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- TidBITS#87/14-Oct-91
- ====================
-
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-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/14-Oct-91
- NewsBITS/14-Oct-91
- Here Comes the Sun
- Working Software Deal
- Boeing Fair
- Little Mac Books?
- Reviews/14-Oct-91
-
-
- MailBITS/14-Oct-91
- ------------------
- Oops. Blew it again. Sorry. Charlie Mingo chastised us about the
- international localization issue Jean-Philippe brought up in
- TidBITS#86. We said that the relevant chapter was in Inside
- Macintosh IV, whereas in fact that chapter in Inside Mac IV is on
- "The Binary-Decimal Conversion Package." However, we meant to say
- that you should look in Inside Mac VI. Didn't we mention that a
- serious localization problem is that Roman numerals are handled
- differently in France? :-) Charlie goes on to add, helpfully, that
- "Volume V, Chapter 1 also has a discussion of localization." Of
- course, if we had a full set of Inside Mac, I would have checked,
- but it's hard to justify the expense when I'm not a programmer.
- Thanks, Charlie, for setting us straight on this.
-
- Information from:
- Charlie Mingo -- Charlie.Mingo@p0.f716.n109.z1.fidonet.org
-
-
- NewsBITS/14-Oct-91
- ------------------
- Apple's becoming kinder and gentler in its old age. First Apple
- admitted that the dirty ROMs were a problem and licensed MODE32
- from Connectix to give away for free. Apple will be doing
- something similar with Adobe Type Manager. After October 15th, you
- can call Adobe at the 800 number below and order a special version
- of ATM 2.02 that includes four Adobe Garamond typefaces for a
- whopping $7.50 for postage and handling. I called Adobe, and the
- rep indicated that this package would also be available through
- the normal Apple software sources. Since it may take between six
- and eight weeks for normal delivery, I hope Apple will post ATM
- online on the commercial services and via anonymous FTP from
- ftp.apple.com. I checked there, and it wasn't up yet, but that's
- not too surprising. Apple products shipping this month will
- include a coupon you can send in with a check for $7.50, but it's
- just as easy to use the 800 number and plastic money, assuming
- you're in the US or Canada. Supposedly the offer isn't valid in
- other countries, but I hope Apple doesn't restrict electronic
- distribution of ATM because of that. Do keep in mind that ATM will
- suck enough memory (200K) that you won't be able to use it with
- most applications on a 2 MB machine under System 7. Buy more
- memory - it's worth it. Once again, thank you, Apple. Keep it up
- and you'll give computer companies a good name despite themselves.
- :-)
-
- Adobe -- 800/521-1976, ext. 4400
-
- A quick reality reminder among the waves of CD-ROM frenzy.
- Information on CD is only as good as that information could be in
- another format. Just putting lots of information on CD does not
- make it good. The latest instance of this came when I heard that
- the Bureau of Electronic Publishing (a commercial firm with a nice
- governmental-sounding name) announced that it was releasing on
- CD-ROM the entire Monarch Notes series of "study aids" (better
- known in schools as "cheat sheets"). Wonderful. Just peachy. Now
- we can have a whole slew of students who can use a CD-ROM player
- but aren't bright enough to work through Shakespeare or Hemingway
- on their own. Sheesh. Now a decent use of CD-ROM would be to
- provide the entire work in question with essays and criticism by
- people who study that author. Instead we get annotated summaries
- and plot synopses. And no, I'm not going to include the contact
- information for this CD-Schlock.
-
- A while back we published some addresses of organizations that
- would accept old computer equipment and would in turn let you
- write it off on your taxes. Sometimes that's the most economical
- way of selling an old computer. Another organization that accepts
- donations of old computers and peripherals is the National
- Cristina Foundation, a non-profit organization which doesn't use
- the computers itself but instead passes them out to member
- organizations. You can contact them using the information below.
