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- TidBITS#76/12-Aug-91
- ====================
-
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Macworld Expo Boston
- The Highlights
- A MultiMedia Bonanza
- In Conclusion...
- Reviews/12-Aug-91
-
-
- Macworld Expo Boston
- --------------------
- You were warned! This week's issue is devoted to the Macworld
- Expo, which occupied the lives of an alarming number of Mac
- industry people and enthusiasts last week, who made the annual
- pilgrimage to Boston's Bayside Expo Center and World Trade Center.
- The clam chowder was exceptional, of course, but the Expo itself
- had little of the charm or pizzazz of some past shows. As one
- TidBITS reporter, Ilene Hoffman, put it, regular readers of
- MacWEEK or TidBITS are less likely to be stunned by the Expo and
- its offerings, and "the thrill and anticipation of going to
- Macworld gets diluted."
-
- There were a number of high points, and certainly quite a few
- things worth seeing. Just as important, this trip provided an
- opportunity to meet a number of fellow TidBITS readers, and a wide
- assortment of other fellow Mac fans. I look forward to meeting
- more of you in the future. In the meantime, I'm going to let Ilene
- and Earl Christie give you a feel for what you missed if you
- didn't make it to the show, or a recap if you did.
-
- One of the things Ilene did at the show was to interview a number
- of attendees. It may be a bit backwards to place these end-of-show
- impressions at the beginning of our Expo coverage, but I think
- they will give you a good idea of what the show was like. The
- details will follow. For the record, each of these people were
- asked what they thought the highlights of the show were.
-
- Of a room full of avid bulletin board users, about eight people
- said "Nothing," while others offered more optimistic comments,
- naming More After Dark (Berkeley), Aladdin's SpaceMaker, Double
- Helix 3.5 (Odesta), and Spectre from Velocity, as highlights.
-
- A noted MacUser writer said that the highlights for him included
- all of the integrated software products (BeagleWorks, Claris
- Works, and Symantec GreatWorks), SpaceMaker, Spaceship Warlock
- (Educorp), Mutant's Beach (Insight), HAND-Off II (Connectix), and
- a MacHack CD which was available at one of the conferences. This
- CD contained all of MacHack from 1987-1991. A MacUser editor said
- his highlights included the new Outbound notebook computers, More
- After Dark, Spectre, SpaceMaker, Magic (Paracomp), the Video
- Toaster (Newtek), HAM (Microseeds), HAND-Off II, and Novell's
- Netware. He also added that a dozen or more products would have
- been drooled over a year ago, but now that the state of the art is
- moving so quickly, we've become jaded.
-
- A group of international users from Germany, Australia, and
- England voted for the integrated packages, Hewlett Packard's
- products, and More After Dark. They also commented that there were
- no major products showing, just "lots of little stuff." Other
- random users pinpointed Living Books (Broderbund), TypeStyler
- (Broderbund), Resolve (Claris), the Video Toaster, Canvas 3.0
- (Deneba), MAD (again!), and Silhouette (the trackball from EMAC).
- The best bargain reported by multiple users was BMUG's $40.00
- membership, which included a canvas tote bag and a T-shirt.
-
- Lots of people agreed on a very few items as highlights, it seems.
- In the following articles, we'll take a closer look at some of
- those highlights and what they'll mean for us down the road.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
- Ilene Hoffman -- Ilene.Hoffman@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
- Fidonet: Ilene Hoffman on 1:101/485
- AOL, AppleLink, & Delphi: IleneH
-
-
- The Highlights
- --------------
- Adam Engst, our faithful Editor, said last year's Macworld Boston
- show made 1990 the "year of the upgrades." With the introduction
- of System 7, this years' Expo could best be called Upgrade II...
- or is that Pro or 7.x? New products are no longer the height of
- the show; they have been replaced with bigger, better, more-
- feature-laden versions of the products you already know and love.
- That's to be expected as the industry matures and there are fewer
- frontiers to explore, but it still takes some of the fun out of
- it.
-
- One of the few areas with plenty of new activity is the integrated
- software market, which we've talked about the last few weeks.
