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- TidBITS#100/06-Jan-92
- =====================
-
- To kick off our new format and the new year we've included reviews
- of some hot new products, Word 5 (with important installation
- tips!) and the PowerBook 170. Find out about chord keyboards that
- might help with carpal tunnel syndrome and about computers you can
- wear. Also this week: a bug with some RasterOps video cards, an
- incorrect illustration in the PowerBook manual, a superstore
- rumor, and how to get that ResEdit template we promised last issue
- but forgot. Enjoy!
-
- 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:
- TidBITS in new format
- MailBITS/06-Jan-92
- NewsBITS/06-Jan-92
- Word 5 Impressions
- PowerBook 170 Review
- BAT Updates
- Reviews/06-Jan-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-100.etx; 36K]
-
-
- TidBITS in new format
- ---------------------
- Welcome to TidBITS#100 and our new setext format! The term
- "setext" stands for "structure-enhanced text" and we have designed
- and optimized the format for use primarily by online publications
- such as TidBITS (i.e., 7-bit text only). We'll be publishing more
- about the format itself as time goes by, but for now suffice it to
- say that there are vast advantages of using a consistently-defined
- text format, both for you that read us online and offline and for
- ourselves, the publishers. At the very least, our weekly issues
- should be easier to read and peruse directly online without having
- to download first.
-
- This week we have a number of excellent articles, so please bear
- with some administrivia first. Those of you that have not seen
- TidBITS before ought to know that we're a FREE weekly electronic
- newsletter, with a full 100 issues since April of 1990 to our
- credit. The first 99 were written and distributed in the HyperCard
- stack format. We're now switching to the setext format to widen
- our accessibility on all computer platforms. Those of you on the
- Internet, AppleLink, or CompuServe (i.e. who can send electronic
- mail to the Internet) can receive more information about TidBITS
- through our fileserver. Address the email to:
-
- fileserver@tidbits.halcyon.com - or - fileserver@tidbits.uucp
-
- The fileserver, which is an automatic program that understands
- commands sent to it via email, will send you back any file whose
- name you specify in the Subject: line. For help and an abbreviated
- listing of what is currently available, send a message with the
- single word "help" (without the quotes) in the Subject: line. Any
- text in the body of the letter or other words on the Subject: line
- will be ignored.
-
-
- More about setext
- From now on all issues of TidBITS will be readable directly online
- (for those of you whose systems support this anyway). Those of you
- wishing to download/ read/ archive them at home may read the files
- with any computer program that is able to open TEXT documents. In
- time - not too distant, we promise - there will be special setext
- _browsers_ to automate the task of searching, archiving and
- transforming bits of the encoded material into WYSIMOLWYG ("What
- You See Is More Or Less What You Get"), to permit navigation in
- large archived mass of data, and more. At least two people are
- currently writing setext browsers, and they will _not_ be
- specific to TidBITS but to **any** setext publication that
- conforms to the format. We also hope to have browsers for direct
- online use (attachments to rn etc., so if you're interested in
- writing one, please contact us). For now any word processor or
- even TeachText (for issues under 30K, as most will be) will do the
- job just fine. Incidentally, setext issues submitted to the Info-
- Mac archives and other archives will have an ".etx" suffix
- ("enhanced/ e-mailable text"), to distinguish them from plain
- ".txt" files, but they'll contain nothing but pure, undiluted,
- structure-enhanced text. So look for "tidbits-###.etx" documents.
-
-
- Introducing: The Delimiters!
- Another of the new enhancements is a special article-end-
- delimiter, expressed as "end" sandwiched between the "<>"
- characters at the very end of each article. You'll see it. This
- should allow importing of the issues into any text database
- programs (like Storyspace from Eastgate Systems or ThoughtPattern
- from Bananafish Software) that can break text into chunks based on
- specific text patterns. Small items within "compound" articles may
- also be delimited with four offset hyphens on a line by itself or
- with short sub-subheads.
