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- TidBITS#22/24-Sep-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- More Apple Bits
- Alarming Prospects
- Telepolitics
- Online Service News
- Reviews/24-Sep-90
-
-
- More Apple Bits
- ---------------
- Apple has been busy with System 7.0, TrueType negotiations,
- HyperCard's transfer to Claris, and the like, but they continue to
- do interesting things. First off, if you've ever watched a TV show
- that had a Mac with a color monitor on it, you probably noticed
- how terrible the monitor looked. That's because the scan rate of
- the color monitors is 67 Hz while the NTSC (National Television
- Standards Committee) standard is 30Hz. The scan rates don't match;
- thus the flicker. To fix this problem and improve their look on
- television, Apple introduced a $35 cdev called VideoSync.
- VideoSync eliminates the flicker by changing the scan rate of the
- color monitor to 60 Hz (double the NTSC rate). VideoSync works
- with 13" color monitors driven by Apple's color video cards,
- though we suspect it will not work with third party cards.
- VideoSync is available through APDA (Apple Programmer's &
- Developers Association) and comes with documentation.
-
- We've received news that the Macs to be announced October 15th
- will indeed have built-in sound digitizers. It seems that Apple is
- pushing them for use with the voice mail capabilities recently
- made available in applications such as QuickMail and Microsoft
- Mail. Easy addition of voice clips to various parts of the
- Macintosh interface certainly wouldn't be amiss either, since
- voice communications can be faster and clearer than written
- communication. Of course, voice can also be far more ambiguous as
- well, which is why verbal agreements are so unreliable. Well,
- maybe we'll be able to count on a Mac keeping its word.
-
- APDA -- 800/282-2732
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 18-Sep-90, Vol. 4, #31, pg. 5
-
-
- Alarming Prospects
- ------------------
- Lately the market for appointment and reminder programs has
- offered a number of useful programs. In some ways, it's odd that
- it took so long on the Mac for alarm programs to appear, since
- they been around on the PC for a long time, dating at least from
- the introduction of Sidekick, an early do-it-all TSR (terminate
- stay resident program).
-
- The shareware Calendar DA was perhaps the first of these programs,
- but it had no reminder capabilities, so it was easy to miss
- appointments. Then, Smart Alarms from JAM Software and Comment 2.0
- from Deneba both appeared, allowing the Mac to sound an alarm at a
- pre-specified time. More recently, the shareware Remember? and CE
- Software's Alarming Events have come onto the scene. And most
- recently, some new companies have shown up, TeamBuilding
- Technologies with the $99 AgentDA and TeamSynchro, and Psybron
- System with CalenDAr. JAM also updated Smart Alarms to version
- 3.03 and announced a more powerful version called Smart Schedules
- for maintaining multiple schedules. Smart Schedules is looking at
- a fall ship date.
-
- TeamSynchro, also slated for the fall, sounds like it should
- compete with Smart Schedules. Both programs are aimed at work
- groups who need to schedule time quickly and flexibly and need to
- be able to modify each other's schedules over a network to account
- for group meetings and the like. In contrast, CalenDAr is going
- after the low-end market with a $49.95 price and fewer features.
- CalenDAr can import sounds and record reminder sounds with
- Farallon's MacRecorder (and probably other sound digitizers),
- though, so it's not entirely featureless. Psybron is also working
- on a hardware device that can trigger external devices like lights
- and radios, but that will be sometime next year.
-
- Despite all the bells and whistles (literally) of the new
- appointment programs, CE's $129.95 Alarming Events, JAM's $125
- (more for multiple users) Smart Alarms, and Dave Warker's $20
- shareware Remember? all do the job perfectly well. Alarming Events
- and Smart Alarms both can work with multiple files over a network,
- though probably not so well as TeamSynchro or Smart Schedules. And
- while Remember? doesn't have any multi-user capabilities at all,
- it is useful for an individual who uses the Mac much of the day.
- So, if you're the sort who is always forgetting appointments,
- check out one of these programs - it may make your life a lot
- easier.