- Claris and Beagle Bros showed their soon-to-be-released integrated
- products, which like already-shipping products from Microsoft and
- Symantec, are particularly good for new users, small businesses,
- and educational users, who typically need a little bit of a lot of
- things. The key differences are that the Claris and Beagle Bros
- offerings give users the ability to use different tools (i.e. word
- processing, drawing, and database tools) within the same document,
- rather than having to use separate documents with each segment of
- the program. According to Beagle Bros, this reflects "the true
- meaning of integration," and we would have to agree. Otherwise, an
- "integrated package" is just a bundle of separate applications
- with one icon. Microsoft plans to upgrade their Works package, but
- there was no information as to when an upgrade would be available
- or what it would include. Rumours have it that Microsoft discarded
- an in-progress MS Works 3.0 and started from scratch when they saw
- the new crop of integrated packages they were up against.
-
- On the hardware front, Outbound Systems introduced their new
- lightweight notebook computers. There are three basic models
- running at 20 MHz and all weighing in at 6.25 pounds, with
- internal 1.4Mb floppy drives, upgradeable microprocessors, a
- choice of hard drive options, and expandable system memory. The
- 68000 and the 68EC030 versions are available now, and a 68030 unit
- will be available after October (the 68EC030 microprocessor is
- functionally the same as a 68030 except that it lacks an MMU,
- needed for virtual memory). Each Outbound Notebook System is sold
- with a used Mac, whose ROM is installed into the Outbound notebook
- before the unit is shipped. In fact, Outbound repurchases the
- ROM-less used Mac shell before the user ever sees it. The result
- of this paper shuffle is that the customer simply receives an
- Outbound with ROM already installed, ready to go. The new
- Outbounds' external connections include an ADB port, sound in/out,
- a 25 pin SCSI connector, and printer and modem ports. The built-in
- keyboard is a standard size, and the pointing device, now called a
- TrackBar, is an optical version of the IsoPoint with only minor
- functional differences. Apple's notebook systems will have to work
- hard to compete with these impressive products, whose retail
- prices range from $2,529 to $4,299. DynaMac, whose portables we
- featured in January's Macworld Expo issue, was also on hand with
- their computers, but are still not quite shipping the most
- impressive products. At least at this show they had working
- prototypes, rather than empty mock-ups.
-
- The biggest news scoop of the show was from Lotus. All of us
- left-out-in-the-cold registered Jazz users (those of us who
- believed in the concept of integrated software from the start)
- will be able to upgrade to Lotus 1-2-3 for $49.00. Specific
- details aren't available yet, but they'll let us know how to
- upgrade when the product starts shipping. If you've moved since
- you registered your copy of Jazz, be sure to send Lotus a change-
- of-address notice!
-
- Anther notable product being shown is Claris's Resolve
- spreadsheet, one of the few Expo highlights currently shipping.
- Resolve fully supports System 7 features, such as publish and
- subscribe, Apple events, Balloon Help, TrueType and virtual
- memory. Owners of Excel, Lotus 1-2-3, WingZ, Full Impact and
- MacCalc can upgrade for $99, and should contact Claris for
- details.
-
- The best bargain and the real honey of the show was Berkeley
- Systems' More After Dark. MAD includes 26 add-on display modules
- for Berkeley Systems' After Dark screen saver (which you must
- purchase separately, though some resellers are bundling the two at
- an attractive price). An AD updater is included to turn your
- 2.0-or-later copy of After Dark into the present version, 2.0v,
- which is compatible with System 7 and with the new 68040
- accelerator boards and computers. These modules are really
- something else. One of the modules you get for a mere $39.95 is
- Lunatic Fringe, an addicting game by Ben Haller of Solarian II
- fame. It's as good as any space ship game on the market.
- Candidates for Best Modules included Boris, a cute little purring
- cat; Globe, a spinning globe, which can be customized with the
- picture of your choice; Meadow, which creates a flowered meadow as
- it changes through the four seasons; and Mountains, which builds
- 3D ranges to your specifications on different planets. Mowin' Man
- was cute, but remember to turn the sound down if you work in a
- busy office. Another key feature of MAD is Virex-D, a detect-only
- version of Virex, the antivirus utility from Microcom. Virex will
- check your drives while your computer is idle, and put 3-D
- versions of your icons on the screen as it works. The best of the
- best is that fourteen of the fifteen new modules tested fine on a
- Mac Plus running System 6.0.5, including Lunatic Fringe! (Meadow
- required 16 colors or gray-scale.)