- Another organization that accepts used equipment but which is not
- an official non-profit (which prevents you from writing donations
- off on your taxes) is Project Gutenberg. Project Gutenberg is
- dedicated to creating and distributing electronic texts. Their
- goal is to have 10,000 etexts available by the year 2000, and so
- far they are on schedule with the ones that are currently
- available. As I said before, Project Gutenberg is not officially
- non-profit, but it is an extremely good cause and one to which
- many people have donated large amounts of time and effort. You can
- contact them by email at the address below.
-
- National Cristina Foundation
- 42 Hillcrest Drive
- Pelham Manor, NY 10803
- 800/274-7846
- 914/738-7494
- 914/738-1571 (fax)
-
- Michael Hart
- Project Gutenberg
- 405 West Elm St.
- Urbana, IL 61801
- 217/344-0367
- 217/344-5009
- hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu
-
- Information from:
- Gar -- apgar@apple.com
- MacWEEK -- 30-Jul-91, Vol. 5, #26, pg. 3
- Michael Hart -- hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu
-
-
- Here Comes the Sun
- ------------------
- The operating systems wars have become harder to keep track of
- than who hates whom in the Middle East and Central America
- combined. On the low end, Novell bought Digital Research and its
- version of DOS, called DR DOS (which was just updated). Microsoft
- will of course have to update MS-DOS to version 6.0 soon to keep
- up on that front, especially since IBM, through its agreement with
- Novell, can include DR DOS with the PS/2. On the high end, the ACE
- Consortium announced that they were going to have the next
- generation operating systems with Windows NT and SCO Unix. Not to
- be outdone, Apple and IBM formed a joint company to produce a
- separate operating environment based on the years of work Apple
- has put into the Pink OS. Confused? Good, scorecards are available
- at the door.
-
- The latest entry into the ring (I think we're well past fisticuffs
- now and are entering the domain of tag team professional
- wrestling) is Sun, the number one maker of workstations. In a
- clever marketing move, Sun (or actually SunSoft, the software
- branch of the company) renamed and renumbered its current
- operating system, turning into Solaris 1.0 in one fell swoop.
- That's a pretty good move on its own, making Solaris seem like a
- hot new product when in reality it's the same old SunOS. However,
- the true marketing coup came when SunSoft announced that Solaris
- 2.0 would run on the 80386 and higher as well, thus providing high
- end PCs with a full-blown Unix operating system.
-
- Compatibility with DOS, and possibly Windows, will come with
- Solaris 2.0, but SunSoft isn't really aiming Solaris at the small
- user. We've heard that Solaris will be one of the easier versions
- of Unix to manage and it does have the Open Look windowing
- interface, but it will still require some work to install and
- maintain, not to mention a good chunk of memory. Instead, the
- benefit lies with those people using high end machines on
- networks. Novell has announced that it will support Solaris 2.0,
- so Solaris should fit right into all those NetWare environments
- without too much trouble. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of
- Sun's move is that Solaris will probably be the first of the major
- operating systems to appear, sometime in the middle of 1992. I
- don't know if it will please the object-oriented people quite as
- much as something like Pink, but Solaris will be here soon and
- will run on Sun's SPARC machines as well as the high end PCs.
- High-end Macs are out for now, although they can hook to a NetWare
- network if present.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Sun propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 09-Sep-91, Vol. 8, #36, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 02-Sep-91, Vol. 8, #35, pg. 1
- Communications Week -- 09-Sep-91, #368, pg. 1
-
-
- Working Software Deal
- ---------------------
- Small software companies suffer as much at the hands of big
- business as do small publishing companies. In all likelihood, you
- haven't seen any products by Working Software around recently. In
- fact, I wouldn't be surprised if you hadn't even heard of Working
- Software's programs. Last I knew, they publish Spellswell, a
- stand-alone spelling checker that claims to be able to catch and
- correct more types of errors than any other spell checker (sounds
- like Working Software should add Apple Event support and license
- it all over the place), Findswell, a standard file dialog file
- find utility, Lookup, which spell checks on the fly in all
- programs, and QuickLetter, a small word processing desk accessory
- for producing letters, printing envelopes and keeping track of
- addresses.
