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- TidBITS#78/26-Aug-91
- ====================
-
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/26-Aug-91
- ExpoBITS/26-Aug-91
- Adobe & Apple & Ted & Alice
- Macs Galore!
- Reviews/26-Aug-91
-
-
- MailBITS/26-Aug-91
- ------------------
- TidBITS readers are nothing if not opinionated! Reader Andrew
- Lewis commented on our recent article about the Help Menu that the
- "Apple propaganda" seemed a bit much for TidBITS, and that [as Ken
- Hancock pointed out last issue] SuperClock 3.9 works fine with
- System 7 and the Help Menu anyway. Andrew's got a point, but it's
- important to realize that, with a company the size of Apple, not
- everyone is a propagandist! Apple employee Rick Holzgrafe, who
- wrote the original article, is "just" a System 7 user, as entitled
- to an opinion as any of us. :-)
-
- Another opinion-holder is Mike Kobb, who was astounded at Earl
- Christie's evaluation of Intelligent Resources' Video Explorer
- Card as the "multimedia dud" of the recent Macworld Expo. Mike
- wrote that "I spent about a half hour at the booth, and I thought
- it was a stupendous product. The quality was tremendous, and the
- modularity of the product means that you can not only add S-Video
- and composite input modules, but also mix-and-match input
- products, so you can use one RGB source and one S-Video, etc.
- Furthermore, the company is working on a non-linear effects board,
- that will be able to wrap video onto spheres, and other neat
- things. Yes, it's expensive, but with the software bundle, it's
- almost a bargain. Yes, it only does RGB right now, but that'll be
- remedied soon." Phew! Imagine how adamant Mike would be about this
- if it weren't for those two "Yes, buts" at the end. Just goes to
- show you that no two people will agree on the significance and
- value of every product that comes down the road.
-
- Michael Lee, a TidBITS reader and fellow fan of the space program,
- left a message while logged onto Memory Alpha BBS to retrieve the
- file containing details about this month's Atlantis mission and
- its Macintosh-based experiments. Michael says that the folks at
- NASA Spacelink, a free on-line service provided by NASA which you
- can reach by modem at 205/895-0028 (300-2400 bps, N-8-1 settings),
- hope to post MacSPOC, the software mentioned last week, so that
- Mac users can download it soon. Spacelink is located at NASA's
- Huntsville, Alabama facility, and is lots of fun to poke through.
- I spent some time looking through the press releases, technical
- documents, programs, and graphics files that are available on-
- line, and wish I had free long distance phone service so I could
- afford to spend more time exploring!
-
- Apologies to those of you who depend on comp.sys.mac.digest to get
- your weekly TidBITS fix. The distribution of issue 77 didn't seem
- to go as smoothly as usual; most sites only got the first few
- lines of the issue's index, though a varying amount reached each
- site. Issue 77 will be reposted shortly, and as usual, you're
- welcome to take advantage of the other distribution sites if
- you're in a rush, or if such things happen in the future. Two good
- bets are America Online and Memory Alpha BBS, as neither depends
- on the intricacies of the Internet. Anyway, my thanks to all of
- you who reported the distribution problem this week, and I
- appreciate your patience.
-
- Information from:
- Andrew Lewis -- AOL: Andrew El
- Mike Kobb -- mjkobb@media-lab.media.mit.edu
- Michael Lee -- Michael_Lee@memory.ithaca.ny.us
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- ExpoBITS/26-Aug-91
- ------------------
- As we promised (threatened?) at the end of our special Macworld
- Expo issue two weeks ago, there's more to say about the Expo that
- just didn't fit. Here's a little bit more material from Ilene
- Hoffman's Expo coverage that doesn't need a special issue but
- deserves mentioning.
