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- TidBITS#23/01-Oct-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- ANTI-B
- Boomerang Makes Good
- Canon Optical Card
- Portable Computer Clothing
- Reviews/01-Oct-90
-
-
- ANTI-B
- ------
- Well, they're at it again, this time in France. Another virus has
- recently been discovered, though it isn't new. ANTI-B is a
- slightly different strain of the ANTI virus that despite being
- discovered almost two years later, appears to be the initial
- version of ANTI. ANTI-A has some code in it which neutralizes the
- ANTI-B virus, which is the main difference and the evidence for
- the evolutionary sequence. Most virus detection and prevention
- utilities have been updated to find ANTI-B, resulting in new
- search strings for SAM and Virus Detective and a new version of
- Disinfectant (version 2.2). We're not as familiar with the update
- mechanisms for most commercial virus programs because we
- wholeheartedly support John Norstad's Disinfectant. As such, we
- haven't been including the search strings for Virus Detective or
- SAM in recent virus articles - please let us know if that would be
- a more useful service than merely publicizing a new version of
- Disinfectant.
-
- Disinfectant 2.2 includes a few minor bug fixes and enhancements
- along with the ability to detect ANTI-B. Most notable of these is
- the addition of the menu item "Desktop Files" in the Scan and
- Disinfect menus. This option allows you to quickly scan or
- disinfect just the invisible Desktop files for the WDEF or CDEF
- viruses. If you use Disinfectant, we recommend that you get the
- new version, though it isn't quite as imperative as with previous
- versions.
-
- Speaking of CDEF, there has been a bit of a flap in Ithaca, NY
- recently because the author of several Mac viruses (we assume MDEF
- and CDEF) was found to be a 16 year-old high school student here.
- The police are not releasing his name and have said that he is
- cooperating fully. Short of that, we have little information about
- the incident. It is nice to know that not all virus authors get
- away with never being detected, though we have no idea what the
- punishment will be (or has been) in this case.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- John Norstad -- jln@acns.nwu.edu
-
-
- Boomerang Makes Good
- --------------------
- One of the most popular shareware utilities of all time has been
- Hiro Yamamoto's Boomerang. Initially free, Boomerang provides
- several important functions in the standard Open and Save dialog
- boxes. First, Boomerang keeps track of up to the last thirty files
- and folders you have visited and allows you to open one of those
- files or go to one of those folders with a single menu selection
- from the Boomerang pop-up menu. Boomerang also provides a
- "Rebound" feature that remembers the last file you used in each
- folder and automatically highlights it in the scrolling file list.
- That way you don't have to scroll down to the bottom of a folder
- with lots of files in it each time you want to open something that
- starts with the letter "x." There are a host of other useful
- features, such as a Find File feature that is faster than Apple's
- and the ability to create a new folder while still in the Open or
- Save dialog box.
-
- In any event, when Boomerang stabilized at version 2.0, it became
- shareware with the promise that only registered users would
- receive later versions. In addition, Now Software recently made a
- deal with Hiro Yamamoto to bundle it with version 2.0 of their Now
- Utilities package. Version 2.1 of Boomerang adds a hierarchical
- menu to the Open menu item. This hierarchical menu lists the
- recently visited files without the user having to see the Open
- dialog box, among other things. Even more impressive, though, will
- be version 3.0, dubbed Super Boomerang. Super Boomerang will do
- everything that previous versions could do as well as sort files
- in the Open and Save dialog boxes by date, size, etc. Super
- Boomerang will copy, rename, and delete files directly from the
- dialog box. Previously, these features were available only in
- Directory Assistance, an INIT that comes with Norton Utilities.
- Unfortunately, Directory Assistance and Boomerang 2.0 don't
- coexist particularly well, so upgrading to Boomerang 2.1 is
- probably the best way to go. The Find feature will be enhanced in
- Super Boomerang as well, making it one of the fastest Find File
- utilities available (reportedly able to search a 600 meg CD-ROM
- disk in 15 seconds!). Registered users of Boomerang will
- automatically receive Super Boomerang when it comes out and will
- also receive a discount on the Now Utilities.
-
- Whether you opt for the full Now Utilities package or choose to
- stick with the shareware route, we highly recommend Boomerang to
- anyone who works with the Mac - it reduces the time you spend in
- foolish file searching and disk navigating. It is heartening to
- see that a program can start out it's life as freeware (during its
- beta test mode, which was not plagued by many bugs), move to
- shareware, and then earn money for its author as a commercial
- offering. Now if anyone wanted to offer us lots of money just to
- keep providing TidBITS for free... :-).