-
- Finally, among the most noticeable changes in the structure of
- TidBITS is the placement of the review listings at the end of each
- issue. From now on, this is where they're going to be found. Quite
- frankly, they are boring to read but are useful to many. Those of
- you downloading and archiving the issues may still want them for
- occasional searches but the majority of (online) readers won't
- have to scroll or page first in order to start reading. We'll have
- more on the setext format in future issues as well.
-
- Information from:
- Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
- chief designer, demon encoder-coder and the current Setext
- Oracle, hard at work on a browser & the setext format release
- Adam C. Engst -- ace@tidbits.halcyon.com
-
-
- MailBITS/06-Jan-92
- ------------------
- I thought that the 13-Jan-92 issue might never happen because I'm
- planning to attend the Macworld expo in San Francisco. It turns
- out that we have enough articles built up to do that issue a few
- days early, so I'll be sending it out before I head off to collect
- lots of news and information for future issues and generally enjoy
- myself. I've already got an invitation to a Claris press reception
- and a couple of others, and I should be at the netters' dinner on
- Sunday night as well. I'm sure I'll see some of you there, and the
- rest of you will hear about it in the 20-Jan-92 issue.
-
-
- ResEdit Template Goof
- In our last issue, which was the last HyperCard stack, I had
- planned to include a ResEdit fmnu template to aid in editing the
- System 7 Finder (for those of you who didn't see that issue, it
- included a number of ways to modify your Finder to make it faster,
- more useful, or merely different). But in the flurry of the
- season, I forgot. So, I've put the template up on our fileserver
- (it's only 714 bytes) for anyone to request. It is Binhexed, so
- you will need to deBinhex it after downloading. Then you can
- install it in your ResEdit Preferences file as I outlined in
- TidBITS#99/Finder_Fun**. **To receive this file, send email to
- fileserver@tidbits.halcyon.com or fileserver@tidbits.uucp with the
- single word (no quotes) "template" in the Subject: line.
-
-
- RasterOps 364 Video Bug
- Mark H. Anbinder writes, "Owners of the RasterOps 364 video card
- for the SE/30 who have tried using System 7 may find that they get
- occasional, unexplainable system errors (usually reported by the
- Mac as bus errors). Since the crashes don't happen at predictable
- times, they are tough to track down. Apparently, this is due to an
- incompatibility in the older ROMs on some 364 cards. RasterOps has
- said they will send a replacement ROM free of charge to affected
- users. I recommend that most users have this ROM installed at
- their local Apple authorized service center. While some people may
- be comfortable with and familiar with opening the SE/30 and
- fiddling around inside, it's not generally something I recommend
- to the average user; it's too easy to injure yourself or the
- computer."
-
- "Thanks to Tory Yaphe of BAKA Computers for providing this
- information, after he laboriously tracked down the cause of the
- problem in his own computer. :-)"
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Tory Yaphe -- BAKA Computers
-
-
- NewsBITS/06-Jan-92
- ------------------
- Again, from Mark H. Anbinder. "On page 97 of the Macintosh User's
- Guide for PowerBook computers, there is an illustration showing
- how to insert a battery into the PowerBook 140/170 recharger. The
- illustration is incorrect. The battery should be turned around so
- that the brass contacts on the battery meet with the brass
- contacts inside of the recharger unit."
-
- "When the battery is inserted according to the illustration, the
- charge light will not come on, indicating a defective battery or
- the charger not plugged in. When the battery is plugged in
- correctly, there should be either a yellow light indicating that
- the battery is charging or a green light indicating that the
- battery is charged and ready for use."
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- J&R Superstore Rumor
- We've heard from a usually well-connected source that New York
- City's J&R Music World, one of the biggest consumer electronics
- discounters, has just "acquired" the entire Macintosh-oriented
- staff of the Mac Emporium, one of the big Apple dealers in NYC.
