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- TidBITS#92/11-Nov-91
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/11-Nov-91
- Compression Corrections
- Prodigy Stumbles... Again
- Far Side Calendar
- Reviews/11-Nov-91
-
-
- MailBITS/11-Nov-91
- ------------------
- This falls into the category of maybe-news for many of you, but
- this week CE and Claris both shipped their long-awaited programs,
- Tiles and ClarisWorks respectively. I've written a little bit
- about both programs in the past, so suffice it to say that Tiles
- is a unique organizing utility and ClarisWorks is Claris's entry
- into the integrated software market. Sue Nail of CE promised to
- send me a copy of Tiles when CE announced it months ago, so I hope
- to report on it more fully in the future. Also shipping this week
- is the Macintosh version of The Far Side Computer Calendar from
- Amaze. See below for a more detailed look at what it could be. On
- to the definite-news!
-
- JR Wolf from AOL sends along this extremely useful bit of
- information. "The cache control panel on the Quadra does _not_
- require you to restart. The catch is you must hold down the option
- key [presumably when turning the cache control on or off]. The
- change takes place immediately with no restart required. The
- string in the STR# resource that follows the string that says you
- must restart for changes to take effect is "Wink, wink," which
- kinda led me to believe that all was not as they tell. I found all
- this out on my own, no need to give anyone else credit, wink,
- wink... By the by, I hacked the cache control panel for the
- Quadra, they do indeed kill both the copyback cache and the
- Data/Instruction caches. I modified it to turn of just one or the
- other, but it doesn't seem to help any programs. Speedometer 3.0
- does confirm the speed difference though.
-
- Processor Test:
- 2.4 - Caches off
- 5.96 - Hmm, can't remember the cache combination.
- 12.34 - Copyback cache off
- 14.11 - Caches on"
-
-
- Our ever-helpful Mark H. Anbinder writes, "For those who are
- curious, here is information from Apple on the possible memory
- configurations of the new LaserWriter IIf and IIg printers. The
- LaserWriter IIg and IIf have 8 SIMM sockets configured as 2 banks
- (4 SIMMs each). When using a bank, it must be completely filled.
- The printers can use 256K, 1 MB, and 4 MB SIMMs. The SIMMs are
- 80ns (same as Mac IIci, which is a relief after the special - and
- expensive - Mac IIfx SIMMs that the IINT and IINTX used). The IIf
- supports from 2 to 32 MB. The IIg supports from 5 to 32 MB."
-
- And for an encore, Mark writes, "Some people have had an
- experience where their Macintosh Portables are no longer working.
- They had let them sit for a month or longer, at which point the
- battery sulfated. When this happens, the battery is rendered
- useless. Sulfation exhibits the same symptoms as the cracked cell
- problem, but it has a different cause. Because the batteries are
- sealed lead batteries, they cannot be stored in a discharged
- state. Generally, if the unit has been in storage for about a
- month without use and without either (a) the power adapter plugged
- in, (b) the mylar sheet installed or (c) the battery removed, the
- battery will sulfate and will no longer be re-chargeable. In
- general, you must charge the battery within a few days of
- discharging it. The only fix is to replace the battery and learn
- how to store the Portable correctly. The old Macintosh Portable
- and the PowerBook 100 both use sealed lead batteries and can
- suffer from sulfation. The PowerBook 140 and 170 use nicad
- batteries so sulfation is not an issue for them. Hope this clears
- up the sulfation issue."
