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- TidBITS#13/16-Jul-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- CD-WORMs
- An Apple By Any Other...
- Update/16-Jul-90
- Lasers In the Jungle...
- Cheap IBM Home Computer
- SUM Competition
- Forced Upgrades
- Alternate Limb Controllers
- Reviews/16-Jul-90
-
-
- CD-WORMs
- --------
- One frustration with the new forms of optical storage is that they
- are mutually incompatible. At least up to now, if rumors on Usenet
- prove to be true. One rumor says that a European company is
- working on an erasable optical drive which can also read the
- CD-ROM disks that are becoming a popular method of distributing
- large amounts of information. This would be a boon to those of us
- who would like to read the occasional CD-ROM but don't use them
- enough to justify a stand-along CD-ROM player. Of course you would
- still have to need the massive storage abilities of an erasable
- optical to justify the undoubtedly higher price of a hybrid unit,
- but that's nitpicking.
-
- A more exciting rumor claims that Yamaha is working on a WORM
- drive that can write to standard CD-ROM platters, which can then
- be read in normal CD-ROM players. The advantages of this method of
- creating CD-ROMs are that the CD-ROM format is standardized,
- unlike the WORM formats, and CD-ROM platters are far less prone to
- damage or data loss than tape or magnetic media, making the system
- ideal for large backup sets.
-
- The ability to create a standard CD-ROM incrementally in a WORM
- drive is extremely interesting, because it's a relatively complex
- and expensive procedure to master a CD-ROM, although the price per
- disk is low after the initial mastering costs. The standard method
- is to create a tape of the information and then transfer that tape
- to CD-ROM, a process which is typically clumsy. This ease of
- production might also increase the use of the sound and digitized
- graphics, both of which are usually space-hungry. So pay attention
- for these products and let us know if you hear anything more!
-
- Information from:
- Philip Machanick -- philip@pescadero.Stanford.EDU
- Eric W. Mitchel -- ewm@mdavcr.UUCP
- The Road To CD-ROM, Nimbus Information Systems -- 800/782-0778
-
-
- An Apple By Any Other...
- ------------------------
- Lapsing from our usual watch for news, we came upon a discussion
- on Usenet about the origin of Apple's name. So no news in this
- article, just an anecdote.
-
- The question first arose when someone wondered about the true
- story behind Apple's name. He'd read that Steve Jobs had fond
- memories of working in an orchard one summer and thought that
- Apple would be a friendly name. Others chimed in with the theory
- that Apple was really something of an abbreviation for appliance,
- which is what Jobs thought the Mac should be. Unfortunately for
- that theory, the Mac came rather late in the company's evolution
- and the appliance theory of microcomputers probably started in Jef
- Raskin's Mac development team. The Apple II was certainly not as
- easy to use as a toaster.
-
- Someone who knows Steve Wozniak contributed a more plausible
- story. Evidently, when Jobs and Wozniak were at the courthouse
- filing the incorporation papers, they still hadn't come up with a
- name. Jobs was eating an apple because he was then (and may still
- be) a "fruitarian," meaning that much of his diet was composed of
- fruit. Having no better option, they wrote down Apple Computer as
- the company name, figuring that they could change it later. Upon
- consideration though, they realized that Apple was early in the
- phone book (and before Atari), sounded friendly, and contrasted
- nicely with the word computer, which was and is still something of
- a scary word.
-
- A final comment was added that the Apple logo was supposed to
- represent the apple with which Alan Turing committed suicide. No
- one has confirmed or denied this rumor though.
-
- We now return you to your regularly scheduled news.