- Apparently J&R plans to offer Macs at superstore pricing and still
- provide a competent level of support, unlike many of the
- businesses trying the superstore approach. It will be interesting
- to see if indeed this is true, and if J&R will manage to combine
- the benefits of dealer service with the superstore pricing
- structure.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Word 5 Impressions
- ------------------
- by Pythaeus
-
- Microsoft has begun shipping Word 5 for the Macintosh, and
- everyone seems to have questions about the it. Is it any good? Is
- it worth $129 upgrade? Will it work with my computer? Should I run
- right out and buy Nisus? I won't attempt to even begin to answer
- all these questions, but I can give a couple of my early
- impressions, some interesting and hopefully useful information,
- and some important installation tips. Stay tuned for more (yes,
- "Word 5, The Sequel") coming to an issue of TidBITS near you next
- week. In that article I'll look at all the external parts of Word,
- the import filters, the modules, the manual, and those sorts of
- things.
-
- Quite frankly, when I first started using Word 5, I was less than
- impressed. It seemed as though Microsoft had upgraded Word 4 for
- System 7-savviness, slapped on a new interface, a thesaurus that
- did not require the Font/DA Mover to install (as Word 4's did even
- under System 7), a Grammar Checker (for people with no linguistic
- confidence), an Equation Editor (which is actually pretty
- powerful) and a drawing section. Since I'm not much of an equation
- person, I mainly liked the drawing section's text rotation tool,
- which rotates text to any angle that you wish (something that
- PageMaker still doesn't do).
-
- I've had some time to work with Word 5 now, and though it still
- holds numerous puzzles and some features that I have not explored,
- I'm liking it quite a bit more than I did before. I've also had a
- chance to look over the manual, which is a vast improvement over
- the Word 4 manual, not that that would be difficult. But more
- about all that next week. Here's a rundown of some of the features
- that I have used.
-
- Before I started using Word, I mainly wrote with WriteNow, which
- uses the standard Macintosh keyboard shortcuts for Bold, Italic,
- Select All, and a few others. Try some of these shortcuts in Word
- 4, and - hold on to your mouse - wacky stuff happens. Word 5
- returns Word users to the standards with Command-A for Select All,
- Command-B for Bold, and so on, although you can completely
- customize the keyboard shortcuts in both programs. Word 5 ships
- with an optional Word Settings file having Word 4's eccentric
- shortcuts, so Word 4 users won't have to relearn any commands.
-
- The menus have changed a lot too. There's now an Insert menu for
- inserting all sorts of stuff, and the Font menu contains "Up,"
- "Down," and "Other" commands. It isn't obvious from the structure
- of the menu, but Up and Down actually increase or decrease the
- font size by one point, and Other appears to merely bring up the
- Character Formatting dialog box, probably so you can select a
- different font size. Even stranger, Other was in Outline style,
- indicating that other font sizes are available, I suspect. As a
- boon to humanity, Microsoft removed the old Short Menus feature
- (or bug, as someone I knew once called it) in favor of shipping a
- special Word Settings file for folks who liked not being able to
- do much of anything.
-
- One obvious new part of the interface is the ribbon, a bar that
- appears just above the ruler and contains some of the more common
- formatting commands. In fact, the pop-down menus on the ribbon
- almost completely duplicate the contents of the Font menu.
- Microsoft also included the more common style commands like Bold,
- Italic, and Underline, which are duplicated in the Format menu,
- but included Superscript and Subscript, which are otherwise only
- available in the Character Formatting dialog box. Other buttons on
- the ribbon include a button to switch to the graphics section, a
- button to display the paragraph markers, and buttons to change
- between one, two, and three columns, which ought to be especially
- handy.
-
- The extensive Preferences dialog box has an interface much like
- the System 6 Control Panel. Some new and notable preferences
- include a Save reminder (you specify how often, but then you have
- to be willing to be beeped at that time interval for the rest of
- your writing life, unlike most other programs which can save
- automatically without bothering you), Short Menu Names (this means
- that the menu titles in the menu bar are abbreviated so they fit
- on the 9" screen better), and an extremely straightforward way to
- set the default font (one of the major bug-a-boos in Word 4 for
- people who didn't realize it was the result of the Normal style).
