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- TidBITS#34/10-Dec-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
- Internet: ace@tidbits.uucp -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Scores Author Charged
- Christmas Things
- Last Chance Survey
- Expo Expectations
- Reviews/10-Dec-90
-
-
- Scores Author Charged
- ---------------------
- With all the effort that many of you have put in responding to our
- survey, we hate to ask you to write yet another letter. However,
- you may want to do so depending on your experiences with viruses.
- The Dallas prosecutor's office is going to file charges against
- the author of the Scores virus, one of the first of those nasty
- little beasties. They feel that they have plenty of hard evidence
- in the case, but are looking for more information on the scope of
- the damage done by Scores outside of EDS (the company originally
- targeted by the Scores virus). Any information you provide will
- not be used on a per-item basis and you will not be called as a
- witness. However, this is something you can do to show your
- support of legal action against virus authors. If you wish to help
- out, include specifics on when your computer(s) contracted Scores,
- any damage it did, and approximately what it took in terms of time
- and expense to clean up after it. Any other related data will be
- appreciated as well.
-
-
- Send your letters to
- Lt. Walt Manning
- Dallas Police Dept.
- 1840 Chestnut. St.
- Dallas, TX 75226
-
- Lt. Manning would also appreciate separate letters on letterhead
- stating that viruses such as Scores are a major problem in the
- computing community and that if possible, their authors should be
- prosecuted under appropriate laws. Evidently he's looking for some
- rational, well-reasoned letters of support that could be used as a
- backdrop to the case.
-
- According to Lt. Manning, they expect the suspect to plead guilty
- when shown the evidence they have against him. No life
- imprisonments here either - they're going to try to get a
- suspended sentence with a public apology and lots of community
- service. We support such sentences so long as they are
- appropriately served. Talented programmers such as this person and
- Robert Morris should be put to work doing programming. No need to
- waste their talents. Of course, if a convicted virus author is
- caught loosing another virus, that's when we should collectively
- break his or her fingers.
-
- That said, we encourage you to write these letters. Even if you
- haven't had the Scores virus itself, the unimaginable amount of
- time that has been spent by everyone who uses computers in
- fighting viruses should be acknowledged to the legal community.
-
- Information from:
- Mark Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
- Gene Spafford -- spaf@cs.purdue.edu
-
-
- Christmas Things
- ----------------
- Before anything else, we'd like to wish you all a very happy
- holiday season, wherever you are and whatever holiday you'd like
- celebrate. Enjoy.
-
- Well, we've been sick, and it was a slow week, and we don't expect
- much more to happen next week either as everything stops for
- Christmas. We will be taking a much-needed break, so don't expect
- to see TidBITS until 1991. We'll probably be missing only two
- issues, and we hope to write some review issues in our time off.
-
- To clear up a question we recently asked (and thanks to
- mingo@cup.portal.com for the first answer), the abbreviation plc
- stands for Public Limited Company and is roughly the equivalent of
- Inc. in the US. So a plc is a publicly-traded company with limited
- liability to its stockholders. This is in contrast to Ltd. which
- is a privately-held company with limited liability. Nice to know
- these sorts of things on occasion. Mingo adds that the German
- equivalent is AG (for Aktien Gesellschaft), and Ltd. is GmbH
- (Gesellschaft mit Beschraenkter Haftung). Consider it your IBL
- (International Business Lesson) for the day.
-
- We said that Michael Joyce's Afternoon is perhaps the first
- electronic novel, and julian@riacs.edu confirmed our suspicion
- that there was indeed an earlier novel, called Brimstone, from
- Synapse and Broederbund. It wasn't particularly popular, in part
- because it wasn't all that interesting, according to Julian. He
- said it was already in the bargain bin at Computerware when he
- found it in 1986, so it probably isn't still around to check out.
- Sorry.
-
- We've started a new folder in the Speak Out section of ForumLink
- on America Online to talk about TidBITS and the articles that are
- either present or should be included. We'll also probably talk
- about things that don't quite merit an article as they stand, but
- are interesting nonetheless. So if you have access to America
- Online, we urge you to check it out. If it goes well, we may see
- about setting up TidBITS discussion groups other places, though
- the best possibility right now would be Usenet, since we don't
- have accounts on CompuServe or GEnie due to lack of funding.