-
- Murph Sewall expands on the troubles he reported earlier with his
- new Quadra. "Someone sent me a message that there is an option in
- Alliance Power Tools which will permit volumes to be used for
- virtual. I called APS and found out that, yes, hidden within the
- Volumes item is a Configure option and checking "Disable Finder
- Eject" will enable the volume for virtual (even if it's a
- cartridge - I may have to put the virtual file on an otherwise
- unused cartridge just to see how often there's virtual i/o by
- watching the light). The really good news is the change can be
- made with a click which does not delete any files on the volume
- (tah, dah, no need to reformat or repartition). It only took a
- couple of seconds and now I am running 4 MB built in and 6 MB
- total with virtual! Also, I mentioned that the PowerTools 2.0.7
- which shipped with the cartridge drive only two weeks ago isn't
- compatible with the Quadra's cache mode, and was told there's a
- new version (2.3) which will be mailed to me forthwith (fifthwith,
- even :-) I'll report on it when it shows up. [See Compression
- Corrections below for information on the latest version of
- DiskDoubler, which also caused trouble for Murph temporarily.]
-
- This note appeared in our electronic mailbox from
- vita@sunny.dab.ge.com, who we'll call "Anonymouse" for lack of a
- better name. "Like many others in netland, I have been anxiously
- waiting for the "free" version of ATM to be posted either to
- ftp.apple.com or to one of the binaries groups (mainly because I
- don't want to wait 6 to 8 weeks!). I had previously sent mail to
- Mark Johnson at Apple, and he said that he'd be perfectly willing
- to make ATM available on ftp.apple.com once the appropriate
- product manager made it available to him.
-
- So I called Adobe's Customer Service Center and spoke to a
- gentleman who sounded very interested in the idea. I explained to
- him what the Internet was and about Apple's FTP site. He said that
- he was in fact working on something very similar, although he
- wouldn't elaborate. I can only assume he was referring to
- electronic distribution on something like CompuServe In fact, when
- I was explaining the Internet to him, he asked if it was anything
- like CompuServe. Overall, he sounded very positive about the idea,
- and thanked me for bringing it to his attention. However, he also
- said that even if the decision was made to go ahead with the
- electronic distribution, it would take several weeks to implement,
- maybe taking until January! He said that things just move slowly
- in a large company. [Unfortunately, he's right.]
-
- Anyway, before hanging up I asked for his name so I could follow
- up with him sometime later, and he said his name was Christopher
- Warnock. Hmm, "Warnock". Why does that last name sound so
- familiar? :-) Perhaps Mr. Warnock has a good deal of influence
- over what goes on at Adobe. [For those who don't know, John
- Warnock is the founder of and head honcho at Adobe.]
-
- Anyway, the bottom line seems to be that even if ATM gets posted
- to ftp.apple.com, it will probably be a while. Though maybe if
- some other interested parties would express their interest in the
- idea to Adobe's Customer Service Center (800/833-6687, option 5),
- the process might be expedited. I personally can't see how it can
- take so long to accomplish something so simple! [You've obviously
- never tried to get a driver's license. A 20 question test, a
- couple of forms, and an instantly developed and laminated card
- should not take 3 hours. Sheesh. :-)]
-
- Information from:
- JR Wolf on AOL
- Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UCONNVM.UCONN.EDU
- Anonymouse -- vita@sunny.dab.ge.com
-
-
- Compression Corrections
- -----------------------
- First, I asked Lloyd Chambers, DiskDoubler's author, about the
- conflict Murph had between the Quadra caches and DiskDoubler.
- Lloyd replied that there is indeed a problem that causes
- DiskDoubler INIT to crash in those circumstances. It was
- originally due to a bug in THINK C 4.0, apparently, and Salient
- has a fixed version (3.7.1) which they will send for free to
- anyone who is having trouble on the Quadra. There are no other
- changes in it.
-
- Second, we inadvertently made some misleading statements in
- TidBITS#88/Compression II, and our apologies to Alysis (we already
- corrected the mistake we made about DiskDoubler and modification
- dates). We said, "DiskDoubler has safeguards (including working on
- a copy of the file and verifying the copy before deleting the
- original) against data-loss due to system crashes while
- compressing files. SuperDisk! does not have these safeguards for
- speed reasons, so if you regularly lose power, you should keep
- that in mind, or, if you're rich, buy an uninterruptable power
- supply."
