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- TidBITS#08/11-Jun-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
- Internet: ace@tidbits.uucp -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Bookend Indexer
- Macworld Expo Info
- MacAdemia Nuts
- PostScript Alternatives
- Farallon Voice Digitizer
- Recharge or Recycle?
- Editors' Notes
- Reviews/11-Jun-90
-
-
- Bookend Indexer
- ---------------
- The ultimate horror for a desktop publisher using PageMaker 3.0 is
- the end of the year index for a series of newsletters. In most
- cases, embedded graphics and the design of the newsletter make it
- impossible to use a word processor to generate the index (if the
- original word processor can generate indices at all). So back to
- the tried and true methods of hand generation.
-
- Sonar Bookends from Virginia Systems should put an end to that
- tedious chore, though. Sonar Bookends will automatically generate
- a list of every word in the document with the corresponding page
- numbers. That list can then be edited to remove words you don't
- want in the index or table of contents. Alternately, you can
- provide Sonar Bookends with a list of words and/or phrases to
- index and save the time spent culling the common words from the
- master index. The advanced features of Sonar Bookends can create a
- multi-level index with an unlimited number of levels, create an
- index with chapter references with the chapters being in different
- files, and use boolean operations and wildcards in the index
- generation.
-
- If you were wondering, and you probably were, supported document
- formats include: PageMaker, FullWrite Professional, MacWrite,
- MacWrite II, Microsoft Word, WriteNow, WordPerfect, Microsoft
- Works, Ready Set Go 4, text (Nisus files are text files so they
- are supported as well.), and MS-DOS text. As an added bonus, Sonar
- Bookends is A/UX compatible.
-
- Virginia Systems has two other products, Sonar and Sonar
- Professional, that also generate indices, but they are general-
- purpose text retrieval utilities and are priced much higher than
- Sonar Bookends' $79.95 list price. Sonar Bookends requires one
- megabyte of RAM and can run in the background under MultiFinder.
- We suspect that the speed with which Sonar Bookends generates the
- index or table of contents depends on the speed of Mac, but no
- information concerning the minimum or ideal system was mentioned.
-
- Virginia Systems -- 804/739-3200
-
-
- Macworld Expo Info
- ------------------
- [Editors' Note: This information comes to you verbatim from Mitch
- Hall & Associates, the organizers of Macworld Expo.]
-
-
- SHOW DATES
- Wednesday, August 8 - Saturday, August 11, 1990
-
-
- LOCATIONS
- * Bayside Expo Center, 200 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, MA 02125
- * World Trade Center, 164 Northern Avenue, Boston, MA 02210
- * Wang Center, 270 Tremont Street, Boston, MA 02116, (conference
- only, no exhibits)
-
-
- SHOW HOURS (Exhibit Hours & Conference Hours are the same)
- * 10:00 - 3:00 on August 8 & 11
- * 10:00 - 6:00 on August 9 & 10
-
-
- REGISTRATION INFORMATION
- * Registration opens at 9:00 a.m. daily
- * Cash only at the door
- * No registration at the Wang Center
- * Exhibits Only - $25
- * Conference & Exhibits - $80. Conferences are on a first-come,
- first-served basis with no guaranteed seating.
-
-
- PRE-REGISTRATION INFORMATION
- (Pre-Registration coupons can be found in June and July Issues of
- MACWORLD Magazine or call (617) 361-1472 and we will send you a
- brochure which will allow you to pre-register.)
- * Pre-Registration Deadline -- July 10
- * Exhibits Only - $15
- * Conferences & Exhibits - $65. Conferences are on a first-come,
- first-served basis with no guaranteed seating.
- * U.S. pre-registrations will be mailed their badges on or around
- July 24. All others may pick up their badges at the "Pre-
- Registration" counter in the Registration Area of Bayside Expo
- Center only beginning Wednesday, August 8.
- * There are no group rates or student rates.
-
-
- HOTEL INFORMATION
- Several participating hotels are offering preferred rates to
- Macworld Expo participants. Call the hotel of your choice
- directly and mention Macworld Expo.
-
-
- AIRLINE INFORMATION
- American Airlines is the official airline. To receive discounted
- rates, call them directly at 800/433-1790, and ask for Star
- File #: S-0580AL.
-
-
- EXHIBIT SPACE
- Exhibit Space is sold out. If you would like to exhibit, please
- call (617) 361-8000 and ask for Christina Wood - she will put you
- on the waiting list.
-
- Information from:
- Mitch Hall & Associates
- (via the News Notebook from All American Software)
-
-
- MacAdemia Nuts
- --------------
- Higher education met the Mac several weeks ago at the fifth annual
- Apple-sponsored MacAdemia conference. Some 800 educators and
- Macintosh enthusiasts gathered in Rochester, New York (USA) to
- view a variety of Macintosh demonstrations with an emphasis on the
- Mac in education. TidBITS editor Tonya Byard attended several
- sessions.
