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- TidBITS#119/13-Apr-92
- =====================
-
- It's not as big a deal as when a car company does it, but Apple
- recalled Tune-Up 1.1 last week and replaced it with 1.1.1.
- That's embarrassing, but not nearly as embarrassed as you'd
- be if your portable caused a plane to have problems due to
- the radio frequency interference we discuss this issue. The
- latest rumors from Claris aren't in the slightest bit
- embarrassing though, and neither is Dan Walkowski's
- excellent trash management utility, TrashMan.
-
- 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 email to info@tidbits.halcyon.com or
- ace@tidbits.halcyon.com -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/13-Apr-92
- Sorry, Charlie! (Tune-Up Recalled)
- RFI Interference Letter
- RFI Follow-up
- Claris Windows Rumors
- The TrashMan Cometh
- Reviews/13-Apr-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-119.etx; 26K]
-
-
- MailBITS/13-Apr-92
- ------------------
- Stimpson J. Millians writes: "The Ashton-Tate/Fox suit got dropped
- as a result of the Borland/Ashton-Tate suit buyout. It was part of
- the Justice Department anti-trust agreement. I'm not pleased about
- Microsoft buying Fox at all. I program FoxPro 2.0, and it's the
- only one out there that civilizes (i.e. GUI-izes) DOS databases in
- a quick, attractive manner. I hate to see a killer program hacked
- to pieces by Microsoft, although the Windows and Mac versions
- might come out sooner because of it. This surprised me even more
- because all of the regional Microsoft salesthings got training on
- the Microsoft database over the Christmas holidays, and said it
- would be out in the summer."
-
- Information from:
- Stimpson J. Millians -- millia@athena.cs.uga.edu
-
-
- Tune-Up Printing Bug
- Geoff Bronner writes, "In the hoopla surrounding the release of
- Tune-Up 1.1 and its companion files one thing has gone
- unmentioned. The release of LaserWriter 7.1 with Tune-Up 1.0
- introduced a bug that caused random PostScript errors when
- printing to Novell NetWare for Macintosh 3.01 queues. The release
- of LaserWriter 7.1.1 with Tune-Up 1.1 has not fixed this problem.
- [And there's no reason to expect this will be fixed in 1.1.1 as
- discussed below. -Adam]
-
- Users at sites using Novell NetWare may get caught by surprise
- when the Installer that comes with Tune-Up 1.1 replaces their copy
- of LaserWriter 7.0 with 7.1.1 and everything stops printing.
-
- The original bug in LaserWriter 7.1 was confirmed by a MacWEEK
- article (MacWEEK 10-Feb-92, pg. 5) but nothing else has been
- mentioned since then.
-
- So be warned! If you are using NetWare for Mac and System 7 stay
- with LaserWriter 7.0."
-
- Information from:
- Geoff Bronner -- geoffb@dartmouth.edu
-
-
- Sorry, Charlie! (Tune-Up Recalled)
- ----------------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- What could be more embarrassing than having to release a bug fix
- to protect users from a bug that can destroy their data? Having to
- release a bug fix to protect users from the first bug fix! Apple
- was embarrassed in just this way last week, when they realized
- that System 7 Tune-Up 1.1 was defective, and needed to be
- replaced. System 7 Tune-Up 1.1.1 was released at the end of last
- week to fix the problem.
-
- According to an anonymous source, when the final version of System
- 7 Tune-Up 1.1 was compiled, a previous version of a header file
- was used. As a result, the Tuner accessed the wrong Process
- Manager globals, creating a potential crash hazard in the
- application purging routines. The problem apparently would only
- appear in certain kinds of low-memory situations, so it went
- unnoticed until after Tune-Up 1.1 had been released.
-
- Apple is currently recommending that all users of System 7 (both
- 7.0 and 7.0.1) install the System 7 Tune-Up 1.1.1 package.
- Previous versions of the Tune-Up package will be replaced by the
- Installer.
-
- In addition to using the Installer, which comes with the Tune-Up,
- users have the option of dragging the "Tuner Parts" folder from
- the distribution disk to their System Folders. An undocumented
- feature of Finder 7 will automatically install the contents of any
- folder that's dropped on the System Folder. (Try it! It works!)
-
- Users wishing to protect themselves from the dreaded Disappearing
- Folders bug should immediately install System 7 Tune-Up 1.1.1.
