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- TidBITS#15/30-Jul-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Apple Bound Outward
- Apple Hardware Problems
- New SPARCstation
- Save Our Screens
- Reviews/30-Jul-90
-
-
- Apple Bound Outward
- -------------------
- Last week we heard the first bit of a rumor that Apple was going
- to buy Outbound Systems, makers of the Outbound Laptop, a small,
- light Mac-compatible portable. At the time it seemed to be a
- reasonable move, but a NewsBytes article on America Online said
- that both Apple and Outbound denied any deals. Waiting a week
- proved to be vital for the story though, as Apple and Outbound
- recently announced that Apple will buy the technology used in the
- Outbound portable. The deal works two ways. Apple buys the
- technology from Outbound and doesn't sue Outbound for intellectual
- property infringement (how pleasant of Apple Legal). In return,
- Outbound gets money, the right to sell its laptop, and licenses
- the technology back from Apple. It's a strange world out there in
- Lawyerland.
-
- Everyone who heard about the deal felt that it was a move by Apple
- to replace the heavy Mac Portable without having to spend more on
- research and development. The next Apple portable is probably a
- year or two off, now, since there is less reason for Apple to push
- it out quickly. The deal gives Outbound more credibility, but the
- Outbound laptop may still need to have a multi-colored Apple logo
- on it to sell well. Outbound doesn't have the market penetration
- (gads, now I'm talking like an MBA) and dealer network that Apple
- has.
-
- Perhaps the most interesting possibility that could come out of
- this deal is that Outbound would be allowed to license the Apple
- ROMs. If so, the Outbound laptop would be the first Mac-compatible
- machine and might lead the way to other, carefully-chosen
- licensees. Allowing Outbound to use the ROMs would make the laptop
- more attractive, because you wouldn't have to cannibalize the ROM
- chips from an SE or Plus. My only concern with the Outbound is
- that its IsoPoint controller is not as easy to use as the well-
- designed trackball in Apple's Portable.
-
- The Outbound laptop will be better than ever in August, when
- Outbound Systems will release an upgrade to the operating system,
- an external floppy drive for $349, an external SCSI adapter that
- connects to SCSI devices and can even treat the laptop's hard disk
- and RAM disk as a SCSI storage device for another Mac.
-
- Apple Computer -- 408/974-2202
- Outbound Systems -- 303/786-9200
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
- Christopher Escher -- Apple Computer
- Matthew T. Russotto -- russotto@eng.umd.edu
- Mark Aaker -- aaker@Apple.COM
- Richard Fozzard -- fozzard@boulder.Colorado.EDU
- John Starta -- starta@tosh.UUCP
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 31-Jul-90, Vol. 4, #26, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 30-Jul-90, Vol. 12 #31, pg. 8
- PC WEEK -- 30-Jul-90, Vol. 7 #30, pg. 1
-
-
- Apple Hardware Problems
- -----------------------
- Macintosh computers have never been error free, much like any
- other set of mechanical devices. The most recent problems have had
- to do with the SuperDrives and with IIcx/ci power supplies.
- Conscientious people have helped pin down the causes of these
- problems and posted the fixes on Usenet.
-
- The SuperDrives have had problems from the very beginning,
- although the furor has died down a bit recently. Part of the
- problem was that people were formatting disks inappropriately.
- However, the problems still persist. Arthur Hills of the
- University of Waterloo took a disciplined approach to the problem
- and found that different disks often had the same bad blocks
- (checking with SUM TuneUp), and if more than one bad block was
- found, the separation of the bad blocks was a multiple of 36
- (don't know the units). Needless to say, this sort of regularity
- with errors is odd. After long communications with the Apple
- Technical Response Group in Toronto and Kao Didak, the disk
- manufacturer, the following became clear.
