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- TidBITS#83/23-Sep-91
- ====================
-
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- In Retrospect
- Claris & Microsoft
- DataClub for Free
- Reviews/23-Sep-91
-
-
- In Retrospect
- -------------
- In the first part of July TidBITS had a full review of Retrospect
- 1.3 that was quite complimentary - heck, it's a good program.
- Since then we've heard more about Retrospect and its developers,
- Dantz Development, that might interest you.
-
- For a while now SuperMac has wanted focus on its graphics hardware
- and to divest itself of its software group. Originally there was
- talk of spinning off a software company, but now it appears that
- SuperMac is selling its products to other companies. SuperMac's
- DiskFit, which has long been a strong player in the low-end backup
- program market, is one of those programs. Luckily for us, the
- original developers, Dantz, are purchasing DiskFit and plan to
- upgrade it to DiskFit Pro (which I believe will include the
- features of Network DiskFit, although I don't know what other new
- features it will include). I presume that Dantz will market
- DiskFit to people who want Finder-readable backups and who don't
- want the complexity or power of Retrospect. Who knows, DiskFit Pro
- may end up costing a bit less than Retrospect. SuperMac will not
- provide technical support for DiskFit after the end of 1991, and
- (unless Dantz has a surprise for us) there will be no more of the
- "df" versions of DiskFit that were free to owners of SuperMac's
- Dataframe hard disks.
-
- We're not sure how Retrospect and DiskFit will differ, but it
- seems clear that Retrospect's main limitations lie in archive
- management. Once you store an item in an archive, all you can do
- is get it out by copying to another volume. In the ideal archiving
- program, you would be able to delete or replace that file, or
- perhaps even read it into a program (although saving directly into
- the archive again would probably be difficult and not all that
- useful). Given Retrospect's abilities at putting files into an
- archive, we'd love to see some management capabilities once the
- files are in that archive. We've heard hints from Dantz that they
- are working on just this sort of capability for Retrospect, so
- look for the next upgrade to provide some interesting new
- features.
-
- All is not perfect in the Retrospect world, and Mark H. Anbinder,
- changing from his TidBITS Baby-sitter hat to his BAKA Tech Support
- hat, sent this note. "Brian Calhoun-Bryant of BAKA Technical
- Support reports that there is a known incompatibility between
- AppleShare 2.01 file server software and the Retrospect Remote
- software. Dantz Development Corporation has confirmed the problem.
- Dantz recommends that Retrospect users should NOT use their Remote
- software to back up an AppleShare file server. Apparently, if the
- server is accessed by an AppleShare client while the remote backup
- is taking place, the computer will almost certainly crash. This is
- true with all versions of Retrospect including 1.2 and 1.3, with
- AppleShare 2.01. Dantz reports that they are working closely with
- Apple on the problem, and Retrospect Remote 1.3 will work fine
- with AppleShare 3.0, expected later this year."
-
- "In the meantime, they recommend that users back up their
- AppleShare file servers by mounting the server at the computer
- where Retrospect is running, and backing it up like any other
- local volume. If the volume is mounted with full administrator
- privileges, then all access information will be backed up as well
- as all files. The only thing that will not be backed up is the
- Server Folder, which contains the server's system software and the
- file server software. Dantz suggests that users should be able to
- back up this folder using the Remote software in the middle of the
- night or at any time when server activity is unlikely."
-
- "Please note that Retrospect 1.3, which is compatible with System
- 7, is a free upgrade for all owners of Retrospect 1.2. If you have
- not yet received it, contact Dantz to confirm that you have been
- registered. Have your serial number(s) handy."
-
- Dantz -- 415/849-0295.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, BAKA Computers Technical Support
- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Rich Long -- long@mcntsh.enet.dec.com
- Steve Lemke -- lemke@radius.com
- Mike Wiese -- mlwiese@mit.edu
- Fabian Ramirez -- Fabian@cup.portal.com
-
-
- Claris & Microsoft
- ------------------
- I'm still getting used to the wealth of computer events in the
- Seattle area. Seattle's dBUG had Claris in to show off ClarisWorks
- and MacDraw Pro a few weeks ago and last Thursday we went to a
- talk by Mr. Bill himself, an event cosponsored by dBUG and the
- Pacific Northwest PC Users Group. Although in both cases Claris
- and Microsoft stuck to the corporate line, there were some
- interesting bits and pieces.
