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- TidBITS#74/29-Jul-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
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-
- 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/29-Jul-91
- SevenBITS/29-Jul-91
- NewsBITS/29-Jul-91
- What Good is the Help Menu?
- DoveFax+ Hears Voices
- AppleLink in Space
- Reviews/29-Jul-91
-
-
- MailBITS/29-Jul-91
- ------------------
- Adam and Tonya and their cats are busy moving this week! So that
- they can concentrate on finding a new place to live in the
- Redmond, WA area, settle into new surroundings and new jobs, and
- relax a little, I've volunteered to be your Guest Editor for a few
- weeks. Who am I? I'm Mark H. Anbinder, of STARNET's Memory Alpha
- BBS.
-
- For the next few weeks, any correspondence and information for
- TidBITS should be sent to one of my electronic or paper addresses,
- shown on the About TidBITS page of this issue. When Adam and Tonya
- take over TidBITS again, they will be providing new addresses that
- we can use to reach them.
-
- Attentive reader Bill Dugan noticed a lack of detail in last
- week's QuickTime article, on the specific subject of the MPC
- standard. Bill reports that the standard configuration is:
-
- 286 processor at 10Mhz or 12Mhz (depending on who you ask)
- 2 megs of RAM
- VGA card with a minimum of 320 x 200 resolution with 256
- colors
- AdLib or SoundBlaster sound board (or emulators)
- CD-ROM drive with transfer rate of 150K/sec
-
- Thanks for the correction, Bill! Readers who want to learn more
- about QuickTime should check out the September 1991 Macworld, in
- which Jerry Borrell's column is devoted to the topic. The column
- is entitled "Why I Love QuickTime: Not just because it's way
- cool."
-
- Rik Ahlberg also wrote, to let us know that Switch, which was
- mentioned in the 15-Jul-91 issue of TidBITS, is incompatible with
- Adobe Illustrator 3.0 under System 7. It apparently causes
- Illustrator to quit and return to the Finder as soon as its icon
- appears in the menu bar.
-
- You may remember the controversy surrounding MarketPlace, a pair
- of products from Lotus that would have provided a variety of
- information on American households and businesses. The product
- that contained information about private individuals and
- households was withdrawn due to the uproar, and the business
- product was cancelled as well. Recently, though, a new company
- named MarketPlace Information Corporation was formed by Lotus
- personnel who didn't want to see their project go down the tubes.
- They are now shipping MarketPlace Business 1.1, containing
- marketing data on over seven million U.S. businesses drawn from
- the Dun's Market Identifiers database. According to the company,
- there are no plans to release the Households database, which was
- at the center of the controversy, but this announcement does raise
- some of the same accuracy issues (it's very difficult to correct
- information on a CD-ROM) and might lead to increased popularity
- for this sort of desktop marketing... which could in turn bring us
- back to the same situation. If MarketPlace doesn't release a
- households database, someone else might.
-
- Speaking of which, a company calling itself variously "American
- Business Information" or "Online Information Network" was
- marketing products at the recent Comdex show along the same lines
- as MarketPlace. ABI is offering a dialup service whereby, for a
- $35 subscription fee, $1 per minute, and 17[cts] per name, users
- can retrieve names from databases of over ten million U.S. and
- Canadian businesses, or over 4.5 million "high income" families.
