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- TidBITS#10/25-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
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-
- 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:
- Electromagnetic Controversy
- HyperCard 2.0, Finally
- C Shells by the C Shore
- SID II
- Reverse Engineers
- Wanted: Color SE
- Yet More Compression
- Reviews/25-Jun-90
-
-
- Electromagnetic Controversy
- ---------------------------
- Macworld devoted much of its July, 1990 issue to the health
- hazards of computers. Most of the articles actually focussed on
- the side-effects of working at video display terminals (i.e.
- monitors for the rest of us) for a long period of time. A number
- of studies have shown that prolonged exposure to VLF (very low
- frequency) and ELF (extremely low frequency) magnetic fields can
- cause cancer and harm fetuses. Unfortunately, none of the studies
- have been conclusive and many scientists refuse to accept the
- current evidence as valid.
-
- The article was written by a journalist named Paul Brodeur, who
- also wrote a three-part series of articles for The New Yorker and
- a book on the subject. His research uncovered not only the
- evidence for health problems such as cancer, but also what appears
- to be an industry-wide cover-up of the entire problem. That is a
- nasty way of saying that the industry doesn't see electromagnetic
- radiation from monitors as a problem. IBM and The New York Times
- both denied that there could be a problem with monitors, perhaps
- in part because of the number of monitors already present in the
- workplace. A recall would seriously hurt business for computer
- manufacturers and admitting there could be a problem would open
- many companies up for lawsuits. Similarly, no manufacturers have
- admitted that working on a standard keyboard can cause carpal
- tunnel syndrome, a nerve disorder that can render one's hands
- almost useless.
-
- We cannot begin to summarize the extensive research done by
- Brodeur for these articles, but the Macworld article marks the
- first time a major publication has publicized the issue and
- actually tested some popular monitors. In response, MacWEEK
- devoted an editorial section to electromagnetic radiation, and
- National Public Radio's All Things Considered program did a piece
- on the article as well. Our feeling is that if you spend a
- significant amount of time in front of a monitor, you owe it to
- yourself to read the articles listed below and make an educated
- decision. The reality likely falls somewhere between the two
- poles. And remember, when researchers were first working with
- radioactive substances, some even tried fertilizing crops with
- them.
-
- Information from:
- Adam Engst -- TidBITS editor
-
- Related articles:
- Macworld -- Jul-90, pgs. 23, 71,136
- MacWEEK -- 26-Jun-90, Vol. 4 #24, pg. 16
- Discover -- Dec-89, Vol. 10, #12, pg. 62
- The New Yorker -- 12-Sep-89, pg. 51
- The New Yorker -- 19-Sep-89, pg. 47
- The New Yorker -- 26-Sep-89, pg. 39
-
-
- HyperCard 2.0, Finally
- ----------------------
- After what seemed like forever to those of us who use HyperCard,
- Apple released version 2.0. We'll assume that if you are reading
- TidBITS, you understand more or less what HyperCard can do and how
- hard it is to pin down its abilities. Apparently, most 1.2.x
- stacks should convert to 2.0 without a hitch, although some
- externals may have problems.
-
- The feature list, which is what you've all been waiting for,
- includes the following:
-
- * Variable card sizes from one square inch to 18 square inches.
- * Multiple windows, multiple fonts, sizes, and styles within a
- single text field.
- * Hot text (i.e. sticky buttons) implemented with three new
- HyperTalk functions, clickText, clickLine, and clickChunk, and a
- new text style.
- * Better printing capabilities.
- * Faster, more powerful HyperTalk environment that can run in the
- background under MultiFinder and includes a modeless script
- editor, a run-time compiler, and debugging tools.
- * Menu bar support and modeless dialogs
-
- HyperCard 2,0 should be available in early July. The software
- alone is free and is available from the usual places such as user
- groups and dealers. If you want the manuals, it costs $49.95.
-
- Information from:
- Apple Press Release
-
- Related article:
- MacWEEK -- 08-May-90, Vol. 4 #18, pg. 1
-
-
- C Shells by the C Shore
- -----------------------
- Last week's article on Ostrakon, an application shell for THINK C,
- garnered a response that we feel worth mentioning this week. We
- said then that compiler packages often came with skeleton
- applications for people to flesh out, but that Ostrakon took this
- idea one step farther by providing extensive documentation and
- commented code. For those who would prefer less external support
- and a non-existent price tag, there is public domain MPW and THINK
- C source code for Macintosh applications called TransSkel.
- TransSkel has been around for some time, and several other modules
- are available for added functionality. These are TransDisplay and
- TransEdit, for display windows and standard editing windows.
- According to Steve Hite, who informed us of our oversight, the
- TransSkel code is well thought out and structured enough to
- provide the base for a professional application.
-
- It is available via anonymous FTP from sumex-aim.stanford.edu (see
- your system administrator if you are unsure if you have FTP or
- don't know how to use it). Ostrakon undoubtedly has some benefits,
- but you can't beat the price for TransSkel.