- Tune-Up 1.1.1 should be available from the usual suspects, and can
- be obtained on the Internet from Apple's FTP server at
- ftp.apple.com [130.43.2.3] in the directory
- dts/mac/sys.soft/7.0.tuneup/
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Mark B. Johnson - mjohnson@apple.com
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
-
-
- RFI Interference Letter
- -----------------------
- From Cliff Wildes, President and CEO of Microtech International
-
- To the Editor:
- Recent articles and discussions in the Macintosh community have
- focused on safety concerns related to the marvelous machinery we
- rely on for our work and enjoyment. As a manufacturer of
- peripherals for the Macintosh market I've been surprised to see a
- crucial safety and quality standard missing from the demands we
- make of our industry. I'm referring to the importance of strict
- adherence to FCC (Federal Communications Commission) Part 15. This
- federal regulation governs the release of radio frequency
- interference (RFI) generated by computer hardware. For many of us
- the words "FCC certified" have simply meant that our systems won't
- stumble when we turn on a radio or our neighbors won't complain
- that each time we fire up our Macs, their TV goes scrambly. But
- the real issue is far more serious.
-
- RFI poses a threat to aircraft control towers, police and fire
- emergency response radio transmissions and medical life support
- systems. With the greater proliferation and mobility of our
- computer systems, this potential danger increases. An uncertified
- monitor attached to an otherwise "clean" system may cause your
- hard drive to fail intermittently. That's annoying at best, but
- consider the potential for tragedy if a "noisy" modem delays your
- local fire department from reaching a blaze. Or if interference
- from a laptop with an unfiltered power supply conflicts with the
- air traffic control communications on the next plane you fly. The
- value of strict compliance with FCC Part 15 certification becomes
- clear.
-
- Sadly, noncompliance is frequent in our industry. At the Fall 1991
- Comdex computer trade show, more than 100 companies were fined by
- the FCC. Last summer, 3 stores were fined $2,000 each for the sale
- of uncertified equipment to home users. Our own research has shown
- that the majority of Macintosh subsystem manufacturers are
- shipping hard drives, optical drives and tape systems that are
- uncertified. Manufacturers fail to do the required testing or
- fraudulently use old or fictitious FCC registration numbers. As
- noncompliance has become more commonplace, so has the potential
- for problems. With the growth of ever more complex business
- networks, the risk of serious interference problems explodes with
- so many different computer peripherals interfacing throughout our
- systems.
-
- The publications which test and review products in the marketplace
- have themselves been slow to require authentic proof of
- certification as a qualification for hardware reviews. All too
- often, benchmark tests and "best buy" recommendations lead
- consumers to products which manage a lower price point by
- sidestepping the admittedly expensive but legally and morally
- essential RFI review process. And those of us who take the time
- and expense to meet these critical safety standards often cannot
- match pricing based on such unethical practices.
-
- For the past two years, I have raised this issue with trade
- publications. Demanding compliance and certification is merely a
- demand for meeting minimum legal requirements for the products we
- sell, a demand for responsible journalism. When publications
- ignore noncompliance, they shortchange consumers, degrade our
- industry and condone unfair competition. If the trades placed more
- of their emphasis on investigating the companies which advertise
- in their pages, they might prevent a product that is not tested
- and certified by the FCC from appearing in their recommendation
- lists or on the cover of respected industry publications. I would
- hate to think that these publications have given major awards to
- companies that manufacture illegal products!
-
- Our industry has moved into a "commodity" phase and the temptation
- grows to rush development, use lower quality or used components,
- or degrade standards in order to ship faster and sell cheaper.
- Sound managers however recognize that such economies are self-
- defeating. When we try to pass off lesser components and
- potentially dangerous products to our consumers, we may gain a
- quick profit but we undermine long range achievement. While we
- decry the success of Japanese manufacturers, we cannot compete as
- quality producers if we ignore even basic safety standards. What
- kind of lessons are we teaching the new developers, dreamers,
- users in our industry? That it's okay to ignore the law if it
- brings in more advertising dollars, cuts corners for profit or
- market share? Do we really want "As long as you make a buck, it's
- okay?" to be our industry's message?
-
- As manufacturers of storage solutions, Microtech has made it a
- point to market only products which comply with and are certified
- under the FCC rules. We've spoken up for effective enforcement by
- the FCC. We've advocated strict standards amongst our colleagues
- in the marketplace. We've adopted a policy of nonparticipation in
- reviews which do not demand FCC compliance and certification for
- recommendation. We know all too well the costs of this process -
- Microtech alone has invested an estimated half million dollars in
- our own compliance efforts. Obviously, we'd love to be able to
- bring to market a new drive without facing the rigors of this
- process, the delays, the costs and the paperwork required. But we
- know that not only would that be illegal, it would be immoral. And
- we know that the long term health of our company and our industry
- rests on maintaining the highest quality. We require this of
- ourselves and we ask that all members of the Macintosh community
- demand the same from themselves, the companies they deal with and
- the publications we all rely on.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Cliff Wildes
- President and CEO
- Microtech International, Inc.
