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- TidBITS#33/03-Dec-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- TidBITS Survey (2nd chance)
- When I'm 68040...
- Disinfectant 2.4
- Afternoon, The Novel
- AT&T&NCR
- Not Exactly a Prodigy
- Reviews/03-Dec-90
-
-
- TidBITS Survey (2nd chance)
- ---------------------------
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- TidBITS
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- Basic Questions
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-
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-
- When I'm 68040...
- -----------------
- By now I'm sure that most of you have heard of Motorola's speedy
- new chip, the 68040. Motorola finally announced this week that it
- will start shipping the 68040 in quantity, an announcement which a
- number of companies were waiting anxiously for. Of those, NeXT is
- probably the most important since the new NeXTStations and
- NeXTCubes can't ship until the 68040 arrives in bulk. Motorola is
- rushing the chips out in an effort to meet manufacturers' needs.
-
- This is all well and good for Apple as well, since it's no secret
- (or at least we don't think it is :-)) that Apple has been working
- on a 68040-based Macintosh. However, Apple has also been rumored
- to be working on a RISC-based (reduced instruction set computing)
- computer that would use Motorola's 88000 line of processors. There
- is a slight problem with the Motorola chips though. In true Nancy
- Reagan spirit, Motorola recently instituted a drug-testing policy
- for its employees, a policy that caused a number of Motorola's
- engineers, most significantly the ones in the 68040 and RISC
- departments, to resign in protest. That may be another reason
- Motorola rushed the 68040 ship date - they didn't want
- manufacturers getting worried about chip availability
-
- It's unclear whether or not the Apple RISC machine will be a
- Macintosh or not, although I personally think it would be a large
- mistake to introduce yet another platform into the market. Such a
- RISC machine should at least have a Macintosh emulation mode.
- Apple has said that it will only use the 68000 family in the Mac,
- but some people wonder if this is true, in light of last week's
- news that Apple and VLSI Technology and Acorn Computer Group plc
- formed a new company in Cambridge, England (would someone in the
- UK please tell us what that plc stands for?).
-
- The company, Advanced RISC Machines (ARM) will develop cheap RISC
- processors that consume little power. Such processors would be
- extremely useful in the next generation of portable computers,
- perhaps even the sort that General Magic is working on. Another
- likely possibility for the RISC processor would be in a laser
- printer's rasterizing board. The greater the resolution of a laser
- printer, the greater the need for processing power, particularly
- with complex images, and Apple no longer has a high-end laser
- printer now that 600 and 1000 dpi printers are readily available
- from companies such as LaserMax. Apply that logic as you will,
- we've heard nothing specific and are merely connecting related
- points of information.
-
- Information from:
- John Catsoulis -- jtc@latcs1.oz.au
- Nigel Cliffe -- ncliffe@axion.bt.co.uk
- Ian Harries -- ih@doc.ic.ac.uk
- Lawrence D'Oliveiro -- ldo@waikato.ac.nz
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #48, pg. 17, 153
- InfoWorld -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #49, pg. 5
-
-
- Disinfectant 2.4
- ----------------
- It's gotten so that we can't even think of good titles for this
- article any more. It's repetitive, we know, and there's not much
- we can do to make it interesting short of telling lawyer jokes (no
- offense to any lawyers of course, most of our lawyer jokes come
- from lawyer friends. "What!" you say. "These people have friends
- who are lawyers? And here we thought they were normal!").
-
- In any event, there is a new version of Disinfectant. The version
- number is 2.4, and you should grab a copy next time it's
- convenient. We probably don't sound terribly alarmed and in truth
- we aren't. The new virus that 2.4 finds is a new strain of the ZUC
- B virus, which originated in Italy. We initially thought there
- wasn't much cause for concern, but just this week, a copy of ZUC B
- was found here in Ithaca, New York, USA. There are a few other
- minor fixes and small things that John cleaned up in 2.4 and it's
- worth having, in case a ZUC B virus tries to sneak into your
- computer. Pick it up from your favorite purveyor of free software.