-
- Professor Douglas L. Chute from Drexel University showed samples
- from a HyperCard stack that he projects from a Mac as a visual aid
- to his lectures. Rightly enough, he pointed out that hypermedia
- can be a valuable learning tool, but that the media must contain
- content as well as hype. He has designed his lecture stack so that
- it occasionally has a bit of glitz, but so that on the whole it
- provides a consistent, easy-to-use lecturing tool that is full of
- content.
-
- Dorothy Mulligan talked about her college's Project ISDN. At
- Jersey City State College, video conferencing with remote
- classrooms has become reality, using regular telephone wires to
- send real-time sound and video two-ways, between the classroom
- having the teacher and the remote students. Mulligan pointed out
- that the key advantage of using existing telephone wires was that
- the cost and mess of installing special networking cables was
- eliminated.
-
- Robert Dwyer and Raymond Melcher, both from University of
- Massachusetts at Boston, demonstrated a prototype hypermedia
- archive for a collection of video tapes, photographs, and news
- articles concerning America in what Americans call the Vietnam War
- (We at TidBITS are unsure what the rest of the world calls it).
- The project (given time and funding) will integrate vast amounts
- of data. It will use what is called a videodisk jukebox, whereby a
- number of disks can sit in the jukebox, ready to play when called
- upon. Using HyperCard interface, researchers will be able to
- perform complex searches and take data away with them in the form
- of a laser printout, video tape, or audio tape.
-
- Chris Espinosa, System Software Project Manager, from Apple,
- demonstrated system 7.0. We saw Helvetica TrueType functioning and
- many other features which at this point have been previewed ad
- nauseam in most computer magazines. The version that Espinosa had
- running did not crash and even performed as he said it would.
-
- Information from:
- Tonya Byard -- TidBITS Editor
-
-
- PostScript Alternatives
- -----------------------
- Last summer, Hewlett-Packard made an aggressive entry into the
- Macintosh printer market with its DeskWriter, a 300 dpi inkjet
- printer. As a substitute for the ImageWriter or as a compromise
- between a dot matrix and a laser printer, the DeskWriter works
- well. But with its slower speed and lack of PostScript imaging
- capabilities, the DeskWriter falls short of the LaserWriter IINT.
-
- This summer Hewlett-Packard continues its efforts in the Macintosh
- arena with its introduction of an AppleTalk cartridge for several
- of the newer models of its LaserJet printer. For a long time now,
- you could attach a Macintosh to an HP LaserJet using third-party
- software drivers, but these drivers could not do PostScript for
- you. As of this writing, they still cannot.
-
- To make a LaserJet print PostScript, you must first purchase a
- PostScript cartridge for the printer. We have spotted these
- cartridges available from Hewlett-Packard, Adobe, and Pacific
- Page, all priced around $500. These PostScript cartridges come
- with all the printer fonts found in the standard Apple LaserWriter
- set. Then, you must purchase the AppleTalk option from Hewlett-
- Packard, which comes with a software printer driver for your Mac
- and the appropriate screen fonts. And, finally, you must upgrade
- your printer's memory to at least 2 MB, maybe 3 for comfort. All
- told, purchasing all these options is cheaper than purchasing a
- new LaserWriter, though that may change in July if Apple does
- release its $3300 Personal LaserWriter NT. Hewlett-Packard offers
- this option for its LaserWriter IIP, IID, and III. It is not
- available for any of the older LaserJets or for the LaserJet
- Series II. The cheapest of the bunch would be the IIP, which would
- carry a list price around $2960 with the requisite AppleTalk,
- PostScript cartridge, and added memory. Still not cheap, but
- closing in on affordable with standard discounts.
-
- Hewlett-Packard offers more than just an attractive price. For
- those in a "mixed computing environment," though you have to plug
- and unplug the printer between PC-clones and Macs, it is works
- well in either environment, and depending on what you need to
- accomplish and what equipment you already have, this can be a big
- plus (although there are also ways to network PCs to Apple
- LaserWriters). In addition the LaserJet III looks exciting. It has
- a capability which Hewlett-Packard calls "Resolution Enhancement
- Technology." This capability allows the printer to use the extra
- processing bandwidth available in its 68020 CPU to think about the
- printout and fill in jaggies and small serifs on letters or small
- areas in designs with smaller-than-average dots. Hewlett-Packard
- claims that this gives a crisper printout and on initial
- examination, we were rather impressed with the output.
-
- Pacific Data Products -- 619/552-0880
- Hewlett-Packard -- 800/752-0900 ext. 1168
- Adobe -- 415/961-4400
-
- Information from:
- Tonya Byard -- TidBITS Editor
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 12, #24, pg. 24
-
-
- Farallon Voice Digitizer
- ------------------------
- Last week Farallon began shipping a voice digitizer that should
- make voice mail and voice additions to files an easy reality.
- Farallon's new product, the MacRecorder Voice Digitizer, can be
- used to input voice messages to many Macintosh electronic mail
- systems, including QuickMail 2.2x from CE Software, Microsoft Mail
- 2.0, and WordPerfect Office Mail.