-
- As an aside, I hate taking notes on paper in a darkened room,
- particularly when there's no desk. I've been using InfoGrip's
- MiniBAT palmtop computer for this purpose because the chord
- keyboard allows me to touch type in the dark (soon to be a major
- rock song from TidBITS Productions, "Typing in the Dark"). I'm
- getting better all the time, though I doubt I'll ever be as fast
- on the MiniBAT's keyboard as on a normal QWERTY keyboard because
- the MiniBAT's keys have almost no travel. I can't wait to try the
- BAT, InfoGrip's full chording keyboard, when it becomes available
- for the Mac. The only problem is that my multitasking capabilities
- can't handle Tonya's comments while paying attention and typing on
- the MiniBAT. Serious processing overload...
-
- Interestingly enough, Claris's best seller is MacDraw II, followed
- by FileMaker Pro. They didn't mention where MacWrite II fit into
- that scheme, but they did claim that it was the most popular word
- processor (probably Macintosh word processor) in Japan because of
- the Kanji support. I was slightly surprised to hear of MacDraw's
- popularity because I've been more impressed with Deneba's Canvas
- for much of the limited graphics I've done (mostly room layouts
- and technical illustrations). MacDraw Pro will have some pretty
- impressive new features, which it will need to compete with Canvas
- 3.0. I especially liked the custom gradient palette, which allowed
- you to define a number of custom fills by specifying the light
- source and a range of colors. MacDraw Pro will also sport most of
- the ruler features of MacWrite II, which will make text handling
- far easier than in most graphics programs. Extending MacDraw's
- uses still further is the ability to do presentations, I assume in
- a slide-show type manner, without the menubar showing. Despite
- that ability, a friend at the presentation said that he was
- positive that Claris had used Aldus Persuasion for the electronic
- slide-show we saw. I wonder if MacDraw Pro might still have a few
- bugs :-)?
-
- Resolve was there too, but let's face it, Resolve is no longer
- interesting news. What I did find interesting was ClarisWorks,
- which combines the primary features of the Claris family of
- applications in what appeared to be a small (570K) and fast
- program. The basic concept behind ClarisWorks is that of objects
- on a page, but unlike Microsoft Works for Windows (I haven't seen
- Works on the Mac, but I believe it's similar or even worse), when
- you select a graphic object the menus and palettes change to the
- appropriate tools and you can still see and work with everything
- on the page. The only application not integrated with the rest is
- the communications module, which in some ways must be separate,
- not being production-oriented. It is based on the Comm Toolbox,
- and although I suspect it is fairly simple, the CTB will provide a
- good bit of power. ClarisWorks is due in December, and will
- probably be the next Claris application to appear since MacDraw
- Pro and MacWrite Pro and the next version of FileMaker Pro
- certainly won't be available until sometime next year.
-
- After Bill's talk, Microsoft showed off Microsoft Works for
- Windows and Microsoft Publisher for Windows, both of which were
- announced last week. WinWorks seemed capable, but broke little new
- ground and wasn't nearly as smooth as ClarisWorks. The base page
- looked about the same, but if you double-clicked on a spreadsheet
- object to work on it, a separate window opened up with all of the
- spreadsheet tools and menus. Clumsier, but Works works. Sorry.
-
- The hit of the evening wasn't even Mr. Bill telling a member of
- the audience that he wouldn't buy the financially troubled Seattle
- Mariners baseball team or that he'd never spent more than maybe
- $22 on a pizza - an answer I didn't understand. I must have missed
- a story about how Bill went on a rampage and would spend hundreds
- of dollars on a black olive, onion, and anchovy pizza, his
- favorite. No, the best part was when the product manager of
- Microsoft Publisher for Windows showed off the final Wizard in
- Publisher. Let me explain Wizards. They are essentially pre-
- installed macros (I don't know if you can make your own as well)
- that step the user through a series of questions en route to a
- certain type of layout or effect. The interface was excellent,
- with graphical representations of your choices at every step.
- First, she showed a greeting card Wizard (which a friend termed
- "Print Shop on steroids"), a newsletter Wizard, and a Wizard for
- quickly creating drop caps. The final Wizard, though, was the best
- because it walked you through the steps needed to create a number
- of types of paper airplanes. You could choose various effects and
- decals, and when you were done it would print out a sheet of paper
- with the folding lines marked along with either printed or on-
- screen instructions. The one thing you couldn't add was a radio -
- the program essentially told you to get real. Apparently an
- enthusiastic intern created the airplane Wizard, and it wasn't
- clear if Mr. Bill knew that the product manager had decided to
- leave it in the shipping version. I don't think Publisher had many
- high-end features (no kerning to the millionth of a point or
- virtual leading), and they wouldn't say whether or not they were
- planning on a Macintosh version, which more or less implies that
- they're not at the moment. There was some talk about porting
- Visual Basic to the Mac, though, and that would be interesting to
- see.
