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- TidBITS#214/21-Feb-94
- =====================
-
- PowerPC information galore this week, including specs on all the
- new machines due out on March 14th, and current Quadra prices
- for those who don't want take the PowerPC plunge. We cover the
- fuss concerning the Clipper chip and provide pointers to all
- sorts of information about it; Dave Thompson of ARPA warns
- about Meeting Maker and On Technology; and we provide a brief
- look at our upcoming books about the Internet and (from Tonya
- Microsoft Word.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- 71520.72@compuserve.com
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, memory, and accessories.
- For APS price lists, email: aps-prices@tidbits.com
-
- Copyright 1990-1994 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Automated info: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <ace@tidbits.com>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/21-Feb-94
- Current Quadra Prices
- Caveat Emptor: Meeting Maker
- Electronic Activism: Clipper
- PowerPC Reports Positive
- Power Mac Specs
- Reviews/21-Feb-94
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-214.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/21-Feb-94
- ------------------
- As the ides of March approach, so does the deadline for my next
- book. It's unlike any other Internet book that I've seen in that
- it's non-technical and provides a look at Internet life in order
- to _show_ and not _tell_ what the Internet is all about. The
- entire book is written in dialogue form with my good friend Bill
- Dickson, and doesn't attempt to tell you how to do much of
- anything.
-
- Bill: Hi folks! But if you pay attention, you might pick up a
- surprising amount of information.
-
- Adam: We want to convey the concept, the Zeitgeist if you will, of
- the Internet, without bogging the book down with technical jargon.
- I enjoy reading James Herriot's books about being a veterinarian
- in Great Britain, but I have no desire to be a vet - I just want
- to vicariously live the conceit of Herriot's world.
-
- Bill: The Internet is our world, and we come at it from different
- viewpoints. I like to wander aimlessly in the World-Wide Web,
- whereas Adam searches WAIS and Veronica. I've spent plenty of time
- in IRC and various MUDs -
-
- Adam: And I have a life.
-
- Bill: Hey!
-
- Adam: The point is that we want the book to be enjoyable,
- personable, and the answer to the question we hear so frequently,
- "So what do you really _do_ on the Internet anyway?"
-
- Bill: In any event, since our deadline draws near, if you can
- avoid sending unnecessary email to Adam, that would be great. He
- spends a lot of time replying to email these days.
-
- Adam: Yes, thanks, and just so you know the kind of hours we're
- putting in at the moment, Tonya is also finishing a book for the
- end of February. The book is the ultimate guide to Microsoft Word
- (it explains how to actually make Word do something for you rather
- than cheerfully documenting each and every menu item in gory
- detail). Busy is not the word for it, but we don't foresee any
- problems putting out TidBITS thanks to people like Mark Anbinder
- and our other contributors. So please bear with us until the
- middle of March (the books should be out a month or two later),
- and then all should return to normal.
-
- Bill: I'm not even going to touch that one.
-
-
- **A new radio talk show** about computers called "OnLine Tonight
- with David Lawrence" debuts this Sunday, 27-Feb-94 "via the ABC
- Satellite System." I know zilch about radio, so I'm not sure how
- that will help you find it in your area, but the time will be 8:00
- PM Eastern time and 5:00 PM Pacific time, so I'll just go low-tech
- and dial through all the local stations. The demo tape I heard
- indicates that OnLine Tonight may not quite compete with NPR's Car
- Talk (David's going to hate me for saying that), but will
- certainly be far more fun and interesting than any of the boring
- suit-filled computer radio shows I've heard in the past. Although
- David is a self-described Mac fanatic, the show is cross-platform
- and co-host Rita Daniels covers PC questions from callers. Most
- interestingly, if you don't want to use the telephone, you can ask
- questions online as well via America Online or CompuServe. No word
- if they've got an IRC channel set up yet for Internet folks. David
- Lawrence -- oltdavid@aol.com -- 75300.2460@compuserve.com
-
-
- **CD Updates** -- Two popular CDs packed with thousands of files
- have recently been updated. AMUG (the Arizona Macintosh Users'
- Group) shipped BBS in a Box X for $119 ($45 upgrade), and Pacific
- Hi Tech just released the third edition of the Info-Mac CD-ROM for
- $49.95 (previous owners get a $20 discount), which holds many of
- the files stored on <sumex-aim.stanford.edu>. If you've had
- trouble accessing FTP sites due to the load, or if you're setting
- up a BBS and want a ready-made file library, check out these CDs.