-
- All of the above utilities have at one time or another received
- either four and half or five mice from MacUser, but they all
- suffer from one significant problem - lack of marketing clout. As
- a small company, Working Software can't afford ads in the
- magazines and has to resort to various guerilla marketing
- techniques, most notably direct mail. The deal that prompted this
- article is their most impressive yet - buy QuickLetter (the latest
- version, which is System 7-compatible) for $69.95 and get StuffIt
- Deluxe 2.01 (with a coupon for a free 3.0), MacMoney 3.5, and
- Rival 1.1.8 for free. Quite frankly, if you want either the
- excellent MacMoney or StuffIt Deluxe (I use both happily, although
- I've never used Rival and always recommend John Norstad's free
- Disinfectant for virus protection), it's worth the price. Not only
- that, but Working Software guarantees that you'll like QuickLetter
- or they'll refund your money within 90 days, letting you keep the
- other programs. Needless to say, the offer only stands for a
- limited time and will probably end sometime early next year.
-
- I was impressed at the generosity of this deal so I asked Dave
- Johnson, president of Working Software, how he manages to do it.
- He responded, "We have no other choice. There are almost no Mac
- software dealers left. We make a profit on it because enough
- people order. We carefully test each list before we mail, and we
- only mail if it will be profitable to mail to the entire list."
- From what I've seen, Dave is right - he targets the mailing quite
- well and it does get your attention, although in some ways I'm
- sorry that a small company must resort to this type of marketing
- to survive.
-
- I asked what Aladdin and Survivor and the Rival people got out of
- it as well, being the generally curious sort that I am. Working
- Software pays cash for each copy they sell, and while it's a small
- amount, Working Software takes all the risk and provides a great
- deal of market awareness for free. So the deal does benefit
- everyone involved. I'm usually leery of direct mail marketing
- (shades of Lotus MarketPlace), but in this case I think it's not
- only justified and well-handled, but necessary for the survival of
- Dave's company. In this day and age of corporate mergers and
- mega-conglomerates, small companies have to carve themselves a
- niche, and Working Software is doing it by clever marketing and by
- paying attention to what Macintosh users want.
-
- Working Software -- 800/229-9675 -- 408/423-5699 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Working Software propaganda
- Dave Johnson, Working Software president
- 70436.1342@compuserve.com -- D0140@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Boeing Fair
- -----------
- Last weekend, after punishing my body with a fast 5K road race
- that ended with a nasty uphill stretch, Tonya and I shuffled
- slowly around the aisles at the Boeing Computer Users Group Fair
- in the Seattle Center Expo Hall. Boeing is a large enough company
- (about 100,000 employees in the Seattle area alone) that its Users
- Group commands a lot of power. There were probably about 50
- vendors of various types there, although it was a little hard for
- us to tell since we arrived late. Many of the vendors present were
- local PC manufacturers selling PC clones at incredible prices,
- such as $1750 for a capable, if not loaded, 486. Ouch! Somehow I
- doubt I'll be able to snag a Quadra 900 for that kind of price.
