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- TidBITS#86/07-Oct-91
- ====================
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-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/07-Oct-91
- NewsBITS/07-Oct-91
- Apple/IBM: It's Official
- UG-TV Reply
- The French Connection
- Reviews/07-Oct-91
-
-
- MailBITS/07-Oct-91
- ------------------
- Earl Williams recently informed me about a catch to the great deal
- that International Business Software offered with DataClub,
- WriteNow, Panorama, and MacCalc. Apparently, the version of
- DataClub does not include the DataClub Admin application. This
- sounds serious, but in reality it's not that bad, since you don't
- need DataClub Admin unless you want to create users and groups and
- passwords. DataClub works fine without it. In addition, a coupon
- in the box allows you to buy DataClub Admin for $50. IBS said that
- the offer should have mentioned the lack of DataClub Admin, but it
- was somehow lost. So the deal isn't quite as good as it seemed
- previously, but even with the extra $50 it's still attractive.
- It's too bad IBS comes off looking flaky, but I don't believe it
- was malicious or intentionally misleading.
-
- Roger Hart writes, "The SuperDrive on our SE has dramatically
- improved the quality of the air in our home here in Los Angeles.
- Just as Apple helps keep your desk clean by collecting filth into
- little chunks around the rollers inside your mouse, the SuperDrive
- removes dust from the air. The air is filtered in a circuitous
- route through the machine where dust is trapped by the
- magnetic/electrical properties of the drive head and other
- electronic components."
-
- "Unfortunately, apparently due to faulty design of the SE, some
- Mac users may become unnecessarily alarmed by the persistent "disk
- unreadable" dialog boxes which result. This is only a healthy sign
- of how effective your Mac is at conditioning the air."
-
- "Warning: Before you are tempted to use so-called floppy disk
- cleaners, mini-vacuums or compressed air to get rid of these
- "unwanted" dialogue boxes, remember that doing so will only return
- the dust so painstakingly collected by your Mac back into the
- environment."
-
- Information from:
- Earl Williams -- earl@cognet.ucla.edu
- Roger Hart -- IZZYCY5@UCLAMVS.BITNET
-
-
- NewsBITS/07-Oct-91
- ------------------
- If you're the sort who pays attention to corporate mergers, you'll
- remember that Novell was in the process of buying Digital
- Research, Inc. (DRI) earlier in the summer. One of the carrots in
- front of Novell has just been upgraded, leapfrogging MS-DOS yet
- again. DR DOS 6.0 is out with a whole slew of features. Primary
- among them, as far as I can tell, include the ability to stuff
- even more code into high memory to allow programs to use 628K of
- main memory (the Mac and Unix people start snickering about this
- point) and built-in disk compression, disk defragmenting, and file
- recovery utilities. DRI also included a graphical shell, task-
- switching abilities, battery management capabilities for
- portables, numerous security features (such as password protected
- files, directories, and logins, as well as automatic keyboard
- locking), and online hypertext documentation. DR DOS retails for
- $99 and cheaper upgrades are available to registered users. From
- the sounds of it, if you have to use DOS, DR DOS is a bit more
- powerful than MS-DOS 5.0, while retaining the same
- compatibilities.
-
- Digital Research -- 408/649-3896 -- 800/274-4DRI
-
- Information from:
- Steve McNabb -- 76703.615@compuserve.com
-
-
- Apple/IBM: It's Official
- ------------------------
- Some people would prefer that title to be "Apple/IBM: It's Oh-
- fish-al," since they think they detect a tell-tale smell. However,
- the Apple/IBM deal appears to be real and was consummated last
- week in the press releases, where all good industry relationships
- eventually end up. Nothing much has really changed since the first
- news came out, but the two companies are focussing more on
- multimedia than was expected, even though we thought that IBM
- would be interested in Apple's QuickTime technology.
-
- The deal has five main points, although no one can be sure how
- long it will take for some of these things to appear on the
- market. First and least interesting to those of us who don't
- connect to large IBM systems will be some products that will help
- meld the Mac with the mongo IBMs. My opinion is that this is good
- for Apple's appearance to the big buyers, but has little interest
- otherwise. Of course this stuff is the easiest and was probably in
- the works as soon as Sculley and IBM's Akers started talking. Look
- for it by the beginning of 1992.
-
- Second come the PowerPC RISC processors, although Apple and IBM,
- along with Motorola, are hoping that their RISC processors don't
- finish second to the MIPS R4000. Motorola hitched a ride on this
- part of the deal since Apple will be ignoring a Motorola-designed
- RISC chip that was reputed to have some problems despite a lot of
- Apple input. The PowerPC chips will evolve from IBM's current
- implementation of the technology in its RS/6000 workstations. I've
- heard differing opinions on how good the PowerPC technology is
- overall and where its strengths and weaknesses lie, but since I
- know little about processor design and implementation, I'll stay
- out of the fray. Since Motorola has to do quite a bit of work on
- the new single-chip implementation of the PowerPC, it will be
- several years before Apple and IBM, much less anyone else in the
- market, can buy them from Motorola.
