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- TidBITS#24/08-Oct-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- New Mac Attack
- Shades of Hope & Glory
- Luxury Tax
- Notes & Comments/08-Oct-90
- Reviews/08-Oct-90
-
-
- New Mac Attack
- --------------
- In an effort to compete in the low and mid-range computer market,
- Apple officially announced three new Macs, the Mac Classic, Mac
- LC, and Mac IIsi. For those who read the industry press, the
- announcement had few surprises, but those not up on the details
- may appreciate a run down of the specifications for these new
- machines. All of the new Macs should ship with System 6.0.7.
- According to Apple rep George Cooke, Macs shipped with System
- 6.0.6 in their boxes should have the system replaced before they
- are sold due to a few bugs that should be fixed in 6.0.7. All of
- the new Macs come with just one SuperDrive and the System software
- comes on 1.44 meg disks.
-
-
- Mac Classic
- CPU: 68000 at 8 MHz
- Memory soldered to System Board: 1 MB
-
- Memory Expansion Options: Up to 4 MB by purchasing Mac Classic
- Memory Card ($149). Card comes with 1 MB on board, and you can add
- 2 more MB to the card.
-
- Video Options: built-in monochrome 9" screen
-
- Interesting Notes: Runs about 10% faster than the SE; unlike the
- SE and the SE/30, it doesn't have a universal power supply; only 1
- ADB port; no expansion slots - George Cooke pointed out that
- according to Apple statistics, only 5 percent of all SE owners
- used the SE expansion slot.
-
- Configurations and List Prices: (Both configurations include
- Apple's new ADB keyboard.)
-
- 1. No hard disk and 1 MB RAM - $999
-
- 2. 40 MB hard disk and 2 MB RAM (includes the Classic Memory
- Card) - $1499
-
- Availability: Now
-
-
- Mac LC
- CPU: 68020 at 16 MHz
- Memory soldered to System Board: 2 MB
-
- Memory Expansion Options: Up to 4 MB using 1 MB SIMMs; up to 8 MB
- using 4 MB SIMMs
-
- Video Options: Built-in video supports all Apple monitors except
- the Portrait and 2-page monitors.
-
- Interesting Notes: The only expansion slot is a new 020 direct
- slot (just in case Mac developers were bored with the previous
- collection of slots); comes with a microphone and software to
- bring sounds into the Mac; only 1 ADB port; Apple will make an
- Apple IIe emulation card available for the 020 slot.
-
- Standard Configuration: (Includes Apple's new ADB keyboard)
- 1. 40 MB hard disk and 2 MB RAM - We don't have the price :-(
-
- Availability: This is unclear, and it appears that dealers will
- have this machine before academic-type places.
-
-
- Mac IIsi
- CPU: 68030 at 20 MHz - does not include a math coprocessor. In
- comparison, the SE/30, IIcx, and IIx run at 16 MHz, the IIci runs
- at 25 MHz, and the IIfx runs at 40 MHz, and all of them all come
- standard with a math coprocessor. You can add a math coprocessor
- for a mere (list) $249.
-
- Memory soldered to System Board: 1 MB
-
- Memory Expansion Options: Expands to 5 MB using 1 MB SIMMS;
- expands to 17 MB using 4 MB SIMMs.
-
- Video Options: Built-in video supports all Apple Mac monitors
- except the 2-page monitor. You can add a NuBus card or an '030
- direct card (but not both).
-
- Interesting Notes: To add an expansion card, you will first need
- to buy a IIsi adapter card. Yes, Apple is becoming recursive - you
- must add an adapter card to the motherboard to be able to use
- either a NuBus or 030 direct card. The adapter card includes the
- math coprocessor, which cannot be purchased separately, and you
- can only have one IIsi adapter card, so prepare to decide whether
- you want 030 or NuBus when you buy the card. In an unprecedented
- move toward compatibility, Apple made the IIsi 030 slot compatible
- with the SE/30 030 slot, though a card will work in the IIsi only
- if it physically fits. The IIsi is small and quite light at 10
- pounds, particularly in comparison to the Portable's 17 pounds.
- With the IIsi, the idea of having one Mac with several monitors in
- different locations starts to make sense. Finally, the IIsi comes
- with a microphone and software to bring sounds into the Mac.