-
- Here's a new idea - drag and drop text. Basically, you select some
- text, and then you click on it and drag it some place else. Within
- the same screen of text, this is easier than cut and paste, but
- I've found myself accidently dragging things around. Luckily, this
- option can be turned off, so if I don't improve at it, I won't
- have to use it. It's also only practical within the screen since
- once you've started to drag, you can't use the mouse or keyboard
- to jump around in the document, although the window will scroll
- with you as you drag.
-
- The Find and Replace command lets you do a bit more than Word 4
- allowed. For example, you can look for a particular bold word and
- replace it with that same word in italic. But you still cannot
- look for all bold words and replace them with italic words. (You
- actually can do this in Word 4 and Word 5 with the file saved in
- RTF format, but this is not for the timid). The Find and Replace
- box is a bit awkward, with menus popping up and down all over the
- place. You can also search for a pattern of numbers, but the
- pattern matching stops there and doesn't come close to matching
- the raw power of Nisus's PowerSearch+ (essentially a Unix-like
- grep, which stands for Global Regular Expression Parser. Glad you
- asked?).
-
- Still no macro language, though Microsoft claims that WordBASIC
- from Word for Windows will be in Word 5.1.
-
- Still only one undo, grrr, unlike Nisus's unlimited undo's.
-
- Before you can play with some of this stuff you (of course) have
- to install Word 5 on your machine. Here are some important things
- to keep in mind:
-
- * Speed: Face it. If you have a 68000-based machine, Word 5
- ambles. Use WriteNow. Put Word on a IIcx and it works fine. I
- haven't seen it on a 68020, so you'll have to try it yourself.
- Right now, I'm running Word on a Mac Classic, and while it
- certainly keeps up with my typing, I'd probably turn into a
- frustrated pumpkin if I had to do a lot of quick formatting to
- meet a deadline, since each dialog box takes its own sweet time
- opening and closing.
-
- * Hardware: Word 5 moseys on a Mac Plus and runs on machines newer
- and faster than the Plus. PowerBook users will want to remember to
- turn off the preference for Background Repagination (I still can't
- believe that Microsoft can't figure out how to do Background
- Pagination quickly like everyone else in the known universe.) so
- that their computers can sleep properly, and Quadra users can keep
- their caches on.
-
- * Memory: Microsoft explains this right on the package.
- Essentially, Word 5 is a RAM hog. If you run System 6.0.2 or later
- (but not System 7) your computer must have 1 MB of RAM, but
- Microsoft recommends having 2 MB. If you want to run the Grammar
- Checker, you must have 2 MB. If you run System 7 or later, you
- must have at least 2 MB (of course) and 4 MB to run the Grammar
- Checker. Word 5's suggested size without the Grammar Checker is
- 1024K (I believe the suggested size increases to 2048K with the
- Grammar Checker installed).
-
- * Disk Space: You need a hard drive for the installation, and you
- won't want to work off of floppy if you can possibly avoid it. The
- Word 5 program alone is 825K. Add the spell checker and the
- dictionary file and you'll need 1.2 MB. The drawing capability
- takes another 72K and the Find File function takes up 81K. I
- installed as much as I could on my hard disk, and my Word 5 folder
- takes up 2.7 MB. Notice I said I installed "as much as I could."
- The Word 5 installer (Microsoft used version 3.3 of Apple's
- installer program) requires enough free space on the hard disk to:
- hold the compressed files, the uncompressed files, and a copy of
- your System file. So, when I tried to install, I only had 7.5 MB
- free and I tried to install most everything. After a few tries,
- Word and I compromised on not installing any of the filters except
- the EPS/TIFF/PICT filter and not installing the Grammar Checker (I
- don't have enough RAM to use it under System 7 anyhow). Another
- solution would have been to install the System-related files in a
- second installation. The installer has a custom install option in
- which you select files to be installed.