-
- StuffIt SpaceMaker from Aladdin Systems was another show stealer.
- This compression program can be configured to automatically
- compress any file on your hard disk. The program will compress
- files which have not been modified in a specified amount of time
- or are flagged with a keyword, in the background. SpaceMaker has
- many features, and like Disk Doubler will compress and decompress
- files on-the-fly. Although it was announced at the show, no
- shipping date was available. It will retail for $59.95. In the
- meantime, I'm pretty pleased with System7-savvy Salient Software's
- Disk Doubler 3.7, available since June, slightly higher-priced at
- $79.95. One Salient bigwig was skeptical of the likelihood of
- Aladdin having an effect on their market, but a more forward-
- thinking marketing rep at Salient felt that the competition
- between Disk Doubler and SpaceMaker could only make the market
- bigger and more exciting to be part of.
-
- One other item of note is Abaton's InterShare, a $179 software
- product which allows modems and other direct-connect serial
- devices to be shared on a LocalTalk, EtherTalk, or TokenTalk
- network. It also allows Abaton's and EMAC's fax modems to be
- shared, with full fax functionality available to network users.
- This presents real hardware cost savings to companies who do not
- want to buy multiple modems for their networks. It contains a
- server application and Chooser client software, and works with
- software that supports the Comm Toolbox. The serial server Mac
- needs to be at least a Mac Plus with at least 1Mb of memory, but
- it need not be a dedicated server; any workstation can serve as a
- device server.
-
- The downturn of the economy was evident in the lack of giveaways.
- Fewer companies than usual handed out buttons, bags, visors, hats,
- or sunglasses (items available in large numbers at previous
- shows). Most giveaways were reserved for the patient few who sat
- through whole demonstrations. The presents for those folks
- included hats, T-shirts, carry bags, and demonstration disks.
- Lotteries at some presentations yielded copies of software, Apple
- System 7 kits, and Apple video tapes. The best giveaway was a
- Lotus 1-2-3 watch. Show-goers liked the stick-on moose which
- Baseline gave to unsuspecting passerbys, and the Talking Moose
- himself was wandering around to liven up the show. Microtech gave
- out an audio CD to anyone who answered a set of questions about
- their products. Rumours that one of the companies gave out
- dehydrated ice cream were true, but which company remains a
- mystery to us! In addition, Digital Vision was taking photos using
- a still video camera and their Computer Eyes video capture board
- and returning a disk based TIFF or PICT image to the show
- participant.
-
- Information from:
- Ilene Hoffman -- Ilene.Hoffman@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
- Fidonet: Ilene Hoffman on 1:101/485
- AOL, AppleLink, & Delphi: IleneH
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- A MultiMedia Bonanza
- --------------------
- Those attending the show to see the latest in video and multimedia
- were not disappointed.
-
- The hit of the show for integrated media professionals came from
- Alias Research Inc., who demonstrated "the world's first freeform
- 3D illustration and design package," Alias Sketch[tm]. Most 3D
- packages require lathing and extruding shapes in multiple windows,
- showing the object's top, bottom and side views. In Sketch,
- everything is created in a single 3D perspective with freeform
- drawing tools. Very cool! Sketch should ship in October according
- to their marketing people, a month or so later if you talk with
- others in the company.
-
- For 2D drawing & illustration, Deneba Software's Canvas 3.0 stood
- out as the winner. The addition of gradient fills, object
- blending, the ability to convert TrueType and Type 1 fonts to
- editable outlines, CMYK and Pantone support and full System 7
- support makes this upgrade a powerhouse. Registered users of any
- version of MacDraw, MacDraft, Illustrator and FreeHand can upgrade
- to Canvas 3.0 for $149. Do it! Upgrades for Canvas owners are $99,
- or $129, depending on the version of Canvas you own.