- Both CDs reportedly have a conflict between the Dataware software
- used to create the CDs and the drivers for NEC CD-ROM drives. The
- workaround for the moment is to use a third-party generic driver,
- such as Charismac or FWB's CD-ROM Toolkit. AMUG -- 602/553-8966 --
- 602/553-8771 (fax) -- amug@aol.com -- Pacific Hi-Tech -- 801/278-
- 2042 -- 801/278-2666 (fax) -- 71175.3152@compuserve.com
-
-
- **Duo Battery Patch** -- Apple has released a patch for the Duo
- 210, 230, and 250 (the 270c is not affected) that reportedly
- solves problems with the Duo not charging its internal battery.
- The problem apparently cropped up with the release of the
- PowerBook Duo Enabler, the version that Apple currently recommends
- for all Duos. According to Apple, we can look forward to the next
- PowerBook Duo Enabler release incorporating the patch. You can
- find the patch on AppleLink or on the Internet at:
-
- ftp://ftp.austin.apple.com/pub/mac/Duo_Battery_Patch.sea.hqx
-
-
- Current Quadra Prices
- ---------------------
- Mark Anbinder reported on the Quadra price drops two issues ago,
- but we've had requests for the actual pricing, and some additional
- information appeared too late for Mark's article. Pricing on the
- current Quadra models now looks like this:
-
- Previous New Percent
- Apple Apple Change
- price price
-
- Quadra 650 8/230 w/512K VRAM/ $2,399 $2,129 11%
- Ethernet & FPU
- Quadra 650 8/230CD w/1 MB VRAM/ $2,739 $2,479 9%
- Ethernet & FPU
- Quadra 650 8/500CD w/1 MB VRAM/ $3,339 $3,069 8%
- Ethernet & FPU
- Quadra 660AV 8/230 w/1 MB VRAM $2,289 $1,879 18%
-
- Quadra 660AV 8/230CD w/1 MB VRAM $2,579 $2,159 16%
-
- Quadra 660AV 8/500CD w/1 MB VRAM $3,169 $2,759 13%
-
- Quadra 800 8/230 512K VRAM/ $2,739 $2,439 11%
- Ethernet & FPU
- Quadra 800 8/500 w/1 MB VRAM/ $3,379 $3,079 9%
- Ethernet & FPU
- Quadra 800 8/500CD w/1 MB VRAM/ $3,649 $3,349 8%
- Ethernet & FPU
- Quadra 800 8/1000 w/1 MB VRAM/ $4,089 $3,789 7%
- Ethernet & FPU
- Quadra 840AV 8/230/1 MB VRAM/ $3,619 $3,199 12%
- Ethernet
- Quadra 840AV 8/230CD/1 MB VRAM/ $3,909 $3,489 11%
- Ethernet
- Quadra 840AV 16/500CD/1 MB VRAM/ $4,849 $4,419 9%
- Ethernet
- Quadra 840AV 16/1000CD/1 MB VRAM/ $5,559 $5,119 8%
- Ethernet
- Quadra 950 8/SD w/1 MB VRAM $3,559 $3,149 12%
-
- Quadra 950 33 MHz 8/230/1 MB VRAM $4,089 $3,679 10%
-
- Quadra 950 33 MHz 8/500 w/1 MB VRAM $4,659 $4,249 9%
-
- Quadra 950 33 MHz 16/1000 w/1 MB VRAM $5,729 $5,309 7%
-
- Quadra 950 33 MHz 0/1000 w/1 MB VRAM $7,999 $7,329 8%
-
-
- Caveat Emptor: Meeting Maker
- ----------------------------
- by Dave Thompson, Manager, ARPA Networking Services
- dthompson@arpa.mil
-
- The Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) has been using
- Meeting Maker from On Technology <on.support@applelink.apple.com>
- for the last three years as its agency-wide scheduling system.
- Although we have a love/hate relationship with this product, it
- has clearly changed the way ARPA does business. These days, if a
- meeting doesn't exist on Meeting Maker, the meeting doesn't exist.
-
- Unfortunately, Meeting Maker has a small problem with its
- database. The product was designed using a fairly unreliable
- database technology, which tends to occasionally "lose" the
- database links between elements. When this happens, the only
- action that the customer can take is to delete the account that
- owns the bad information.