-
- After discussing this issue with Farokh Lam of Alysis Technical
- Support we can clarify the issue. SuperDisk! does keep temporary
- files in the System Folder for any files that it has open, so if
- you crash or lose power while opening or closing a compressed
- file, your file will be fine after you reboot. The important step
- here is _rebooting_. If you use MacsBug or the command-option-
- shift-escape trick to recover from a crash without rebooting, your
- file will appear to be corrupted if you look at it again
- immediately. Don't do it, just reboot, and SuperDisk! will do its
- magic with the temporary files and fix your file. Believe me, it
- works. I couldn't corrupt a file even with a fair amount of
- effort, which is testament to the efficacy of those temporary
- files.
-
- There is a second situation which is more serious, but much less
- likely. If you lose power (a crash is extremely unlikely at this
- point) while SuperDisk! is compressing a file after you've renamed
- the file with a ".s" extension in the Finder, that file will be
- corrupted. The temporary files will not save you in this instance,
- but as Farokh rightly points out, the probability of losing power
- while compressing a file (especially since SuperDisk! is so fast)
- is very low. Murphy's Law of Lightning Strikes does apply, though.
- :-) Farokh also pointed out that if you regularly lose power,
- files corrupted by this unlikely occurrence will be the least of
- your problems and you should definitely buy an UPS. To quote from
- my favorite episode of Star Trek (and no, I'm not a junkie),
- "Right, Spocko."
-
- Farokh was also kind enough to give me some glimpses into the
- features that Alysis has planned for SuperDisk! 2.0, which they
- hope to ship December 1st. Many of these additions address
- complaints we had in our review, so it will interesting to see how
- SuperDisk! 2.0 stacks up, especially since AutoDoubler and
- Aladdin's SpaceMaker should be coming soon too. Alysis has
- enhanced SuperDisk! so you can just add ".x" to a file to create a
- an auto-expanding file, which is good. They've tightened the
- compression, added checksums (which help ensure data integrity),
- and speeded up Finder file copies. The interface has been improved
- with the addition of menus, hot-keys, user-defined filename
- extensions (if you don't like ".s"), and new alerts. The animation
- is also gone, but they've added MS-DOS compatibility (in what
- form, I wonder?) and compatibility with DiskDoubler and StuffIt
- files. Farokh also assured me that Alysis is continuing to enhance
- the program all the time and upgrades past 2.0 will add even more
- impressive capabilities. Nothing like a little healthy competition
- to foster innovation. :-)
-
- Information from:
- Lloyd Chambers -- SALIENT@applelink.apple.com
- Farokh Lam -- Alysis on AOL -- 72510.1317@compuserve.com
-
-
- Prodigy Stumbles... Again
- -------------------------
- by Mike Godwin
-
- On some days, Prodigy representatives tell us they're running "the
- Disney Channel of online services." On other days the service is
- touted as a forum for "the free expression of ideas." But
- management has missed the conflict between these two missions. And
- it is just this unperceived conflict that has led the B'nai
- B'rith's Anti-Defamation League to launch a protest against the
- online service..
-
- On one level, the controversy stems from Prodigy's decision to
- censor messages responding to claims that, among other things, the
- Holocaust never took place. These messages - which included such
- statements as "Hitler had some valid points" and that "wherever
- Jews exercise influence and power, misery, warfare and economic
- exploitation ... follow" - were the sort likely to stir up
- indignant responses among Jews and non-Jews alike. But some
- Prodigy members have complained to the ADL that when they tried to
- respond to both the overt content of these messages and their
- implicit anti-Semitism, their responses were rejected by Prodigy's
- staff of censors.
-
- The rationale for the censorship? Prodigy has a policy of barring
- messages directed at other members, but allows messages that
- condemn a group. The result of this policy, mechanically applied,
- is that one member can post a message saying that "pogroms,
- 'persecutions,' and the mythical holocaust" are things that Jews
- "so very richly deserve." But another member might be barred from
- posting something like "Member A's comments are viciously anti-
- Semitic." It is no wonder that the Anti-Defamation League is upset
- at what looks very much like unequal treatment.