-
- Now Software -- 800/237-3611
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Greg Youngs -- GregYoungs on America Online
- Gene -- GeneS3 on America Online
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 11-Sep-90, Vol. 4, #30, pg. 31
- InfoWorld -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #40, pg. 46
-
-
- Canon Optical Card
- ------------------
- Bored by that ho-hum magnetic storage? Yawning at the speed of the
- optical drives? Frustrated by the reliability of floppies? Well
- Canon has something for you. They call it the Optical Card, and it
- is a credit card-sized storage system that can hold about 2
- megabytes of information per card. The card uses WORM technology,
- which disqualifies it from the general purpose uses floppies
- generally fulfill, but is admirable at storing relatively inert
- information, such as (we hope) medical records, maintenance
- records, personal identification, etc. The Optical Card has an
- inner recording layer sandwiched between two hard plastic layers
- for protection against physical damage. The recording layer has
- 2500 parallel tracks, on which data is written by a laser beam
- several microns in diameter. A lower-powered laser beam coupled
- with a photo sensor reads the data back from the card.
-
- Because the method of storing information physically puts tiny
- pits in the recording layer, the cards are not susceptible to
- either magnetic fields or static electricity. This level of data
- safety is not true of the popular magnetic strip cards commonly
- used for ID and credit cards nor of the larger IC cards that
- combine CPU and memory chips on a card. The price of the Optical
- Card is also much cheaper than either of the other types in terms
- of the amount of information stored. The real prices are likely to
- be between $4 and $35 for the cards and $1500 and $3000 for the
- Reader/Writers necessary to access the information on the cards.
- Those prices have large ranges because Canon doesn't currently
- know how popular the system will be, and the lower prices require
- volume production. The initial models will only work with the
- IBM-AT bus, but SCSI models for the Mac and other platforms should
- follow shortly.
-
- What will these little things be used for? It's a good question,
- and one which Canon tries to answer in its propaganda sheets. They
- offer suggestions such as a storage medium for medical records or
- vehicle maintenance records, assuming that such information should
- be relatively stable with additions only. Other suggestions
- include secure identification cards, because 2 megabytes is plenty
- of room to store fingerprints, retinal scans, and photographs, and
- data distribution cards for publications or software that is
- unwieldy on either paper or floppy disks. Basically, the issue
- seems to be that applications for the card are those that store a
- relatively small amount of information that is relatively static.
-
- Needless to say, while 2 megabytes is a good amount of
- information, we would all like it if they could hold more. On-
- board compression could effectively double the space without any
- speed loss. Oh, speaking of speed, they aren't all that fast.
- Writing speed is 15.3 kilobits per second, reading speed is 100
- kilobits per second, and access time ranges from 23 milliseconds
- to 2.5 seconds with a 1.5 second average. However, considering the
- paper data the cards might replace, any computerized access time
- will be faster than the human access time searching through a file
- folder of papers.
-
- Because it is unsure of the market for the cards, Canon seems to
- be looking for people to test the units and evaluate their
- applicability in various areas. If you are interested in using
- this technology, contact Bruno Dosso at Canon at the phone number
- below. As with all of our articles, we ask that you mention where
- you heard about the product so we can build our reputation in the
- industry.
-
- Canon -- 516/488-6700
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Canon propaganda
-
-
- Portable Computer Clothing
- --------------------------
- Sure portable computers are nice. It's fun to just set up wherever
- you happen to be and work. Unfortunately wherever you happen to be
- is seldom a good place to set up a machine designed to be placed
- on a table in a relatively well-lit room while you are sitting on
- an ergonomically designed chair. The answer? Portable computers
- need to be integrated into what we wear, so putting on your
- computer in the morning is little different from remembering to
- strap a watch to your wrist. The technology is closing in on this
- goal, though no one that I've heard of has a design for it in the
- works. The Private Eye monitor technology from Reflection
- Technology puts a monitor on a headband (the viewing device is
- only a couple of inches large and uses optics to appear the size
- of a 12" display) and a friend who tried one claimed that it was
- wonderful to use, though a little hard on the eyes when used for
- extended time periods.
