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- TidBITS#85/30-Sep-91
- ====================
-
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-
- Topics:
- NewsBITS/30-Sep-91
- Installer Hell
- UGTV Show
- DigiGraf Goes Freeware
- Reviews/30-Sep-91
-
-
- NewsBITS/30-Sep-91
- ------------------
- A quick recommendation. If you are interested in the future of the
- computer industry and electronic technology, read the September
- 1991 issue of Scientific American. I haven't finished mine yet,
- but it has numerous interesting articles by luminaries in the
- field.
-
- Jasmine has toppled again, and this time its parent company won't
- prop it up with extra money. You always hear about (American)
- companies filing for Chapter 11, which means that they're bankrupt
- but are planning to recover and stay in business. Jasmine did that
- last time, but this time they're going for Chapter 7, which means
- that the executives are heading for the border. Not really, that's
- the protection afforded by incorporating, but Jasmine is
- liquidated. I'm sure a pithy quote by Arnold Schwarzenegger would
- be appropriate here if it weren't for all the customers who are in
- danger of being crushed as Jasmine falls. Apparently Jasmine has
- no plans to return the drives it has in for repair, and it is
- still accepting (well, throwing in a corner) drives that come in
- for repair. It's not that they're being sleazy - it's just that
- there's no one working, and no money to pay anyone to do so. The
- moral of the story is: Avoid Jasmine! Do not send them anything!
- Do not pass Go! Do not collect on your warranty! For those of you
- who have bad drives from Rodime PLC in Scotland (I'd guess that
- mostly European users are affected), don't send them back for
- repair either. At least one person has yet to receive confirmation
- of receipt of his drive, sent in some weeks ago, and Rodime PLC
- has announced that it will cease manufacturing operations. Rodime
- PLC is separate from Rodime Systems, Inc., of Boca Raton, FL,
- which is why US Rodime users have less to fear. Several companies,
- including DriveSavers and Mipro III, will recover dead drives for
- a fee, so it's worth talking to them if you are in serious need. I
- have no experience with any of these companies, and I'm sure there
- are others, so check into it before sending in your drive. See
- below for numbers.
-
- Mark H. Anbinder writes, "MacTCP version 1.1, which is System 7
- compatible, is now shipping from APDA. To order, customers can
- call APDA at 800/282-2732. The single-user price is $100. APDA
- will send MacTCP version 1.1 free of charge to current MacTCP
- Commercial Distribution and Internal Use licensees. For more
- information on licensing MacTCP, contact Software Licensing at
- 408/974-4667."
-
- There's been concern about a minor ROM bug in the IIci, IIfx,
- IIsi, and LC. The bug isn't fatal - it merely slows down a small
- number of programs a small amount. At some point a bug fix in the
- form of an extension called MMInit was leaked to the outside
- world. Thomas Okken kindly quoted to the nets the relevant section
- from d e v e l o p magazine that closes the issue for good. The
- answer is, Apple fixed the problem in System 7 (yet another reason
- to upgrade) and the version of MMInit that made it out of Apple is
- buggy and can cause data corruption, data loss, and crashes. It's
- evil, so don't use it. If you see it on BBS, please ask the sysop
- to delete it (especially since it's not sanctioned by Apple
- anyway). By the way, if you use MMInit under System 7, it will
- defeat Apple's fixes. Even more reason not to bother.
-
- DriveSavers -- 415/883-4232
- Mipro III -- 415/306-1100 -- 415/364-9002 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UCONNVM.UCONN.EDU
- Dave Platt -- dplatt@ntg.com
- Steve Burgess, Mipro III -- MrMipro on AOL
- Mark H. Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
- Thomas Okken -- thomas@duteca.et.tudelft.nl
-
- Related articles:
- d e v e l o p, #7, pg. 95-96
- MacWEEK -- 10-Sep-91, Vol. 5, #30, pg. 107
- MacWEEK -- 24-Sep-91, Vol. 5, #32, pg. 6
-
-
- Installer Hell
- --------------
- by Paul E. Jacoby
-
- [Editor's Note: At various times I've complained about installer
- programs, which I generally think are overkill for a well-written,
- compact program. However, now that more and more programs have
- tons of little accessories like XTND filters, dictionaries, help
- files, and tutorials galore (and you thought Barbie dolls came
- with lots of accessories), many companies have decided to go the
- installer route. Here's a reason from Paul E. Jacoby why that's
- not such a hot idea.]
