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- TidBITS#94/18-Nov-91
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/18-Nov-91
- NewsBITS/18-Nov-91
- Aldus Delivers
- TidBITS Fileserver
- Reviews/18-Nov-91
-
-
- MailBITS/18-Nov-91
- ------------------
- We had a bad week. Someone (and I use the term loosely) broke into
- our old car and stole a small piece of the ignition, rendering
- poor Watson the Datsun undrivable. The perpetrator didn't take
- anything else, but did break some plastic and mess up the
- passenger door outside lock. Needless to say, we weren't pleased,
- and I spent most of two days dealing with it, having Watson towed
- to a shop, finding and installing a new ignition, and putting him
- back together. Then on Saturday I made the mistake of playing
- basketball with a group of people who dwarfed my 6'0" height and
- 150 lb. weight. It was, and still is, a painful experience. We
- also forgot to include the phone number for Amaze in last week's
- issue, so it's at the end of this article. Not all is gloomy
- though, and we did hear some good information at the latest dBUG
- meeting, at which Aldus honcho Paul Brainerd gave yet another
- "future of computing" talk but with a semi-working version of
- something he loosely called Multimedia PageMaker. This issue's
- date, Monday, November 18th, is officially my 24th birthday, which
- will be fun, although not as much fun as if we were back in
- Ithaca, an option we seriously considered as Watson sat glumly
- sans ignition. As some unemployed friends say, the worst that can
- happen is that we'll die and crows will peck out our eyeballs. :-)
- Anyway, on to the issue.
-
- One quick piece of administrivia: the caretakers of the FTP site
- at sumex-aim.stanford.edu have decided to reorganize the site
- slightly. TidBITS issues will be located in the /info-
- mac/digest/tb/*.* directory from now on. So if you get your fix
- from sumex, make a note of the new spot.
-
- There's been some confusion over results from Speedometer 3.0 (an
- excellent shareware utility for rating the speeds of Macs)
- especially in the case of the Quadras. Apparently, if you turn off
- the caches on a Quadra, it runs at about the speed of an SE/30 or
- a IIci running a color monitor in 256 colors from internal video.
- This has bothered a lot of people, but Mike O'Dell offers this
- technical explanation. "A bit of Computer Architecture 101:
- Without the caches running, the 68040 is limited to the speed of
- memory, so expecting it to go noticeably faster than a cache-less
- 68020 on the same memory system is pretty unreasonable. Yes, the
- 68040 shortened the cycle counts for some instructions, but all
- that means is that it gets to wait on memory more often. The limit
- is the memory bandwidth. Keep in mind that the access time of
- memory chips is only a fraction of the full cycle time of the
- memory system, which is usually two to three times the access time
- (i.e., 70 ns access yields about 200 ns write cycles, about 150 ns
- read cycles), and the memory system is busy for the full cycle
- time, unless it is bank-interleaved. Bank interleaving allows each
- bank to be doing a cycle simultaneously, assuming the reference
- stride hits the banks right. So, when you disable the primary
- mechanism used to reduce memory latency, you shouldn't be
- surprised the chip runs as slow as a chip without those features."
-
- Jay Lieske writes with a useful tip for Nisus users: "Nisus 3.05
- and later uses a file called "Nisus Text Stationery" for 'TEXT'
- files that lack Nisus formatting - i.e. files from the net, C
- source code, etc. Set up a file with that name in your Nisus
- folder to have the default layout and font you want." [Thanks,
- Jay. Speaking of Nisus and Paragon Concepts, Paragon is working on
- a new program to radically simplify organizing and managing files
- in the disk hierarchy. We haven't heard any details yet, but they
- posted to the Nisus list asking for name suggestions.]
-
- Murph Sewall writes about AppleScript, the scripting module that
- Apple originally promised for System 7, "Apple may still envision
- AppleScript in a "future system" upgrade, but it hasn't received
- any mention among the features expected in System 7.1, including
- QuickTime, ATM, MODE32, and <thank goodness> a fix for that non-
- relocatable code that makes System 7's System memory use appear to
- grow without bound, plus of course, the improved SANE <math>
- that's already in 7.0.1. Latest word is that 7.1 will not be
- announced at January's Macworld (would you believe March?)."
-
- Amaze -- 206/820-7007
-
- Information from:
- Mike O'Dell, whose email address we lost, sorry.
- Jay Lieske -- jay@wanda.princeton.edu
- Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UCONNVM.BITNET
-
-
- NewsBITS/18-Nov-91
- ------------------
- Of course by now you've all heard that Microsoft officially
- announced Word 5 last week after over two and half years, but that
- doesn't mean that you'll see it before January. We'll probably be
- doing an article about what is good, bad, and ugly in the new
- version sometime in the future, so keep an eye out.
