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- TidBITS#75/05-Aug-91
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/5-Aug-91
- CE Ships Kanji QuickMail
- Notebooks... the Next Generation
- One Minute Magazine
- A New Voice
- Integrated Software Wars
- Reviews/5-Aug-91
-
-
- MailBITS/5-Aug-91
- -----------------
- Last week's issue of TidBITS contained an article about the
- astronauts on board the space shuttle Atlantis planning to use
- AppleLink from space to communicate with ground personnel. I
- commented that, "Unfortunately for us, but fortunately for the
- astronauts and their sanity, the shuttle's AppleLink address is
- being kept confidential." A couple of readers have written to say
- that they've discovered that the address is "Atlantis." I'll say
- this... I feel sorry for the real owner of the AppleLink address
- "Atlantis," because it's not NASA! Yes, the address exists, but it
- has been there for a while. No doubt these poor people have been
- deluged with messages. Please don't contribute to the problem by
- writing to them yourself!
-
- TidBITS will have a few roving reporters in Boston this week to
- report on the Macworld Expo. I'd love to meet some other TidBITS
- readers (after all, most of the time I'm a reader myself), so if
- you're going to be at the Expo, please feel free to leave a
- message for "Mark H. Anbinder" in the convention center's message
- system (you can leave out the "H." if it'll confuse the people at
- the message desk).
-
- Don't forget to look for next week's Macworld Expo issue,
- containing lots of info about what was hot at the show.
-
- Below is some material that Adam sent me for inclusion in this
- week's MailBITS.
-
- Just before packing up my Mac for Seattle, I received email from
- Henry Norr of MacWEEK, who was upset with the way I related his
- comment on the new ROMs issue. Contrary to what I said (due to my
- misunderstanding his original note), Henry said that he didn't
- feel the issue warranted another story at that point, not that he
- felt the issue was dead. My apologies to Henry and to all of you
- for muddying the article behind incorrect information. That's one
- of the problems with email - short messages with little context
- are easy to misconstrue. Henry also said in his recent note that
- not only did he not feel that the issue was dead, but that MacWEEK
- has continued to pay attention to the matter (by printing a recent
- letter to the editor) and will continue to do as warranted.
- Thanks, Henry! I hope that continued attention from TidBITS and
- MacWEEK will help jolt Apple management into making a policy
- statement on the issue, as we politely requested in the letter
- sent to them. See below for another bit on the subject.
-
- In the near future TidBITS will have a new home on America Online.
- Thanks to Chris Ferino (AFL Ferino) for setting up a TidBITS file
- area in the Hardware file libraries (keyword: mhw). All new issues
- will show up there and eventually we'll have all the older issues
- there as well. As an added bonus, Chris has agreed to give anyone
- who writes an entire TidBITS issue a free hour of time on America
- Online, so send your submissions in to Mark and us (after we're
- set up again) if you wish to get that free hour on AOL. If you
- aren't sure about how to go about writing an issue, just ask Mark
- for our basic guidelines - they're easy to follow.
-
- One of our readers contributes the following about Apple's clean
- ROM saga. Apple published "Macintosh IIci Computer Training" in
- its Quick Reference Booklet series. The copyright is 1989. On page
- 23 of this booklet is the beginning of a section titled "User
- Questions". The second user question listed on that page is: "Is
- the new ROM universal? That is, will it be incorporated into all
- Macintosh CPUs?" The answer stated by Apple on that same page:
- "No. The ROM will be available only on the Macintosh IIci. The
- features incorporated into the Macintosh IIci ROM, especially
- including 32-bit addressing, will be made available to the
- installed base of Macintosh IIx, IIcx, II, SE and SE/30 owners at
- a later date."
-
- Now what I get from this is that Apple will make the ROM available
- to the installed base, not that Apple will produce new machines
- which the installed base can purchase. Also note the listing of
- the Mac SE - which has never been discussed in the AOL forums as
- one of the machines that would receive the new ROM. While MODE32
- could be construed as making the 512K ROM features available, it
- does not fulfill making it available to the Mac SE! The 1989 date
- also shows that Apple knew full well in 1989 that the ROMs were
- dirty in the pre-Mac IIci CPUs.
-
- You should be able to get the actual booklet at one of the Apple
- dealers in your area - they probably have it put away some where
- in a back room or threw it away. A lot of these booklets were
- produced for the IIci so one should be available. I have two of
- them - one without the two disks that comes with the booklet.
