guidance, as Apple
- has done with the Mac.
-
- Lest it appear that we are being defensive about Windows, let it
- suffice to say that we support anything that advances the level of
- personal computing. We aren't worried about Apple going under in
- the face of cheap IBM-clones running Windows because the Mac is
- still cleaner and easier to use. Price isn't really an issue
- either, because the ideal Windows machine will still cost at least
- $3500 (a 25 MHz 386 machine with color VGA, 4 MB of RAM, and a
- large hard disk). Of course Windows will run on a plain vanilla
- 286 with only 1 MB of RAM, but that's masochism of the ilk of
- running PageMaker on a Mac Plus over TOPS (don't smirk, we've done
- it). We do hope that Apple will start feeling pressure (whether or
- not it is really there) and will push a bit harder in the future.
-
- Information from:
- Peter Frenning -- pfrennin@altos86.Altos.COM
- Sam Shim -- shim@zip.eecs.umich.edu
- Peter Nelson -- nelson_p@apollo.HP.COM
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 4 #20, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 21-May-90, Vol. 12 #21, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 7 #20, pg. 1 and supplement
- MacWEEK -- 26-Jun-90, Vol. 4, #24, pg. 47
-
-
- The ToolBook Toolbox
- --------------------
- Despite numerous criticisms, HyperCard has been extremely popular
- among Macintosh users because of its ease of use and flexibility.
- Clones were inevitable, and Silicon Beach introduced SuperCard and
- Olduvai introduced PLUS (now marketed by Spinnaker) to complement
- HyperCard. Both are slower than HyperCard but provide powerful
- features that HyperCard lacked. Neither has gained the acceptance
- HyperCard has, though, because both are commercial products that
- cannot compete with the price of the free HyperCard.
-
- HyperCard-like products sprang up on the PC as well, with HyperPad
- being the most visible along with LinkWay from IBM. None could
- read HyperCard stacks, though, until Spinnaker announced a version
- of PLUS for Windows and Presentation Manager that could read PLUS
- stacks from the Mac, and thus HyperCard stacks through the
- Macintosh version of PLUS. LinkWay has been criticized as clumsy,
- and HyperPad has no graphical capabilities, being limited to the
- ASCII character set of the PC.
-
- Now however, a recently-released program may provide some of
- HyperCard's power for PC users. Asymetrix Corp., founded by Paul
- Allen, the cofounder of Microsoft, announced its first product,
- the $395 ToolBook. ToolBook is designed to work with Windows 3.0
- and runtime versions of ToolBook will accompany all copies of
- Windows 3.0. In addition, all 386 machines from Zenith will come
- with Windows 3.0 and the complete version of ToolBook installed.
- Hopefully they will also include at least 1.5 MB of RAM, because
- ToolBook needs that much minimum.
-
- ToolBook uses a "book" and "page" metaphor instead of HyperCard's
- "stack" and "card" metaphor, although we at TidBITS think that if
- it quacks like a duck, it's a duck, no matter what the ostensible
- metaphor. Like HyperCard 2.0 and System 7.0, ToolBook will
- exchange information with Windows applications through Dynamic
- Data Exchange, and also like HyperCard and its XCMDs and XFCNs,
- ToolBook will be extensible through what it calls Dynamic Link
- Libraries. One advantage ToolBook will have over HyperCard is a
- Script Recorder that will build scripts from watching the actions
- made by the user. Scripts can also be attached to anything such as
- graphics or bits of text, not just buttons or fields. ToolBook
- books can be distributed with a royalty-free runtime version,
- although in theory everyone with Windows 3.0 should already have
- that runtime version.
-
- The icing on the ToolBook cake is a program called ConvertIt!,
- written by The HyperMedia Group for Heizer Software. ConvertIt!,
- true to its name, will convert HyperCard stacks into ToolBook
- books. ConvertIt! will be released this summer and we then see how
- complete its conversion actually is. Who knows, we may even
- convert the TidBITS reader to ToolBook, although we would do so
- from the ground up to take advantage of ToolBook's capabilities
- and avoid its weaknesses.
-
- Asymetrix -- 206/462-0501
- Heizer Software -- 415/943-7667 -- 800/888-7667
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 4 #20, pg. 9
- InfoWorld -- 21-May-90, Vol. 12 #21, pg. 1, 101
- PC WEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 7 #20, pg. 6, Supplement pg. 38
- PC WEEK -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 7 #23, pg. 51
- InfoWorld -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 12 #24, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 02-Jul-90, Vol. 12 #27, pg. 82
-
-
- MacUsenet
- ---------
- A common question on Usenet is how to use the Mac to read mail and
- Usenet news directly, without having to use a mainframe or
- workstation and their less-intuitive interfaces. The question
- arose again this week and was greeted with some new answers.