-
- Information from:
- Christina O'Connell, Microtech -- 70214.2231@compuserve.com
-
-
- RFI Follow-up
- -------------
- Just so you don't all think I'm being a slug and just printing the
- above letter to the editor, here's some more information that
- might be of interest on this subject.
-
- Essentially, there are two levels of FCC certification, A and B.
- Class A certification for devices used in office environments is
- easy to get since the vendor does the testing itself and doesn't
- have to file anything with the government. Class B, which covers
- devices used in the home, is much more difficult to get, since it
- requires an independent testing lab to do the work and the FCC to
- certify the device. Any device certified as a Class B device must
- carry a sticker with its FCC ID number prominently (which usually
- seems to mean on the bottom or back) displayed. Class B
- certification, because of the independent testing and the FCC
- certification, isn't all that cheap at about $3000 to $4000,
- according to Tom Hora of the FCC, as quoted in a MacWEEK Special
- Report on the subject. (Incidentally, if you're interested in this
- subject, you should definitely find the issue listed below and
- read the full article - it's an excellent treatment.)
-
- All of the devices I use regularly (and could easily tip over or
- read the back of) had an FCC ID sticker, but that doesn't
- necessarily mean that the device is clean because in some
- instances, the ID number could refer to the case of a hard drive
- rather than the mechanism, or could refer to a certain size
- mechanism but be used for numerous different size drives. It
- appears, from some conversations on ZiffNet/Mac and CompuServe,
- that some vendors don't even realize they have to get FCC
- certification, and others may have sold uncertified drives in the
- past.
-
- I've implied, as does Cliff Wildes above, that the problem is
- limited to hard drives. Many types of electronic equipment can
- have problems with radio frequency interference, and even my
- keyboard, mouse, answering machine, and telephone have FCC ID
- numbers. My impression is that every electronic device that can
- create or react to radio frequency interference must be certified
- if it is to be used in the home.
-
- Perhaps the most important place where RFI can cause problems is
- on an airplane. Airplane pilots can refuse to allow passengers to
- use any device that will create RFI, so those two guys in the
- Apple PowerBook commercial who connect their machines via
- LocalTalk might be shut down. (Ten to one they're really playing
- Spaceward Ho! over that impromptu network - I sure would be!)
- Interestingly, there was some discussion on the nets about a new
- FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) rule that bans the use of
- laptop computers with mouses (and the accompanying cords) because
- the cords radiate interfering radio waves. Needless to say, this
- is a serious problem on newer planes that do not use mechanical
- controls. This cropped up as an issue because some dealer
- advertised that the PowerBook was the only (an exaggeration, of
- course) legal airborne computer. Although the problem and the ban
- are real, laptops without mouses or laptops that use an internal
- pointing device like the Outbound Portable are fine.
-
- If you're concerned about this (as I am - I'm leery enough of
- airplanes and don't need any more cause for concern such as
- someone with a DOS laptop and mouse interfering with the plane),
- you can check on FCC Class B certification before purchasing a
- piece of hardware. It's a simple question and one which the
- companies ought to at least know the answer to since it is a big
- deal in certain situations. You can also check your existing
- devices by calling an FCC BBS, the Public Access Link (PAL). The
- phone number is 301/725-1072 and is available all the time, though
- only at 300 and 1200 baud. The other settings are eight bits, no
- parity, and one stop bit (8N1). Just hit return a couple of times
- after the modem connects, and then enter the FCC ID number in
- question when PAL requests the "CODE." You get five minutes per
- call between 8 AM and 8 PM Eastern time and fifteen minutes the
- rest of the day. If you have other questions or want to check on
- the status of a pending certification you can call the FCC
- directly at the number below between 2 PM and 4 PM Eastern time.
-
- Of course, as serious as RFI problems can be today, can you
- imagine the utter chaos and confusion that will result if and when
- we start using wireless networks for real? I can imagine the
- conversations: "Hang on a minute, I'm getting a lot of errors on
- that file transfer, let me move the Mac to the other table..."