- The same databases will be available on CD-ROM as well.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
- Bill Dugan -- bdugan@teri.bio.uci.edu
- Rik Ahlberg -- fahlberg@rodan.acs.syr.edu
- Adam C. Engst -- ace@tidbits.ithaca.ny.us
- John G. DeArmond -- jgd@Dixie.Com
- MarketPlace Information Corporation -- 617/225-7850
- American Business Information -- 402/953-4565
-
-
- SevenBITS/29-Jul-91
- -------------------
- Since the May introduction of System 7, Apple has been shipping
- all computers with a coupon that users can mail to Apple, good for
- a free copy of System 7. They recently announced that, beginning
- at the end of July or the beginning of August, new Macintosh
- computers (except for the 1Mb Macintosh Classic, the Macintosh
- SE/30, and floppy-only configurations of the Macintosh LC) will
- ship with System 7, either pre-installed on the internal hard
- disk, or in the box for CPUs without hard disks. The Mac Classic
- and LC will start shipping with System 7 a little later than the
- beginning of August, no doubt due to the long lead times for these
- products. The fact that the SE/30 won't be converted to ship with
- System 7 looks strange, unless you consider the rumour that the
- SE/30 is due to be replaced this fall by a new Classic '030
- machine.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- NewsBITS/29-Jul-91
- ------------------
- Novell is supposed to buy DRI (Digital Research Inc, makers of
- C/PM in the past and DR DOS in the present). This will give Novell
- a network OS and a desktop OS, which competes with Microsoft's
- inclusion of networking hooks in DOS and Windows. Also interesting
- is that IBM has a deal with Novell that lets the Blue resell
- NetWare, and that might carry over to reselling DR DOS. Many
- people think DR DOS is technically better than MS-DOS, so IBM
- could show its displeasure with Microsoft even more than before by
- ditching the agreement with Microsoft (which produced PC-DOS) in
- favor of DR DOS. Also interesting is the fact that these large
- companies are gradually clumping together, which the newly
- aggressive FTC certainly won't like and which may bode ill for the
- small, innovative, developers.
-
- Information from:
- Bob Cringely
- Adam C. Engst -- ace@tidbits.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- What Good is the Help Menu?
- ---------------------------
- by Rick M. Holzgrafe -- rmh@apple.com
-
- "So what good is the Balloon Help menu? I already know how to use
- my Mac!"
-
- I've been hearing this question a lot lately, as I eavesdrop on
- the networks and bulletin boards. A lot of people seem to think
- that:
-
- - It's only for system software.
- - It's only for turning the balloon display on and off.
- - It wastes space on the menu bar.
-
- These are all misconceptions. Let's take them in order.
-
- "It's only for system software." Actually, any application can use
- the Help menu. Applications can have their own balloons to explain
- their own menus, windows, and controls. We haven't seen much of
- this yet because most of us haven't yet gotten our System 7-savvy
- upgrades and new applications. But the developers are all jumping
- on the bandwagon: I haven't heard of a single upgrade or new
- product since the release of System 7 that will not include
- Balloon Help.
-
- "It's only for turning the balloon display on and off." Click over
- to the Finder for a minute, if you're running System 7. Pull down
- the Help menu. There's an item at the bottom called "Finder
- Shortcuts". You may have thought that was a special hack just for
- the 7.0 Finder; it's not. Any application can add its own custom
- menu items to the Help menu. (And by the way, that's its proper
- name: not the "Balloon Help" menu, but just the "Help" menu. It's
- not just for balloons!)
-
- Apple intends for the Help menu to become the standard place for
- users to go for on-line help: not just for balloons, but for the
- manual pages that you currently have to turn over all the rocks to
- find. ("Is there a menu called 'Help'? No... maybe it's in the
- Apple menu, under 'About MacFoo'. Rats, not there. Check ALL the
- menus, looking for an item called 'Help'. Rargh! Uh, maybe there's
- a 'Help' button in the About box....") Just think how nice it will
- be when most apps have online help, and all in the same place!
-
- "It wastes space on the menu bar." Well, yes and no - mostly no.
- In System 7, there can be as many as three iconic menus at the
- right end of the menu bar: the Keyboard menu, the Help menu, and
- the Application menu. (The Keyboard menu is for users who must
- change the keyboard layout for typing in different languages. Many
- users don't need it, and never see it.) Both the Keyboard and Help
- menus will automatically disappear whenever your regular menus
- need the room, so normally these menu icons don't waste space.
-
- The only conflict is with menu bar clock INITs. Many people use
- them, and some apparently can't live without them. They make two
- kinds of problem. First, older INITs don't know about the Help and
- Keyboard menus, and don't move over to make room for them. Second,
- a menu bar clock is not a menu: the Menu Manager doesn't know it's
- there and can't make room for it when space gets tight. A menu bar
- clock on a 9" screen can find itself helplessly squeezed between
- the Help menu on the right and MS Word's menus on the left!
-
- Some people, wanting to keep their menu bar clocks, have figured
- out ways to remove the Help menu altogether. They figure that they
- won't ever need it, or that they can use one of the new freeware
- or shareware hacks to turn on Balloon Help from the keyboard. I
- don't recommend this. I hope I've convinced you by now that the
- Help menu is important and will soon become very useful to you,
- and that the balloons are not the only important feature.