-
- More interesting was the conversation I had with the Radius rep
- while checking out a Color Pivot. Initially I was curious what
- would happen to the Radius Rocket accelerator once Apple
- introduced the Quadras, since it wouldn't provide as impressive of
- a performance boost in comparison to the native power of the
- Quadras. However, Radius has come up with some truly neat
- technology that allows the Rocket's 68040 to continue processing
- while the Mac's internal CPU is working. I've seen information on
- a bunch of accelerators over the last few years, but this is the
- first one that is able to use both CPU's at the same time. Right
- now the technology to provide this multiprocessing, called Saturn
- V, requires the user to activate the second processor by dropping
- an application on a Rocket icon on the Mac's desktop. Alternately,
- you can double click on the icon, which opens a window that looks
- just like another Macintosh desktop, and once there, start another
- application. The Radius rep termed the abilities of Saturn V
- "primitive" in comparison with what it will be able to do in the
- future. Appropriately written programs will be able to distribute
- processing to the Rocket automatically, and at some point in the
- future, Saturn V might be able to sense CPU slowdown and take over
- some processing automatically. Such distributed processing
- wouldn't suffer the slowdowns of other distributed processing
- schemes that have to run over a network, and if you really need
- significant processing power, you could fill a six-slot Mac with a
- bunch of Rockets and have them all working at once. Of course,
- that would cost a pretty penny, considering the Rocket lists for
- about $3500.
-
- Less startling but cheaper and more immediately useful will be
- Radius's PowerView, which is an external SCSI box that allows you
- to hook 12" and 13" monitors to the Classic II and the new
- notebooks. It does require Color QuickDraw, so it won't help those
- of you with a Plus or SE, but it will soon support the Pivot and
- Color Pivot as well, which makes all three machines, the Classic
- II, the PowerBook 140, and the PowerBook 170, far more attractive
- for real work.
-
- After talking the Radius guy for a while, we went over to check
- out a PC Color Pivot that happened to be running at the Aldus
- booth. It was equally as nice as the Macintosh version (and it's
- so much fun flipping those suckers back and forth :-)), and we
- talked to the Aldus rep for a while too. He mentioned that
- PageMaker and FreeHand were getting some interesting new features
- that ought to help Aldus in its battle with Quark. PageMaker will
- finally be able to accept add-in modules in version 4.2, something
- which Quark XPress has been able to do for a while, and he claimed
- that 4.2 would also be fully System 7-savvy. I'd like to see some
- System 7-savviness with the table utility, and I'd also like to
- see some speed increases, but on the whole it sounded like Aldus
- was catching up nicely. Just out of curiousity, I asked him if
- Aldus had any plans to develop PageMaker for the NeXT, since Quark
- had backed out on porting XPress, leaving FrameMaker as the only
- DTP package on the NeXT. Unfortunately for NeXT people, I got the
- expected response, that NeXT simply wasn't shipping enough systems
- for it to be worthwhile. Oh well, someone could make a killing by
- writing a good DTP package for that machine and putting it on the
- publishing map.
-
- FreeHand 3.1 for the Mac will also become fully System 7-
- compatible, will import and export more file formats, and will
- support pressure-sensitive tablets from companies like Wacom. I'm
- sure some graphics people will be extremely interested to try out
- that feature, based on the interest I saw in pressure-sensitive
- tablets from some graphic designer friends a while ago.
-
- Information from:
- Radius rep
- Aldus rep
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 17-Sep-91, Vol. 5, #31, pg. 1
-
-
- Little Mac Books?
- -----------------
- The latest in corporate sleaze comes from Que Corporation, which
- has just published a Macintosh book called The Little Mac Book by
- Neil Salkind. Hmm, that sounds familiar. Looking on my bookshelf,
- I see a slim volume entitled The Little Mac Book by Robin
- Williams. That's strange, I didn't think you were allowed to do
- that sort of thing, but apparently copyright law does not apply to
- book titles. Now that I know this I'm going to make a killing with
- my upcoming novel called The Iliad. Mine will be easier to read
- and probably shorter too. Homer can suffer.
-
- Unfortunately, Robin Williams is suffering too. She's often
- confused with Robin Williams the actor, and whenever I've
- recommended her book to someone, I always have to add, "That's not
- Robin Williams the actor, although the book is excellent." No,
- this Robin Williams is a teacher at Santa Rosa Junior College and
- is a single mother of three. With all that to handle, I'm
- impressed she managed to write a book at all, much less one that's
- as good as The Little Mac Book. For those of you who have not seen
- or heard of The Little Mac Book, it is a quick but complete
- introduction to the world of the Macintosh and is probably the
- best I've seen. I talked to April at Peachpit Press, the small
- Berkeley company that publishes The Little Mac Book, and she said
- that although Que's book certainly hurts Peachpit's sales, Robin
- Williams is the true victim. As an author of sorts myself, I can
- understand the pain of seeing your hard work undercut by a massive
- and impersonal corporation.