-
- Information from:
- John Norstad -- jln@casbah.acns.nwu.edu
- America Online: JNorstad
- CompuServe: 76666,573
- AppleLink: A0173
-
-
- Afternoon, The Novel
- --------------------
- It's not just a state of mind, it's a time of day. Afternoon is
- also the title of perhaps the first work of fiction that requires
- a computer to be read. I stress the phrase "work of fiction"
- because most people immediately think of the text adventure games
- popularized by Zork and others from Infocom. However, Afternoon is
- different. It is truly fiction and bears no resemblance to a game
- or puzzle. There is nothing to solve, nowhere to go, no prize to
- capture. In essence, there is no more goal in Afternoon than there
- is in Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" or any other papertext.
- With fiction, if there is a goal at all, it would be what some
- have called the completion of self, i.e. when you feel that you
- are satisfied with the fiction. In papertexts, that usually
- happens at the end, though I've stopped reading a book in the
- middle because it was completed to my satisfaction (a nice way of
- saying it was lousy). In hyperfiction, you may never read
- everything, but that doesn't matter so long as you feel that
- you've read a complete story.
-
- If you like modern fiction, and particularly if you like the idea
- of an ever-changing, fluid fiction, I highly recommend Michael
- Joyce's Afternoon. It runs on the Mac 512KE and above, sells for
- $19.95 from Eastgate Systems, and if you act fast, you may even
- get an autographed disk. Afternoon is the first fiction written in
- Storyspace, a program that Michael Joyce helped to create.
- Storyspace will also be marketed by Eastgate and is specifically
- designed for writing hypertext. I shouldn't say too much more
- about it for now, since it will be released soon, but suffice it
- to say that Storyspace is an excellent hypertext authoring system.
- I personally have written the equivalent of over 250 pages in it,
- so I should know what I'm talking about. Stay tuned...
-
- Eastgate Systems -- 800/562-1638 -- 617/924-9044
-
- Information from:
- Mark Bernstein, Eastgate Systems
- CompuServe -- 76146,262
- Internet -- 76146.262@compuserve.com
-
-
- AT&T&NCR
- --------
- What a lot of letters! It may become reality if AT&T succeeds in
- its bid to buy NCR. So far NCR has refused (and I may not have
- this exactly right - stocks are not my strong suit) stock offers
- of $85 and $90 per share, but AT&T isn't giving up. There's been
- talk of $100 per share, and NCR has proposed $125 per share. One
- way or another, it's a lot of money.
-
- AT&T is probably looking at NCR as a excellent way to finally get
- a decent computer line. NCR makes a huge family of computers and
- just released a whole slew of new ones. AT&T, on the other hand,
- has had poor results in the computer market. Computers like the
- AT&T PC 6300 and a pseudo-personal Unix box flopped in the market.
- So on that account, AT&T could get back into what it must see as a
- lucrative market, especially considering that AT&T Unix is a
- popular operating system and a number of the NCR computers run
- Unix.
-
- The deal goes both ways, of course. NCR isn't known for their
- customer service, or rather they are known for mediocre customer
- service, whereas AT&T usually gets decent ratings on that score.
- In addition, NCR recently announced WaveLAN, a wireless network,
- though little has been said about it since its introduction.
- AT&T's clout behind WaveLAN might give it a serious boost in what
- is bound to become a large market eventually. Motorola has
- announced a more ambitious radio network, Apple has asked for FCC
- clearance for a portion of the bandwidth, and just recently
- Toshiba announced that it was working on the low end, a method of
- wireless communication between peripherals, which would eliminate
- the massive wire nest behind everyone's desks (where the wire rats
- live :-)). Who knows what AT&T could do with WaveLAN if it managed
- to acquire NCR and quickly pushed WaveLAN into the marketplace?
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 26-Nov-90, Vol. 12, #48, pg. 21
-
-
- Not Exactly a Prodigy
- ---------------------
- The US political climate is about as strange as the average Ithaca
- weather in that it's seldom predictable, but often involves slush.