-
- MacDraw Pro now uses Apple's Installer program to place itself on
- your hard disk. This is primarily because there are considerably
- more parts to the package now (the Program, Help file, Dictionary
- files, XTND system files, XTND translators, etc.).
-
- The Installer method is supposed to be very straightforward,
- saving the user the pain of making sure all component of the
- MacDraw Pro package are properly placed. However, the Installer is
- a bit brain-dead, and can _mess_up_ the installation very easily.
- Here is the situation:
-
- A user with multiple hard disks who opts to install MacDraw Pro on
- a hard disk which is NOT the System disk will find the
- installation to be flawed. The Installation process assumes that
- you will place the MacDraw Pro package on a hard disk which
- contains a System Folder. Since this will not be true on a
- secondary (or tertiary) disk drive or partition, a major fumble
- occurs.
-
- 1) The Installer creates a System Folder on the target disk drive.
-
- 2) The Installer creates a 'Claris' folder within the new System
- Folder on the target hard disk.
-
- 3) The MacDraw Pro Help file, dictionary files, XTND System files,
- and XTND translators are placed within the new 'Claris' folder on
- the target hard disk.
-
- 4) The MacDraw Pro application is placed in a 'MacDraw Pro Folder'
- folder on the target hard disk.
-
- If you assume that all is well after the install and launch
- MacDraw Pro, you will find the following problems:
-
- 1) The MacDraw Pro Help file cannot be located, thus you cannot
- use Help.
-
- 2) The Claris XTND translators cannot be found, thus you cannot
- import documents from other programs.
-
- 3) The dictionary files cannot be found, thus you cannot use the
- spelling checker.
-
- Super, your new, nifty, MacDraw Pro is not fully functional! Time
- to delve into the documentation and try to figure out why not. If
- you are experienced with Claris products, you will rapidly
- recognize the problem (especially when you see the System Folder
- sitting on your non-System hard disk!). Moving the items in the
- Claris folder to your existing Claris folder (in the active System
- Folder), or creating such a folder in the active System Folder
- will allow MacDraw Pro to work properly. The funniest part of all
- of this is the warning in the manual that you can NOT install
- MacDraw Pro by just dragging things to your disk. Seems to me it
- would have been faster and more precise to do just that :-)
-
- I wrote to Claris at CLARIS.CR@applelink.apple.com and got the
- following response. Tom Barnum gave me permission to post it to
- the Internet, so I presume TidBITS is fair game as well.
-
- "The installer actually makes life much easier on a system with a
- single hard drive. All the files are placed into the correct
- places, and the Installer even checks versions to make sure you're
- not installing an old version of a file over a newer version. It
- obviously falls flat on installing to a non-system hard drive.
- This is beyond the capabilities of Apple's installer at this time.
- I hope that someday we'll have an installer available to us that
- can install files onto two hard drives. In the meantime, the best
- installation strategy for two-drive users is to install onto the
- system drive, drag MacDraw Pro onto the non-system drive, then
- delete the MacDraw Pro application from the system drive. Then
- everything is in the right place."
-
- "I mentioned that the easiest way to install on a non-System hard
- drive is to do an Easy Install to the system drive, then drag the
- application over to the non-system drive. This is the easiest way,
- but obviously you need an extra 1.5 megs or so on the system drive
- to temporarily install the application. The other files
- (dictionaries, help, etc.) are best put in the Claris folder in
- the System Folder. Many of these files are common to Claris
- products. They'll all look to the Claris folder for these files.
- So, you only need one copy of the dictionary, help and XTND files
- to service all Claris apps that use them. This can save hard disk
- space."
-
- "If you're really tight on hard disk space on the System disk, you
- can place the dictionaries and other auxiliary files in the
- MacDraw Pro folder on the non-system drive. MacDraw Pro will look
- to its own folder for the dictionaries, help and XTND files."