-
- Since the event was cosponsored by Mac and PC users groups, Bill
- was careful not to offend either party by making disparaging
- comments about either Apple or IBM. He also garnered a lot of
- immediate good will with the giveaway - as you walked in, user
- group staffers accosted you with the terse question, "Mac? IBM?"
- and when you responded, they happily shoved a copy of the
- appropriate Flight Simulator into your hands. I can't wait to get
- my copy of HyperCard 2.1 so I can crash a plane into the Golden
- Gate bridge via Apple Events. Apparently they got the shrink
- wrapped copies of the Mac version that day - the project manager
- for Flight Simulator saw his first shrink-wrapped box that night.
- All in the name of the possibly mythical Big-But-Not-Bad Wolf.
-
- It was the fairly standard song and dance, I gather, and Bill
- didn't really break any new ground. But then again, Microsoft is
- not in business to break new ground, but instead to make lots of
- money harvesting the crops. There was a hint that Microsoft will
- be branching out into innovation a bit more at some point, since
- it has started a new research and development group and is busy
- hiring as many well-known scientists as it can, including the
- designer of the Mach operating system used in the NeXT. Still, it
- was interesting to hear the company line straight from the man
- himself, and I'll be curious to hear future versions of the
- company line at later talks (as was one developer who asked if
- Windows was really the operating system Microsoft was going to
- push now, since the last time he'd asked the answer had been
- OS/2).
-
- Information from:
- Claris reps
- Bill Gates
- Microsoft Program Managers
-
-
- DataClub for Free
- -----------------
- Just before we left Ithaca, International Business Software
- started a great deal on a DataClub whereby for some low price
- (around $75, if I remember correctly) you could get a three-user
- pack of DataClub along with WriteNow, Panorama, and MacCalc, I
- think. At the time, I decided not to mention the deal in TidBITS
- because the flyer claimed that not just everyone was eligible.
- However, I was talking to the press agent for IBS recently, and
- she said that she didn't think that IBS was checking closely, so
- if you're interested in getting DataClub and some other good entry
- level software, it's worth giving them a call and pretending you
- got one of those flyers. I don't know how much longer the deal
- will go on, so call soon or don't complain.
-
- $75 is a good price, sure, but what if you'd prefer not to pay
- anything at all? Piracy is out (and causes tooth decay), but if
- you work with a non-profit organization, IBS is giving away more
- of those three-user packs for free. You can only get one, and they
- only have 3000 to give away, but if you're fast and lucky you
- might still get one. I heard about the deal late Friday afternoon,
- so you do have a pretty good chance of getting your hands on a
- copy if you call as soon as you read this.
-
- Although IBS comes up smelling like the proverbial rose with all
- these deals, you do have to realize that you are supporting
- guerilla marketing. By offering great prices and free packages,
- even if only for a short time, IBS gets a lot of copies of
- DataClub out to the market where people can see that they are
- useful. In addition, since you need to buy another package if you
- want to add more than three pseudo-server Macs to your DataClub
- network (you can have as many clients as you want since DataClub
- clients use the AppleShare client software on your system disks),
- IBS is likely to rack up yet more sales at a higher price. I
- mention this partly because I do think people should be aware of
- how they've been targeted, and partly because I subscribe to the
- Usenet theory of commercialism: there's nothing wrong with it as
- long as the community good outweighs the hassle of reading
- advertising.
-
- Another thing you should keep in mind is that the currently
- shipping version of DataClub is not completely compatible with
- System 7. System 7 Macs can be clients on a DataClub network, but
- they can't contribute their hard disk space. IBS has slated a
- System 7-compatible version for the end of September, and as I
- said in a previous article a few months ago, it will be slightly
- different in that there will be two versions, DataClub Classic and
- DataClub Elite. DataClub Elite will take over the dedicated-server
- features of the current version, and DataClub Classic will retain
- the non-dedicated parts. That will allow you to create a single
- network virtual volume by dedicating one or more Macs to DataClub
- as well as having some non-dedicated Macs helping out. There will
- be a few more neat features, like significant speed increases (up
- to four times faster), remote administration tools (ideal for
- those headless dedicated servers), and load-balancing tools for
- the administrator to ensure that you squeeze every last bit of
- performance out of your network.
-
- IBS -- 800/733-2822 -- 800/522-5939
-
- Information from:
- Carrie Wong -- Niehaus PR (for IBS)
- IBS propaganda -- IBSUS@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Reviews/23-Sep-91
- -----------------
-
- * BYTE
- Grammar Checkers, pg. 238
- Correct Grammar 2.0
- Grammatik Mac 2.0
- RightWriter for the Mac 3.10
- Sensible Grammar 1.6.2
-
- References:
- BYTE -- Aug-91
-
-
- ..
-
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