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- TidBITS#79/02-Sep-91
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
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-
- For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
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- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/02-Sep-91
- dBUGing
- Got Those OS Blues
- Reviews/02-Sep-91
-
-
- MailBITS/02-Sep-91
- ------------------
- Well, I'm back, more or less. I won't completely take over until I
- get my network connections to the rest of the civilized (read:
- electronic) world up and running (note that the address below may
- not work, and I should have a better one soon), and it's taking a
- long time for even the snail mail to return to normal. Until then,
- I hope Mark can continue the wonderful job he's doing with
- TidBITS. I'll try to help out by writing about what I can,
- although until my network connections come back up I feel as
- though I'm treading water in an empty sea of information.
- Pathetic, isn't it, what happens to an info-junkie deprived of his
- daily fix? In the meantime, I'm handling mundane details, working
- on a new business card, whipping up a "We've Moved" postcard to
- send to the companies with whom I correspond, trying to get in
- shape for a run/bike biathlon, and generally goofing off. I hope
- to write a review issue or two for some of the programs I've been
- working with (such as Storyspace from Eastgate Systems, Timeslips
- III from Timeslips, uAccess from ICE Engineering, and ShortCut 1.5
- from Aladdin [actually I'm waiting to see Super Boomerang 3.0, at
- which point I'll compare the two]).
-
- Mark here, again. Adam has done the lion's share of the writing
- for this Labor Day issue, which gives me the chance to "sit back
- and relax," at least relatively speaking. :-) While I've still got
- this handy soapbox under my feet, I'd like to take this
- opportunity to thank all those of you who've helped me with
- TidBITS over the last several weeks. You writers, reporters,
- advisors, proofreaders, and commentators (a polite word for
- kibbitzers) know who you are!
-
- Recent reports from various sources, while we're on the subject of
- kibbitzers, have said that despite the rumoured supply of 32-bit
- clean ROMs sitting unused in cardboard cases at Apple, the company
- has no plans to do a simple 32-bit clean ROM release. Any
- potential ROM upgrade, it's been decided, would have to include
- far more in the way of improved functionality or performance. What
- might that entail? Well, network startup functionality like that
- found in prototype form on the Classic's ROM would be a good bet,
- allowing Macs to start up from a network file server without a
- local floppy disk or hard disk. We could also expect to see more
- of the Macintosh Toolbox included, especially the new parts of the
- toolbox that arrived with System 7. This would mean vastly
- improved performance in these parts of the operating system that
- are otherwise doomed always to execute from disk rather than from
- firmware. In the meantime, Apple may release memory management
- software that, like MODE32 from Connectix, would patch the unclean
- parts of the existing ROMs.
-
- Reader Andrew Lewis wasn't quite finished with his comments on the
- menu-bar clock issue. He adds, "Small clocks leave a sticky
- buildup. If you are going to take that route, you might as well
- try mounting a larger clock near that line of sight behind your
- computer. SuperClock is just too useful, more so than many menu
- bar menus!"
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- polari!tidbits!ace@sumax.seattleu.edu
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
- Pythaeus
- Andrew Lewis -- AOL: Andrew El
-
-
- dBUGing
- -------
- Recently, I went to the local Macintosh Users' Group meeting here
- in Seattle. dBUG (for downtown Business Users' Group) as it's
- called, is ever so slightly different from MUGWUMP (Macintosh
- Users' Group for Writers and Users of Macintosh Programs, or
- something similar), the users' group in Ithaca. I think MUGWUMP's
- membership has been on the rise recently, thanks in part to the
- efforts of president Mark Anbinder, who you all know, and another
- friend, Henning Pape-Santos. Still, Mark and Henning have only
- managed to increase the membership list up to about 75, whereas
- the single dBUG meeting I went to had a poor attendance of only
- about 200, and the hotel hosting the event provided baked potatoes
- and ice cream for all present. Now that's the sort of treatment I
- can handle! Hewlett Packard and Iomega (makers of the Bernoulli
- drives) presented their latest products and gave one of each away.