- Battles have been waged over issues like flag burning (does it
- count if I throw a TIFF image of the American flag in my Mac's
- trash can?) and other free expression issues. Electronic freedoms
- have been in the news as well, what with the FBI seizing the
- equipment of suspected electronic burglars. It's even gone so far
- that Mitch Kapor and others formed the Electronic Frontier
- Foundation, a group dedicated to educating both the government and
- the public about electronic freedoms.
-
- In the midst of this thicket of confusion, up pops Prodigy, the
- online service run by IBM and Sears, two of the more conservative
- companies in the solar system. On the face of it, Prodigy sounds
- like a great deal, a flat rate of $9.95 for a month no matter how
- long you spend online. There are a few drawbacks, such as a fifth
- of the screen devoted to advertising and an interface from hell,
- but people didn't mind that. Then came the slush. Prodigy decided
- that it wasn't making enough money, so it raised the monthly rates
- and started charging 25 cents for each mail message over 30 per
- month. Considering that it costs the same amount to send real mail
- and have someone pick it up at your house and deliver it your
- friend, people became unhappy. First they started grumbling in the
- bulletin board areas, then in private mailing lists when Prodigy
- informed them that their griping was uninteresting and wouldn't
- allow it posted. That wasn't enough, so Prodigy changed its
- guidelines to make such mailing lists illegal. In addition,
- Prodigy expelled the most vocal of the dissenters and starting
- screening even private mail to be sure its guidelines aren't
- weren't violated. Now there's a nasty job.
-
- Due in part to the massive bad press, though, Prodigy now says
- that it will reinstate the people it expelled if they sign letters
- admitting that they harassed other Prodigy members and advertisers
- with their protest. From what we've heard, Prodigy's offer has
- been turned down cold. The other online services have been happily
- taking the users who are unhappy with Prodigy's censorship
- practices.
-
- This ugly incident point more towards a larger issue of the
- boundary between email and normal mail. Opening a letter that's
- not addressed to you is a US federal crime, and it's no better for
- a mail carrier to do so. Similarly, free speech guarantees that
- you can say what you want in person, but that doesn't seem to
- apply to electronic discussions. In our opinion, freedom of
- expression should not be limited by the medium of expression, but
- only by its ability to directly harm another person. An excellent
- example is Usenet, where lots of unpleasant and controversial
- subjects are discussed. You can say anything you wish without fear
- of legal reprisal (except for some local computer abuse laws).
- However, if what you say is deemed inappropriate for any reason,
- prepare to be flamed. That internal set of checks and balances
- serves to properly compartmentalize topics, so if your message
- belongs in alt.sex.chains&whipped_cream, it had better not show up
- in comp.sys.mac.misc. In the vast majority of cases, the existence
- of appropriate forums is enough; and in the few exceptions, public
- uproar serves to keep the peace. If only the rest of the
- electronic world were so reasonable.
-
- Information from:
- Heidi Aycock -- heidia@samba.acs.unc.edu
- Don -- donc@microsoft.UUCP
- Clayton Cramer -- cramer@optilink.UUCP
- David Lemson -- lemson@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #48, pg. 13
- InfoWorld -- 26-Nov-90, Vol. 12, #48, pg. 5
- MacWEEK -- 04-Dec-90, Vol. 4, #41, pg. 36
-
-
- Reviews/03-Dec-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Accounting Packages, pg. 61
- Great Plains Accounting Series
- Insight Expert Accounting Series
- SBT Database Accounting Library
- (these things don't come in parallel :-))
- Studio/32, pg. 61
- Adobe Illustrator 3.0, pg. 74
- Sonar Bookends, pg. 76
- Editorial Advisor, pg. 78
- Solarian, pg. 78
- Might & Magic II, pg. 79
- OCR Systems, pg. 107
- OmniPage 2.1
- Parallel Reader
- Typist
- TopScan CDP 9000
- TopScan CDP 6000
- ScanReader
- TextPert 3.5
- Read-It! O.C.R 2.1
- Read-It! O.C.R Personal 2.1
- Datacopy AccuText 2.0
-
- * InfoWorld
- Adobe Illustrator 3.0, pg. 64
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 04-Dec-90, Vol. 4, #41
- InfoWorld -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #49
-
-
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