-
- * System Folder: Some parts of the Word 5 package (the Equation
- Editor's special font, specially configured Word Settings files,
- and the Voice Annotation software, for example) install into your
- System or System folder. If you choose to install on a disk having
- no System Folder, none of the System stuff will show up as
- installation choices. So, if you normally put your startup System
- on one disk and your software on another, you'll need to pay
- attention to what you install where. The best tactics here might
- be to either install everything on your startup disk and then copy
- the application-related files to another disk or run the installer
- twice, once to install the System stuff on the startup disk and
- once to install the applications files.
-
- Well that's enough words about Word for now. Remember, if it seems
- like I didn't talk about a lot of the cool features that you've
- been hearing about, that's because they are external to the
- program. So tune in next week, same bat-channel...
-
- Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
- Microsoft Mac Word Technical Support -- 206/635-7200
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Word 5 Installer Read Me
- Word 5 manual
-
-
- PowerBook 170 Review
- --------------------
- by Murph Sewall
-
- My initial reaction to the PowerBook 170 was WOW! So, I thought I
- might use it for a couple of weeks before writing down my
- impressions. Now that I've used the PowerBook 170 long enough for
- the initial dazzle to wear off, my considered impression is WOW!
-
- One of the first things I did was run a Speedometer comparison of
- the PowerBook 170 and the IIci (with cache card). The statistics
- are nearly dead even. The PowerBook 170 also has a 16 MHz "power
- saver" mode for lengthening the usable life of a battery charge.
- The statistics for power saver mode are a close approximation to
- those recorded for an SE/30 (16 MHz with FPU and black and white
- display).
-
- I've taken the opportunity to cycle (full charge to "I'm going to
- sleep, ready or not") the battery several times in both 25 MHz and
- 16 MHz modes. A battery life of about 2.5 hours in normal use at
- power saver speed seems a realistic expectation. Using the modem
- which the manual says consumes extra power) even without power
- saving, the battery delivers the low end of the promised "2 to 3
- hours." At 16 MHz, the battery lasts longer, but not an hour
- longer (at least not the way I use the PowerBook). Word processing
- sessions, with infrequent saves, permit the hard drive to power
- down and prolong the usable battery life. Sticking to tasks which
- rarely access the hard drive may provide close to three hours of
- computing before recharging. Even though the internal floppy drive
- gobbles power, I have been able to duplicate floppy disks at user
- group meetings for more than 1.5 hours without depleting the
- battery.
-
- The PowerBook provides ample warning when the battery charge gets
- low. There's roughly a half-hour left after the first warning, and
- perhaps ten minutes after the second. The third warning occurs
- only 10 seconds before the PowerBook drops into sleep mode.
- Fortunately, memory contents are preserved (at least for awhile).
- Plugging into an AC outlet restores programs to where they were
- when the system went to sleep.
-
- Commands which activate the drive once it has fallen asleep take a
- little getting used to. The delay while the drive comes up to
- speed is a clever imitation of a system freeze. The Portable
- Control Panel has an option that keeps the drive active while
- plugged into an AC outlet.
-
- Galen Gruman's review in the February Macworld (pg. 258) complains
- a great deal about the PowerBook keyboard. While I too prefer the
- Apple Extended keyboard to the PowerBook's built-in keyboard, I
- find the Macworld review overly critical. In my opinion, the
- "wrist rest" design is more comfortable than the keyboards of
- other (MS-DOS) notebooks. Possibly, my more positive view is
- affected by my hand size (not large), and the fact that I'm not a
- flash typist (I do touch type, but at something on the order of 40
- words per minute). I've also used a _lot_ of keyboards, so I'm not
- habituated to a particular feel (the PowerBook has it all over a
- 33 KSR teletype :-)).
-
- The review expresses a lot of frustration about trying to find a
- comfortable placement of the keyboard. I've also found the average
- table or desk too high. Tables and desktops also place other
- computer keyboards at a greater height than a typewriter (or
- computer) table. Even at typing stand height, the PowerBook
- keyboard feels odd. It's likely I haven't adapted to using a
- PowerBook on a fixed surface because I rarely do so. The real
- reason for a notebook computer is portability. The PowerBook's
- wrist rest design is the best literally "in-my-lap" keyboard I've
- ever used. My preferred PowerBook typing position is in a
- recliner. I've tried putting an Apple Extended Keyboard in my lap;
- in that position, I prefer the PowerBook.