-
-
- The best new utility for power users at the show was Hard Disk
- Toolkit (HDT), a SCSI formatting utility from hard drive
- manufacturer FWB, Inc. This powerful tool, similar in concept to
- SilverLining, LaCie's universal formatter, will ship within the
- next few weeks. HDT includes a heap fixing tool, flexible
- partitioning, "impenetrable password protection," 15 diagnostic
- tests, bench tests for transfer rates, seek, access, and read
- times. The test results are stored in a library for later use. In
- addition, over 150 different SCSI-1 and SCSI-2 parameters are
- supported. You can even edit your drive's microcode! The manual is
- a comprehensive guide to SCSI and will be over 100 pages thick.
- HDT supports AppleShare, A/UX, and System 7, but its minimum
- requirements are one megabyte of RAM and System 6.0.2 or higher.
- It will retail for about $199.00. HDT gets Ilene's vote for the
- hottest product at the show.
-
- Golden Triangle will release another impressive SCSI utility later
- in the year. DiskMaker, also with full System 7.0 compatibility,
- includes one button installation, password protection with an
- emergency override, partitioning, and an easy to use control
- panel. It is a good consumer product for those who do not need all
- the features of the Hard Disk Toolkit. The suggested retail price
- is $89.00.
-
- The best general utility at the show was the update for HAND-Off
- II from Connectix. The desktop utility has five major features
- including pop-up menus to launch applications, open files, or open
- groups of applications and files (called Briefcases); SuperMenu,
- which allows for hierarchical System 7 Apple menu access like the
- old DAMenuz hack; automatic application substitution, which is
- invaluable for those without MacWrite for opening read-me files;
- AutoHide, which hides applications as they switch to the
- background to keep your desktop tidy; and automatic sound and
- color depth switching. Fred Hollander, the developer, was on hand
- to demonstrate his latest version.
-
- Information from:
- Ilene Hoffman -- America Online: IleneH
-
-
- Adobe & Apple & Ted & Alice
- ---------------------------
- As if the recent pendulum-like events in the Soviet Union weren't
- confusing enough, Apple and Adobe, the on-again, off-again
- adversaries in the type wars, have announced that they've signed a
- letter of intent that calls for the inclusion of Adobe Type 1 font
- technology within a future version of System 7.
-
- Apple's 20 August press release states that the rasterizer
- technology that has been sold as Adobe Type Manager since October
- of 1989 will soon be incorporated into the Macintosh system
- software. Not surprisingly, Apple plans to continue to support the
- TrueType format, which should engender a sigh of relief from the
- font vendors who have devoted the last year or so to creating
- TrueType product lines to go alongside their Type 1 lines.
-
- The inclusion of Adobe technology in Apple's system software means
- that users will have equal access to both common font formats when
- using their Macs and their favorite software, according to Charles
- Geschke, Adobe's president and chief operating officer. The press
- release doesn't mention Adobe CEO John Warnock, whose adversarial
- approach to the issue of separate font technologies fueled the
- "font wars" that we've been watching over the last couple of
- years.
-
- "Implementation of the letter of intent is contingent on the
- execution of definitive contracts," the press release says, but is
- carefully vague on the subject of just when we can expect to see
- Type 1 rasterizing within System 7. Of more immediate interest is
- the statement that Apple plans to make the ATM software and a core
- set of Type 1 fonts available to purchasers of Macintosh systems
- and Apple printers in the meantime, through an "interim offer,"
- which will be available in the Fall of 1991.
-
- Adobe Type Manager is already available very inexpensively in
- several ways. The software itself (with its four included font
- families) is available from dealers and mail-order houses for
- about $60, but it's also available bundled along with an
- increasing number of graphics and font technology products, such
- as Adobe's Type On Call CD-ROM, PhotoShop, and Illustrator, and
- third party products such as the FontCard NTX from Sonnet
- Technologies, the Kodak Diconix M150 Plus printer, and the
- assorted CD-ROM drive bundles that also include Type On Call. The
- FontCard NTX is probably the most interesting of those; more on
- that later. It's certainly nice, though, to hear that the same
- technology will be made available to users in a less-expensive,
- better-integrated manner.