-
- I'd recommend that you live without your menu bar clock, either
- for a while (until System 7-savvy menu bar clocks appear), or
- forever. The menu bar clock can be replaced by a watch, a wall
- clock, a five-dollar stick-on digital clock, the Alarm Clock DA,
- or any of a half-dozen nifty freeware window-clock applications.
- But the only substitute for good on-line help is a paper manual,
- and I doubt whether you enjoy getting them out and flipping their
- pages any more than I do.
-
- So, that's what good the Help menu is! In about a year, you may
- wonder how you ever lived without it.
-
-
- DoveFax+ Hears Voices
- ---------------------
- One of the more interesting modem spin-offs recently is the
- DoveFax+. I'm personally not all that impressed with fax
- technology, but I think sticking fax capabilities in a modem is a
- good way to avoid killing more trees. What makes the DoveFax+
- stand out though, is its ability to do limited voice-messaging.
- You probably wouldn't replace a huge voice mail system with the
- DoveFax+, but for an individual or a couple of people it looks
- quite good. The DoveFax+ is the first voice messaging system for
- the Mac, at least in the normal-person price range. It can
- differentiate between voice calls and fax calls when in the Voice
- Mode, and it sports several other modes, the Data Mode (2400 bips)
- and a straight Fax Mode (I assume that in Fax Mode the DoveFax+
- doesn't try to differentiate between voice and fax calls, but
- there may be more differences too). If you have really complicated
- phone setups, the DoveFax+ works with phone line managers as well,
- and Dove has tested it with the Phone Line Manager from La Cie and
- the SmartMax II from MaxTrax.
-
- The DoveFax+ simulates the "Press1 to talk to a VP, Press 2 to
- talk to the CEO, etc." with a Caller ID feature. Unlike anything
- to do with the phone company, this is merely an ID that you assign
- to a caller, so if they call and punch in their ID, the DoveFax+
- plays a specific message for them. You can record different
- messages and link them to different Caller IDs, which gives you a
- lot of flexibility in the sort of messages you leave. You can also
- save messages and reuse them, a technosend (I'm not religious, and
- the word godsend didn't seem appropriate) for those who hate
- creating messages. The DF+Manager program even keeps track of
- people who called with a Caller ID and will auto-dial that number
- when you get back and want to return the call.
-
- Since the DoveFax+ records messages digitally onto the hard disk,
- I was concerned about the amount of space it could consume. Page
- Gilley of Dove Technical Support said that a 30 second call takes
- about 150K of disk space. That would only cause problems with a
- few of my friends who like to talk to the answering machine at
- length. You probably wouldn't want to leave for vacation without
- clearing some hard disk space, but in general it doesn't sound
- like disk space will be a problem.
-
- The main problem I personally have with the DoveFax+ is that it's
- not all that impressive as modems go. At the moment, it is merely
- straight 2400 bips Hayes compatible, but that can't compete with
- the 9600, v.everything modems that come in at about the same
- price, $549. Page said that Dove was working on implementing v.42
- and MNP, which could increase the throughput significantly, though
- I'd still prefer a full feature 9600 bips modem with the fax and
- voice features of the DoveFax+.
-
- As far as the details go, the DoveFax+ can work in the background
- as a fax modem and is a Group 3-compatible 9600 bips fax. Included
- are the QuickFax DA, customizable cover sheets, an activity log,
- and automatic phone directory updating. The voice messaging part
- of the DoveFax+ can import SoundEdit, snd, and AIFF sound files
- (so you can use all those great sounds as phone messages, and if
- you've got SoundEdit, you can have a lot of fun with manipulating
- your messages). Two other useful features for when you're away
- include remote retrieval of messages and message forwarding to
- another number. So if you are in the market for a modem and a fax
- machine with some sophisticated answering machine capabilities
- thrown in, you might consider what the DoveFax+ will do for you.