- I don't know about you, but I would have been very happy to win a
- Bernoulli 90 MB removable drive or a DeskWriter C.
-
- Unfortunately, I didn't even win the dinner for two from the hotel
- or one of the various t-shirts that dBUG raffled off, but I did
- have a chance to see the DeskWriter C, a $1095 printer which I
- suspect will become wildly popular. It's basically a DeskWriter,
- which is already wildly popular, but as the "C" in its name
- indicates, it can also print in color. Unlike most color printers,
- though, the DeskWriter C uses both black and color ink cartridges,
- so if you're printing straight text, just pop in a black cartridge
- and print away. You can't switch between cartridges in the middle
- of a page, which means that if you are mixing color and black text
- that the color black (if black can be considered a color and not
- the absence of color) isn't quite as dark as the black from the
- black cartridge. It's so easy to switch cartridges on the
- DeskWriter C (just like switching them on the DeskWriter), so it
- shouldn't be a big deal to change them. The speed of printing in
- color is acceptable, though not impressive, at four minutes per
- page. Printing in black goes at the same speed as printing on a
- normal DeskWriter, approximately 1 - 2 pages per minute. From the
- samples I saw, the color output of the DeskWriter looks
- attractive, although not quite as bright as the output from HP's
- PaintWriter (which costs less at $995 list but only does 180 dpi
- and requires special paper).
-
- The DeskWriter C's print quality at 300 dpi looks great, as you
- would expect from a DeskWriter. Considering that the DeskWriter
- (which will stick around) lists for $729 and sells for about $500,
- I expect the DeskWriter C to sell for between $700 and $800. As
- far as other details go, the black cartridge is the same as the
- DeskWriter's and gives you 500 pages for $20, whereas the color
- cartridge (which you can't use in the DeskWriter, by the way) is
- $35 for 300 pages. Also note that the color ink is water-soluble,
- so don't put printouts through the washing machine. If you're
- currently buying a new printer and are interested in color as well
- as high quality text, it doesn't look like you can do any better
- than a DeskWriter C. HP also offers $450 upgrade that you get
- directly from HP, but it almost might be worth selling your
- DeskWriter used and buying a new DeskWriter C.
-
- Iomega had a slightly harder time of it even though they showed a
- snazzy electronically-generated videotape presenting the Bernoulli
- 90 MB series of removable hard drives. That's because removable
- hard drives don't produce anything, and good ones are measured
- primarily by their speeds, capacities, and reliability. If you are
- thinking about purchasing a removable cartridge drive, though, the
- Bernoullis appear to be contenders. They feature decent speed with
- 19 millisecond access time (in theory, it's 13 milliseconds if you
- use Iomega's caching software), a full 90 MB of space on each
- disk, which are a tad pricey at $229 each and can only be bought
- in packs of three, and the best reliability technology, in theory.
-
- I say "in theory" because even though I appreciate the theory
- behind the Bernoulli system (a floppy rises up to meet the
- read/write head and falls down if anything such as a piece of dust
- interrupts the airflow), when I asked on Usenet about experiences
- with the Bernoullis, people said that they were not significantly
- more reliable in day to day use than the cheaper SyQuests. The 90
- MB Bernoullis and the 88 MB SyQuests haven't been out long enough
- to make a comparison, but my impression is that both work well,
- and now that the Bernoulli price has dropped ($800 mail order),
- you won't go wrong with either. Both Bernoullis and SyQuests can
- read the 44 MB disks of their previous versions, which is fine for
- already archived files, but isn't of much use if you used those
- existing disks as a read/write medium frequently. One final note:
- Iomega has a trade-up deal on any previous product of theirs or
- any other company's removable hard drive that allows you to send
- in your old drive and get a new Bernoulli 90 for $725. Certainly
- worth doing if you've got some of those old 10 MB Bernoulli drives
- around and don't know what to do with them. Just call the number
- below for more information through October 31st, 1991.