-
- Apple has shipped two different types of floppy drives, an early
- version with a green controller board and later version with a
- blue controller board. The green controller board lacks a phase-
- lock-loop circuit to regulate the speed of the drive. This circuit
- is important because it guarantees a specific rotational speed
- within 1%. Without the phase-lock-loop circuit the rotational
- speed can vary greatly. If bits are written at different speeds
- than they are read at later, it appears to the computer that the
- bit has shifted, which can causes cyclic redundancy check (CRC)
- errors. A similar problem can occur if you take a disk written in
- one Mac to another whose drive is faster or slower. The fix is of
- course to replace the drives with new drives with the blue
- controller board. So if you have problems, try checking your disks
- with SUM TuneUp and if you can document the problem, you may be
- able to get your drive replaced. Of course, buying SUM will cost
- at least $100, so it may be easier to just get a new drive.
-
- The second problem is a bit stranger. Robin Goldstone reports that
- some IIcx and IIci machines will sometimes fail to turn on with
- either of the switches. The probability of experiencing startup
- problems is higher if the system has been turned off overnight,
- strangely enough. The simple fix is to unplug the power cord from
- the Mac for more than 10 seconds and then plug it back in. Apple
- says that if the Mac doesn't start up properly after the
- unplugging trick, the power supply should be replaced. If you are
- having these problems and you have a power supply in one of the
- following ranges, you should give your friendly local Apple dealer
- a call and sound pitiful. According to the posting, the serial
- number ranges are "GE924xxxxxxx through GE953xxxxxxx AND/OR
- GE001xxxxxxx through GE023xxxxxxx" [sic]. Of course, there may be
- others as well.
-
- Apple has fixed the problem ("Oh, yeah, we should've put a
- resistor across capacitor C9 and jumper wire on the control board.
- Details details.") and all the good power supplies now have a
- white dot adjacent to the Molex output connector, should you
- happen to know what a Molex output connector looks like. I
- wouldn't if it hit me in the nose. Apple is working on a Customer
- Satisfaction Program, so if you have this problem but don't have
- one of the above serial numbers please call your dealer and ask
- for satisfaction. This is the sort of thing that Apple should
- replace because it is mind-numbingly frustrating and an
- opportunity to win some customer loyalty with good service.
-
- Information from:
- Arthur Hills -- ahhills@watmath.waterloo.edu
- Robin Goldstone -- robin@csuchico.edu
-
-
- New SPARCstation
- ----------------
- As the high end of the Macintosh line rises, it has begun to bump
- into the low end of the so-called workstations from companies like
- Sun, HP, IBM, and NeXT. Sun just introduced a new model of their
- popular SPARCstation, the IPC (for InterPersonal Computer - sounds
- vaguely kinky to us, a computer go-between :-)) that is moving
- down into the personal computer range. A bit on terminology first.
- There is a big difference between a personal computer like an
- Apple II and a Sun SPARCstation. However, there is little
- difference between a SPARCstation and Macintosh IIfx running A/UX
- these days, making the terms personal computer and workstation
- rather ambiguous. The difference seems to be related to the type
- of use these things are put to. Macs and PC-clones, even the high
- end ones, are general purpose computers. There are thousands of
- programs to do many things and they are marketed to general users.
- On the other hand, SPARCstations and NeXTs and IBM's RISC 6000
- computers are limited purpose computers. They do several things
- very well, better than general purpose computers in most cases,
- but many other actions require significant effort. They are not
- marketed to the general public even when their prices place them
- in that price range, partly because they usually run Unix, which
- is not a simple operating system even when buffered by a graphical
- interface. Put it this way. There isn't a SunConnection or
- NeXTConnection yet.
-
- Nonetheless, Sun is slumming a bit with the IPC. It comes with a
- 207 megabyte hard disk, eight megabytes of RAM, a 16" color
- monitor, built-in EtherNet, two slots, two serial ports, and a
- 3.5" drive. Sounds like a nice Mac IIfx system, no? All that has a
- list price of a mere $9995, but educational prices drop
- significantly to $5997. The price is one thing, but the IPC really
- crosses to the other side of the tracks with its DOS emulator,
- which can run programs such as Lotus 1-2-3, Wingz, and WordPerfect
- if you don't want to reap the benefits of buying the SPARC-
- specific versions.