-
- Information from:
- Chris Silverberg -- macman@wpi.wpi.edu
- A J Cunningham -- tjc@castle.ed.ac.uk
- Brian Matthews -- blm@6sceng.UUCP
- Mark H. Nodine -- man@eilat.cs.brown.edu
- Steve Hix -- fiddler@concertina.Sun.COM
-
-
- Update/16-Jul-90
- ----------------
- We've been adding new references to articles that we wrote some
- time ago, but a new issue has just arisen. Some of our articles
- are relatively ambiguous because they are based more on rumor and
- conjecture than on fact. To fill in some of the facts, we will be
- including small Update articles every now and then. You can copy
- these updates into the original articles or leave them here-
- whatever is easier for you.
-
-
- Lasers In the Jungle...
- -----------------------
- Apple has finally released the new Personal LaserWriters, the SC
- and the NT. Ours is on back order, so we can't comment personally,
- but they are based on the same Canon engine as the HP LaserJet
- IIP, which means they print at 4 pages per minute (ppm) at top
- engine speed. In theory, the LaserWriter II's print at a top speed
- of 8 ppm, but seldom reach that throughput in reality. The
- Personal LaserWriter SC will retail for $1999 while the NT will
- list at $3299, although the educational discount for the NT drops
- its price to about $2200. At that price point, a LaserJet IIP with
- extra memory, AppleTalk, and a PostScript cartridge is only
- minimally less expensive. The competition will also come from the
- QMS-PS 410, a PostScript printer based on the same Canon engine,
- but with a faster processor (68020 vs.. 68000), a later version of
- HP's Printer Control Language, and a better method of switching
- between Macs and PC-clones. The QMS printer will list for $2795,
- $500 less than the Personal Laser NT.
-
- QMS -- 800/631-2692
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
- Apple spec sheets
- QMS technical support
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 10-Jul-90, Vol. 4, #25, pg. 1
- Macworld -- Aug-90, pg. 128
-
-
- Cheap IBM Home Computer
- -----------------------
- IBM has released the PS/1, as their new home computer is called,
- in several large cities around the country to be test-marketed.
- The new name has prompted numerous wags on Usenet to remark that
- at least this computer will be a whole Personal System, rather
- than the halved PS/2. The spec sheet reads modestly, starting with
- a 10 Mhz 80286 CPU, 512K RAM, and a 1.44 megabyte floppy drive,
- but picks up a bit with a mouse, an internal 2400 baud modem, and
- VGA graphics. Options include a 30 megabyte hard disk, a 512K RAM
- upgrade, an AT-style (ISA) expansion box, an audio card, and a
- joystick. Initially, the lack of a hard disk would seem to be
- deadly, but the ROMs include the BIOS, DOS, and the DOS shell (we
- assume DOS version 4.01). The list price for such a beast with a
- color monitor and the hard disk is $1999, but since IBM is selling
- through large retail channels, the street price could easily drop
- to around $1500, which is competitive, if not overwhelmingly
- inexpensive. We're not holding our collective breath on this one,
- if only because even with a DOS shell and everything built into
- the machine, it still doesn't make it as an easy home machine for
- people getting started in basic home computing. Not to be
- chauvinistic, the Mac doesn't really fit that bill either, so
- there is still room for a killer appliance computer that will sell
- like VCRs, er, hotcakes.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
- IBM spec sheets
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 16-Jul-90, Vol. 7, #28, pg. 24
-
-
- SUM Competition
- ---------------
- Several weeks ago we wrote of a potentially dangerous bug in the
- Backup utility that comes with the new MacTools Deluxe package
- from Central Point Software. Since then we have had a chance to
- use the program and even found another bug, a conflict between
- Suitcase II and the Optimizer Help. Needless to say, we weren't
- particularly enthusiastic about MacTools at that point. However,
- our faith in Central Point Software has been restored. We
- received, completely unsolicited, a disk in the mail yesterday
- that included new versions of Backup, Optimizer Help, and Rescue,
- which fix the bugs that we and others had noticed. We still have
- some minor gripes about the interfaces, but on the whole, the
- package is now worth recommending on its own merits. One
- additional comment: for those of you without either GOfer or On
- Location, the Locate DA that comes with MacTools does an excellent
- job of finding text within files and then displaying it for you.