-
- Hewlett Packard -- 800/752-0900
- Iomega -- 800/456-5522
-
- Information from:
- HP & Iomega propaganda & reps
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 06-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #27, pg. 5
-
-
- Got Those OS Blues
- ------------------
- During some of the information-free contemplation that I've been
- forced to perform recently, I've come to what might be an
- important conclusion. Alternately, it might be completely trivial,
- but I can't tell yet. I've realized that all this warring in the
- PC world primarily over operating systems is wholly bogus and
- might even be something of a ruse on the part of Microsoft and IBM
- to throw the FTC off the scent.
-
- Look at it this way. An operating system provides certain
- capabilities to the application software running on top of it and
- arbitrates between the hardware and the applications. I'm sure
- that's a far too simple definition of an operating system, but
- I've never taken any Computer Science courses, so it's the best I
- can do. Now, DOS has numerous idiotic limitations, but it also has
- a number of good features. For one, it's small. Two, it's not very
- big. Three, it doesn't take up a lot of disk space. Four, it
- doesn't use a lot of memory. I could go on like this for a while
- because it's easy to slam on DOS. No challenge whatsoever. It's
- also fun to chortle loudly whenever you hear someone raving about
- how they managed to get another 3141 bytes of memory under the
- 640K barrier.
-
- Now take Windows. It runs on top of DOS, so there are certain
- limitations it has to patch after the fact, most notably the
- memory problems. However, because Windows is only an environment
- shell and not a full operating system, it must by default be
- slower and clumsier than a true OS. Windows does provide
- multitasking, but in the cooperative form used by the Mac rather
- than the preemptive form used by Unix (a "real" operating system,
- if you talk to a Unix person). Curiously enough, although Apple
- had good reason to use cooperative multitasking to preserve old
- programs that wanted the entire machine, Microsoft didn't
- particularly, considering the fact that there was almost no
- software for Windows when 3.0 came out and most of that was
- heavily rewritten for 3.0 anyway. OS/2, in contrast, is a bit more
- real of an operating system in that it has its own, more
- efficient, file system, preemptive multitasking, no memory
- limitations, and RAM-hungry hardware requirements. Do note that
- although Microsoft has gone on an OS/2 diet, many programmers and
- power users at Microsoft still use OS/2 on their machines -
- they've got the memory and the processors to run it and prefer to
- avoid Windows.
-
- The products waiting in the wings then, are OS/2 2.0 (primarily
- from IBM) and Windows NT from Microsoft. There's also been some
- talk about what Microsoft will put in DOS 6.0, and there's a
- 32-bit version Windows that will run on top of DOS 6.0 for the
- common person. OS/2 2.0 is in beta testing now, and provides all
- that previous versions of OS/2 did with the promise from IBM that
- it will run DOS apps better than DOS and Windows apps better than
- Windows. Windows NT, which is not quite based on the Mach kernel
- that NeXTstep uses, will run DOS and Windows apps too, as well as
- provide everything that OS/2 will. And, like OS/2, Windows NT will
- be power-hungry, requiring 8 MB of RAM and a fast 386 at minimum.
- DOS 6.0, similarly, is supposed to support preemptive
- multitasking, a flat memory model that removes the 640K barrier, a
- new, more efficient file system, and better networking support.
- Gee, does this sound familiar?
-
- So here's my perhaps not so amazing revelation. All these
- operating systems are basically the same thing with several
- different names. Now I know that this isn't literally true since
- they have different kernels, but it makes it easy for Microsoft to
- take the hard line "There will be no OS/2 3.0 (unless we decide we
- like IBM again)!" Sure, there won't be an OS/2 3.0, but any of the
- code that was going to go into OS/2 3.0 that might be useful very
- well may make its way into Windows NT and perhaps DOS 6.0, and so
- on. Code transfers may not have specifically happened, but the
- concepts and high level utilities would certainly make the move.
- After all, Microsoft didn't dissolve the OS/2 group, they just
- transferred them to the Windows NT group (OS/2 programmers never
- die, they're just forced to work on Windows :-)).