-
- Dave Warker -- 1330 W. North St. Egg Harbor, NJ 08215
- Deneba Software -- 800/622-6827 -- 305/594-6965
- CE Software -- 515/224-1995
- JAM Software USA -- 415/663-1041
- TeamBuilding Technologies -- 514/278-3010
- Psybron Systems -- 800/866-4260 -- 304/340-4260
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- CE propaganda
- Remember? documentation
- Comment 2.0 documentation
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 25-Sep-90, Vol. 4, #32, pg. 14
-
-
- Telepolitics
- ------------
- A few months back Mitch Kapor and others started the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation to help educate both government employees and
- the general public to the realities of computer use and abuse. The
- EFF claimed it was going to immediately step in and work on
- various ongoing trials, including the case of a programmer whose
- machines were confiscated supposedly because he was writing a
- manual on how to perform electronic espionage. In addition, Steven
- Levy, author of "Hackers," wrote about the complete computer
- ignorance displayed by several FBI agents who visited him in
- relation to the nuPrometheus investigation. Luckily Levy sat down
- and explained things to the agents he talked to - a small help but
- a help nonetheless.
-
- In light of these troubling occurrences, we received an
- interesting note. A candidate for governor in the state of Nevada
- (for the benefit of our international readers, this state is
- located on the lower left hand corner of the United States map) is
- and has been deeply involved in the computer and
- telecommunications industries. Jim Gallaway, the Republican
- candidate, outlined the following positions, which we reprint for
- accuracy's sake (an odd thought considering we are merely copying
- and pasting).
-
- "These are my positions, relative to some of the recent law
- enforcement practices by some government agents:
-
- 1. Government responses to alleged misdemeanors and crimes must be
- no more than comparable to the seriousness of the wrong-doings.
-
- 2. Simple electronic trespass without harm must be treated as any
- other simple trespass. It does not justify armed raids on
- teenagers, forced entry of private homes, nor seizure of telephone
- handsets, answering machines, computer printers, published
- documentation, audio tapes and the like.
-
- 3. The notion that equipment can be "arrested" and held
- inaccessible to its owner, without promptly charging the owner
- with a crime, is absolutely unacceptable. The practice of holding
- seized equipment and data for months or years is a serious penalty
- that must be imposed only by a court of law and only after a fair
- and public hearing and judicial finding of guilt.
-
- 4. Teleconferencing and BBS systems must have the same protections
- against suppression, prior restraint, search or seizure as do
- newspapers, printing presses and public meeting places.
-
- 5. The contents of electronic-mail and of confidential or closed
- teleconferencing exchanges must have the same protections against
- surveillance or seizure as does First Class Mail in a U.S. Post
- Office, and private discussions among a group in a home or
- boardroom.
-
- As Governor of the State of Nevada I will vigorously support all
- of these positions - both statewide and nationally.
- -Jim Gallaway, candidate for the Governor of Nevada"
-
- We know nothing more about this man or his other campaign
- positions other than a personal reference from Jim Warren, who
- originally posted the article on the Well. Since we don't know Jim
- Warren, we can't expound on the details. However, we do find it
- encouraging that a candidate for a major governmental position
- feels that his views on electronic freedom are an important part
- of his campaign. As Mitch Kapor has stated, the level of ignorance
- regarding computers and telecommunications at the governmental
- level is astounding. We even heard second hand that President Bush
- has joked that he uses a typewriter because he doesn't know how to
- use a computer at all. Such ignorance is dangerous because of the
- level of regulation being proposed by these people, people who
- think every teenager with a personal computer and a modem is
- probably capable of duplicating the events of the movie "War
- Games." If you are curious about this, feel free to contact either
- Jim Warren or Jim Gallaway himself at the phone numbers or
- addresses below.
-
- The concept of regulation is also often a problem because
- telecommunications in general is the sort of act which is either
- private or with a limited group. Admittedly, there are many
- thousands of people who participate on Usenet, but even still, the
- group is limited to those with the ability to get connected one
- way or another. Many people on Usenet pride themselves on the
- anarchic way Usenet runs. But run it does in spite of (or perhaps
- because of in part) the flames and the pettiness. Usenet runs
- because it somehow brings out the best and worst in people while
- avoiding all physical ramifications. Perhaps the distinction I'm
- trying to elucidate is that Usenet is direct whereas the United
- States government is representative and indirect. A representative
- organization will never truly understand a direct organization,
- and until government positions are held by people who understand
- the direct governing of telecommunication groups by their members,
- there is great danger for governmental abuse.