-
- I haven't heard too much about this subject recently, having moved
- away from Cornell and its public computer rooms, but at one point
- I was very interested in getting a Mac to boot to a network.
- Actually, my low tech solution was a cheap SCSI device that held a
- small storage device, perhaps EPROMs. That would then work with
- any Mac, rather than requiring a network. (And anyone who wants to
- use my idea can pay me royalties and I'll tell them the rest of
- the details :-)). However, a more logical situation for public
- rooms with Ethernet installed is to use something like Sonic
- Systems's recently-announced The Diskless Mac (TDM). TDM is a ROM
- chip that replaces ROM chips on popular Ethernet cards and
- includes software that loads an image of the System Software into
- a RAM disk on the client Mac. One of TDM's claims to fame is that
- it will work with a Unix server as well as with an AppleShare
- server, which increases its flexibility. I don't know if BootToob,
- the other remote booting package, supports this (see TidBITS#73
- for more information on BootToob). The advantage of remote booting
- should be obvious - client Macs don't need hard disks, easier
- network administration, viruses having a harder time spreading,
- and simpler software protection. The only drawbacks to this sort
- of thing are that it requires an Ethernet network, which isn't as
- cheap or as common as LocalTalk networks, it requires extra RAM
- (my guess is that 4 MB would be the minimum after you devote 1 MB
- to the RAM disk and 1.5 MB for the System to use for normal
- operation; check your About this Macintosh... to see how much your
- System is using), and it costs an extra $149 per Mac. Still, for
- the protection and convenience it offers (I wrote the moron-proof
- instructions for rebuilding a public hard disk from backups at
- Cornell, and it would have been wonderful if those Macs hadn't
- required rebuilding all the time), TDM could easily pay for itself
- in no time.
-
- Sonic Systems -- 408/736-1900
-
- Connectix tells me that they've shipped version 2.2.1 of HAND-Off
- II, which adds compatibility for System 7.0.1, the PowerBooks,
- Quadras, and other 68040 accelerators. The upgrade is free to
- registered users, just call Connectix and ask. If you already own
- On Cue or the Now Utilities, you can get HAND-Off II for $35
- directly from Connectix through December 31st, 1991. In addition
- to the added compatibility, Connectix's Roy MacDonald said that he
- felt the main benefits of the upgrade over Now Software's
- MultiMaster are application substitution, greater reliability, and
- a stronger Launch menu (it now includes a better interface, color
- and sound switching), and the ability to pop up the menu anywhere
- on the screen. HAND-Off II also includes the SuperMenu feature
- that makes the Apple menu hierarchical, a feat matched by Now's
- NowMenus, HAM from Microseeds, and the $10 shareware BeHiearchic.
- In this version of HAND-Off II, Connectix has optimized the
- SuperMenu feature for speed and memory usage, but having only used
- NowMenus, I can't comment on the difference. One final addition to
- HAND-Off II is the ability to have your menu drop automatically
- when you move the mouse over it, called "auto-drop," or to have
- the menu stay down once you click once on it, called "click-to-
- drop." I've found similar features irritating on 13" monitors, but
- Roy said that despite misgivings, he found it quite useful on a
- 25" monitor. Time will tell.
-
- Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100
-
- At the last dBUG meeting, Aldus president Paul Brainerd said that
- he wouldn't buy a PowerBook right away because he couldn't live in
- 40 MB. Luckily for him, CMS has announced 40 MB and 80 MB upgrade
- drives specifically for the PowerBooks, and has a 100 MB drive in
- the works for early 1992. These LDPB drives sport 15 ms average
- access time and a somewhat better throughput than Apple's models.
- I mistakenly said in our "Quadra Quirks" article that the hard
- drive in the PowerBook 100 was soldered on, which would have made
- upgrading the 100 quite difficult. Soldering the hard drive on to
- the motherboard was proposed as a way the next PowerBooks could
- get still smaller but got mixed up in my scribbled notes (I forgot
- the MiniBAT that night.). Thanks to Karl Seppala of CMS for
- setting me straight on that. So if you have any PowerBook and need
- a larger internal hard drive, these drives from CMS should now be
- shipping. They don't come cheap, with the LDPB 80 drive listing
- for $999 and the LDPB 40 for $699, but size is inversely
- proportional to cost these days. Needless to say, a dealer should
- install this sort of thing, especially considering how easy it is
- to mess up a PowerBook and its equally fragile warranty if you
- don't know what you're doing inside.