-
- This is the kind of technological cooperation that can only
- benefit the end user. There's little danger that Adobe, the leader
- in electronic font technology, will stop working on its planned
- innovations, such as the FontMaster technology that promises
- automatic font weighting as simply as Type 1 fonts provide font
- scaling. On the contrary, this agreement should boost Adobe's
- position in the font arena and give it the motivation to keep
- moving. The concern? Despite Apple's promise to continue its
- support for TrueType, it's clear that the company has lost some of
- its enthusiasm for TrueType as the be-all and end-all of font
- technologies. What will TrueType partner Microsoft think about all
- this? If we find out, we'll be sure to let you know.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Apple press release
-
-
- Macs Galore!
- ------------
- Thanks to MacWEEK and their ability to sniff out the facts ahead
- of time, we're all starting to get some glimpses of this fall's
- slate of new Macintosh computers. The article in last Tuesday's
- MacWEEK gives us new names for the products we've been expecting,
- which include two 68040 Macs, a 68030 Classic, and three new
- portable Macs.
-
- The new portables, the first Apple computers that can really be
- called notebooks, are called PowerBooks. They fold down to 8.5 by
- 11 inches, and the lower section includes a keyboard and a
- trackball placed below the keyboard. Apparently some testers have
- expressed some discomfort due to the trackball's placement, but on
- an eleven-inch panel, there's a limit to the number of places you
- can put a trackball! Obviously having to have a separate mouse
- would not do.
-
- Power users won't be disappointed by the raw power of Apple's '040
- offerings, the Mac Quadra 700 and its big brother, the Quadra 900.
- These are the "Desktop" and "Tower" '040 Macs from earlier
- reports, with snazzier names than the "Macintosh IIex" that had
- been rumoured. One thing the MacWEEK article neglects to mention
- about these machines is the significance of their names. The
- "Quadra" name, from the Latin for the number four, would seem to
- be in atonement for the ill-fated Apple /// computer. Since the
- flop of the Apple ]['s would-be successor and business
- counterpart, Apple has quietly vowed never to name another
- computer with the number "three." It would have sounded silly to
- have a Macintosh IV without having had a Mac III, so they
- presumably did the next best thing and skirted the issue with some
- linguistic fiddling.
-
- The least impressive of the fall's batch will be the Macintosh
- Classic II, a 68030 version of last fall's enormously-successful
- Mac Classic. This machine should really be replacing the Mac
- Classic, rather than the SE/30. With no expansion slot and no new
- features, the Classic II is hardly going to fill the void left
- when the SE/30 is discontinued. The void this machine will more
- likely fill is that created by the Classic itself, that of real
- computing power for the masses. People who've been considering a
- Classic would do well to wait for this new machine, with its
- rumoured retail price of $1900, and those who didn't wait will be
- pleased to learn that an upgrade from Classic to Classic II is
- expected.
-
- Along with two new printers, these six computers represent the
- largest new-product offering from Apple in a long, long time, if
- not ever. They show Apple's return to its commitment to the high
- end, without the lack of attention to the low end that some had
- feared would accompany the '040 Macs. A good sign in an industry
- where diversity in the marketplace is critical.
-
- Information from:
- MacWEEK
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 20-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #29, pg. 1
-
-
- Reviews/26-Aug-91
- -----------------
-
- * InfoWorld
- PixelPaint Professional 2.0, pg. 61
-
- * MacWEEK
- Address Express, pg. 35
- PacerTerm, pg. 35
- JAG, pg. 36
- Active Memory, pg. 36
- SideWinder EasyServer, pg. 38
- 4th Dimension add-ons, pg. 38
- 4D Calc
- 4D Write
- Aldus PrePrint 1.5, pg. 40
-
- References:
- InfoWorld -- 19-Aug-91, Vol. 13, #33
- MacWEEK -- 20-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #29
-
-
- ..
-
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