-
- Jim Gallaway -- 702/255-2828
- Jim Warren -- 415/851-7075
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Jim Warren -- jwarren@well.sf.ca.us
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Online Service News
- -------------------
- We far prefer the pseudo-free (meaning "somebody pays for this but
- it's not usually me") electronic services such as Usenet or local
- BBS's to the pay-per-millisecond-of-access-time services like
- CompuServe. Nonetheless, the pay services are often better
- organized and more comprehensive. They also offer easier
- connections - it is difficult to get on Usenet if you aren't at a
- university or large business.
-
- In the latest happenings in the commercial service front, Prodigy
- has expanded their phone number coverage widely, even hitting our
- town of Ithaca, New York. Unfortunately, Prodigy raised the
- monthly rate from $9.95 to $12.95 (although there is no charge for
- access time), which apparently irritated large numbers of Prodigy
- users. We've come across three other drawbacks to Prodigy in
- talking to their support people. First, the Prodigy software looks
- like it was ported directly from the IBM version. The fonts are
- blocky and ugly, it has an on-screen menu that encourages you to
- maneuver it with the arrow keys, and it bears no resemblance to a
- Macintosh application, unlike American Online's software or even
- the new CompuServe interface for the Mac. Second, Prodigy has no
- program libraries so it isn't possible to upload or download
- public domain and shareware software - something that I like doing
- a great deal. Third and finally, the reason Prodigy's price is so
- low is that the bottom fifth of the screen is devoted to
- advertising. If I wanted to watch advertising, I'd get cable
- television.
-
- More useful is GEnie, the online service run by General Electric.
- It is a full featured service with companies providing online
- support, program libraries, and electronic mail. Previously, GEnie
- was relatively expensive, at least in the same ballpark as
- CompuServe. As of October 1st though, GEnie is dropping its $29.95
- signup fee and providing non-prime time unlimited access time for
- email, non-computer oriented bulletin boards, travel services, and
- the news and weather sections. Rates for the other sections have
- dropped from $10 to $6, at least for 2400 baud.
-
- GEnie is still a command line based system, though, so for online
- services with decent interfaces you would have to look to America
- Online, CompuServe (with the CompuServe Information Manager), and
- Apple's own AppleLink. In November, AppleLink will be updated to
- version 6.0, which will include a number of new features and
- enhancements. The entire service will be reorganized to make it
- easier to find information, and more third parties will have their
- own sections. New group discussion areas will facilitate
- communications by adding threading capabilities so users can
- easily filter out unwanted articles and search for specific ones.
- Mail will get some of the same filtering capabilities, files can
- be attached to mail messages, and the address book has been
- improved. Unfortunately, AppleLink is still a tad pricey for most
- of us with the startup kit at $70, a $12/hour access charge, and a
- kilocharacter charge of $.045 for non-prime time access (we assume
- that this last charge is a simple fee for the number of characters
- transferred, though we aren't positive). Sounds like it would add
- up fast, though Apple did rescind the $45 annual membership fee.
-
- Prodigy -- 800-PRODIGY
- GE Information Services -- 800/638-9636
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 17-Sep-90, Vol. 12, #38, pg. 42
- MacWEEK -- 25-Sep-90, Vol. 4, #32, pg. 14
-
-
- Reviews/24-Sep-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- PostScript Emulators, pg. 73
- Freedom Of Press
- T-Script
- UltraScript
- AccessPC, pg. 73
- MediaTracks, pg. 80
- DacEasy Light Checkbook, pg. 80
- HandOff II, pg. 82
- File Director, pg. 83
-
- * InfoWorld
- MediaTracks 1.0, pg. 90
- Quark XPress 3.01 , pg. 96
-
- * PC WEEK
- Word Processors, pg. 75
- Word 4.0
- MacWrite II 1.1
- WriteNow 2.2
- FullWrite Professional 1.1
- WordPerfect 1.0
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 25-Sep-90, Vol. 4, #32
- InfoWorld -- 24-Sep-90, Vol. 12, #39
- PC WEEK -- 24-Sep-90, Vol. 7, #38
-
-
- ..
-
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