-
- Unlike Gruman, who doesn't like trackballs, I prefer them. Hence,
- I adapted to the PowerBook's "thumb ball" rather quickly. Gruman
- had trouble pointing accurately on a subway. I experienced similar
- difficulty riding home over two lane roads as a passenger in a
- pickup truck. However, I generally was able to keep on computing
- (and typing) in the truck, in the dark. I'm sure using a PowerBook
- on a commercial airline will not be a problem.
-
- Gruman evidently runs a very spare System. The claim that 7.0.1
- requires a megabyte less memory than 7.0 isn't borne out by my
- experience. With all extensions off, 7.0.1 only squeezes down to
- 1.3 megabytes. The addition of a modest number (for me that's
- about a dozen) of utilitarian extensions (Apollo, ShortCut,
- BeHierarchic, a printer driver, and so forth) results in a System
- of 1.75 MB. With 4 MB of RAM, I have room to run an application
- which requires 2 MB (SPSS), but I have to quit before PrintMonitor
- has room enough to print the application's output.
-
- It's difficult for most users to justify the expense of a
- PowerBook as a second Macintosh. Hence, a reasonable question is
- how capable is the PowerBook as a primary computer? First, I would
- recommend purchasing a separate keyboard to plug into the ADB port
- for regular desktop use. Placing the display in a comfortable
- location relative to an external keyboard probably will make the
- built-in trackball difficult to reach. An extra trackball or mouse
- could prove handy. For many of us, a 40 MB hard drive also is
- limiting. The PowerBook on a desktop works very nicely with an
- external drive, and 40 MB or even larger external drives have
- dropped to quite reasonable prices. One doesn't really need to
- take every application and document on the road.
-
- The active matrix display is at least as nice as the venerable 9"
- screen of the compact Macs. In fact, the PowerBook screen is wider
- than that long-time Macintosh standard. If color really is
- essential, there are third party devices that permit attaching a
- PowerBook to a color display.
-
- The PowerBook 170's price is slightly less than for a 5 MB IIci
- with 80 MB hard drive (without keyboard and monitor). The
- PowerBook 140 and IIsi are likewise comparably priced. Anyone in
- the market for a IIsi or IIci might find a PowerBook with external
- keyboard and third party external hard disk worth considering. I
- believe the PowerBook 170 is worth every penny of the premium over
- the model 140. The most valuable differences are the internal
- fax/modem (about one-third of the price difference if purchased
- separately) and the FPU (floating point unit). Many people don't
- realize the extent to which the math coprocessor accelerates
- calculation and display of graphics. An FPU is a worthwhile
- addition even for users who don't crunch a lot of numbers. The
- other noticeable difference between the 170 and the 140 is the
- active matrix display. I find the 140's passive LCD quite
- satisfactory, but the active matrix looks and acts a lot more like
- a CRT. LCD displays have a relatively narrow viewing angle that
- makes it difficult for more than one person to have a clear look
- at the screen. The active matrix display has a viewing angle the
- equal of a CRT.
-
- In short, if buying a IIsi seems sensible, buying a PowerBook 140
- should seem sensible. If a PowerBook 140 seems sensible, then
- finding the extra dollars for a 170 is not a farfetched notion.
-
- Information from:
- Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UCONNVM.BITNET
-
-
- BAT Updates
- -----------
- I've written in the past about the cute personal organizer
- (nanocomputer?) from Infogrip called the miniBAT. I've used one
- since early August when Ward Bond, Infogrip's president, sent me
- one to try. After a fair amount of use, I've come to several
- conclusions. First, the miniBAT works well as a small note-taking
- machine, and its other features add a bit to its overall utility.