-
- At the beginning of January, we attempted to do our quarterly
- purge of the database and discovered we had several accounts that
- contained bad records. One of these accounts is the Director of
- ARPA, and we really wanted to avoid deleting his account.
-
- Now we would have gone ahead and deleted his account, getting a
- lot of egg on our faces, except that On Technology knows how to
- "reattach" the data record. Kelly Martin, their lead technical
- person, knows how to go into the database and remove the offending
- record, without requiring the deletion of the entire account. We
- found it interesting that she is the only person at On Technology
- who knows how to perform this delicate task (she didn't respond to
- our inquiry of what happens to On Technology if she gets hit by a
- bus).
-
- You would think, "Aha! There is a solution! We get the database
- fixed, and life goes on." No such luck. Since ARPA is a Department
- of Defense agency, and this service is used by everyone in the
- agency, the data in the database is sensitive information, and
- there are federal regulations governing it. The bottom line is
- that it can't leave the building. However, On Technology "provides
- phone and electronic support for their package only." They offered
- to fix the error if we would send the database to them
- electronically.
-
- This put us in a real dilemma. We don't want to delete the
- Director's account, but the only way to avoid it is to send the
- database to the vendor, which we are not allowed to do, due to
- federal regulations. We spent all of January trying to find a way
- to resolve this situation. We offered to pay to fly Kelly Martin
- down and fix the database. We offered to fly one of our people up
- to learn how to fix it. We even considered hiring her. After a
- month of telephone tag, requests, cajoling, and pleading, On
- Technology gave us their official position, that they "provide
- phone and electronic support for their package only." We continued
- to try and get them to stand behind their product. In the latest
- attempt, our Director of MIS tried to contact the President of On
- Technology, Chris Risley. He refused to take the call, or to
- return the call.
-
- Finally, on February 13th (poetic, eh?), our Meeting Maker servers
- themselves resolved the situation for us. They crashed and refused
- to come back up. Our only option was to delete the accounts, and
- restart the system. Meeting Maker did come back online, and we
- have had the distinct pleasure of explaining to the ARPA front
- office why the Director's account had to be deleted when it wasn't
- necessary. Needless to say, the search has begun for a replacement
- for Meeting Maker, and products from On Technology will not be
- considered.
-
- For those of you considering Meeting Maker XP, it is our
- understanding that this problem has not been fixed in the new
- release, and unfortunately, On Technology's support policies have
- remained equally unchanged.
-
-
- Electronic Activism: Clipper
- ----------------------------
- You may have heard mutterings in the media about the Clipper chip,
- a computer chip that provides encryption services for both data
- and voice transmissions (that's right, telephones). The concept is
- good - if you're sending sensitive information about your love
- life to a friend, you may want to make sure that no one can pry
- through your email. However, the Clipper chip has a catch, a back
- door, if you will. The U.S. government, in the form of the FBI and
- the NSA, wants to have "keys" to the Clipper chip that enable them
- to decode anything encrypted with the Clipper chip. The government
- argues that they need this capability to be able to learn about
- terrorist and criminal plans, particularly those that threaten
- national security.
-
- However, there are several good reasons to oppose the adoption of
- the Clipper chip. First, the government has never proven itself
- entirely trustworthy in terms of protecting the privacy of its
- citizens, and frankly, there is no "government" that holds these
- "keys" - government employees do, and people cannot be completely
- trustworthy. Just think of the scandal if the Clipper chip were
- adopted and some government employee sold the secret back door to
- another country. Second, even if you aren't concerned with the
- government possibly poking through your personal information,
- isn't it a bit arrogant to assume that the U.S. is the only
- country that could come up with a decent encryption technology?
- Smart criminals and terrorists would simply pay a hotshot
- programmer from some other country to create an unbreakable
- encryption technology, and use that one to avoid having their
- communications fall into the hands of the FBI and NSA. Clipper is
- an act of electronic hubris.
-
- CPSR, the Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, has
- organized a petition drive to oppose the Clipper chip proposal. If
- you wish to sign on to this petition, all you have to do is send
- email to <clipper.petition@cpsr.org> with the message "I oppose
- Clipper" (sans quotes) in the body of the letter. CPSR has also
- made information about the Clipper chip available on the Internet
- via FTP, WAIS, and Gopher as:
-
- gopher://cpsr.org/
- ftp://cpsr.org/cpsr/privacy/crypto/clipper/
-
-
- There's another way you can work against the Clipper chip proposal
- and the U.S. restriction on export of powerful encryption
- software. Currently, encryption software that the NSA cannot
- decrypt may not be exported from the U.S. (again assuming that
- other countries couldn't come up with their own unbreakable
- schemes). U.S. Representative Maria Cantwell (D-Washington) has
- introduced a bill into the House of Representatives that would
- move authority of the export of encryption software from the
- Secretary of State to the Secretary of Commerce, and would also
- invalidate license requirements for non-military software
- containing encryption capabilities unless there is substantial
- evidence that the software will be specifically used or modified
- for military or terrorist use.