-
- FCC PAL -- 301/725-1072
- FCC Questions -- 301/725-1585
-
- Information from:
- Cory Kempf -- cory@enigami.mv.com
- James Kroger -- kroger@tinman.cognet.ucla.edu
- Jim Bailey -- jb@lexicon.com
- Christina O'Connell, Microtech -- 70214.2231@compuserve.com
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 06-Apr-92, Vol. 6, #14, pg. 38
-
-
- Claris Windows Rumors
- ---------------------
- We've been muttering about a version of FileMaker Pro for Windows
- for quite some time now, and we've finally gotten some
- confirmation of that project. Claris reportedly showed an early
- version of FileMaker Pro running under Windows in a private suite
- at Comdex last week. Reportedly the Windows version will be very
- similar to FileMaker Pro 2.0 on the Macintosh, so there were some
- added features like improved speed, improved scripting, and
- QuickTime support. Not only will the Windows version have all
- that, but it will look like a Claris product, rather than using
- one of the strange interfaces that are still popping up in Windows
- programs.
-
- Claris is working on ways of making other ports of its Macintosh
- products to Windows easier, but that does not mean that you'll see
- the full Claris suite ported to Windows any time soon. We've heard
- that MacDraw Pro code is unlikely to ever show up in a Windows
- product, although Claris might use some of the code from Hollywood
- in a Windows MacDraw. Resolve and MacWrite II, not to mention
- ClarisCAD and SmartForms, just aren't likely to make enough money
- to be worth the effort of porting them.
-
- The big surprise, perhaps, is ClarisWorks. It's a great product
- written by a team of programmers with vision, and rumor has it
- that it will be the next Claris application to make the jump to
- Windows. I'd love to see it (and if I had a PC clone, I'd love to
- use it), but the one thing that worries me a little bit is that
- Claris may have to scale back its efforts aimed at the Mac and
- future Macintosh systems to get this Windows software out the
- door. Of course, no need to turn down all the money that Windows
- users will want to give Claris for FileMaker Pro for Windows and
- ClarisWorks for Windows.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 13-Apr-92, Vol. 6, #15, pg. 1
-
-
- The TrashMan Cometh
- -------------------
- When I was growing up, my family took our garbage to the town dump
- every week. The best part was tossing it over the cliff, and much
- of the excitement went out of the weekly expedition when the dump
- was full and the town bought a trash compactor truck (which could
- be fun on occasion if it actually compacted the trash while you
- were there). As a result of these town policies, I never
- experienced the joys of listening to garbage trucks rumbling by
- early in the morning until I went to college. The noise was
- bothersome, but the benefit was obvious - I carried the garbage a
- short way and the garbagemen (excuse me, sanitation engineers) did
- the rest.
-
- The Mac under System 7 is a lot the same way except you have to do
- both jobs, take the trash out and empty it. No one can do the
- first task for you because only you can decide what's trash and
- what's not, but why should you be bothered by the humdrum task of
- emptying the trash? Well, now you don't have to with the System
- 7-specific utility TrashMan 4.0.1, a $10 shareware trash
- management utility from Dan Walkowski.
-
- TrashMan has three parts, TrashMan Controls, which is a Control
- Panel for TrashMan's settings, TrashMan Engine, a special
- application that scans the trash and deletes files, and TrashMan
- Emptier, on which you drop disks to delete the trashed files from
- those disks.
-
- TrashMan Controls allows you to set the amount of time that a file
- will spend in the trash purgatory before being deleted. You can
- set the days, hours, and minutes a file can last in the trash - I
- personally have it set to three days. I'll explain why later.
- There's also a checkbox to set whether or not TrashMan deletes
- locked files, which can stick around for a long time if you don't
- set it to delete them. You can increase or decrease the Engine
- Speed, which controls how often the Engine will scan. I see no
- reason not to leave it on the lowest setting so TrashMan uses the
- least possible CPU time. You can also stop (or start) the Engine
- if you wish. The final checkbox controls whether disks are
- automatically ejected after you drag them on the TrashMan Emptier.
- Holding down the option key will produce the opposite result, so
- you can decide whether you generally want disks ejected or not. I
- don't. One added bonus to TrashMan Controls is that Dan has added
- some unobtrusive yet effective sounds to the controls. I approve
- of that sort of thing when it's done well.
-
- TrashMan Engine is a strange new type of application that appeared
- with System 7. You drop the TrashMan Engine into the Extensions
- folder, and it runs automatically on startup, but does not appear
- in any application lists (such as the MultiFinder menu or About
- This Macintosh...). There's not much else to say about the
- TrashMan Engine, except that it is completely unnoticeable when
- it's scanning. Previous versions would pause the Mac temporarily
- while scanning, but this version is really smooth.