-
- Central Point Software -- 503/690-8080
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
- Central Point Software
-
-
- Forced Upgrades
- ---------------
- An interesting problem recently arose on Usenet. It seems that an
- Excel 1.0 user in Holland wanted to upgrade to system 6.0.4, but
- when he did so, Excel stopped working. Microsoft said that it
- wasn't their problem and that he should upgrade to Excel 2.2. The
- cost of an Excel upgrade in Holland equals out to about $370 so he
- had quite a bit of incentive not to upgrade, especially
- considering the added functionality was unnecessary. The question
- was then, who is to blame, and if Microsoft, is this a breach of
- contract? After all, someone must be at fault-that's how the world
- works :-).
-
- Few people were surprised that Excel 1.0 didn't work under the new
- system because Microsoft products are notorious for disobeying
- Apple's programming guidelines, and as such, tend to break when
- Apple updates the system software. Apple isn't at fault for
- Microsoft's flaunting of the rules-in fact, Apple even had code in
- early versions of MultiFinder to deal with Excel 1.5's quirky
- memory requirements (it had to be loaded into the first megabyte
- of memory to work). The feeling in some of the postings (and one
- with which we agree wholeheartedly) is that Apple should let
- Microsoft products crash and burn when updating the system
- software. That way Microsoft might receive enough negative
- comments to start following the guidelines. Even Microsoft's
- position as the largest Macintosh (and microcomputer) software
- company should not afford them such favoritism. In many ways,
- Apple's guidelines have helped the Mac become what it is because
- users can be assured of the interfaces in different programs being
- similar.
-
- Quite some time ago a similar problem arose with Microsoft Works
- on the PC. A group had created a number of macros to handle their
- tasks, but they ran into some major problems with those macros
- when they upgraded to the next version. Unfortunately, they had
- sent back their original disks and replaced the working copies so
- they couldn't easily move back to the older version. At first
- Microsoft wanted to charge them for the older version, but
- complaining vociferously on the net and to the customer support
- people finally convinced Microsoft to just give them the old
- version back again. Such actions might work in this more recent
- instance as well.
-
- We don't have a copy of the Microsoft warranty/software contract
- and are certainly not lawyers, but if the warranty says anything
- about "working as advertised" then a case might be made for a
- breach of contract. In comparison, the MacTools Deluxe warranty
- does say "the SOFTWARE will perform substantially in accordance
- with the accompanying written materials," which implies that bugs
- would be covered under warranty. It may not be possible, but we
- would like to see companies being flexible enough honor odd
- circumstances like this, especially since it is more than worth it
- in customer loyalty.
-
- Information from:
- Norman Graham -- norman@d.cs.okstate.edu
- D. Daniel Sternbergh -- ddaniel@lindy.Stanford.EDU
- C. Irby -- ac08@vaxb.acs.unt.edu
- Steven A. Schrader -- SAS102@psuvm.psu.edu
- Hans Mulder -- hansm@duteca8.tudelft.nl
-
-
- Alternate Limb Controllers
- --------------------------
- A recent discussion on the net regarding alternate pointing
- devices inspired me to try running my mouse with my feet. It works
- well, though I need a longer mouse cord to maintain the necessary
- position for any length of time (the cord is not long enough for
- the mouse to rest on the floor). For some touch typists or those
- with limited desk space, the mouse has always been limiting. One's
- hand must jump off the keyboard to move the mouse, and the mouse
- often competes with papers, electronic gizmos, food, and plants
- for space. I have read heated debates about the pros and cons of
- removing one's hand from the keyboard. Some advocate track balls
- as the solution to the space problem, and I myself have
- passionately argued for a keyboard offering the j (or the f) key
- as a mini-trackball so I could type and keep my hands on the
- keyboard while clicking and dragging. (I had a number of possible
- schemes for typing a j (or f) when the actual letter was needed.)