-
-
- Last Chance Survey
- ------------------
- Well, this is it. This is the last week that our survey will be
- included in the issue. If you've responded already, please, we
- implore you, delete this item. If you're seeing this for the first
- time or you haven't yet gotten up the gumption or initiative to
- respond, we'd appreciate it if you did. Don't worry about the
- space this is taking up since it's been a slow week. We're not
- holding out any good news to include the survey this last time. As
- far as we can tell at the moment, we're looking at about a 3%
- return rate. That may be good by normal survey standards, but it
- seems a tad low to us. So be abnormal and tell us about yourself.
-
- Send completed surveys in any form you wish to any of these
- addresses:
-
- * Internet:
- ace@tidbits.tcnet.ithaca.ny.us
- ace%tidbits.uucp@theory.tn.cornell.edu
- pv9y@vax5.cit.cornell.edu
- pv9y@cornella.cit.cornell.edu
-
- * America Online: Adam Engst
-
- * CompuServe:
- :INTERNET:ace@tidbits.tcnet.ithaca.ny.us
- (or :INTERNET plus any other Internet address above)
-
- * GEnie: Sorry we have no account on GEnie and are unaware of any
- gateways to the Internet. You'll have to use snail mail.
-
- * Snail mail:
- Adam Engst
- TidBITS
- 901 Dryden Rd. #88
- Ithaca, NY 14850 USA
-
-
- Basic Questions
-
- 0. We'll start with the easy ones. What is your name?
-
- 1. They're not getting much harder. In what town and country do
- you live?
-
- 2. Another easy one. Do you read TidBITS regularly?
-
- 3. From where do you download or otherwise acquire TidBITS?
-
- 3a. If download statistics are listed, approximately how many
- others download each issue of TidBITS from that source? This one's
- important!
-
- 4. Do you redistribute TidBITS to other people or online services,
- such as your mother or a local BBS?
-
- 4a. If you do redistribute TidBITS, approximately how many people
- read each issue that you redistribute? This one's also important!
-
- 5. Do you use TidBITS articles in user group or university (or
- other non-profit) publications? (You can, you know, as long as you
- credit us.)
-
- 6. Have you found the TidBITS Archive useful for looking up
- information?
-
- * (For the following questions, 1 is low, 10 is high, and only
- integers exist)
-
- 7. On a scale of 1-10, how knowledgeable are you as a Mac user, if
- a DOS user who has never seen a Mac is 0 on the scale and Andy
- Hertzfeld is 10?
-
- 8. On a scale of 1-10, how knowledgeable are you as a HyperCard
- user/author?
-
- 9. On a scale of 1-10, how often do you use the contact
- information to contact companies?
-
- 10. On a scale of 1-10, how often do you use the references to
- related articles?
-
- 11. Do you have HyperCard 2.0 yet? You'll want to get it soon,
- because TidBITS will require it some time in the future. Of course
- at that point the distribution format will be text, so you'll only
- need it for the archiving features.
-
- * Optional Questions
-
- 12. What do you like best about TidBITS?
-
- 13. What do you like least about TidBITS?
-
- 14. What sort of articles would you like to see in TidBITS that
- are not currently present?
-
- 15. What would make TidBITS easier to acquire and read?
-
- 16. What other Macintosh publications (paper or electronic) do you
- read regularly?
-
- 17. Are you interested in writing special issues (like the Xanadu
- issue, #30) or product reviews for TidBITS? If so, please contact
- us via email for more information. We pay only in fame, since
- that's all we get.
-
- 18. What's your favorite color?
-
- That's 21 questions including the sub-questions, so we'll stop
- now. Give yourself 1 point for each question answered. Scores of
- more than 11 win. Scores of less than 3 indicate that you probably
- won't return the survey, so answer a few more questions and then
- send it in. At most it's a few minutes and a stamp and we
- guarantee never to do telephone surveys (or to sell your name to
- mailing list brokers). Also, we will share the results (especially
- the statistical significance of question 18) in TidBITS. Thanks
- for the enthusiasm, it keeps us going.
-
-
- Expo Expectations
- -----------------
- Unlike the Macworld Expo in Boston this year, the San Francisco
- Expo promises to show some products that haven't been thoroughly
- squeezed of interest by the press (including us :-)). The computer
- industry and Apple in particular has a strange fascination with
- leaking information, wavering between battening down the security
- hatches and making sure that "unofficial" information is freely
- available. The three recently-introduced Macs are the best example
- of this latter phenomenon since almost everyone knew exactly what
- they could do well before they actually appeared. For this
- upcoming Expo on January 10-13 in San Francisco, though,
- everyone's staying quiet. We've got a few ideas about what might
- be released there, some backed up with evidence, some just based
- on educated speculation.