-
- My statements were made as a lawyer, which I remain, but because I
- like the Mac so much I no longer have the legal profession as my
- primary profession.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
- Adam C. Engst
- Pythaeus
-
-
- CE Ships Kanji QuickMail
- ------------------------
- CE Software, Inc., the publisher of QuickMail, QuicKeys2, and a
- bunch of other neat products, has just announced a new version of
- QuickMail designed to work with KanjiTalk, Apple's Japanese
- version of the Mac operating system. CE worked on the project with
- a Japanese partner, Software Research Associates, or SRA.
-
- Lots of normal Macintosh programs work fine under KanjiTalk, but a
- program must be specially designed to take full advantage of
- KanjiTalk, to allow users to work in Japanese. Because of the
- large number of characters in the Kanji Japanese writing system,
- KanjiTalk uses two bytes of the computer's memory to represent
- each character, instead of the single byte used to represent a
- character in the Roman character set, used by most versions of the
- Mac OS. The screen shots enclosed with the press release
- distributed by CE recently show that the Kanji product, known as
- CEQUICKMAIL, cleanly integrates Roman and Kanji text within the
- same window.
-
- CE has already been distributing versions of QuickMail in
- languages such as Swedish, German, French, Danish, and Italian,
- but this is the first two-byte version. According to Paul Miller,
- the director of CE's International Department, "The goal of
- globalization of our products has leaped forward with the support
- of 2-byte character systems." He anticipates an exploding market
- for Macintosh networking in Japan. These Iowans are already the
- leading supplier of network mail software for the Macintosh, with
- over 350,000 QuickMail users worldwide.
-
- Software Research Associates can be reached at: 1-1-1 Hirakawa-
- cho, Chiyoda-ku, 102 Tokyo, Japan. Phone: 81 3 3234 2624, Fax: 81
- 3 3234 4338, AppleLink: DVJ.SRA.INC
-
- CE Software, Inc. -- 515/224-1995 -- AppleLink: CESOFTWARE
-
- Information from:
- CE propaganda
- Sue Nail, CE Software, Inc.
-
-
- Notebooks... the Next Generation
- --------------------------------
- Apple is expected to release a series of three computers this
- October that will be the first Macs that deserve the name
- "notebook computer." That doesn't mean, though, that the rest of
- the industry should hold its collective breath!
-
- Outbound Systems Inc. has had a popular alternative to the
- heavier, more expensive Macintosh Portable for over a year now,
- and a special agreement negotiated with Apple allows them to ship
- Apple ROM chips, taken from used Macs, in Outbound portable
- computers. Their new product, the Outbound Notebook System, will
- give impatient Mac users an alternative to this fall's Apple
- offerings.
-
- The new six-pound Outbound Notebook System shows quite a bit of
- promise. It can hold both an internal high density floppy disk
- drive and an internal hard drive, as opposed to the low-end Apple
- notebook, which will contain one or the other. A proper notebook,
- the new Outbound will fold down to 8.5 by 11 inches. I am
- skeptical of Outbound's assertion of a new-and-improved pointing
- device, which looks an awful lot like it's just an IsoPoint with a
- new-and-improved name. Given that there's no room on this machine
- for a trackball, I suppose the "TrackBar" (their new device) will
- be a reasonable substitute.
-
- The truly stunning notebook computer in the news this month is
- NCR's System 3125, a pen-based 386 portable that weighs less than
- four pounds. No, it's not a Mac or a Mac-compatible, but this
- machine will show us what might be down the road for Mac users.
-
- The 8.5 by 11 inch 3125 has no keyboard, which means there's lots
- of room for the 640x480 greyscale liquid crystal display. Instead
- of typing, the user enters data and controls the system using an
- included pen, with either GO's PenPoint operating system, or
- Microsoft's competing PenWindows. (The computer comes with one or
- the other operating system, but not both.) This means the NCR
- notebook isn't quite suited to every computing need, but it would
- certainly be good for data entry tasks such as inventory
- management, appointment scheduling, and address/phone databases.
- Of course, computer users who have never liked keyboards will be
- pleased by the option of using this handwriting-recognizing
- technology.