-
- The Outbound Portable features a pointing device called the
- Isobar. This bar, located just below the space bar, slides left
- and right and rolls up and down. When you push the bar, you
- perform the equivalent of a mouse click. I found this to be a tad
- awkward when I ran into the mouse pad equivalent of running out of
- room on the mouse pad, but on the whole I liked the Isobar, though
- it has received mixed reviews from others I know (like me! -Adam).
-
- Mouses for a number of Unix-style workstations sport three buttons
- to allow users to give different commands depending on what
- combinations of keys are pushed. Proposals for a Mac mouse that
- does this were greeted by statements that the Control-click and
- Shift-click options accomplish the same tasks.
-
- Recently one person proposed adding two dials to the keyboard for
- scrolling. This would be handy, though a number of programs define
- the arrow keys for that task. Another person mentioned a company
- that may be working on an organ pedal-like mechanism for foot
- input. Lest we forget that not everyone is so lucky to have the
- full use of all limbs and digits, it is important that companies
- pursue alternate devices for controlling computers. One
- possibility in that arena is a head-mounted input device, although
- as C Irby points out, that leads to the
- <option>-<shift>-<click>-<headbutt>.
-
- Most people use a mouse and don't question its prominence in the
- input device category. Some use trackballs, a few use styluses,
- and even fewer use devices where their fingers do the walking on
- special pads. I'm looking forward to the development of devices
- that use feet, thus freeing my fingers for typing and letting me
- exercise my weak arches in the process. All that would really be
- necessary would be the mouse unit built into the toe-end of a
- slipper, though some attention should be paid to proper foot
- orientation to avoid overuse injuries. Freeing the feet would also
- allow the use of multiple pointing devices and multiple cursors.
- If the opposable thumb made the difference in human evolution,
- just think what the opposable mouse could do for computer
- evolution.
-
- Information from:
- Tonya Byard & Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editors
- James G. Smith -- jgsmith@watson.bcm.tmc.edu
- C. Irby -- ac08@vaxb.acs.unt.edu
- Robert Minich -- minich@a.cs.okstate.edu
- James G. Smith -- jgsmith@watson.bcm.tmc.edu
- Dana E. Keil -- dana@are.berkeley.edu
-
-
- Reviews/16-Jul-90
- -----------------
-
- * InfoWorld
- PageMaker 4.0, pg. 76
-
- * PC WEEK
- PageMaker 4.0, pg. 80
-
- * Macworld
- Accelerators, pg. 134 (too many to list)
- Utility Programs, pg. 144 (too many to list)
- Color Scanners, pg. 152 (too many to list)
- Network File Sharing, pg. 160 (too many to list)
- Fax Modems, pg. 169 (too many to list)
- UltraPaint 1.0, pg. 176
- RagTime 3 3.04, pg. 177
- Now Utilities, pg. 180
- Mitsubishi Optical WORM Drive, pg. 182
- MultiClip 2.0, pg. 187
- Flash 1.0, pg. 189
- MaxSPITBOL 1.12d1, pg. 191
- ProIcon, pg. 191
- Macintosh Allegro Common LISP 1.3, pg. 193
- UpBeat 2.0, pg. 194
- EtherGate 1.45, pg. 196
- Racal-Vadic 9632VP Modem, pg. 198
- Prograph 1.2, pg. 200
- Metamorphosis 1.0, pg. 203
- Palmtop Link for the Macintosh 1.0, pg. 206
- Organizer Link 1.1, pg. 206
- CasioLink for the Macintosh, pg. 219
- The Bard's Tale 1.0, pg. 220
- Tefax System RA-2110 with BackFax, pg. 222
- The Resume Kit 1.0, pg. 224
-
- References:
- InfoWorld -- 16-Jul-90, Vol. 12, #29
- PC WEEK -- 16-Jul-90, Vol. 7, #28
- Macworld -- Aug-90
-
-
- ..
-
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