- Second, and more importantly, I think chord keyboards stand a
- chance in the fight against carpal tunnel syndrome-causing QWERTY
- keyboards, although the fight will be an uphill one even now that
- Infogrip has come out with the BAT, a pair of seven key chord
- keyboards that supplement or replace your standard keyboard. The
- BAT comes in models for the Macintosh and PC clones, and several
- other options are on the way. For those of you who haven't heard
- of a chord keyboard until now, it works in the same way a piano
- does; you simply hit two or more keys together to create a unique
- keystroke. For instance, the single index finger might be the
- letter "e" and the index finger and the middle finger together
- might be the letter "a." Believe me, it works, and surprisingly
- well.
-
- The miniBAT measures about 3.5" x 7" x .75" and weighs
- approximately eleven ounces - and that's with a full 37K of data
- in it. :-) It comes with a sturdy plastic slipcase and fits into
- roomy pockets. The current incarnation of the miniBAT sports a
- tiny twenty character by four line LCD display that isn't lit in
- any way. Its has a terribly laid-out alphabetical keyboard (laid
- out in alphabetical order), number keys, and 19 function/
- navigation keys. Both the screen and the keys would seem to be
- major drawbacks to using the miniBAT, but they're not. I'll
- explain in a bit. The rest of the surface of the miniBAT is taken
- up by seven large keys placed to correspond with the natural
- positions of the fingers on the right hand (lefties can learn to
- use their right hands pretty easily I suspect, since the motions
- aren't significantly different from normal typing, which uses both
- hands). The right side of the miniBAT contains the rest of the
- items the user will care about, the ON/OFF switch, the power plug
- for charging, an indicator light that goes on when the miniBAT is
- plugged in, and a small serial port covered by a sliding panel.
- The miniBAT supposedly lasts about 40 hours on a charge, but I've
- never tried to run it down all the way.
-
- I'm not really up on the personal organizer market since I'm not
- particularly impressed by what they can do for me. However,
- nanocomputers intrigue me, and I like to check out computers like
- the HP 95LX and the Poqet PC from the hit movie, "Honey I Shrunk
- The Keyboard." Those two have far better screens than the miniBAT,
- and their keyboards are at least laid out in the QWERTY layout, so
- you have a chance of being able to type on them, but when it comes
- right down to it, they're too small. It doesn't make sense to make
- a nanocomputer by merely shrinking the design of a desktop
- computer; they are different beasts and serve different purposes
- so they should be designed differently.
-
- Later this week Infogrip will introduce the first in a line of
- InfoWear, computers that you actually wear. The Hip PC is a small
- PC clone that lives in a fanny pack worn around the waist. A
- miniBAT serves as a keyboard, and Reflection Technologies's
- Private Eye virtual display works as a monitor. I'm pleased to
- hear about InfoWear, and in fact as soon as I heard the name from
- Ward, I asked him to spell the last four letters for me, just to
- be sure. I have pushed for wearable computer equipment for some
- time now since makes so much more sense than an itty-bitty
- desktop-style palmtop. See TidBITS#23/01-Oct-90 for the article I
- wrote way back when on Portable Computer Clothing.
-
- So anyway, yes, the miniBAT has a bad screen and yes, the miniBAT
- has a terrible alphabetic keyboard. But the chord keyboard makes
- up for it with a vengeance. As I've said, I use the miniBAT mainly
- for taking notes in meetings, although I'm considering starting to
- use it for taking notes while I talk on the phone since I hate
- trying to type on my keyboard with one hand. I even used the
- miniBAT to write a short letter to my mother while creeping along
- in a Seattle traffic jam. Ward told me that one miniBAT user is
- writing a novel while commuting to work; I'm too chicken to try
- that.
-
- The beauty of the chord keyboard is that within an hour or so you
- can learn to touch type. If you can touch type, you don't have to
- use the alphabetic keyboard at all (or most of the function keys),
- and you no longer have to look at the screen. If you don't have to
- look at the screen, you can do lots of other things like pay
- attention in a meeting or interview, watch a presentation in a
- darkened room, drive your car (apparently), or who knows what
- else. As you grow more proficient with the chord keyboard, your
- speed will improve and you won't have to concentrate as much on
- remembering the chords. This is not to imply that the miniBAT's
- chord keyboard is ideal, because if it was, I would have retired
- my extended Mac keyboard by now and my wrists would thank me.