-
- Information from:
- Steve Hite -- ...gatech!uflorida!unf7!shite
-
-
- SID II
- ------
- Some of you may remember reading about an ambitious and generous
- project to create an inexpensive sound digitizer from plans and
- software donated to the Mac community by a group calling
- themselves The SID Trio. We can't find the original article in
- MacWEEK because it was well before TidBITS and searching through
- those magazines can be a lot of work. However, the rest of the SID
- story has been played out over the networks. It seems that the SID
- included some parts that were almost impossible to find, so few
- people ever managed to build one (we heard the best way to get
- some of the hard-to-find parts was to call and ask for a sample
- because you were thinking of making a big order). A number of
- people on Usenet were even planning on pooling their resources so
- they could purchase the minimum number of a certain elusive part,
- although we don't know how they fared.
-
- Recently though, an enterprising person named Mike E. Ciholas
- decided to do something about the problems with the SID design. He
- claims that he has improved the design and reduced the overall
- cost at the same time with his version, called the SID-II. In
- keeping with the original philosophy of The SID Trio, Mike has
- released the plans to his SID-II to the public (the original SID
- software still works), but he is also selling circuit boards and
- complete kits for those would prefer not to hunt down the parts.
- The plans include a schematic, a parts layout diagram, a circuit
- description, a parts list, a section on stereo operation, and a
- section on using various crystals.
-
- Here's the specs for those who are interested. The SID-II samples
- sound at up to 22254 samples per second, plugs into one of the
- serial ports, and requires no external power source or batteries.
- Two SID-IIs can be wired together so that they record in stereo.
- You can use the built in microphone, an external microphone, or a
- line level source (like a tape deck or CD player) as the input for
- the SID-II. The SID-II is compatible with the Farallon's
- MacRecorder and SoundEdit software, although the SoundEdit
- software is available only in a package with the MacRecorder and
- not separately.
-
- The plans are available via anonymous FTP from sumex-
- aim.stanford.edu as info-mac/sound/program/sid-ii.hqx (see above
- for where to look for information on FTP). If you cannot use FTP,
- you can send mail to Mike directly at his email address or snail
- mail to the address below. Contact him at CEDAR Technologies for
- information on purchasing the SID-II since we unfortunately have
- no further details.
-
- CEDAR Technologies
- P.O. Box 224
- Dublin, NH 03444
-
- Information from:
- Mike E. Ciholas -- mikec@wheaties.ai.mit.edu
-
-
- Reverse Engineers
- -----------------
- Faced with the contradictory news of the new low-cost Mac
- (MacCheap?), a number of people on Usenet have started talking
- about the possibilities of reverse engineering the Mac ROMs along
- with the rest of the Mac hardware. That way a company could
- compete with Apple by lowering prices significantly.
- Unfortunately, reverse engineering is fraught with legal problems
- and even more importantly, is a huge amount of work. Most people
- on the net felt that it could not be done economically or within a
- reasonable time span, although a number of other options and
- related issues were raised.
-
- Someone mentioned the MCP (Macintosh Compatibility Package) from
- Screenplay Systems. MCP is not exactly a case of reverse
- engineering, but it is a set of libraries that allow Mac source
- code to be ported relatively easily to a PC-clone.
-
- Another more attractive option is to try to persuade Apple to
- license out the MacOS and the ROM chips from the Mac Plus and SE,
- both of which are essentially obsolete but functional. Apple would
- gain revenue that could be significant (as Adobe did with
- licensing PostScript) and would not have to continue manufacturing
- the Plus and SE. Third parties could then take the legally
- licensed ROMs and MacOS and manufacture extremely cheap Mac-clones
- that would by definition (i.e. built into the license agreement)
- be completely Mac-compatible. Users would benefit from having a
- cheap Mac to start with that would compete with the low-priced
- PC-clones. Additionally, those of us looking for a cheap Macintosh
- portable might find a few more options. Apple would benefit from
- increased popularity as people wanted to move up to the newer and
- faster machines that would only be available from Apple. And Steve
- Jobs would come back to Apple to design the nExt Macintosh. OK, so
- it's all a tad farfetched.
-
- On the dark side, Apple might feel that it would be losing control
- of the Mac line and would be losing profits to be made from the
- Plus and SE, especially considering the automated production lines
- for those two machines presumably require little financial input
- at this point. If the clone manufacturers broke the license
- agreement, Apple could be faced with the same sort of pseudo-
- compatible mess they had with the Apple II and that IBM faced at
- first with the PC.
-
- Information from:
- Ken MacLeod -- ken@hotlips.COM
- Anton Rang -- rang@cs.wisc.edu
- Cy Shuster -- cy@dbase.A-T.COM
- Derek L. / MacLover -- derek@leah.Albany.Edu
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 18-Jun-90, Vol. 12, #25, pg. 18
-
-
- Wanted: Color SE
- ----------------
- This is yet another article inspired by discussions of the low-
- cost Mac and what it should be. We may even write an article on
- the low-cost Mac itself one of these days, although a few more
- facts and a bit less rumor will be necessary first. In any event,
- this latest discussion centers on the possibilities surrounding a
- color screen in the SE case. The size is somewhat important
- because Apple has less to re-tool on its automated assembly line
- if most everything stays the same size. In addition, many people
- are quite fond of the size of the compact Mac-they are easy to
- move and less fuss than the modular Macs. One suggestion was to
- increase the screen size vertically several inches, although we
- would like to see a full page display in such a machine, as long
- as we are making our wish list.