-
- Third comes Unix, or at least the melting-pot combination of IBM's
- version of it, AIX, Apple's version, A/UX, and the POWER
- architecture of IBM's RISC chips. From what I've heard, the
- resulting dish will be able to run Macintosh software along with
- both AIX and A/UX software, and will sport some of A/UX's
- interface features, but will be built on the AIX core. Of course,
- to mix in a little spicy confusion, Apple and IBM will both
- continue enhancing AIX and A/UX independently. And people wonder
- why Unix has never caught on?
-
- Fourth comes the new emphasis on multimedia. Rather than just a
- little cross licensing, Apple and IBM will create a new
- independent company that will come up with new multimedia
- technologies and license them where ever possible. I wouldn't be
- surprised to see some consumer electronics products come out of
- this joint venture, although I certainly hope that it is staffed
- with totally new people. I've seen few interesting multimedia
- efforts from IBM, due in part to the fact that multimedia is
- essentially entertainment-like and IBM just isn't terribly
- entertaining. Apple has a much better concept of this, which is
- one reason that Apple will continue to lead in the multimedia
- market, despite the multimedia extensions to Windows. And please
- accept my apologies for using the term "multimedia." I realize
- it's a poor word, and linguistically incorrect, but it's the
- jargon of choice.
-
- Fifth and finally comes the primary focus of the deal. Apple and
- IBM will create an independent company to develop a next-
- generation object-oriented operating environment. If I threw
- "multimedia" in that sentence as well, I'd probably get a triple
- sentence score in Jargon Scrabble. This company will work with
- Apple's Pink OS and attempt to create an operating system that is
- platform independent to the extent that it will work on RISC
- workstations, machines based on the 80x86 chips, and computers
- using Motorola's 680x0 chips. To be real, I'd say that you can
- forget about the lower end PCs and Macs, and the Commodore 64 is
- right out. The only mildly new bits of this part of the agreement
- are that both companies will license parts of the technology and
- incorporate them into existing operating systems before the new
- company comes out with a complete operating environment, which
- probably won't be for another three or four years at best. Also
- included as a little teaser is the fact that Apple and IBM are
- cross-licensing patent and visual displays, "including a limited
- license to the Macintosh visual displays." That last phrase leads
- me to think that OS/2 might sport a decent interface in the
- relatively near future, which certainly wouldn't hurt in its
- battle with Windows.
-
- Like it or not, Apple and IBM have signed the papers and all that
- remains now is to see what comes out when. I suspect the new
- companies will lay low for a year or so, much as General Magic has
- done. I'm sure the people at General Magic aren't sitting around,
- but they also haven't said anything new for some time now.
- Eventually something will show up.
-
- Information from:
- Apple/IBM propaganda
-
-
- UG-TV Reply
- -----------
- After Murph and I were somewhat unkind in last week's TidBITS
- about the UG-TV presentation, I think it is only fair to print Rye
- Livingston's (a User Group Connection honcho of sorts) reply to
- all the comments that he'd received. This fits in with our TidBITS
- policy of "subjective, but fair." If I don't like something, I'll
- say so without hesitation, but I'd better back up what I say and
- allow reasonable rebuttal or I'm being unfair. For those of you
- who saw the UG-TV presentation (or have idea on it), please do
- send Rye mail telling him what you think. If Apple is going to
- provide a user Group Connection at all, the least we can do is
- support their efforts to help us.
-
-
- Rye Livingston writes,
-
- Thanks for your input and keep it coming...really! Your comments
- will decide if we do another broadcast, and if we do what the
- content and format will include.
-
- We have been getting mixed reviews on the different segments of
- the UG-TV broadcast, and have learned a lot. Everyone agrees that
- the tour bus could have gone off a cliff in the beginning of the
- show and we all would have been better off. We were concerned
- about that bit too and you just confirmed our suspicions. Why was
- it in there in the first place you might ask? We were listening to
- the people who make these kinds of shows for a living, but they
- don't know User Groups.
-
- Now of course that would have only taken care of the "tour group",
- and we did receive all kinds of comments on every other aspect of
- the show. Some liked the roughness of not having professionals
- host the show and others wanted it more polished with hired
- actors. Some really liked the demos, some said they were flat.
- However, for every negative comment we have received at least four
- have been positive. Of course we did get 100% confirmation on how
- bad the tour group was...RIP.