- Being so small, the miniBAT's chord keys don't have positive
- tactile feedback, which makes them worse than mushy. I find it
- difficult to tell when I've actually pressed a chord at times,
- although I'm improving now that I have figured out to create the
- pattern in mid-air, and then "thwack" the proper keys. I'm waiting
- on the full BAT keyboards before I put the effort into
- transferring all my typing to a chord keyboard, and I'll be sure
- to write about them once I've tried them.
-
- The miniBAT accepts memory and program cards that expand its
- power, and can even take a fax modem or alphanumeric pager.
- However, it's too pricey at $595 for what it does right now,
- considering the price of the personal organizers and the DOS
- palmtops. The success of miniBAT will not come from sales, but
- from the experience that Infogrip has gained from it that will
- benefit future products. Given Infogrip's fast pace and innovative
- ideas, I'm sure that they will have even more original products
- out soon.
-
- If you are going to Macworld San Francisco, you may be able to ask
- them yourself, since Infogrip will be there showing off the BAT
- for the Mac as well as other cool stuff for ergonomic computing.
- Check them out at Booth 5323 in Brooks Hall.
-
- Infogrip Inc.
- 812 North Boulevard
- Baton Rouge, LA 70802
- 504/336-0033
-
- Reflection Technology -- 617/890-5905
-
- Information from:
- Ward Bond, Infogrip president
- miniBAT documentation
- Infogrip propaganda
-
-
- Reviews/06-Jan-92
- -----------------
-
- * Macworld
- Desktop Publishing Programs -- pg. 208
- Aldus Personal Press
- Timeworks Publish It Easy 2.12
- Letraset ReadySetGo
- Applied Systems and Technologies MaxPage 1.2
- Aldus PageMaker 4.01
- QuarkXPress 3.0
- Letraset DesignStudio 2.0
- FrameMaker 3.0
- Ventura Publisher Macintosh Edition 3.2
- Page Layout Add-ons -- pg. 214
- (too many to list)
- Midrange Hard Disks -- pg. 218
- (too many to list)
- Email Programs -- pg. 235
- cc:Mail
- InBox
- Microsoft Mail 3.0
- QuickMail 2.5
- WordPerfect Office
- 3D Modeling Programs -- pg. 246
- (too many to list)
- OneScanner -- pg. 256
- LaserScript LX -- pg. 257
- Macintosh PowerBook 170 -- pg. 258
- MarketPlace Business -- pg. 262
- Image Cataloging Programs -- pg. 264
- Mariah 1.06
- Multi-Ad Search 1.0
- PictureBook+ 1.0
- Fractal Design Painter 1.0 -- pg. 266
- Hard Disk Toolkit 1.0 -- pg. 273
- Help 1.0 -- pg. 273
- DynoDex 2.0.4 -- pg. 274
- Address Book Plus 2.0 -- pg. 274
- Acta 7 -- pg. 277
- Azimuth 2.0 -- pg. 277
- Earthquest Explores Ecology -- pg. 278
- Glider 4.0 -- pg. 278
- PageBrush Color for the Mac -- pg. 280
- Verbum Interactive 1.0 -- pg. 280
- Aqua Blooper Piper -- pg. 282
- 3 In Three -- pg. 282
- Backmatic 2.01 -- pg. 284
- JMP 2.0 -- pg. 284
- Michelagniolo: Self Portrait -- pg. 287
- Instant Update 1.0 -- pg. 287
- Now Utilities 3.0.1 -- pg. 289
- CheckList 2.0 -- pg. 289
- OutNumbered 1.0 -- pg. 291
- EPS Exchange 1.01 -- pg. 291
-
- * BYTE
- ClarisWorks -- pg. 48
- Claris Resolve -- pg. 273
- Tektronix Phaser III -- pg. 285
-
- References:
- Macworld - Feb-92
- BYTE - Jan-92
-
-
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