-
- MacroMind showed its upcoming System 7 savvy upgrade of Director.
- Version 3.0 supports Apple events, the ability to play sounds
- while a movie is loading, better memory management and anti-
- aliasing.
-
- A number of vendors demonstrated QuickTime-compatible versions of
- their software in an Apple suite off the show floor. Acius showed
- a QuickTime 4D database and Gold Disk, Inc. incorporated QuickTime
- movies into its Animation Works program. The hardest hit by
- QuickTime may be those developers who forged ahead of Apple and
- developed their own proprietary compression utilities. Storm
- Technology may survive QuickTime's introduction because its
- Picture Press hardware and software combination offers enormous
- control over how an image is compressed.
-
- The major players in the video display arena treated the crowds to
- much of the same as in previous expos, but bigger, faster, and
- with more colors. RasterOps announced its MediaTime board which
- combines CD quality audio with 24-bit real-time video and graphics
- display. RasterOps also introduced the Expresso, a personal slide
- scanner. Imagine a microscope designed by Krupps that scans 35mm
- slides and puts out an NTSC video image that can be captured with
- any video frame grabbing device. You've just imagined the
- Expresso.
-
- Radius introduced the Ergo:Shield, a custom-fitted glare shield
- that reduces ELF and VLF emissions from their monitors to be in
- compliance with Swedish emission standards.
-
- The longest line at the show wrapped around SuperMac's booth where
- show goers were posing in front of a blue screen waiting to have
- their image overlaid onto one of Faneuil Hall Marketplace to
- create a four second video postcard on disk. SuperMac accomplished
- this with the aid of its VideoSpigot card, which digitizes
- incoming video and stores it in a compressed movie form. These
- movies can be edited together into longer pieces using SuperMac's
- ReelTime software.
-
- MASS Microsystems showed the JPEG & System 7 savvy version of
- their QuickImage 24 video capture card, and a video card that
- outputs flicker-free 8-bit NTSC video
-
- The most impressive video output device at the show, the NewTek
- Video Toaster, does not run on a Macintosh. This amazing device is
- based on a Commodore Amiga and can take multiple live NTSC video
- sources and create broadcast quality transitions between them or
- overlay graphics onto them. It can also read Macintosh PICT and
- EPS files and convert them into broadcast quality video. The
- Toaster comes standard with a 24-bit paint program and a 24-bit 3D
- animation program. All this for $3995. The folks at NewTek are
- working on a version of the software which will control all of the
- features of the Toaster from a Mac. If you need to create high
- quality desktop video but are on a budget, check out the Toaster.
-
- Digital F/X announced upgrades to the Video F/X system that
- include support for A/B roll, non-linear editing, and PICS
- animation. A/B roll is the process where one full motion video
- source transitions in to another using a wipe or a dissolve. This
- ability is one of the most fundamental parts of professional video
- production, yet is not addressed by most Macintosh video
- solutions. In non-linear editing, editors work with digitized
- pieces of video and sound to avoid the time spent waiting for
- video tape machines to shuttle back and forth. It may not sound
- like much to a Mac user, but very few professional video houses
- can offer the sophistication of non-linear editing.
-
- CalComp Inc. has announced a challenge to Wacom's (pronounced
- Wack-com) dominance of the graphics tablet market with the
- introduction of pressure sensitive pens to CalComp's Drawing Board
- II series of graphics tablets. The CalComp pens offer 256 levels
- of pressure compared to Wacom's 64 pressure levels, but Wacom has
- succeeded in getting the developers of all of the major 24-bit
- software to support its product in the past year. If CalComp can
- match Wacom's compatibility, they could have a winner.
-
- The multimedia dud of the show was Intelligent Resources' Video
- Explorer Card. The arrival of this $8000 card has been anxiously
- awaited since its slick demo tape was shown at last year's Boston
- Expo. Now shipping, the card requires RGB video input and output
- rather than the more common composite or S-Video connections.