-
- To get more information about the Cantwell bill, send email to
- <cantwell-info@eff.org>, and to add your voice to those supporting
- Cantwell's bill, send email to <cantwell@eff.org> with "I support
- HR 3627" in the Subject line of your message. In the body of the
- message, outline reasons why you support Cantwell's bill. If you
- wish to read the full text of the bill, it's available on the
- Internet at the following URLs and soon on AOL (keyword EFF) and
- CompuServe (GO EFFSIG).
-
- ftp://ftp.eff.org/pub/Policy/Legislation/cantwell.bill
- http://www.eff.org/ftp/EFF/Policy/Legislation/cantwell.bill
- gopher://gopher.eff.org/00/EFF/legislation/cantwell.bill
-
-
- For yet more information about the Clipper chip situation, you can
- retrieve two essays written by John Perry Barlow and Brock N.
- Meeks for WIRED. To receive these essays, send email to
- <infobot@wired.com> with these three lines in the body of the
- message:
-
- send clipper/privacy.meeks
- send clipper/privacy.barlow
- end
-
- Barlow's essay raises the same arguments I've raised above, but
- also relates the White House staff's responses. Depressing stuff.
- WIRED also sports some Gopher- and World-Wide Web-based sources of
- information on this topic at:
-
- gopher://gopher.wired.com
- http://www.wired.com
-
- I recommend reading some of the information to see what the
- hullabaloo is about. For those not in the U.S., consider if the
- same argument might not arise in your country (one report
- mentioned that the NSA is shopping the technology around to other
- countries), and even if not, how the Clipper chip and related
- legislation could affect communications with the U.S. and the U.S.
- computer industry. We live in a global economy, and those of us on
- the nets interact daily on a global basis. That's important, and
- must not be compromised.
-
-
- PowerPC Reports Positive
- ------------------------
- March may bode well for Macintosh users if the PowerPC versions of
- the Macintosh appear on schedule and live up to reports I've
- heard. You can find some of this sort of information (but not the
- juicy stuff) via Gopher at the URL below. There's also a
- possibility of native PowerPC demo applications appearing there.
-
- gopher://info.hed.apple.com/11/PowerPC/
-
-
- Compatibility
- Sure, the big name developers will support the PowerPC - they'd be
- stupid not to. But what about some of our favorite freeware and
- shareware authors? There's no telling, although individual
- developers often support new technologies well in advance of the
- commercial outfits. News from Pythaeus indicates that university
- developers haven't been left out of the fun. A four-month loan of
- a PowerPC has allowed various developers to ensure their
- applications work with the PowerPC. Among the programs tested are
- the Gopher server from the University of Minnesota, Mosaic from
- NCSA, CU-SeeMe and Mandarin from Cornell University, the World-
- Wide Web server (they probably mean Chuck Shotton's MacHTTP), and
- MacSLIP from the University of Texas.
-
- Compatibility reports I've heard about commercial applications are
- surprisingly good - apparently most everything runs well in
- emulation. The major exception is any application that requires a
- hardware FPU, since the emulation only emulates the FPU-less
- 68LC040 chip that has been used in a few Macs. I doubt this
- limitation will be serious since any application that relies
- heavily on the FPU has no business not going native. Reports from
- test sites indicate that the transition to the PowerPC Macs may be
- even less stressful than the transition from the 68030 to 68040 or
- from System 6 to System 7. Some people even claimed the PowerPC
- Macs were more compatible than the AV Macs (which must be pretty
- good, since I've seen relatively few incompatibilities with the
- 660AV).