-
- Keyboards are another sticky point, though a small chording
- keyboard could be easily attached to a belt without appearing
- bulky. Disk drives would be a pain, but many portables these days
- only have an internal hard drive anyway, so floppy access could be
- external and left at home. A mouse is also a problem, and current
- trackballs don't really solve it. Something like Felix, a mini-
- joystick, or the UnMouse, a pointing tablet, mounted on the back
- of a chording keyboard might help, but more research would have to
- be done in that area. Of course, advances in handwriting and voice
- recognition would be nice too, but they might require a bit more
- thought before they would be as unobtrusive as a small chording
- keyboard with integrated pointing device.
-
- The chip companies are doing their bit for smaller computers (pun
- not intended). Intel is reportedly working on a new version of the
- 386SX chip that will combine a 386SX processor with a cache and
- memory controller. A later version will include a 387SX math
- coprocessor. Both versions of the chip will have built-in sleep
- modes to conserve power, which is another bugaboo for lightweight
- portable computers. Intel is going farther too, with the Genesis
- chip, which integrates a 386SX, I/O ports, a memory controller,
- and a display controller on a single chip.
-
- Not to be completely outdone, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) last
- week announced that they have succeeded in putting almost an
- entire IBM-AT-clone motherboard (286 CPU, memory controller, DMA
- [direct memory access] controllers, interrupt controllers, real-
- time clock, expanded memory manager, and a bus controller) on a
- single chip, the AM286ZX. Another chip, the AM286LX, will include
- power management functions as well, making it ideal for low-power
- portables. AMD says the chips will be available in 12, 16, and 20
- MHz versions, and a computer with the 20MHz AM286LX chip will
- probably be as fast or faster than 386SX computers at the same
- clock speed. The speed increase is probably due to the closeness
- of the components on the chip in comparison to the closeness of
- the components when they are strewn around a motherboard.
-
- AMD's main problem is not with speed, but with the fact that the
- world is moving towards 32-bit chips like the 386 and 486 (not to
- mention the 68030 :-)). Many buyers are avoiding 286 machines
- because they are unable to run 32-bit applications or concurrent
- DOS applications. One way or another though, these chips point at
- an increased level of integration and power management, both of
- which will be necessary for tomorrow's computer clothing.
-
- Reflection Technology -- 617/890-5905
- Intel -- 800/538-3373
- AMD -- 408/732-2400
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Matt Lewkowicz
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #40, pg. 6
- PC WEEK -- 03-Sep-90, Vol. 7, #35, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 7, #39, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 7, #39, pg. 137
-
-
- Reviews/01-Oct-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Client-Tracking Programs, pg. 59
- C*A*T III
- Client/Mac 2.1
- Leads!
- Market Master Manager II+
- TeleMagic Release 10
- VideoQuill, pg. 59
- 4D 2.1, pg. 66
- 4D Compiler, pg. 66
- PosterWorks, pg. 66
- Screenshot, pg. 68
- MultiClip, pg. 70
-
- * InfoWorld
- 4D Compiler, pg. 85
- Individual Training For Word, pg. 85
-
- * PC WEEK
- Video Frame Grabbers, pg. 85
- QuickImage 24
- RasterOps 364
- DigiVideo Color
-
- * Macworld
- Frame Grabbers, pg. 210
- DigiVideo Color
- RasterOps 364
- Quark XPress 3.0, pg. 212
- Phaser PX Color Printer, pg. 214
- Color MacCheese 1.04, pg. 220
- Balance of the Planet 1.0, pg. 227
- Beyond 1.5, pg. 229
- Letterforms & Illusions 1.0, pg. 231
- Jack Nicklaus' Greatest 18 Holes of Major Championship Golf,
- pg. 233
- Think Pascal 3.0, pg. 236
- DrawTools 1.0, pg. 238
- ComputerEyes Professional, pg. 240
- DiskExpress II 2.04, pg. 243
- Fast Forms 2.0, pg. 245
- MacBravo 2.0, pg. 247
- TopDown 2.0, pg. 249
- C*A*T III 1.0, pg. 250
- VideoPaint 1.0, pg. 252
- Send Express 1.0, pg. 254
- Inspiration 2.0.4, pg. 256
- MiBAC 1.2.1, pg. 259
- The Duel: Test Drive II, pg. 261
- Sybil 2.0, pg. 263
- Aranda 1.0.1, pg. 265
- Card/Fax 2.0, pg. 269
- Bass Champ 1.1.1, pg. 269
- The Athlete's Diary 1.1, pg. 270
- Cyclist's Logbook, pg. 270
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 02-Oct-90, Vol. 4, #33
- InfoWorld -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #40
- PC WEEK -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 7, #39
- Macworld -- Nov-90
-
-
- ..
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