-
- The main thing to look for at the Expo is Apple's new laptop. It's
- rumored to be a bit lighter than the current one, and may use a
- different pointing device (the leading contender is the Isopoint,
- the one used in the Outbound portable). We haven't heard whether
- or not a new screen will be included, but there have been lots of
- talk of Apple working with Toshiba and Sony, both of whom could
- contribute a lot to the new portable's screen capability. We
- originally thought that the Portable's screen was quite good, but
- in using a borrowed one more, we're not all that impressed. We
- have heard of several people who can barely use a luminescent
- screen because of eye problems. For them, an LCD screen is a must.
- There's also been talk of lighter portables coming out later in
- the year, which we certainly wouldn't complain about.
-
- We've been thinking (and saw mention of this in the 10-Dec edition
- of Robert X Cringely's rumor column in InfoWorld) that Apple may
- actually ship System 7.0 at this Expo, rather than in the spring
- as had been the previous indication. We have seen System 7.0 up
- and running and have seen few crashes, although the fancier stuff
- like virtual memory and file sharing wasn't quite complete. If
- System 7.0 shipped at the Expo, and if third-party developers were
- ready for it, that would mean a whole slew of new System 7.0
- versions of programs like Word and Excel, which are both looking a
- little grey around the edges (and I don't mean grey-scale) in
- comparison to their competitors. We'll just have to wait and see.
-
- We're betting on a color version of Radius's popular Pivot monitor
- to show up at the Expo too. Radius hasn't said anything concrete
- about it yet, but one inquiring soul was given a solid "No
- comment." Now if we asked in true journalistic style, "Do you deny
- that you were avoiding the question of whether or not there will
- be a color Pivot introduced at the Expo?" then we'd know for sure
- what was happening. Lucky for Radius, we're not nasty journalists
- and we like their monitors. So one way or another, we hope there
- is a color Pivot introduced, if only because we'd love to see a
- review unit and because they would sell like hotcakes if they
- weren't too expensive. Who knows, maybe PCPC will even show the
- Flipper monitor at the Expo too. If so, it would be the first time
- we'd heard of a confirmed sighting. Our money (if we had any) is
- on Radius.
-
- Information from:
- Michael Kobb -- mjkobb@media-lab.media.mit.edu
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 10-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #49, pg. 1
- InfoWorld -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #49, pg. 1
-
-
- Reviews/10-Dec-90
- -----------------
-
- * PC WEEK
- DEC Pathworks, pg. 111
-
- * BYTE
- Norton Utilities for the Macintosh , pg. 179
- VideoQuill, pg. 229
-
- * MacUser
- Kodak XL7700 Color Printer, pg. 62
- 4D Compiler, pg. 65
- Aldus PrePrint, pg. 70
- Desk, pg. 74
- TelePort A300, pg. 79
- HookUp!, pg. 83
- Project Scheduler 4, pg. 86
- 2400 Baud Modems, pg. 100
- AU/X, pg. 118
- SQL Implementations, pg. 138
- DAL
- SQL*Net
- SequeLink
- Low-End Word Processors, pg. 156
- MacWrite II
- Works 2.00
- WordMaker 1.01
- WriteNow 2.2
-
- * Macworld
- Graphics Accelerators, pg. 136
- Image Manipulation Software, pg. 144
- Photoshop
- ColorStudio
- 24-bit Display Systems, pg. 152
- NeXTstation, NeXTcube, and NeXTdimension, pg. 160
- MacRenderMan 3.1, pg. 176
- QuicKeys2 2.0, pg. 178
- FrameMaker 2.1, pg. 180
- Amazing Paint 1.0, pg. 184
- MacProteus 1.0, pg. 188
- Aldus PrePrint 1.0, pg. 195
- MediaTracks 1.0, pg. 198
- Where In Time Is Carmen Sandiego?, pg. 200
- EtherPrint, pg. 202
- Darwin's Dilemma 1.0, pg. 203
- TCP/Connect II 1.0, pg. 207
- Desk 1.0, pg. 209
- MacTools Deluxe, pg. 210
- Point of View, pg. 214
- Ask It 1.0, pg. 215
- The Mathematics Teacher's Workstation 1.0, pg. 215
- TrakHur 1.5, pg. 215
- Afternoon, pg. 218
- Report Ideas, pg. 218
- AgreeMentor, pg. 218
-
- References:
- PC WEEK -- 10-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #49
- BYTE -- Dec-90
- MacUser -- Jan-91
- Macworld -- Jan-91
-
-
- ..
-
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