-
- Configurations and Prices: (All options do not include keyboard or
- monitor or IIsi adapter card)
-
- 1. 40 MB hard disk, 2 MB RAM - $3769
-
- 2. 80 MB hard disk, 5 MB RAM - $4569
-
- Availability: Now
-
- Apple also introduced a new 12" color monitor which lists for
- $599. Apple's 13" color monitor remains in the Mac monitor line-
- up, with its usual list price of $999. The Plus is discontinued,
- and the fates of the SE, IIcx, and IIx remain unclear. They are
- not pictured on Apple's new promotional posters and are likely to
- dwindle away in the coming months.
-
- These Macs were no great secret to those who believed the trade
- magazines. I'm pleased with them, though my dream was for an '030
- machine that listed around $1000. The Classic's added speed makes
- it a useful entry level machine. Those who can't afford it should
- be able to find good deals on used Pluses and SEs. The Mac LC and
- IIsi don't change things as much, except that they make it cheaper
- to add a large color monitor, and people who previously could not
- afford this option will now be able to enjoy it. (Not everyone is
- a mail order fiend with access to the latest from MacConnection
- MacWarehouse, to name a few, and even the most careful of shoppers
- had to scrape pennies to add a big monitor to their setups.)
-
- Information from:
- Tonya Byard -- TidBITS Editor
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- George Cooke -- Apple rep
- Apple propaganda sheets
-
-
- Shades of Hope & Glory
- ----------------------
- by Ian Feldman, ianf@random.se
-
- Sometimes priceless news can be found in places where you least
- expect them. BusinessWeek, Oct 15, has these interesting nuggets
- (all literal quotes from that issue):
-
- BusinessWeek half-admits that a policy of "licensing portions of
- Apple's proprietary OS to outside manufacturers, to broaden the
- Mac market" is being considered. Apple's plans for replacement of
- the Macintosh in the future include a Motorola RISC model code-
- named 'Jaguar' (hmm... speed), still at least 2 years off, that
- will offer extensive video capabilities and links to VCRs and TVs;
- possibly also the ability to accept handwritten input. Apple's
- next laptop, due in 1991, may well be produced by Sony and/or
- Toshiba, a heresy previously unheard of at Apple.
-
- The Macintosh models of recent years are now called over-
- engineered, with the choice epithet of "overpriced, overweight
- disaster" reserved for the Mac Portable that we've all grown to
- love and hate. We certainly already knew it was overpriced. Now
- Apple has discovered that as well. Jean-Louis Gassee is out. So
- are the not-invented-here syndrome, the prima donnas, the
- "creeping elegance [of overdesigning]," the internal politics, and
- there's no more room for "people slowing each other down." So
- who's in?
-
- Mike Spindler, the new COO, nicknamed "the Diesel," that's who,
- said to be "an antithesis of New Age, touchy-feely Silicon Valley
- managers," former head of the highly-profitable Apple's European
- operations. And what, pray, are his recipes for survival?
-
- Tighter budgets and firm deadlines to start with. Also teamwork,
- reversing decisions to spin-off Claris, patching up feuds with
- Adobe, undoing past mistakes, and preparing the company for the
- times ahead. Company perks, with the excellent workout facilities
- singled out, are in part said to have contributed to its higher
- than competition expenses (Apple aerobics-freaknics take note).
-
- With Apple's market share dropping below 10% mark, Windows 3.0
- looming large on the horizon and System 7.0 not yet in sight to
- offset the lost market advantage, the company has entered on the
- road toward financial recovery through lower-priced models and a
- more "substantive-marketing" approach (whatever that means) to
- engineering and sales. On the home front that stands for phasing
- out its own major-corporate-account sales force and turning the
- sales to local dealers.
-
- Thinking ahead, Apple has started dispatching teams of employees
- on "camping trips" to universities, to suck out the hearts and
- minds of the best and brightest of tomorrow. CEO John Sculley now
- devotes fully 70% of his time to oversee the research and
- development effort of the Advanced Technology Group, "making sense
- of the various projects launched under Jean-Louis Gassee." His aim
- is to shorten new product development time from 18-24 months down
- to 9-12 months from conception to launching. He seems to have
- succeeded at that; the Macintosh LC has had its color graphics
- re-engineered a month before its scheduled debut on Oct. 15th "to
- meet demands of educational buyers" (addition of 'Government
- Green' to the default palette? Fall Fashion Colors? blacker
- blacks?... your guess is as good as mine).