-
- One person writes that Project Athena at MIT is working on a
- program called TechMail, which uses POP (Post Office Protocol), in
- which a host machine stores mail and serves it out on request to
- remote client machines. In addition, Apple's MacTCP Toolkit
- (available from APDA or via anonymous FTP from apple.com) includes
- a HyperCard stack by Harry Chesley that allows you to read and
- write news, although not mail. If we remember correctly from the
- demo we saw, it suffers partly from not having the ability to kill
- a thread but mostly from its requirement of a LocalTalk (or
- EtherTalk) connection to an NNTP (Net News Transfer Protocol)
- server machine. A similar package is published by InterCon
- Systems, although we have not seen its interface.
-
- The classic method of reading and writing mail and news on a Mac
- is to use the public domain implementation of UUPC for the Mac.
- However, UUPC does not have a Macintosh interface and can be
- difficult to set up. A cleaner solution, though more expensive, is
- to use CE Software's QuickMail with the UMCP Bridge so QuickMail
- can talk to a Unix machine. QuickMail works well for mail, but has
- no news reading capabilities yet-perhaps in a few months.
- Accompanied by a sophisticated news reader, QuickMail will be
- ideal, especially considering the number of gateways it has to
- other types of mail systems.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
- Mark Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
- Dan Revel -- dan@lclark.UUCP
- J.A. Tanner -- jat@ukc.ac.uk
- Skip Montanaro -- montnaro@spyder.crd.ge.com
- Kurt Baumann -- kdb@macaw.intercon.com
- Brian Bechtel -- blob@apple.com
- J. Vickroy -- jmv@sppy00.UUCP
-
-
- A/UX Grows Up
- -------------
- A/UX, Apple's version of Unix for the SE/30 and Mac II line never
- gained a great deal of popularity. Version 2.0, due out in June,
- should help A/UX's reputation significantly though, judging from
- the rave reviews it has received on Usenet. A/UX runs many MacOS
- applications, including multiple application under MultiFinder.
- Apple claims that only "32-bit clean" applications should be
- expected to run, but users have said that in reality most standard
- Mac applications do run, including Word 4.0, Wingz 1.1, and Excel
- 2.2.
-
- A/UX comes on different media, including CD-ROM, 80 MB hard disk,
- floppy disk, and tape. Prices vary between the media, with CD-ROM
- the cheapest at $795, floppy and tape at $995, and the 80 MB hard
- disk coming in at $2395. (Looks like another area in which Apple
- is trying to make it worth your while to buy a CD-ROM player.)
- A/UX ships with five manuals: the Installation Guide, A/UX
- Essentials, Setting Up Accounts and Peripherals, Roadmap to A/UX,
- and A/UX 2.0 Release Notes. The rest of the documentation, true to
- Unix, is online in the form of man (manual) pages. You may not
- need the documentation as much, though, because A/UX has Commando-
- style dialogs allowing you to build complex Unix commands by
- choosing items in a dialog box. It's not as fast as typing the
- command in, but it is faster than looking for the syntax in the
- documentation.
-
- For those of you who drool over the details, A/UX is System V Unix
- from AT&T with BSD networking, sockets, signals, etc. It supports
- two Unix file systems, System V and Berkeley FFS, along with the
- standard Macintosh Hierarchical Filing System (HFS). You have to
- partition your hard drive and you must use System 6.0.5, but
- that's to be expected.
-
- One person mentioned that purchasing A/UX 1.0 and using the free
- upgrade would save a lot of money, but another person said that he
- checked with the bookstore at Stanford and it was too late to do
- this. MacWEEK reported that upgrades ranged from $275 to $550
- depending on the media, so perhaps the upgrade was only free to
- academic users.
-
- Information from:
- Jeff Noxon -- jeffn@nuchat.UUCP
- Ron Johnston -- johnston@Apple.COM
- Steve Goldfield -- steve@violet.berkeley.edu
- Chris Ranch -- csr@ubvax.UB.Com
- Philip Machanick -- philip@Kermit.Stanford.EDU
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 4 #20, pg. 7
-
-
- Reviews/21-Mar-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Plotter Drivers -- pg. 49
- PlotMaker
- MGPU
- MacPlot
- PLOTTERgeist
- FileForce -- pg. 59
- SoftPC EGA/AT -- pg. 59
- Type Reunion -- pg. 59
- WriteNow 2.2 -- pg. 64
-
- * InfoWorld
- Animation & 3-D Modeling Software -- pg. 65
- MacroMind Director 2.0
- Studio/1 1.0
- Interface 1.0
- Dimensions II 2.15
- Super3D 2.0
- Swivel 3D 1.1
- Vocabulearn/ce -- pg. 79
-
- * PC WEEK
- Databases -- pg. 63
- 4th Dimension 2.0.10
- FileForce 1.0.1
- Omnis 5 1.1
- FoxBASE+/Mac 2.0
- Double Helix II 3.0
- McMax 2.0 (not in release any more)
- Reflex Plus 1.0.1 (not in release any more)
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 4 #20
- InfoWorld -- 21-May-90, Vol. 12 #21
- PC WEEK -- 22-May-90, Vol. 7 #20
-
-
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