-
- The new Voice Digitizer does not come with sound editing software
- and is targeted to people who wish to add simple sounds or voice
- to a Macintosh file. People who need sound editing capabilities
- will still find them in Farallon's two-year-old MacRecorder Sound
- System, which comes with editing software and an input jack for
- sound from a stereo system. In exchange for its reduced
- functionality, the Voice Digitizer lists for $149, $100 less than
- the list price for the Sound System.
-
- Voice mail is an exciting application for the new digitizer, but
- because its lower price may make it a realistic purchase for more
- people, we might find other, perhaps more interesting, types of
- applications accepting voice input. For example, FrameMaker (a
- desktop publishing application), when running on the NeXT machine
- (we've never seen it running on the Mac or any other workstation,
- so we don't know if this only applies to the NeXT) has a facility
- for incorporating sound into files. The sound is represented by an
- icon which can be clicked to hear its message. This is handy for
- critiquing a colleague's work on screen. If you didn't like the
- design or wording, you could explain it verbally instead of trying
- to show it on the screen or writing a message. It is also handy
- for leaving messages to yourself and for hypermedia-like
- applications where the document is intended to be read online.
-
- Farallon -- 415/596-9000
-
- Information from:
- Farallon Press Release
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 12, #24, pg. 41
-
-
- Recharge or Recycle?
- --------------------
- Computers are fairly good about not using natural resources and
- not creating unnecessary waste products. In fact, one of the
- design features in our original conception of TidBITS was that it
- would never generate waste paper. By its very nature, it cannot
- properly exist on paper.
-
- The main culprits in resource waste are printers, especially laser
- printers. Paper can often be recycled, but until recently the
- large amount of plastic and metal in toner cartridges could only
- be saved by having the toner cartridge refilled, which can cause
- some problems if it is not done correctly. We'll hopefully have
- more on recharging in a future issue of TidBITS.
-
- Now there is an alternative if you don't want to recharge your
- toner cartridges and don't have an easy place to sell them to.
- Hewlett-Packard will pay the postage for you to return the used
- cartridge to them. All you have to do is pick up a recycling kit
- from an authorized HP dealer and follow the instructions contained
- in it. HP will re-use some parts of the cartridges in making new
- ones and others parts, such as the aluminum drum, will be melted
- down and recycled as raw materials.
-
- The project will run on a test basis from June 1st to December
- 31st, 1990 in 11 Western US states (including Arizona, California,
- Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah,
- Washington, and Wyoming), Germany, and Switzerland. HP hopes to
- expand the program to the rest of the US and Canada and more
- European countries in 1991. As an added incentive, for each
- cartridge returned, HP will donate 50 cents each to the National
- Wildlife Federation and The Nature Conservancy.
-
- HP Technical Support told us that they would take any toner
- cartridge that can be used in an HP LaserJet printer, which
- includes cartridges that are used in LaserWriters. You would have
- to get a recycling kit from an authorized HP dealer though, but if
- you buy HP cartridges, a kit will come with new cartridges. HP
- should be commended highly for instituting this program, although
- in all fairness we must say that they are saving a bit of money on
- toner parts by paying only several dollars for postage for a used
- toner cartridge. Capitalistic quibbles aside, the program is very
- well-intentioned and we hope it succeeds.
-
- Hewlett-Packard -- 800/752-0900
-
- Information from:
- John at HP Technical Support -- 800/752-0900 #3
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 12-Jun-90, Vol. 4 #22, pg. 14
-
-
- Editors' Notes
- --------------
- We currently face a dilemma with TidBITS. We have found
- alternative sources of information so we no longer rely on the
- trade magazines much at all any more. The advantage to this is
- that it removes us from the grey area of misappropriation in
- copyright law. The disadvantage is that we cannot provide
- references to articles in magazines if what we choose to write
- about has yet to be covered in the magazines. So herein lies the
- question for you, our all-important readers, to answer.
-
- Do you use the references provided in TidBITS to read related
- articles in the trade magazines?
-
- We do intend to continue citing our sources (good little academics
- that we are) and including contact information whenever possible.
- We also hope to distribute an update stack several times each year
- that will update the items for which we have found references (we
- do keep track of new references in our master TidBITS Archive).
-
- If you have an opinion on this subject, please tell us. You can
- reach us most easily via email, but snail mail is fine although it
- will take longer for a reply. Our various addresses are on the
- initial "About" card at the bottom under CONTACT INFORMATION.
-
- Many thanks and we hope to hear from you. - Adam & Tonya
-
-
- Reviews/11-Jun-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Word for Windows, pg. 29 (not Mac-specific)
- Grammar Checkers, pg. 29
- MacProof
- Sensible Grammar
- Correct Grammar
- Grammatik Mac
- RightWriter
- Calera TopScan, pg. 42
- Shiva NetModem V.32, pg. 42
- MacroMind Director 2.0, pg. 42
- INITPicker 2.0, pg. 45
- Super Fontina, pg. 45
- NOW Utilities, pg. 46
-
- * InfoWorld
- Anti-virus programs, pg. 86
- Antitoxin
- SAM
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 12-Jun-90, Vol. 4 #22
- InfoWorld -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 12 #24
-
-
- ..
-
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