-
- We're not running out to get one though, at least not until we see
- what NeXT comes out in September. The new machines from NeXT will
- both use the Motorola 68040, include 2.88 megabyte floppy disks,
- 100 megabyte hard disks, and will have the optical drive as an
- option. The main difference between them will be size and color,
- with the low end machine ($5000) (which is still a medium-end
- price in our book) forsaking the cube look for a pizza box style
- and the high end machine ($10,000) including 32-bit color graphics
- and Renderman technology.
-
- Joel Conklin, Sun Microsystems -- 315/445-0390
-
- Information from:
- Joel Conklin -- joel@sun.com
- Adam C. Engst & Tonya Byard -- TidBITS editors
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 30-Jul-90, Vol. 12 #31, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 30-Jul-90, Vol. 7 #30, pg. 1
-
-
- Save Our Screens
- ----------------
- Some time ago a letter to the editor of MacWEEK complained about
- the amount of attention that was being paid to screen savers. The
- author of the letter felt that screen savers were a patent waste
- of time and MacWEEK should put its energies into more productive
- pursuits. "All work and no play..." seems to apply here, Jack.
- Screen savers are the perfect example of a necessary utility that
- can be interesting and fun as well. Computer screens that are left
- on the same picture (such as the Finder) for long periods of time
- will burn that image into the phosphor leaving a ghost image
- behind. It takes some time for this to happen, but it is
- disconcerting to work with once the phosphor has burned. I
- experience it mostly in my work with PC-clones that have lived
- through too much Lotus 1-2-3, so no matter what you do, the spirit
- of 1-2-3 lurks in the background reminding you of the machine's
- ethereal past. (Gives me the creeps!)
-
- John Lim's Moire was the first screen saver to put interesting
- patterns on the screen, although Mac screen savers from the very
- beginning had been able to display pictures at random spots on the
- screen. Moire was the first addictive screen saver, though. We
- knew people in college who would become entranced by the Moire
- patterns and stare blankly at the screen for up to half an hour
- before realizing a problem set was due. A professor friend even
- had to remove it from his machine because he would watch it
- instead of paying attention to a phone conversation, much to the
- consternation of his colleagues.
-
- Since then Berkeley Systems has come out with After Dark and Fifth
- Generation responded with Pyro!, and Advanced Software should be
- releasing an as-yet-unnamed utility package from Andrew Welch (of
- FlashWrite and Black Box fame) soon, which includes a similar
- screen saver. All three are relatively similar in that they are
- screen saver shells and can thus accept any appropriate module. As
- of last count, After Dark sported 24 modules with Pyro! and Andrew
- Welch's package outfitted similarly.
-
- Berkeley Systems is escalating the screen saver wars with version
- 2.0 of After Dark, due out at Macworld Expo. Version 2.0 will
- include sound, so thunder can accompany the lightning bolts,
- increased password protection, support for the Notification
- Manager, on-line help for each module, and SystemIQ, which
- monitors the system activity, slowing down or speeding up After
- Dark to match the system load. The new modules will be the main
- difference though. From Tom & Ed's Bogus Software comes Fish!, and
- it will be accompanied by Flying Toasters (we suspect it's
- something in the drinking water that inspires these), MultiModule
- for displaying more than one module at a time (I like the worms
- eating Starry Skyline personally), a PICS Player for playing
- animations made with multimedia packages, and Satori, from Ben
- Haller of Solarian II fame. The upgrade will be $5 for recent
- purchasers (after June 1) and $14.95 for others and people
- upgrading from another package. The list price is still $39.95.