-
- [The electronic medium falls down here, as it's hard for me to
- indicate that I'm the one writing again, and not Paul or Tom. I'm
- stepping in again to make a couple of points. -Adam]
-
- * Installers are not inherently evil, but most are poorly done.
- * Installers can be extremely useful in certain instances.
- * Apple's installer is as close as we get to a standard Macintosh
- installer.
- * Apple's installer has some problems, as evidenced by the above.
-
- Therefore, we need a new installer. The best installer I've seen
- recently comes with Now Utilities 3.0. I found it to be simple and
- clear, and it tells you what each control does in an information
- box. Sure, it's not balloon help, but many people don't use
- balloon help, even when they should. Apple's installer has some
- good points too, like warning you which disks you'll need ahead of
- time. You can even write a script for Apple's installer, but from
- what I hear, it's very hard to do. StuffIt Deluxe can work as an
- installer as well, but it's mainly used when the files are
- compressed.
-
- Someone, preferably Apple so it becomes ubiquitous, should come up
- with an installer which can do at least the following:
-
- * Copy files to any user-specified folder on any hard disk, but
- allowing a suggestion from the developer that the user can
- override.
- * Install or change resources in files. This will also allow
- large, split files to be joined.
- * Delete specific outdated files.
- * Perform expansion of compressed files in one of the popular
- formats.
- * Give the user a text preview of what will happen. If multiple
- disks are involved, that too should be made clear.
- * Provide feedback throughout the entire installation process.
- * Provide a reasonably simple method for creating install
- procedures.
-
- Then I'll be happy.
-
- Information from:
- Paul E. Jacoby -- pejacoby@serc.3m.com
- Tom Barnum, Claris Tech Support --
- CLARIS.CR@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- UGTV Show
- ---------
- by Murph Sewall [and Adam C. Engst]
-
- I watched the User Group TV broadcast on September 25th with a
- couple of media center professionals who were REALLY impressed
- with Apple's broadcasts last year for educators and developers.
- I've also talked with a user group member who watched at another
- site. We've all arrived at the same conclusion - the show took 90
- minutes for about 15 minutes worth of content.
-
- [Adam here. I saw the show too and generally agree with Murph.
- I'll add any comments I may have in square brackets, as usual.]
-
- The "Tour of Apple" was a truly awful amateur production that
- wasted a lot of valuable time. Frankly, my neighbors home videos
- are more entertaining. Oddly, after the Apple II segment, the show
- contained a quick two minutes or so that did as much as the
- pointless tour.
-
- [Murph's speaking of a fictionalized Odyssey Bus Tour featuring
- sappy computer user stereotypes, a stupid tour guide in a
- referee's striped shirt, and a slimy reporter. The slimy reporter
- was included as a broad poke at MacWEEK, since at the end he
- flipped the MacWEEK press pass in his hat to reveal the other
- side, which said MacLeak. I think the rationale behind the tour
- was to add some humor (only occasionally successful - they could
- have called the tour bus the "NuBus," but missed that obvious
- opportunity) and to provide a look at Apple and Apple's history. I
- also suspect they taped most of it beforehand.]
-
- An appearance by the CEO (John Sculley) is more or less
- obligatory. We can forgive him for being as bland as nofat
- margarine.
-
- [He did make one important point that is notably lacking from the
- visions of the industry I've heard from other multi-millionaires,
- Mr. Bill included. Sculley said quite rightly that perhaps the
- most important task facing the computer industry is changing how
- people use computers. Bill's long-term vision of a computer on
- every desk is boring if people are using those computers for the
- same old tasks. However, Sculley's ideas were aesthetically marred
- by the jerky transitions in the pre-recorded sequence. Shame on
- those video engineers. As Murph said in email, they could have
- just used an Amiga and a Video Toaster to clean it up.]
-
- The Apple II segment was something of a disappointment. The stuff
- on the new Finder was interesting, but HyperCard GS with the Video
- Overlay Card was so hurried that it was largely unhelpful. Zip,
- zero, nothing on the new software for the LC //e card :-(
-
- [Yeah, really! That //e card is pretty cool, but I did hear that
- it will be able to share partitions on an LC with the MacOS.]