-
- But the problem exposed by this controversy is broader than simply
- a badly crafted policy. The problem is that Prodigy, while
- insisting on its Disney Channel metaphor, also gives lip service
- to the notion of a public forum. Henry Heilbrunn, a senior vice
- president of Prodigy, refers in the Wall Street Journal to the
- service's "policy of free expression," while Bruce Thurlby,
- Prodigy's manager of editorial business and operations, invokes in
- a letter to ADL "the right of individuals to express opinions that
- are contrary to personal standards or individual beliefs."
-
- Yet it is impossible in any free-expression policy to explain both
- the allowing of those anti-Semitic postings and the barring of
- responses to those postings from outraged and offended members.
- Historically, this country has embraced the principle that best
- cure for offensive or disturbing speech is more speech. No regime
- of censorship - even of the most neutral and well-meaning kind -
- can avoid the kind of result that appears in this case: some
- people get to speak while others get no chance to reply. So long
- as a board of censors is in place, Prodigy is no public forum.
-
- Thus, the service is left in a double bind. If Prodigy really
- means to be taken as a computer-network version of "the Disney
- Channel" - with all the content control that this metaphor implies
- - then it's taking responsibility for (and, to some members, even
- seeming to endorse) the anti-Semitic messages that were posted. On
- the other hand, if Prodigy really regards itself as a forum for
- free expression, it has no business refusing to allow members to
- respond to what they saw as lies, distortions, and hate.
-
- So, what's the fix for Prodigy? Rather than choosing to refine and
- tighten its censorship policy, as Prodigy management has recently
- done in response to the ADL complaints, a better answer may lie in
- replacing the service's censors with a system of "conference
- hosts" of the sort one sees on CompuServe or on the WELL. As WELL
- manager Cliff Figallo conceives of his service, the management is
- like an apartment manager who normally allows tenants to do what
- they want, but who steps in if they do something outrageously
- disruptive. Hosts on the WELL normally steer discussions rather
- than censoring them.
-
- But even if Prodigy doesn't adopt a "conference host" system, it
- ultimately will satisfy its members better if it does allow a true
- forum for free expression. And the service may be moving in that
- direction already: Heilbrunn is quoted in the Wall Street Journal
- as saying that Prodigy has been loosening its content restrictions
- over the past month. Good news, but not good enough - merely
- easing some content restrictions is likely to be no more
- successful at solving Prodigy's problems than Gorbachev's easing
- market restrictions was at solving the Soviet Union's problems.
- The best solution is to allow what Oliver Wendell Holmes called
- "the marketplace of ideas" to flourish - to get out of the
- censorship business.
-
-
- Mike Godwin is the staff counsel for The Electronic Frontier
- Foundation (EFF). EFF has been established to help civilize the
- electronic frontier; to make it truly useful and beneficial to
- everyone, not just an elite; and to do this in a way that is in
- keeping with our society's highest traditions of the free and open
- flow of information and communication. A recent graduate of the
- University of Texas School of Law, Mike coordinates the ongoing
- legal work of the EFF. Previously he served as editor-in-chief of
- The Daily Texan student newspaper. He has been a frequent
- contributor to the discussions of computing and civil liberties on
- the net.
-
- Information from:
- Mike Godwin -- mnemonic@eff.org
-
-
- Far Side Calendar
- -----------------
- Like thousands of other people, one of my first actions every
- morning is to tear off the page on my Far Side Daily Calendar for
- a bracing dose of Gary Larson's inspired lunacy. Unlike hardly
- anyone else, my next action is to go check my Mac for email and to
- see if Remember? claims I have to do anything that day. Thanks
- to** **amaze!nc (should be pronounced with a fake Russian accent,
- as in Natasha's "Dat iss amazink, darlink."), I may soon be able
- to combine my morning chores by reading my daily dementia on the
- Mac. Amaze, Inc (the legal version) has just come out with The Far
- Side Computer Calendar, a program that combines Gary Larson's
- cartoons with an extremely capable calendar program. I've seen the
- Windows version, but the Macintosh version won't be out for about
- another week, so there may be some differences. I hope to do a
- comparison of calendar programs on the Mac soon, so I should be
- able to report on any differences then.