-
- There have been a number of comments concerning new product
- announcements. This broadcast was never positioned as a product
- introduction event. Magazines may have articles on upcoming Apple
- products, but we are not allowed to talk about them. If you look
- back at all the UG-TV announcements that we published and articles
- in MacWEEK and Computer Reseller News, there was no mention of
- introducing new products. If that was your expectation, then it is
- not surprising you were disappointed.
-
- To set the record straight on the Q&A, it was scheduled to be 30
- minutes long. It worked in rehearsal too, but when we were
- approaching the end of the show there was only 12 minutes for Q&A.
- This was very disappointing for everyone because we knew it was a
- cornerstone to the success of the show.
-
- We were also trying to use America Online as a means to
- communicate during the Q&A but it didn't work. Someone pointed out
- that I was sending signs to the director during the end of the
- show and he was right. I was writing "??? from AOL", trying to get
- that aspect going.
-
- We attempted this TV broadcast for you, the User Group member. We
- could take the safe conservative route and continue with our
- monthly mailings thank you, but that isn't really the Apple way.
- We tried something that has never been done before, and what makes
- it even more difficult is the different cross section of people
- who were watching the show; Community groups, Education, Corporate
- and Government groups. Unfortunately you can't make everyone
- happy.
-
- Apple has the most aggressive and comprehensive User Group program
- in the computer industry. A TV broadcast to the User Group
- community had never been tried before and thankfully most of you
- are seeing the big picture of what we tried to do; communicate
- with User Groups through new and innovative mediums. We gave it a
- shot and most of you are telling us that for our first try it was
- good. We have learned a lot! With your constructive input, we hope
- to try it again next year and make it better, a lot better!
-
- Information from:
- Rye Livingston, User Group Connection
- LIVINGSTON2@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- The French Connection
- ---------------------
- by Jean-Philippe Nicaise with help from Vincent Florin, Benoit
- Widemann and Thierry Delettre
-
- [Jean-Philippe, by the way, is instrumental in distributing
- TidBITS in France. Thanks! -Adam]
-
-
- Take a jumbo, cross the water.
-
- Last Sunday, back home in Reims, some wine growers told me that
- vintage will begin very soon in the Champagne area. Weather has
- been good, and the harvest will certainly be a very good one,
- maybe a "millesime!" If people worldwide especially appreciate our
- "local wine," we especially appreciate the Macintosh in France. To
- be honest, France is Apple Computer's second market after the USA
- but before Japan, Canada, the United Kingdom and Germany (formerly
- West Germany).
-
- During 1990, Apple Europe, established in August of 1988, reported
- sales of $1.576 billion, or 28.4% of Apple Computer's entire
- sales. Not only that, but sales are still growing at 28% each
- year! Unlike the USA, Europe is a language and cultural patchwork
- which means Apple must do a lot of localization. In October 1990,
- when Apple unveiled the three low cost Macs, they made System 6.07
- available in 13 different languages at the same time. Some new
- (fabulous?) markets are emerging - Eastern Europe and Soviet Union
- - and Apple is hard at work on new systems for them. As a proof of
- Apple's belief in the European market, Apple opened a venture
- capital fund of $60 million in June 1990, they started a research
- centre mainly focused on communication products in Paris, and they
- will open a new production plant in Apeldoorn, the Netherlands
- (the other big one is in Cork, Ireland).
-
- Europe is different. And I'll try to use the biggest European
- market (France) to explain how much. Two weeks ago was the 8th
- edition of "Apple Expo," an Apple France-organized exposition
- which took place in Paris. No really big news since Boston's
- Macworld Expo, except a general System 7 mania. This was the first
- time users could really touch it, feel it, and get the "new" 7.0
- compatible applications. Apple released French Systeme 7.0 by mid
- July, about two months after the official international
- announcement. That's a really **very** short time for translation
- of the whole package!
-
- For a little more than a year now, the major American software
- companies have created subsidiaries in France. So we can now talk
- directly to Aldus, Claris, and Symantec (Microsoft already had
- one, but mainly because of the PC market). Some hardware vendors
- have also appeared, including RasterOps, GCC, and Farallon. How
- could we get our Mac stuff before? Only through local
- distributors. But this had two disadvantages: products were
- **very** expensive (five to twenty times the exchange rate!) and
- users (i.e. clients) weren't as well treated as in the USA [Ed.'s
- note: So stop your griping here, it could be worse! :-)]. Copy
- protection was severe (though piracy wasn't and still isn't worse
- than on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean), translation and
- user-support were sometimes non-existent, and update policies very
- strange or nonexistent. Excel 3.0 VF (French Version) is the first
- Microsoft Mac product that is not copy protected. In 1989, ACI,
- mother company of ACIUS, used copy protection for "4eme Dimension"
- in France while they offered "4th Dimension" in the USA without
- copy protection and at half the French price.