-
- The Macintosh QuickTime demonstration was one of the few redeeming
- features of the night (award second place to the description of
- Apple's stuff for user groups which Apple Ambassadors know about,
- but which many [possibly most?] group members are unaware of).
- Even our jaded media professionals were impressed (especially
- since the demo used WordPerfect Mac as a "for example"
- application). Alas, the demo also included "I haven't got time to
- show you this, so you'll have to trust me on it." If the
- production had been better managed, there would have been time.
-
- [Murph's right, the QuickTime demo was excellent, but left you
- wanting to see a lot more. The Apple Events demo was also good,
- showing linking between a forms package and an accounting package
- that provided almost relational database capabilities for the two
- programs over a network.]
-
- Some of the flaws were cosmetic. Most of what the broadcast
- industry refers to as "the talent" weren't broadcasting
- professionals, so they can be forgiven for coming over sometimes
- as paralyzed by the camera and mike. However, many of those
- segments could have been prerecorded; they probably should have
- been. That would have given the presenters an opportunity to
- smooth over the rough spots, but most of all it would have
- permitted editing in a LOT more production value (more graphics,
- less "talking heads"). After all, the whole point of buying the
- satellite time is IT'S VISUAL - "show," don't just "tell."
-
- Apple DOES have folks who can put on a show worthy of network
- television at the drop of an invitation. I've got a video of Pat
- Kuras, who works out of Apple's Connecticut office and sometimes
- contributes a thought or two to the Info-Mac digest, at a User
- Group meeting last June that's both more informative and more
- entertaining than Wednesday night's broadcast. Maybe Pat's unique?
-
- [The lack of professionalism came through especially when the
- hosts were trying to remember what they were supposed to say and
- swapping turns to talk. There's no reason that stuff had to be
- live - there was little interaction with the live audience for
- most of it. On the whole the staff did quite well when responding
- to the audience's questions, so they should have stuck with that
- for the live parts.]
-
- Perhaps we're grumpy here because we had to stay up late (I
- understand that's a function of the lease costs for satellite
- transponder time rather than simply waiting until after
- California's dinner hour :-) Also, our opinion undoubtedly is
- colored by the certain knowledge that Apple is capable of
- delivering MUCH HIGHER quality.
-
- [Nah, I thought it was mediocre too and I didn't have to stay up
- late now that I live on the West Coast where the time is funny.]
-
- To Apple's credit, their interest in and attention to user groups
- certainly contrasts with their competitors (all of them, not just
- the Blue one). I wonder if Apple has really figured out exactly
- how to cooperate with user groups to best advantage? User groups
- are by every account I've ever seen FAR, FAR better than "see your
- dealer" at resolving problems, especially those dealing with
- software. However, when user groups ask Apple for some support for
- those training activities, the response has sometimes been
- inappreciative. Still, we're starting to see some evidence that
- change is underway. The support packages (Quicken, FileMaker Pro
- templates) for user groups shown on the broadcast are a very
- supportive response (more than the competition offers their user
- groups :). It would appear that the User Group Evangelists inside
- Apple are getting the cost-benefit message through to the policy
- makers.
-
- [To be fair, Microsoft does have two people who are full-time User
- Group Coordinators (I met one at the UGTV presentation, as a
- matter of fact). Still, Apple does more for user groups than any
- other computer company that I know of.]
-
- The outrageous opinions above are my own and do not necessarily
- represent those of either user group I belong to or my employers
- media center staff.
-
- [The opinions in square brackets are my own and aren't Murph's.
- They do however reflect the official views of TidBITS :-).
- Seriously now, Apple put a lot of money and time into that UGTV
- presentation, but could have done a far better job. I applaud
- their willingness to spend money on supporting user groups, but I
- hope they think more clearly about what they're doing next time.]
-
- Information from:
- Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UCONNVM.UCONN.EDU
-
-
- DigiGraf Goes Freeware
- ----------------------
- Simon Tortike just announced on Usenet that he is transforming his
- DigiGraf digitizing application from shareware to freeware. Simon
- said that he no longer has the time to support the program to the
- extent that he feels he must to justify its existence as
- shareware. I wish to applaud Simon's forthrightness in dealing
- with this situation - most people would merely have stopped
- upgrading the program and continued to cash the occasional check.