-
- Glossing over the installation on a PC running Windows (it
- actually went pretty well, although it did require starting from
- DOS and fixing the AUTOEXEC.BAT file after the installer mucked up
- the PATH statement), we were quite impressed with the display,
- especially the cartoon for the day which depicted a nerd cowboy
- with toilet paper stuck to his shoe as he exited an outhouse. The
- calendar opens to a "Theme" view which shows the cartoon and the
- date in basically the same format as a tear-off daily calendar. At
- the bottom are five buttons and two forward/backward arrows that
- allow you to cheat and look both back and ahead. In our house you
- are only allowed to look at the cartoon on your birthday - all
- others have to be a surprise on that day. If you want to see a lot
- at once, buy a book. The five buttons correspond to the cartoon
- view, a Day view (which actually shows two days, a Week view that
- shows an entire week, a Month view, and a Year view, the last two
- of which do exactly what you would think.
-
- Overall I was quite impressed with the ease with which I navigated
- the dates. Double-clicking a month in the Year view took me to the
- Month view of that month, double-clicking a day in the Month view
- took me to a Day view of that day, etc. Double-clicking on the
- blank part of the Day view (or selecting the menu option) brought
- up the Event Editor, as one would expect, and if you clicked on an
- event, that event would be the selected one in the Event Editor. I
- was slightly distressed to see how sluggishly the Event Editor
- appeared on a 20 MHz 386 - I certainly hope that the speed is due
- to Windows being slow and that the Mac version will be snappier.
- In the Event Editor you could define events extremely flexibly
- (every third Tuesday of months in which someone I know has a
- birthday - OK, not quite that flexibly) with options such as every
- three days, all second Fridays, etc. I haven't seen anything which
- offers so many options for repeating events, although I'm still
- waiting for a calendar program that is slightly programmable so it
- can handle things like Tonya's paychecks, which come on the 15th
- of the month and the last day of the month unless either of those
- days falls on a weekend or holiday, at which point the check comes
- on the first work day beforehand. The rules are simple, but no
- program has been able to handle them yet.
-
- Defining an event is easy, just select the time and date (it
- defaults to today's date, but the time defaults to 8:00 AM), the
- event type (or you can type your own), notes about the event if
- you wish, an alarm, an icon, and then click Add. The icons are
- animated and are to use the vernacular, "way cool." We especially
- liked the board room meeting icon that had different charts
- flashing on the blackboard behind the participants. You may even
- be able to create your own animated icons in the next version of
- the program, at least on the Mac side of things. The alarms, in
- contrast, are truly lame. This is no fault of Amaze, but simply
- the result of running on a PC. The only good one was the sound
- that imitated a digital watch beeping (not too difficult), but
- Vivaldi played in beep and boops was awful. Luckily, the Macintosh
- version will allow you to pick any installed system beep sound,
- and you can create your own with a MacRecorder or with a
- microphone on any of the newer machines. After you've defined an
- event, it shows up in your Day view with the notes and the
- animated icon, in your Week view with just the name, and
- optionally in the Month view as a straight line (a form of greeked
- text) corresponding to the approximate time of day (farther down
- for later in the day). The only problem we had with the display in
- general is that it is a large window that covers the minimized
- icons Windows places at the bottom of your screen (at least on a
- normal-size VGA screen). This will annoy people who wish to keep
- the calendar up all the time and switch in and out of other
- applications too, but was apparently a licensing issue related to
- the aesthetics of the cartoons. (There are a couple of workarounds
- for people wanting to keep the calendar open at all times and
- switch in and out of other applications, but they involve
- offensively non-intuitive keyboard shortcuts.)