-
- Dove Computer Corp. -- 919/763-7918
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- ace@tidbits.ithaca.ny.us
- Page Gilley -- 72230.653@compuserve.com
- DoveTech or PageG1 on AOL
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 19-Mar-91, Vol. 5, #11, pg. 16
- Macworld -- Sept-91, Vol. 8, #9, pg. 223
-
-
- AppleLink in Space
- ------------------
- The upcoming flight of the space shuttle Atlantis, which has been
- delayed a couple of times this month, will be a first for the
- information age. NASA's astronauts will be carrying aboard a
- Macintosh Portable that has been outfitted with an off-the-shelf
- modem and a customized version of the AppleLink software, and
- they'll be connecting to AppleLink and sending electronic mail
- from space.
-
- While this isn't the first time e-mail has been sent or received
- from space (earlier missions have included packet radio BBS
- experimenting), it will certainly be the first use of Apple's
- online service from space (assuming everything works as planned).
- Not only will the astronauts be able to exchange data files and
- mission reports with ground control personnel, but they'll also be
- able to communicate with their families during the trip.
- Unfortunately for us, but fortunately for the astronauts and their
- sanity, the shuttle's AppleLink address is being kept
- confidential.
-
- Connections to AppleLink already involve a complex data network,
- but this time things will be a bit more convoluted. Here's the
- path as described by Apple's Michael Elliot Silver:
-
- "The digital X.25 packet goes through the GE IS ww network to a
- modem pool (converts to analog) which is connected to a ROLM
- telephone switch (converts back to digital), then to a data phone
- at Johnson Space Center.
-
- "The data phone is connected to a Mac Portable through its Printer
- port. The packet then goes through a 'Data Forwarder' application
- written by our own Byron Han (the genius behind this project)
- which sends the packet out the Modem port using 'NASALink,' a CTB
- tool specially written for this event (also by Byron).
-
- "The packet then goes through a PSI Fax Modem (back to analog)
- operating in v.27 terr (half duplex, ungodly, and evil) and is
- then routed through an ATU (Audio Terminal Unit) which digitizes
- the signal (converts to digital).
-
- "The packet is then sent up to an orbiting CommSat (Commercial
- Satellite) then back down to White Sands, New Mexico TDRSS
- (Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System).
-
- "It is then sent up again to another TDRSS Satellite which is
- orbiting geosynchronously with the space shuttle, and that
- satellite sends the packet to the space shuttle (still digital)
- which sends it through its voice subsystem and converts it back to
- analog.
-
- "It is sent through another ATU to another PSI Fax modem (back to
- digital) through the modem port, through the NASALink CTB tool and
- finally into AppleLink 6.0.2s1 (a special version of AppleLink
- 6.0.2)."
-
- Information from:
- Rick M. Holzgrafe -- rmh@apple.com
- Michael Elliot Silver
-
-
- Reviews/29-Jul-91
- -----------------
-
- * Macworld
- Word Processors, pg. 160
- Microsoft Word 4.0
- WriteNow 2.2
- MacWrite II 1.1
- WordMaker 1.01
- FullWrite Professional 1.5s
- WordPerfect 2.0
- Nisus 3.05
- Taste 1.01
- Microsoft Works 2.0
- Budget Hard Disk Drives (40-120Mb), pg. 184
- Too many to list (73 drives!)
- Microsoft Excel 3.0, pg. 204
- DVA-4000/Macintosh and Mediator, pg. 206
- Animation Works 1.0, pg. 208
- PixelPaint Professional 2.0, pg. 209
- RoboSport, pg. 217
- LocalSwitch, pg. 219
- Infini-D 1.0, pg. 222
- DoveFax+, pg. 223
- Aldus Digital Darkroom 2.0, pg. 226
- MacPro Plus Keyboard, pg. 228
- DynoPage 1.0, pg. 230
- TouchBase 1.0.2, pg. 233
- Last Resort 1.0, pg. 235
- LiteShow II, pg. 237
- MacPhonebook 3.0, pg. 239
- MyAdvancedDatabase 2.0, pg. 242
- Ray Dream Designer 1.01, pg. 244
- Loom 1.0, pg. 245
- Adobe Photoshop 2.0, pg. 248
- KaleidaGraph 2.1, pg. 253
- CD ROM discs, pg. 255
- Ecodisc
- Dictionary of the Living World
- Sherlock Holmes on Disc
- U.S. History on CD-ROM
- The Orient
- Birds of America
- Learn to Speak Spanish
- Desert Storm: The War in the Persian Gulf
-
- References:
- Macworld -- Sep-91
-
-
- ..
-
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