-
- Unfortunately, sometimes American publishers can act worse than
- some European publishers. Some companies strictly forbid American
- mail-order firms to deliver their software outside the USA just to
- protect their foreign distributors. A good example is Caere and
- its well-known OCR package, OmniPage, which costs $500 in the USA
- but $1500 in France. Same program, just translated and with less
- user support. Worse, banning of selling is restricted only to some
- countries and, if you are in an African country you can order and
- receive a program that runs **only** under the US system. Blah!
-
- [Ed.'s note: And this isn't even getting into the types of
- software, like various encryption packages, that are export-
- restricted by the US government.]
-
- Some publishers agree to deliver outside the USA, but do not
- support users outside the USA. They tell them to ask to the local
- distributor for upgrades. Of course, the local distributor claims
- they cannot support these users because they bought the software
- in the USA. No way out! Many European users had this kind of
- problem with Adobe Type Manager 1.0 when they wanted to upgrade to
- version 2.0 later. They ordered in the USA simply because the
- localized version would have been available only many months later
- and they wanted good printing immediately.
-
- Claris first gave the example of non-copy protected software
- (surprising? no, Apple philosophy is there). Early in 1990 they
- opened their subsidiary, Claris France, taking back their software
- from P-Ingenierie, one of the largest local distributors. They
- first came up with really interesting upgrade policies, nice
- user-support and a toll-free phone number! Strangely, HyperCard
- 2.x is not distributed by Claris France but by Apple France. Even
- more strangely, version 2.1 VF is not available yet (no date
- given) and no upgrade policy has been offered from version 1.x to
- 2.x. Symantec France, which opened in mid-1990, first reorganised
- its PC market, letting go its two PC local distributors. BR
- Publishing, Symantec's Mac distributor, will certainly have
- trouble keeping their products. All this adds up to the users'
- benefit. Considering the costs of Apple's low cost Macs, having to
- pay half as much for a word processor as for your computer was
- simply crazy.
-
- But the landscape is not all black - many companies act the good
- way. Software publisher Compose-Tel recently decided to translate
- and market two top-quality North American games, Darwin's Dilemma
- and Tesserae. "Unfortunately most games for the Macintosh are
- still now marketed only in US version and users do not have
- support in case of trouble" says Igor Schlumberger of Compose-Tel.
- His company offers those games fully translated at 1.5 times the
- exchange rate, and with a one year free upgrade policy. A
- "premiere" in the French game software for the Mac! Compose-Tel's
- other products, Rival, an anti-virus utility, and Souvenir, an
- advanced phone directory, follow the same rules - low prices and a
- free upgrade.
-
- One of the most common problems Macintosh products find outside
- the USA is localization. I'd like all American programers to read,
- re-read, and read once more Chapter 14 of Inside Macintosh Volume
- IV: Worldwide Software Overview! [Ed.'s note: You heard him,
- folks, better check it out before you ship.] I've recently been
- offered an American copy of Symantec's GreatWorks. In the
- spreadsheet module, when I type a figure the French way, that is
- "12,52" instead of "12.52", the application understands "1,252".
- Symantec should have used the 'itl' resources and noticed that I'm
- using a French system with the French figures standards. Grrr...
- On the other side, some programs could be considered model
- citizens. Backup Retriever by the French publisher Additional
- Design, a backup utility with personal and network capabilities,
- balloon help, Apple Event awareness, and 32-bit cleanliness also
- has the ability to localize itself live! If your system is French,
- menus and help are in French. If your system is English, menus and
- help are in English. And this with exactly the same application!
- Soon German and Italian languages will be available. No doubt
- American users will hear about it very soon since it's already
- been translated!
-
- As for now, the hard work for Apple France is to face the new low
- price policy and to reorganise its distribution circuits. General
- public stores FNAC and general mail-order firms CAMIF and UGAP
- have recently signed agreements with Apple France to market the
- Macintosh products, most of the software, and user-support. In
- order to face this new challenge, Apple France named as Marketing
- Director Francois Benveniste, who created the Apple Expo during
- his two years at Apple France from 1984 to 1986. Now, like many
- people around the world, we are looking forward seeing the new
- portables in a few days. And we remember that their modems were
- designed in Europe.
-
- Information from:
- Jean-Philippe Nicaise -- nicky@etca.fr
- Apple Europe propaganda
-
-
- Reviews/07-Oct-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Outbound Notebook System 2000, pg. 43
- Painter, pg. 43
- Now Utilities 3.0, pg. 46
- nuBASE, pg. 47
- PC-LocalTalk Cards, pg. 49
- Dayna DL2000 PC Card
- Farallon PhoneNET Card PC for LocalTalk
- Sitka FlashCard
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 24-Sep-91, Vol. 5, #32
-
-
- ..
-
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