-
- The cynical view of the situation is that Que Corporation saw how
- popular The Little Mac Book became in the year or so that it's
- been out, knew that companies can't copyright titles, and decided
- to cash in on Robin's work. Peachpit is small, so Que was
- undoubtedly not worried about incurring the legal wrath of a
- publishing giant like McGraw-Hill or Microsoft Press. April at
- Peachpit said that she didn't think the move was intentional or
- malicious, but I have trouble believing that the largest publisher
- of computer books, Que, would have been completely unaware of the
- popularity of Williams's book. The person I called at Que wouldn't
- comment on the situation, although that was probably just because
- she didn't know. As with many unknown situations, if you don't
- assume maliciousness, you have to assume ignorance on the part of
- Que. I'm not sure if that is much better, and it certainly won't
- make Robin Williams happier.
-
- It does surprise me that a title is not considered part of a book
- to the extent that it is covered by copyright law, especially
- since name of software and publications can be protected in
- various ways. I know it wouldn't go over well if I decided to put
- out a HyperCard-based spreadsheet and called it Excell, and
- several years ago Infocom had to change the name of its product
- newsletter from the New Zork Times to the Status Line because of
- some lawyers from the New York Times masquerading as grues.
- Interestingly enough, one person on the Info-Mac digest suggested
- that perhaps this sort of case would not fall under copyright law,
- but under fraud, since Que was misrepresenting their book.
- Unfortunately, very few real lawyers frequent the nets, so as
- usual we have no legal opinions on the subject.
-
- Robin Williams wrote an open letter to Que, and I quote. "There is
- nothing I can do about your undermining the sales of my book.
- There is nothing I can do about your riding on the wave of my
- book's popularity. There is nothing I can do about the people who
- read the reviews and think they are buying my book and get yours
- instead. There is nothing I can do about the fact that you will
- seriously affect my livelihood that I have struggled so hard to
- create."
-
- There may be nothing Robin Williams can do, but there are things
- that we can do. I would encourage you to write or call Que and
- complain about their marketing tactics. You can also write or call
- Peachpit to show your support, and most importantly, you can buy
- or recommend The Little Mac Book by Robin Williams to friends who
- are getting into the Mac. Peachpit has just released the second
- edition of the book, which includes a chapter on System 7. If you
- can't find it at your local bookstore or computer store, first
- chastise them soundly and then order it directly from Peachpit
- Press for $14.95 plus shipping and handling. If I were in charge
- of Peachpit, I would also consider renaming the book "The REAL
- Little Mac Book."
-
- Que Corporation
- 11711 N. College Ave.
- Carmel, IN 46032
- 800/428-5331
- 317/573-2583 (fax)
-
- Peachpit Press
- 2414 Sixth Street
- Berkeley, CA 94710
- 800/283-9444
- 415/548-4393
-
- Information from:
- Phil Ryan -- ryanph@mrl87a.dsto.oz.au
- Russell Aminzade -- AMINZADE@UVMVAX.BITNET
- Michael Lutas -- Michael.Lutas@p0.f716.n109.z1.fidonet.org
- Charles A. Patrick -- PATCHAS@vm.nrc.ca
- Gary Greene -- garyg@netcom.com
- Andy Baird
-
-
- Reviews/14-Oct-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- PicturePress 2.0, pg. 43
- RunPC, pg. 43
- QuickView Studio, pg. 44
- QuickTools, pg. 46
- Calc+, pg. 49
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 01-Oct-91, Vol. 5, #33
-
-
- ..
-
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