-
-
- Upgrades
- Apple has announced that they intend to offer PowerPC motherboard
- upgrades for even more current Macs, bringing the list to the
- following:
-
- * LC 475, 520, 550, 575
- * Performa 475/476, 550, 600
- * Macintosh IIvx, IIvi
- * Centris 610, 650, 660AV
- * Quadra 605, 610, 650, 660AV, 800, 840AV
- * Apple Workgroup Server 60, 80, 95 (but only with System 7)
-
- Of these, the only one that surprises me is the AWS 95, which is
- essentially a Quadra 950. It's rumored that the upgrade will only
- come in the form of the PDS card rather than the full logic board
- upgrade, and at that point, it would seem that the Quadra 700
- would be a candidate for the same upgrade. Upgrades will be
- available at the March 14th introduction and should start at less
- than $1,000.
-
- DayStar has announced that they intend to provide upgrades for
- other Macs currently left out (the SE/30 rides again!). The
- details of how the DayStar and Apple PDS upgrade boards will
- handle RAM are still fuzzy, but the companies may come up with
- cards that use memory in different ways, resulting in different
- prices and different overall speeds.
-
- One advantage of the Apple PDS card upgrade is that you can choose
- between PowerPC 601 or 68040 mode merely by rebooting, so if your
- software wasn't compatible with the PowerPC chip, you could easily
- switch back to normal 68040 mode. The big question that remains is
- if the PDS card upgrades might not be even faster than the low-end
- PowerPC logic board upgrades since Apple's PDS cards come with a
- large RAM cache.
-
-
- Names & Prices
- The naming scheme that Apple has adopted makes a certain sort of
- twisted sense, but requires the ability to perform complicated
- internal arithmetical linkages. When will these people learn that
- a word is worth a thousand numbers?. And of course, keep in mind
- that this information still fits in the rumor category. I suspect
- Apple sometimes changes squiggly details at the last minute to
- discredit those of us who disseminate them.
-
- We should see at least six PowerPC Macs (three of which will sport
- AV technologies), all named PowerMac (or perhaps Power Macintosh).
- Each will sport 8 MB of RAM and the price includes built-in
- Ethernet, a keyboard, and monitor, presumably a basic 14" model.
-
- The low-end PowerMac 6100/60 uses a 60 MHz PowerPC 601 chip and
- costs $2,099 with a 160 MB hard drive and room for a maximum of 72
- MB of RAM. The next model up, the PowerMac 7100/66, is $2,999 for
- a 66 MHz chip, a 250 MB hard drive, and space for 136 MB of RAM.
- The fastest model, which will be the one to buy for adequate
- SoftWindows speed, is the PowerMac 8100/80 and costs $4,499 with a
- 250 MB hard drive and room for 264 MB of RAM, although I don't
- even want to think about how much that RAM would cost. There will
- undoubtedly be various options in terms of hard drives and
- whatnot.
-
- Reports indicate that the lowest end model is way too slow for
- SoftWindows (which will be included with some models), but the
- demo I saw at Macworld indicated that the high-end PowerPC Mac
- could do a good job of PC emulation.
-
- I believe that some of the pricing difference between the various
- models is related to the secondary cache memory, which is fast and
- expensive, but which significantly improves performance.
-
- Each of the above machines also comes as an AV model, with the AV
- technologies provided on a PDS card. Otherwise the specs are
- pretty much the same.
-
- I'm sure you can figure out the naming scheme - the first number
- indicates the case type, with the 6 being the Quadra 610 case, the
- 7 being the Quadra 650 case, and the 8 being the Quadra 800 case.
- The 100 tacked on the end is there to make the number look
- impressive. The number after the slash is of course the chip
- speed. I have no clue what they plan to call an LC 550, for
- instance, that you upgrade to a PowerPC chip.
-
-
- Performance
- Reports from test sites still indicate that the speed of current
- Macintosh applications running in emulation mode feels like the
- speed of a Quadra 700. Apple disclaims emulation speed widely,
- saying that it varies dramatically from application to application
- and that it should range from IIci to Quadra 700 speed. It's
- unclear how the recent InfoWorld article that claimed 68000 and
- 68020 performance was done - I have yet to hear from anyone who
- thinks that, and these are people who have used PowerPC Macs for
- some time.
-
- Native mode software runs anywhere from twice as fast as existing
- high-end Macs to as much as eight times as fast in specific areas.
- I could quote benchmarks at you, but frankly, I think they're
- relatively meaningless. No one is going to buy a PowerPC Mac
- solely because it's a few SPECmarks faster than a Pentium-based
- Windows box. Instead, people will buy PowerPC Macs because they
- are Macs and they are damn fast, especially for the prices
- involved. End of story.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Power Mac Specs
- ---------------
- The following specs were posted to the nets, and certainly aren't
- officially from Apple. Still, they jibe pretty much with what I've
- heard.