-
- We have heard nothing from the Pyro! folks, but we recently saw a
- beta version of Andrew Welch's new utility package. It includes a
- screen saver with at least as many modules as After Dark along
- with 7 other mostly cdev-based utilities. Included are a cdev to
- provide command key equivalents to the buttons in dialog boxes,
- much like CE Software's DialogKeys and a NeXT-like icon dock along
- with the others.
-
- Berkeley Systems -- 415/540-5536
- Advanced Software -- 800/346-5392 (Jeff or Larry)
- Fifth Generation -- 800/873-4384 -- 504/291-7221
-
- Information from:
- Bruce Burkhalter -- bruce@sim.uucp
- Josh Hodas -- hodas@saul.cis.upenn.edu
- Frank Malczewski -- fdm@wlv.imsd.contel.com
- Bob S. -- rjs@trwrb.dsd.trw.COM
- Dennis Cohen -- claris!drc@ames.arc.nasa.GOV
- Leonard Rosenthol -- leonardr@svc.portal.COM
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 31-Jul-90, Vol. 4, #26, pg. 35
-
-
- Reviews/30-Jul-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- PostScript Fonts, pg. 77
- FrameMaker 2.1, pg. 84
- GCC PLP IIS, pg. 84
- QMS-PS 820 Turbo, pg. 88
- MORE 3.0, pg. 91
- Storage Dimensions MacinStor Erasable, pg. 91
- Tempo II+ Tools, pg. 92
-
- * InfoWorld
- CompuServe Navigator 3.0 , pg. 72
-
- * MacUser
- Fontina, pg. 38
- Screen Locker, pg. 38
- DIRectory, pg. 38
- MacPhotography Workshop, pg. 38
- PowerKey, pg. 39
- Zterm, pg. 39
- Easy Color Paint, pg. 39
- Rival, pg. 39
- CopyFlow, pg. 39
- Cribbage King/Gin King, pg. 40
- SharpenUp, pg. 40
- VersaTerm-PRO, pg. 40
- Canned Art: Clip Art for the Mac, pg. 40
- LapLink Mac III, pg. 42
- Portable Attache, pg. 42
- The Madson Portable Case, pg. 42
- Diconix M150 Plus, pg. 43
- Remote Access Pack, pg. 43
- Portable Pack, pg. 43
- PageMaker 4.0, pg. 46
- OmniDraft, pg. 48
- OmniSpell, pg. 48
- OmniProof, pg. 48
- PublishIt! Easy, pg. 61
- File Force, pg. 67
- UltraPaint, pg. 69
- Forms Software, pg. 73
- Fast Forms
- Informed Designer
- FontStudio, pg. 76
- Metamorphosis, pg. 80
- RAM Disks, pg. 92
- Maxima
- NanoDISK
- THINK Pascal 3.0, pg. 94
- AppMaker, pg. 97
- Photographs & Clip Art on CD-ROM, pg. 98
- NoteWriter II, pg. 101
- NOW Utilities, pg. 105
- The Playroom, pg. 111
- McGee, pg. 115
- Prograph, pg. 118
- Desktop Scanners, pg. 136 (too many to list)
- Hand-held Scanners, pg. 167
- Asuka 270A
- Complete PC Complete Half-Page Scanner
- LogiTech ScanMan Model 32
- NCL ClearScan
- ThunderWare LightningScan
- Mac Portables, pg. 192
- Apple Macintosh Portable
- Colby SE/30
- Outbound Laptop System
- Dynamac SE/30
- Apple Personal LaserWriters, pg. 212
- Windows 3.0 (not Mac-specific)
- Network File Transfer Packages, pg. 281
- Flash 1.0
- LapLink Mac III Network Pac
- Oscar 1.0a1e9
- SendExpress 1.0
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 31-Jul-90, Vol. 4, #26
- InfoWorld -- 30-Jul-90, Vol. 12 #31
- MacUser -- Sep-90
-
-
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