-
- What really sets The Far Side Computer Calendar apart, other than
- the nice animated icons and daily cartoon, is the animations.
- Whenever the program starts up, there is a random chance that you
- will see an animation. It might be a version of a six panel Larson
- cartoon like the caveman who sees a bird flying, tries to fly,
- gets disgusted, makes a bow and arrow, and smugly shoots the bird.
- Even better was the animation of a meteor crashing into the screen
- and leaving a temporary crater. I gather there is a window washer
- who comes along and cleans the screen too, but I haven't seen him
- yet, although we did quit the program and start it up over and
- over again to try to get a few more animations to show up. To keep
- you interested in running the program at all times, there are
- secondary animations which run at random times throughout the day.
- It's hard to tell right now after having just played with the
- Windows version, but if the Macintosh version solves the problems
- that are inherent to the PC and Windows, it could be killer
- program.
-
- Oh, if you're wondering, you get one year of cartoons from the day
- you install the program (or another day if you wish). I assume
- that at that point Amaze will have an electronic refill pack ready
- to sell to you at a hopefully reasonable price. Given the "Theme"
- menu, which goes unexplained in the manual, I wouldn't be
- surprised if Amaze came out with refill packs from other
- cartoonists as well - the calendar engine can certainly handle it.
- One nice touch is the card labeled "Open this and get mugged."
- It's the registration card, and to ensure a high return rate,
- Amaze will send you a Far Side mug if you send them the card with
- your name and address on it. It's a good bribe - I will do it. The
- Far Side Computer Calendar should be available from all major
- dealers, mail order houses, and normal stores as well for about
- $50.
-
- Amaze -- 206/820-7007
-
- Information from:
- Amaze propaganda
- The Far Side Computer Calendar manual
-
-
- Reviews/11-Nov-91
- -----------------
-
- * Macworld
- OCR Programs, pg. 169
- AccuText 2.0
- OmniPage 2.12
- Read-It Pro 3.0
- ReadRight for Macintosh 1.0
- ReadStar II Plus for Macintosh 1.08
- Recognize 1.0
- Read-It Personal 2.1
- Typist 1.0
- Tape Backups, pg. 176
- (too many to list)
- Accounting Packages, pg. 186
- (too many to list)
- Multimedia Design Tools, pg. 194
- HyperCard
- Aldus SuperCard
- Spinnaker Plus
- Authorware Professional
- MacroMind Director
- Linx Industrial
- Course Builder
- Microsoft Project 1.1, pg. 210
- DesignStudio 2.0, pg. 212
- EGA/AT Option Module & SoftPC for the Classic/LC 2.0, pg. 224
- BLP Elite, pg. 226
- MacDraw Pro 1.0v1, pg. 228
- Enhance 2.0, pg. 231
- ReadingMaze 1.0, pg. 233
- The Geometer's Sketchpad 1.01, pg. 234
- Meeting Maker and Microsoft Schedule+ 1.0, pg. 239
- CodeCheck 3.01, pg. 240
- DS-3000 Color Scanner and Niscan Spectra, pg. 242
- StatView Student 1.0, pg. 244
- Read My Lips 2.2, pg. 246
- At Your Service 1.0, pg. 246
- Tesserae 1.04, pg. 248
- MiBAC Music Lessons 1.01, pg. 250
- SimMac 3.1, pg. 253
- MousePenMac and MVP Mouse, pg. 255
- Beaker 2.0, pg. 257
- Electronic Workbench 1.5, pg. 259
- Calendar Programs, pg. 261
- Calendar 1.8
- Calendar Creator 1.0
- CalendarMaker 3.01
- MyTimeManager 3.5.8
- Alarming Events
- Smart Alarms 3.0.7
- Rendezvous-Plus 3.02
- AgentDA 1.1
- CalenDAr 1.1.2
- Remember 2.2
- Easy Alarms 1.0
-
- References:
- Macworld -- Nov-91
-
-
- ..
-
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