- Unfortunately, this means that to interface with most pieces of
- video equipment, the card requires an expensive RGB encoder and
- decoder. To offset this deficiency, Intelligent Resources is
- bundling the card with the ElectricImage[tm] Animation System,
- Time Art's Oasis[tm], MacroMind Media Maker[tm], and Letraset's
- LetraStudio and ColorStudio for $8800. Hopefully, Intelligent
- Resources will offer inexpensive, composite NTSC and S-Video input
- and output modules for the Video Explorer in the near future.
-
- Information from:
- Earl Christie -- Earl.Christie@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
- Fidonet: Earl Christie on 1:101/485
- AOL: EarlChr
-
-
- In Conclusion...
- ----------------
- Don't get us wrong, there was lots to see and do at the Macworld
- Expo this time around. A number of nifty new products and a whole
- host of updates to old acquaintances. One of the expected
- bonanzas, though, was in the area of updates that fully supported
- System 7. Too many of the updates are not yet shipping, and of
- those that are, most take advantage of only some of the key
- features: Balloon Help, publish and subscribe, TrueType, Apple
- events, virtual memory, and 32-bit addressing. No doubt next
- January's Macworld Expo in San Francisco will be full of companies
- touting their products' System 7 Savviness, but by then it will be
- old news.
-
- For now, we'll be satisfied with talking about what did make it to
- this Expo. We have lots of products to review in future issues,
- and lots more products that deserve brief mentions, so you can
- count on seeing more information gleaned at the Expo over the next
- few weeks.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
- Ilene Hoffman -- Ilene.Hoffman@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
- Fidonet: Ilene Hoffman on 1:101/485
- AOL, AppleLink, & Delphi: IleneH
-
-
- Reviews/12-Aug-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacUser
- Voice Navigator II, pg. 48
- Adobe Photoshop 2.0, pg. 50
- Two 2D CAD Programs, pg. 54
- Blueprint
- PowerDraw
- Ray Dream Designer, pg. 56
- Text Reference Software, pg. 62
- EndNote Plus
- Bookends Mac
- Publish or Perish
- Image Compression Utilities, pg. 68
- ColorSqueeze
- ImpressIt
- PicturePress
- Spyglass Transform, pg. 75
- StuffIt Deluxe 2.0, pg. 87
- Shortcut 1.5, pg. 87
- MacPro Plus Keyboard, pg. 87
- OverView, pg. 88
- Music Writer, pg. 88
- MyAdvancedLabelMaker, pg. 90
- MyAdvancedMailList, pg. 90
- Last Resort, pg. 92
- Personal Financial Software, pg. 96
- CheckFree 1.5
- CheckWriter II 3.1
- MacMoney 3.5
- Managing Your Money 4.0
- Quicken 1.5
- WealthBuilder 1.0
- Grammar Checkers, pg. 112
- Correct Grammar 2.0
- Grammatik Mac 2.0
- MacProof 3.2.3
- RightWriter 3.1
- Sensible Grammar 1.6.2
- Workgroup Printers, pg. 128
- Apple LaserWriter IINT
- Apple LaserWriter IINTX
- Dataproducts LZR1260i
- Dataproducts LZR1260ess
- GCC BLP IIS
- Kyocera Q-8010
- Panasonic KX-P4455
- QMS PS 810 turbo
- QMS PS 820 turbo
- QMS PS 2210
- Qume CrystalPrint Express
- Texas Instruments microLaser XL PS35
- Xaente Accel-a-Writer II
- Personal Printers, pg. 150
- Apple StyleWriter
- GCC WriteMove
- Hewlett-Packard DeskWriter
- Kodak Diconix M150 Plus
- Apple Personal LaserWriter LS
- GCC PLP II
- GCC PLP IIS
- 10BASET Ethernet Solutions, pg. 174
- too many to list!
-
- * MacWEEK
- FrameMaker 3.0, pg. 105
- Bernoulli 90 Transportable, pg. 105
- Oracle Server, pg. 112
- Panorama II, pg. 114
- QuickDEX II, pg. 114
- Instant Update, pg. 118
- ColorMaster Plus, pg. 120
- Microsoft Project, pg. 126
- Hewlett-Packard IIIP, pg. 134
-
- References:
- MacUser -- Sep-91, Vol. 7, #9
- MacWEEK -- 06-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #27
-
-
- ..
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