-
- The final piece of the TrashMan puzzle is the TrashMan Emptier, a
- tiny application that acts as a front end on which you can drop
- disks. It's really nice that you don't have all the files in the
- trash emptied all the time under System 7, but that feature
- suddenly disappears the first time you throw out some files on a
- floppy and want to copy more on. The Finder will happily empty the
- trash for you if you wish, but it will delete all the files in the
- trash, not just the files that were originally on that floppy.
- With TrashMan Emptier, you can just drop the floppy on TrashMan
- Emptier and only the trashed files from that floppy will be
- deleted, and all others will stay put.
-
- When all is said and done, though, why is TrashMan neat? It allows
- you turn a mindless task over to an automated program so you don't
- have to keep deciding if you want to empty the trash or not. In
- addition, TrashMan allows the trash to live up to its potential as
- promised by System 7. You not only get a second chance, as you did
- in System 6, or even a third or fourth chance, as in System 7, but
- as many chances you want when using TrashMan. An added feature is
- that TrashMan works well on AppleShare servers to ensure that
- users don't waste disk space by leaving files in the trash (and
- Dan says that AppleShare servers have separate Trash folders for
- each user, so there's no need to worry about it emptying
- everyone's trash).
-
- I said earlier that I have TrashMan empty the trash after three
- days. I often will drag one of my partitions to the TrashMan
- Emptier to clean it off manually, but I prefer to leave files in
- the trash when I can. That's because there's a neat trick you can
- do with Nisus have it save its secondary backup files into the
- trash. That's _secondary_ backup files, and I almost never need
- them, and I never need them after three days. With the amount I
- use Nisus and the number of files I use, though, I could easily
- use up several megabytes of space on my hard disk with just those
- secondary backups. Now TrashMan makes sure that I have access to
- the secondary backups I've made in the last three days, and also
- makes sure that I'm not wasting large portions of my ever-
- shrinking hard disk on lots of backup files that just aren't
- necessary.
-
- Now of course you're going to want to know the trick with Nisus
- (and this may work with WordPerfect or other programs that can
- save a secondary backup file in addition to the primary file).
- It's pretty easy, and there are two methods.
-
-
- Method A
- Boot with System 6 (if possible), run Nisus, and select the Trash
- folder in the secondary backup Saving Preferences. Then reboot
- under System 7. Neat, eh?
-
-
- Method B
- If you feel like a macho hacker and want to use ResEdit, or you
- can't run System 6 on your machine because it's too new, first run
- Nisus and set your secondary backup folder to a five-letter folder
- at the top level of your hard disk. I used "Perseus:Games". Then,
- after quitting Nisus, open the Nisus Preferences 3.0 file in
- ResEdit and open the DFLT resource. There should only be one entry
- (mine was ID 301), so open that. Scroll down until you see the
- name of your secondary backup folder in the ASCII on the right
- hand side of the window. Then select the five letters of the
- folder name and replace them with "Trash". So I changed my setting
- from "Perseus:Games" to "Perseus:Trash". (You may see some
- additional letters there if you at one time selected a folder with
- a longer name, but as long as there is a colon after the "h" in
- "Trash" you'll be fine.) Then save the file, quit ResEdit, and
- create and save a new file in Nisus. Then look in the trash to
- make sure the secondary backup is in there.
-
- Whether or not you use Nisus and find this trick useful, I highly
- recommend TrashMan 4.0.1. It's a mere $10 shareware and Dan
- Walkowski has done an excellent job making it safe, stable, and
- unobtrusive. It should be available at your local purveyor of
- shareware software. There are a few commercial utilities that
- offer the same functionality and even more features, but I feel
- that TrashMan is a clean (and cheap) compromise between ease of
- use and power. The one additional capability Dan will be adding in
- a future version of TrashMan is a TrashMan Burner that will
- immediately delete a file, so if you create a massive temporary
- file you can get rid of it immediately without having to disturb
- the other files resting quietly in your trash. Highly recommended.
-
- Information from:
- Dan Walkowski -- walkowsk@cs.uiuc.edu
- TrashMan documentation
-
-
- Reviews/13-Apr-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- FirstClass BBS 1.65 -- pg. 47
- TeleFinder 2.4 -- pg. 47
- TurboCASE 4.0 -- pg. 48
- The Incubator -- pg. 48
- BBN/Catalyst 1.4 -- pg. 52
- TelePort/FullFax -- pg. 53
- MiCC Pocket Fax Modem -- pg. 53
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 06-Apr-92, Vol. 6, #14
-
-
- ..
-
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