-
- Still, having for several years produced computers for the rest of
- Corporate America the company may ultimately have difficulties
- switching over to make one for the rest of us. That doesn't
- concern the Mac Classic and LC, which seem affordable enough
- (although three years too late) but the future Look-Ma-No-Mice and
- related products. Perhaps we all should sleep soundly at night now
- that Apple is tended by an executive "with a turbo for a mind";
- someone said to be capable of synchronous-speed activities "by
- mind, mouth and hands" when in front of a white board. But... hey!
- wasn't there another high- sprung executive there recently, in
- front of the very same board, making substantive plans for Saving
- Our Souls From IBM-doom, one Jean-Louis Something or Other?
-
- Information from:
- Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
-
- Related articles:
- BusinessWeek, International Edition -- October 15, 1990, pg.
- 40-46
- InfoWorld -- 08-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #41, pg. 5
- MacWEEK -- 09-Oct-90, Vol. 4, #34, pg. 1
-
-
- Luxury Tax
- ----------
- Those of us who engage in sinful activities have become used to
- paying for them in the form of high taxes. Sin taxes, more
- commonly known as luxury taxes, bring in revenue from the sale of
- alcohol, cigarettes, and gasoline. But computers? Since when are
- computers sinful, except perhaps when their primary use is to run
- MacPlaymate?
-
- According to a plan to reduce the US federal deficit, a luxury tax
- would be applied to a number of currently untaxed items, such as
- cars, jewelry, and electronics. That's not the problem. The
- problem is the price ranges that the government considers
- luxurious. Cars over $30,000, furs over $500, jewelry over $5000,
- and electronics over $1000 are all considered luxury items and
- would be taxed at a rate of 10% on the amount over the threshold.
- For a $5000 computer (a nice IIci system, for instance), there
- would be an additional $400 in tax on the $4000 over the $1000
- threshold. The fallacy in the plan is obvious to anyone familiar
- with the industry. A $30,000 car is a pretty nice car - you could
- probably suffer with a $25,000 car and not really notice much
- difference. Jewelry and furs are not necessary for much of
- anything short of vanity (as powerful a force as that may be). But
- if computers are considered a consumer electronic purchase, as
- they are currently under the proposed plan, people would be taxed
- on the machines that they work with and are - to use a popular and
- irritatingly overused term - empowered by. Machines that increase
- productivity are in our opinion, not luxuries by definition. We
- would not complain about the expensive camcorder or VCR or stereo
- for most people, though, because they aren't necessary in any way,
- shape, or form unless you happen to be a video or audio
- professional.
-
- The subject has received a great deal of discussion on the nets,
- not surprisingly, and the general consensus is that taxing
- computers as luxury items is a mistake that would severely hurt
- the low end of the industry - people like students who really
- can't afford an extra 10% but will do useful work with that
- machine. Even the new Mac Classic is barely under $1000 in its
- stripped-down form, and only 8086 PC-clones consistently come in
- at under $1000. This is not to say that the wealthier customers
- wouldn't be hurt by the price hike as well, and the entire
- industry very well might decline further from its already shaky
- position on Wall Street.
-
- While a few people have expressed the opinion that something must
- be done about the US federal deficit (which should start being
- expressed in scientific notation for clarity's sake) and several
- others have pointed out that the problem faces only Americans, we
- still feel that it is important to express our feeling on the
- idiocy of the proposition. Computers must not be restricted to the
- wealthy any more than they already are, and by keeping prices
- lower in the US, perhaps the rest of the world will also see lower
- prices.
-
- Please note that we are not absolutely up to date on the latest
- budget negotiations, so this tax may be fittingly slashed before
- it even has a chance to affect us. However, unless you know that
- the tax on computers is no longer, we suggest that you make your
- feelings known to the people who make the decision, since they
- obviously do not understand the issues involved. You can...
-
- * call your congressional representative's local office to
- register your opposition to the proposed luxury tax on computers.
- * ask your representative to voice your concerns to the
- legislators who are negotiating in the budget summit.
- * call members of the budget summit in Washington, D.C. to
- register your opposition to the luxury tax.