-
- Interestingly enough, much of the Usenet discussion was based on
- whether color was even desirable. One person felt that black and
- white is perfectly appropriate in many situations, to which
- another pundit replied, "Who needs FM radio? AM is perfectly
- appropriate in many situations. I don't see the correlation
- between quality output and satisfaction." The majority of
- responses said that color was a good thing, particularly in
- educational settings where it helped to capture interest and to
- clarify subtle points such as the innards of a frog. (And believe
- us, those frogs they give you in freshman Biology can indeed have
- subtle innards!) At least one person mentioned a number of uses
- for color even in word processing, such as keeping quotes from
- different people straight or making personal notes for deleting
- later. Of course if you are going to use color in a word
- processing document, get Nisus, which can search on colors and
- most everything else as well.
-
- Another issue in color for educational Macs is that children are
- used to the vibrant colors on television and are often
- disappointed in computers that cannot perform up to the level of
- display that they are used to. One possibility is the color LCD
- screens that have started to appear on some laptop machines. If
- those screens could be made fast enough, they would be ideal for
- compact (as well as portable) computers. Another different monitor
- technology that would be possible in the SE form factor are new
- indexed color CRTs (cathode ray tubes) that do not use a shadow
- mask. They only have a single electron gun, but they have four
- vertical phosphor stripes: the normal red, green, and blue, plus
- an extra (non-visible to the eye) one along with a photodetector
- that keeps everything in sync. These tubes supposedly produce
- beautiful bright color (because of not using the shadow mask),
- take little power, and have no convergence problems. They are no
- larger or heavier than the standard black and white tubes because
- they don't have three electron guns like standard color monitors.
- The electronics are somewhat more expensive, but if they were used
- more commonly the prices would drop.
-
- Information from:
- Don Gillies -- gillies@p.cs.uiuc.edu
- Wm Leler -- wm@ogicse.ogc.edu
- David Sumner -- sumner@usceast.UUCP
- Ingemar Ragnemalm -- ingemar@isy.liu.se
- Philip Machanick -- philip@pescadero.Stanford.EDU
- Johan van Zanten -- eggplant@walt.cc.utexas.edu
- Jason Gross -- gross@umiami.miami.edu
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 18-Jun-90, Vol. 12, #25, pg. 18
-
-
- Yet More Compression
- --------------------
- Compression is an excellent way to save space and is more elegant
- than using larger and larger hard disks or faster methods of data
- transmission. MIT's Media Lab does a great deal of work on newer
- and more efficient methods of compression for this very reason.
- We've run several articles on compression in the past, most
- notably DiskDoubler for the Mac and Expanz! for PC-clones. Another
- program has appeared on the PC that helps compress files,
- executable programs in this case. Called LZEXE.EXE, the program
- removes extraneous space from programs, thus shrinking them
- somewhat and allowing them to load faster. The rest of the program
- execution speed is of course unaffected. LZEXE.EXE is available
- from BBS's near you or from the main PC file archive at
- simtel20.army.mil via anonymous FTP.
-
- We have not yet had a chance to try this particular package, but
- several similar ones exist for the Atari ST, which has an
- operating system relatively like MS-DOS. We found that these
- programs worked in all but one instance, and none of the programs
- which were compressed have ever given problems after the fact. So
- it seems that if a program works at all after being compressed
- like this, it will likely be fine. Some programs will undoubtedly
- resist being compressed however.
-
- Interestingly enough, nothing like this program has shown up for
- the Mac. Even if individual users didn't use it, companies like
- Aldus could shrink PageMaker significantly before shipping it.
- Microsoft may in fact do something like this since StuffIt is
- unable to compress Word 4.0 by more than a few percent, whereas it
- can usually compress programs up to about 30%. One possibility is
- that the Mac file format with data and resource forks does not
- lend itself to compression as well as the simpler PC and Atari
- file formats.
-
- Information from:
- John "Frotz" Fa'atuai -- frotz@drivax.UUCP
- Russ Nelson -- nelson@sun.soe.clarkson.edu
- Jim Reisert -- reisert@ricks.enet.dec.com
- Brian King -- brian@leah.Albany.Edu
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 25-Jun-90, Vol. 12, #26, pg. 90
-
-
- Reviews/25-Jun-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Windows 3.0 (not Mac-specific), pg. 47
- RasterOps ColorBoard 364, pg. 52
- DigiVideo, pg. 52
- Color MacCheese, pg. 54
- Color Printer Drivers, pg. 54
- HP PaintJet Kit
- TekColor for ColorQuick
- Sharp JX-730 Driver
-
- * InfoWorld
- On Location, pg. 70
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 26-Jun-90, Vol. 4 #24
- InfoWorld -- 25--90, Vol. 12 #26
-
-
- ..
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