-
- CMS -- 714/222-6000
-
- Here's an interesting new CD. Raynbow Software has searched far
- and wide for GIF (I believe it stands for Graphic Interchange
- Format and was developed by CompuServe) images and put them on a
- CD-ROM. They have about 5000 images of the G and PG variety, to
- use the Motion Pictures Association of America ratings. So those
- of you looking for the NC-17 GIF images should look elsewhere (X
- and XXX actually aren't MPAA ratings). The only catch is that
- GIFdb, the database software for searching among these 5000 images
- only runs under DOS. Ick. However, Raynbow has included GIF
- viewers, convertors, and manipulators for the Mac as well as the
- Amiga, Atari ST, and Sun, and when I asked, Louis Goldstein said
- that the disk was pressed in ISO 9660 format, which means that you
- can use it with a Mac. Without the search engine it might be a tad
- difficult to find any given image, but all the images will be
- accessible. Louis did say that they plan to create search engines
- for other platforms if this disc succeeds, so hope remains. The
- disc is being pressed as I write and should ship soon.
- Interestingly enough, since Raynbow has merely collected the GIF
- files and the utilities, those are included for free. The $50 cost
- covers only the media and Raynbow's DOS search engine. A penny per
- image isn't bad in comparison to the connect fees you would rack
- up downloading them, plus they're all on a single CD, a good place
- for space-hungry graphic files.
-
- Raynbow Software -- 408/425-1154
-
- Information from:
- Connectix propaganda
- Roy MacDonald, Connectix -- connectix@applelink.apple.com
- CMS propaganda
- Karl Seppala, CMS -- seppala@applelink.apple.com
- Louis Goldstein, Raynbow Software -- louis@terra.ucsc.edu
-
-
- Aldus Delivers
- --------------
- Well, at least that's what they claim and it sounds better than
- "Aldus Promises." Aldus showed up to show off at the last dBUG
- meeting in downtown Seattle. Aldus president Paul Brainerd started
- the evening with a version of his keynote address to the Seybold
- Conference earlier this fall, and unlike most of those "I have a
- dream about computers..." talks, Paul actually had an application.
- I liked that because I'm becoming bored with canned demos and
- videotape productions showing off what well-paid executives think
- will happen in the future. Not surprisingly, Aldus's current
- vision of the future is based on PageMaker, and Paul jokingly
- called the program "Multimedia PageMaker." The basics of the
- program look a lot like what I would expect PageMaker to look like
- once it supports QuickTime, with the ability to import and play
- sound, animation, and video. That was cute, but not terribly
- interesting. However, Paul's main point, I think, was that people
- receiving the information ought to be able to receive it in
- whatever form they wish, putting the burden on the author to make
- that possible and on the program to make the forms obvious.
- Multimedia PageMaker approached this by optionally displaying the
- multimedia document with sound and video as a three dimensional
- picture that let you look behind the virtual page. Each medium was
- represented by a 3-D bar whose length corresponded to the time of
- the sound bite or video clip, and the reader could pick and choose
- between them, jumping in anywhere at will, much as people browse
- through books or radio stations or TV channels. It was a good
- idea, though not exactly revolutionary. Paul did mention the
- serious problems of copyright and distribution but didn't offer
- any solutions. I'm waiting for the solutions.
-
- Back in the real world, several product managers introduced the
- latest versions of their programs, PageMaker 4.2 and FreeHand 3.1.
- PageMaker 4.2 sounds like a solid, if not impressive, upgrade.
- First and foremost, it includes full System 7 support with Publish
- & Subscribe, which will allow PageMaker and FreeHand to be even
- more tightly integrated. Double-clicking on a placed FreeHand
- document in PageMaker will run FreeHand and open that document for
- editing. Changes in the FreeHand document are then reflected
- immediately (if you wish) in PageMaker. An enhancement that is not
- physically included in PageMaker's code is Aldus PrePrint, which
- now comes bundled in PageMaker's box for free. People who do color
- separations will appreciate that. Everyone will appreciate the
- speed increases in PageMaker 4.2, including the ability to
- interrupt the screen redraw. I'm not enough of a type-head to
- understand the use of this, but Aldus added baseline to baseline
- leading, and apparently that's a big deal. To compete with
- QuarkXPress, Aldus included a control palette (it allows users to
- enter precise numerical values for various actions) and the
- ability to load discrete modules, called Aldus Additions. Aldus
- showed several examples of Additions, including one that allowed
- repetitive actions to be scripted with a simple scripting language
- and another that allowed the user to arrange thumbnails of pages
- to quickly modify the overall arrangement of the document.
-
- FreeHand 3.1 has a couple nice new features, including support for
- pressure-sensitive tablets such as those from Wacom. No other
- PostScript drawing program supports these pressure-sensitive
- tablets, so FreeHand will probably pick up some supporters on that
- basis alone. Other enhancements include the ability to import and
- export color libraries, new style and layer palettes, and of
- course the hot links with PageMaker, which do require System 7.