-
-
- Model 6100/60 7100/66 8100/80
-
- Processor PPC601 PPC601 PPC601
- Speed 60 MHz 66 MHz 80 MHz
- Cache Optional Optional 256K standard
-
- Performance 25% faster 200% faster
- Native 2-4x 68040/33 than 6100/60 than 6100/60
- Emulated fast 030-040
-
- RAM 8 MB standard 8 MB standard 8 MB standard
- DRAM exp. 72 MB 136 MB 264 MB
- SIMM Slots 2 4 8
-
- Expansion Slots One 7" NuBus 3 full size 3 full size
- NuBus NuBus
- Storage
- Standard 160 to 250 MB 250 to 500 MB 250 MB to 1 GB
- Floppy 1.4 MB w/DMA 1.4 MB w/DMA 1.4 MB w/DMA
- CD-ROM Optional Optional Optional
-
- Video
- DRAM video Standard Standard Standard
- VRAM 1 MB standard 2 MB standard
- VRAM exp. 2 MB 4 MB
- Standard Support 1 monitor 2 monitors 2 monitors
-
- SCSI High-speed High-speed High-speed
- asynch asynch asynch
- Dual SCSI
- channels
-
- Networking Ethernet on-board w/DMA channel, AAUI connector
-
- Other Built-ins
- 16-bit audio stereo in/out with DMA
- 2 serial ports-LocalTalk and GeoPort compatible, with DMA
- Channel Apple Desktop Bus (ADB for input devices)
-
-
- AV Models 6100/66AV, 7100/66AV, 8100/80AV
- Video-in NTSC, PAL, SECAM
- Video in resizable window
- Frame and video capture
-
- Video-out NTSC, PAL
- VRAM 2 MB standard, not expandable
- Interface S-video for video in/out
- Composite (RCA) adapters included
-
- Software
- System 7.1.2 Macintosh OS with AppleScript
- PC Exchange & QuickTime.
- PlainTalk text-to-speech and speech recognition software
- MS-DOS/Windows 3.1 with Insignia Solutions SoftWindows
- software with some models
-
- Other
- SIMMs 72-pin, 80 ns or faster, installed in pairs
- CD-ROM AppleCD 300i
- Power 100-240 volts, 50-60 Hz
- EnergyStar-compliant (7100/66, 8100/80)
-
-
- Logic Board Upgrades
- Models 6100/60
- 7100/66
- 8100/80
-
- Includes 8 MB DRAM, same interface, audio, and video
-
- Expansion Same as applicable model
-
- Hard Drive 160 MB minimum recommended
-
- DRAM DRAM from upgraded system must be 72-pin,
- 80 ns or faster, installed in pairs
-
- Software System 7.1.2, AppleScript, PC Exchange,
- QuickTime
-
- AV Logic Board Upgrades
- Models 6100/60AV
- 7100/66AV
- 8100/80AV
-
- Includes Upgrade included 8 MB DRAM & same interfaces as
- applicable model
-
- Other Same expansion, HD, DRAM, and software specs
- as non-AV logic board upgrades
-
- Video-in NTSC, PAL, SECAM
- Video in resizable window
- Frame and video capture
-
- Video-out NTSC, PAL
-
- Interface S-video for video in/out
- Composite (RCA) adapters included
-
- Power Macintosh Upgrade Card
- Upgrade Card
- Processor PPC601
- Speed Twice the clock speed of host motherboard
- Slot Motorola 68040 PDS
- Cache 1 MB
-
- AV technologies not supported.
-
- Host Macintosh Resources
- DRAM 8 MB min., uses DRAM on motherboard
- Interfaces None on card, uses host interfaces
- Expansion Requires NuBus slot in line with 040
- PDS empty to install card
- Software System 7.1.2 with AppleScript, PC Exchange
- and QuickTime
- Supports booting Mac with host 040
- or PPC601
-
- Availability Concurrent with introduction of PowerMac
-
-
- Reviews/21-Feb-94
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 14-Feb-94, Vol. 8, #7
- AppleSearch 1.0 -- pg. 1
- Ray Dream Designer 3.0 -- pg. 41
- OptiMem 1.5.2 & RAM Doubler 1.0.1 -- pg. 49
-
- * InfoWorld -- 14-Feb-94, Vol. 16, #7
- SITcomm 1.0 -- pg. 99
-
- $$
-
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