-
- Capitol Hill Senate: 202/224-3121
- Capitol Hill House: 202/225-3121
- White House: 202/456-1414
-
- Information from:
- Morgan Davis -- mdavis@pro-sol.cts.com
- William C. DenBesten -- denbeste@bgsuvax.UUCP
- Matthew T. Russotto -- russotto@eng.umd.edu
- Cushing Courtney Whitney -- cw1z+@andrew.cmu.edu
- Brendan Mahony -- brendan@batserver.cs.uq.oz.au
- Michael Rys -- mrys@ethz.UUCP
- Dave Seaman -- ags@seaman.cc.purdue.edu
- Christopher M. Mauritz -- cmm1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
-
- Notes & Comments/08-Oct-90
- --------------------------
- We're trying a slightly different format for displaying text in
- this week's TidBITS. It is designed for online consumption,
- whereas we've normally stuck with designs meant for paper
- consumption. Since we currently don't make it easy to print
- TidBITS at all (that's the point!), such a paper-oriented design
- doesn't make sense. Please let us know if you like or dislike this
- new format in comparison to the old one. The basic difference is
- that paragraphs are no longer indented but are separated by a
- blank line, which we hope makes it more readable on screen.
-
- Apple has announced that the ImageWriter LQ Rework Program will
- expire on October 31st, 1990. They say "we have seen a decline in
- the demand for reworked LQ printers." Of course, that may be
- because those poor people who purchased the ImageWriter LQs have
- completely given up on them by now, but as a more charitable
- friend noted, the LQ would have been a good impact printer if it
- had been quieter, faster, and less trouble-prone. In any event, if
- you have an ImageWriter LQ and wish to have it reworked (I'm not
- too sure what that entails since I've never met anyone who owned
- an LQ), you had better make an appointment with your friendly
- local Apple dealer.
-
- We've heard that several groups of US semiconductor and computer
- manufacturers are recommending that the US drop price controls on
- imported Japanese DRAMs (dynamic RAM chips - the ones that
- normally populate SIMMs - gotta love those acronyms :-)). In 1986,
- the US government imposed a minimum price on the imported chips to
- prevent them from bankrupting American chip makers. The computer
- manufacturers weren't happy then but have apparently managed to
- convince the chip makers that higher prices on memory chips means
- fewer computers sold with installed memory and fewer memory
- upgrades. Even now, the list price for a true Apple 2 megabyte
- memory is $499, and third party prices are hovering around $120
- for a 2 meg upgrade. The recommendation, if implemented, probably
- wouldn't affect the smaller 256 kilobyte and 1 meg SIMMS, but
- would significantly reduce the price on the newer 4 meg SIMMS.
- Manufacturers would also be more likely to increase the standard
- amount of memory sold with computers, much as Apple has done with
- the Mac LC giving it a standard memory configuration of 2 meg.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Mark Anbinder -- mha@memory.UUCP
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 08-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #41, pg. 1
-
-
- Reviews/08-Oct-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Ethernet-LocalTalk Routers, pg. 43
- FastPath IV
- GatorBox
- MultiGate LT2000E
- EtherGate
- Ether*Route
- MaxWay 500E
- Swivel 3D Pro, pg. 43
- KiwiFINDER Extender, pg. 54
- DiskTwin, pg. 54
- Magic Typist, pg. 57
- Personality!, pg. 57
-
- * InfoWorld
- Non-PostScript Laser Printers, pg. 77 (not Mac specific)
- Brother HL-4
- Fujitsu RX7100 S/2
- HP LaserJet IIP
- IBM Laserprinter E
- Okidata Okilaser 400
- QMS-PS 410, pg. 95
-
- * MacUser
- Quark XPress 3.0, pg. 52
- FrameMaker, pg. 54
- GeoQuery, pg. 59
- OCR Packages, pg. 72
- CDP9000/TopScan
- Parallel Reader
- Inexpensive Color Paint Programs, pg. 76
- Color MacCheese
- DeskPaint
- Point of View, pg. 82
- Switchboard, pg. 85
- CD-ROM Stuff, pg. 88
- The Magic Flute Audio Notes
- The Voyager CD Audio Stack
- MIDI Patch Librarians, pg. 92
- SuperLibrarian
- Galaxy
- Erasable Optical Drives, pg. 102
- (too many to list)
- QuickDraw Printers, pg. 134
- Apple Personal LaserWriter SC
- GCC PLP IIS
- HP DeskWriter
- Statistics Packages, pg. 148
- Mathematica
- Theorist
- Maple
- Milo
- Clip Art, pg. 168
- (too many to list)
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 09-Oct-90, Vol. 4, #34
- InfoWorld -- 08-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #41
- MacUser -- Nov-90
-
-
- ..
-
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