- Thank you, Simon.
-
- I personally have not seen DigiGraf, and to tell the truth, I'm
- unlikely to look for it because I have no need of its abilities.
- It is a digitizing program that allows you to turn a graph,
- diagram, mesh, or contour back into the original numbers (an
- extremely useful transformation for those who need it). Those of
- you who have been with us for a while might remember the first
- product review we published, sometime last January. It was a
- program called FlexiTrace, and was reviewed for us by Len Schwer.
- From Simon's description, I gather that DigiGraf will do much the
- same thing as FlexiTrace, although it may not be as polished and
- will certainly not get the same support. You can use DigiGraf with
- either a normal mouse or with a Summagraphics Bit Pad Plus
- (although Simon says he hasn't tested the latest version of
- DigiGraf thoroughly with the Bit Pad Plus). You can also digitize
- graphical data that is already in your Mac, so if you have a
- scanner you can use that to grab data as well as a mouse or
- tablet.
-
- Simon's description of DigiGraf's abilities is better than what I
- could do, so I quote: "DigiGraf will translate, rotate, and scale
- your data, which can be entered as individual points or by
- scanning at a certain rate per second. It handles logarithmic and
- linear scales, and allows the user to choose the display formats.
- All data can be saved to a text file, or be copied and pasted. The
- data is tab-delimited, so one can paste it directly into a
- spreadsheet or a plotting program. The only hard part is clicking
- on the positive end point of each axis and on the origin, to
- identify the (orthogonal) coordinate system. Use DigiGraf to
- replot those old, hard-to-read functions, or to change plotted
- data into tables for input to another program. Digitize mesh node
- coordinates from a diagram for use with finite element software.
- Digitize the outline of a spinal cord X-ray. Digitize a contour
- map. A hundred and one uses. :-)" Thank you, Simon, although I
- still don't have the foggiest idea what a mesh node coordinate is
- or what it has to do with finite element software. But if you do
- know what it is, then you may want to check out DigiGraf. The
- price is right, and I would suggest sending Simon a thank you note
- if you use DigiGraf at all.
-
- DigiGraf is officially available by anonymous FTP from
-
- mmpe.mineral.ualberta.ca
- in the directory
- ~ftp/pub/digigraf1.41.sit.hqx
-
- Just before I sent this issue out I got the latest Info-Mac digest
- with news of another application that performs a similar task.
- Called DataThief, it is limited to reading in data from a scanned
- graph and appears to only handle X-Y graphs, although in both PICT
- and Paint format. DataThief includes auto-trace and manual modes,
- so you can do the tracing yourself if it doesn't seem to be
- getting it right. DataThief is compatible with System 7 and the
- author (Kees Huyser, I presume) merely asks that you send a
- postcard. Between DigiGraf and DataThief, it sounds to me like you
- can get a fair amount of power for the price.
-
- DataThief is available via anonymous FTP from
-
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu
- in the directory
- /info-mac/app/data-thief-106.hqx
-
- Information from:
- Simon Tortike -- simon@cs.ualberta.ca
- Kees Huyser -- keeshu@nikhefk.nikhef.nl
-
-
- Reviews/30-Sep-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Canvas 3.0, pg. 31
- WordPerfect Office 3.01, pg. 31
- DayStar Digital PowerCache, pg. 38
- 3-D Modeling Programs, pg. 39
- ModelShop II
- DynaPerspective
- StrataVision 3d
-
- * PC WEEK
- Mac Token-Ring Adapter Boards, pg. 115
- Avatar MacMainFrame 16/4MB Token-Ring WorkStation
- Cabletron Systems Desktop Network Interface Card T6015
- DCA MacIRMAtrac Apr-16
- H-Three Systems MacRing NB 16/4
- Tri-Data Systems LanWay TR 16/4
-
- * BYTE
- Group Schedulers, pg. 250
- Meeting Maker 1.0
- Planisoft 1.21
- Schedule+ 1.00a
- MediaMaker, pg. 302
- NEC PC-VCR, pg. 307
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 17-Sep-91, Vol. 5, #31
- PC WEEK -- 16-Sep-91, Vol. 8, #37
- BYTE -- Sep-91
-
-
- ..
-
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