-
- Do keep in mind that IBM and Microsoft have heavy-duty cross-
- licensing agreements that basically give them free and constant
- access to each other's work. IBM has had Windows 3.1 betas for
- some time, and I'm sure Microsoft has picked through the source
- code to OS/2 2.0 to its heart's content. Neither company can
- surprise the other (and if it did happen, an immediate salvo of
- lawyers would be on the launch pad). The problem in all this OS
- confusion is that users may be hard put to decide which OS to use.
- They all do the same things and they all run the same software.
- Whichever operating system PC users pick, Microsoft doesn't much
- care at this point. Windows 3.0 and the soon-to-be-released 3.1
- command the PC market so few developers will develop native OS/2
- programs and for every sale of OS/2, Microsoft will probably sell
- a copy of Word or Excel and will pick up some royalties from IBM
- directly. Talk about getting 'em coming and going! My main point
- here is that given the similarities between these operating
- systems, there's not really all that much to worry about until
- they've all been out and the various pros and cons in specific
- situations become clear. Now I promise to shut up about PC
- operating systems for some time, or until something mildly
- interesting happens.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Reviews/02-Sep-91
- -----------------
-
- * Macworld
- 8-bit color monitor systems, pg. 114
- Apple Macintosh 12" RGB
- AppleColor High Resolution 13" RGB
- CalComp DrawingCard 2-Page
- Cutting Edge 20" Trinitron
- E-Machines ColorPage T16
- E-Machines T19
- E-Machines TX
- Ehman 20" Trinitron
- Generation Systems Designer/8 20"
- MegaGraphics 2008/16"
- MegaGraphics 2008/19"
- Mirror Technologies ProView/8
- Nutmeg 19 Color System
- PCPC II 19" Display System
- Radius Color Display
- Radius Color Display/21
- Radius Color Pivot
- RasterOps Business Color System
- RasterOps 8LC System
- RasterOps 8XLi System
- Sigma Designs ColorMax Aug-24
- SuperMac 16" Trinitron
- SuperMac 19" Dual Mode Trinitron
- SuperMac 19" SuperMatch Color Display
- SuperMac 21" SuperMatch Two Page Color Display
- Gray-scale Scanners, pg. 146
- Abaton Scan 300/GS
- Advanced Vision Research AVR 3000/GS Plus
- Agfa Compugraphic Focus II GSE
- Apple Scanner
- Canon IX-30F
- Dest PC Scan 3000
- Hewlett-Packard HP ScanJet Plus
- Pentax IQ Scan
- Prime Option Phovos 600GS
- Thunderware ThunderScan Plus
- Truvel TZ-3
- Umax Technologies UG80 Grayscale
- Xerox GS Plus
- NEC PC-VCR, pg. 154
- Kensington PassProof, pg. 155
- American Heritage Electronic Dictionary 1.0, pg. 156
- FontMonger 1.0.3, pg. 162
- 24-bit Video-Image Capture Boards, pg. 164
- ColorSnap 32+
- QuickImage 24
- Multiple-Resolution Monitors, pg. 166
- L-View Multi-Mode
- QuickView Z21
- NumberMaze Decimals & Fractions 1.01, pg. 173
- LabView 2, pg. 175
- Educational Simulation Games, pg. 176
- The Oregon Trail
- Wagon Train 1848
- Spaceship Warlock, pg. 180
- Masquerade 1.1, pg. 182
- CD-ROM Drives, pg. 184
- Chinon CDA-431
- PLI CD-ROM
- TopDown 3.0, pg. 186
- Earl Weaver Baseball 1.5, pg. 186
- Mac-to-Mac 1.0.1, pg. 191
- M.Y.O.B. 2.0, pg. 193
- FlexiTrace 1.0.1, pg. 195
- Shareware Productivity Enhancers, pg. 197
- Switch Boot 1.0
- Compact Pro 1.30
- Pixel-Flipper 1.3
- RamDisk + 2.11
- AppDisk 1.2
- MaxAppleZoom 1.3
- QuitFinder FKEY 1.2
- SCSIInfo
- SCSIProbe
- Temperament 2.0
-
- References:
- Macworld -- Oct-91, Vol. 8, #10
-
-
- ..
-
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