-
- Some highly-awaited features that should appear in the next
- version of PageMaker include multiple documents on screen at the
- same time (finally!), an ink-based color model, the ability to
- rotate graphics (and presumably text) in small increments, and the
- ability to group objects, which would be excruciatingly helpful.
-
- Information from:
- Aldus representatives
- Aldus propaganda
-
-
- TidBITS Fileserver
- ------------------
- The review of uAccess is still in the works but I am making
- progress. In the meantime, I've thought of a good way to introduce
- you to one of uAccess's more impressive features while at the same
- time providing a useful service that can save us all time.
-
- I've just finished setting up a fileserver in uAccess, which is a
- piece of cake to do with ICE Engineering's custom address command.
- Other custom address commands can autoReply to mail or autoForward
- mail to another electronic address. The fileserver address command
- is the most powerful one so far though. It's not up to the level
- of the LISTSERV software or even a Unix-based mailing list
- program, but it appears to work fine and is a breeze to configure
- and administrate, which I suspect is not true of the Unix systems.
-
- Essentially then, all I had to do was create the files that I
- wanted to make available, format them for transmission through the
- Internet, and then make a record of them in the fileserver
- configuration dialog, adding a keyword and setting some options
- such as what to do with the request mail, keep it or trash it.
- There are currently five files available, although I can make more
- available at any time. These five files are:
-
- help (for using the fileserver)
- index (which lists all the available files)
- guidelines (for writing articles and reviews for us)
- info (general information about TidBITS)
- locations (where you can find issues of TidBITS)
-
- You can read the help and index files for more details, but if you
- wish to request a file from the fileserver, send email to
- fileserver@tidbits.halcyon.com with the keyword (filename) as the
- only word in the Subject: line of your message. Other words in the
- Subject: line and the entire text of the message will be ignored,
- which means you can only request one file per message. Sorry.
-
- One addition I would like to make to the fileserver soon is a list
- of bulletin boards and phone numbers where people can find
- TidBITS. So, if you know of any bulletin boards that carry TidBITS
- issues, please send me email telling me:
-
- BBS name
- BBS location
- BBS phone number
- BBS modem speeds if you know them
-
- So for instance:
-
- Memory Alpha
- Ithaca, NY USA
- 607/257-5822
- 12/24 (or if Mark has added a 9600 bps modem, 12/24/96)
-
- I'm sure someone will ask, but I cannot make issues of TidBITS
- available on the fileserver because of the possible demand from
- thousands of people on the Internet. My site runs over a 2400 bips
- UUCP link that only connects three times per night and not at all
- during the day. There's no way the link could support that level
- of demand, though a dedicated phone line and a high speed modem
- might help significantly. In addition, because I don't have a
- dedicated line, you won't get a return file quite as quickly as
- you might like, although uAccess will process requests promptly.
- If you get a request in for the 1:00 am call, that file should go
- out in the 3:00 am call. If you hit the 7:00 am call, your file
- will have to wait until 1:00 am the next day to go out. Just so
- you realize what you're dealing with here... :-)
-
- So if you wish to get any information that is contained in the
- above files, please use the fileserver rather than asking me
- personally. It will save us both time and is generally more
- efficient. However, if you have any suggestions for other files
- that I should include on the fileserver, please let me know.
-
- Cheers ... -Adam
-
-
- Reviews/18-Nov-91
- -----------------
-
- * Macworld
- Macintosh PowerBooks, pg. 130
- Macintosh Quadras, pg. 140
- Macintosh Classic II, pg. 148
- TokaMac LC, SX, CI, pg. 166
- Radius Rocket, pg. 166
- Outbound Notebook System, pg. 167
- WordPerfect Office 3.0, pg. 170
- LightningScan Compact, pg. 172
- JAG 1.0, pg. 177
- Michael's Draw 1.0, pg. 179
- Quicken 3.0, pg. 181
- ElectricImage 1.0, pg. 181
- More After Dark, Volume One, pg. 184
- Bible Software, pg. 186
- macBible 2.5
- HyperBible 2.0
- Verse Search 5.0
- Net Watchman 1.1, pg. 188
- Bernoulli Transportable 90, pg. 190
- About Cows, pg. 192
- Inspiration 3.0, pg. 195
- Music Publisher 2.5.2, pg. 197
- Personal Training Programs, pg. 199
- Personal Training Systems
- MacAcademy
- Baobab
- The Pollard Group
- TDG
- Individual Software
- Aldus
- Tutorland
-
- References:
- Macworld -- Dec-91
-
-
- ..
-
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