-
- What does this mean for the future? Aside from a vague resemblance
- to Apple's Knowledge Navigator dream computer (you may have seen
- the video tapes of the computer that talks to you... and
- understands spoken commands) the NCR 3125 is really just a
- rearrangement of existing technology. Sony has been selling their
- "palmtop" computer, a personal organizer with handwriting
- recognition technology, for about a year, and of course iconic,
- windowing operating systems aren't new. The key to NCR's product
- release is the combination... solid handwriting recognition in a
- real computer that's light enough and small enough to use
- anywhere.
-
- Apple's three upcoming notebook computers are a step toward the
- same "next generation" category. They are much lighter and smaller
- than the existing Macintosh Portable models, and when closed at
- least, are notebook sized. The keyboard on the Macs, though, will
- mean that Apple will always seem to be behind the pack in notebook
- technology. I'm not saying that I want to see a Mac without a
- keyboard... at least not until they can replace it with a method
- of text entry that's just as fast and accurate! However, the
- industry is going to start wondering where Apple's REAL notebooks
- are.
-
- NCR Corp. -- 513/445-6160 -- 800/225-5627
- Outbound Systems Inc. -- 303/786-9200 -- 800/444-4607
-
- Information from:
- Outbound propaganda
- BYTE
-
- Related articles:
- BYTE -- Aug-91, Vol. 16, #8, pg. 37
- MacWEEK -- 30-Jul-91, Vol. 5, #26, pg. 1
-
-
- One Minute Magazine
- -------------------
- According to a recent Newsbytes article that a friend found
- floating around at Apple, KOFY-TV, channel 20 in the San Francisco
- area, will be broadcasting a one-minute-long "magazine" early in
- the morning of 1 October. The magazine won't be a typical TV
- magazine show, but will be a minute-long montage of still frames
- of text and pictures, generated on a Macintosh.
-
- The still images of the Future Media StillFrame Edition will go by
- on the screen far too quickly to be viewed at full speed, but
- viewers who videotape the broadcast (which will be some time
- between 1:56 and 2:00 am) can view the magazine frame by frame
- later on (or the next morning, for those who like to be asleep at
- 2 am). You'll need a good TV and a four-head VCR to get a high
- enough image quality to read the text.
-
- The magazine is being generated by scanning images from H-8 video
- cameras into the Macintosh, and then laying them into screen-sized
- pages of text and pictures using page layout software. The text
- will be no smaller than 24 point, so it can be read from the
- television image.
-
- I doubt that this will become a popular publishing medium, because
- it requires some effort from the reader/viewer/user beyond sitting
- and absorbing. No doubt this initial broadcast will get lots of
- viewers... but once the novelty wears off, people aren't likely to
- bother.
-
- KOFY-TV -- 415/821-2020
- Future Media -- 415/548-0341
-
- Information from:
- Newsbytes article 19-Jul-91
-
-
- A New Voice
- -----------
- Recent discussions on USENET have mentioned a new version of
- MacInTalk that's supposedly in the works at Apple. Last year
- MacInTalk sparked some heated debates when Apple announced the
- aging speech-synthesis software would no longer be supported and
- could not be counted on to work with future system software or
- hardware releases. The new version sounds like it's a step ahead
- of the old software which, while it was certainly handy, was
- hardly impressive as speech synthesis went.
-
- At the Apple Australian University Consortium Conference last
- month, Caroline Henton of the ATG talked about the new software
- and gave a demonstration, which was said to be very impressive.
- The new MacInTalk will run on all Macs, and is purely software-
- based. It will support multiple voices, though the version that
- was demonstrated only included an American English female voice.
-
- Technically, the software uses concatenative synthesis, which
- presumably means that the component sounds of natural speech are
- assembled, or concatenated, in the right order to generate
- understandable, natural-sounding utterances. This differs from two
- other forms of speech synthesis: formant synthesis, which
- generates utterances based on the characteristic sound waves of
- spoken sounds and combinations of sounds; and articulatory
- synthesis. I can't really even guess about the latter, despite a
- linguistic background, except to offer the speculation of Matthew
- T. Russotto, who suggested that articulatory synthesis might
- attempt to imitate the sound properties of the human throat and
- mouth.
-
- The good news is that, whatever the technology behind it, the new
- MacInTalk is intended to sound as natural as possible. This
- contrasts with a common approach that trades naturalness for
- intelligibility. With well-planned utterances, pure
- intelligibility is a little less of a concern, because the human
- listener can "fill in" bits and pieces of missing sound when
- what's being said sounds natural enough. This is accomplished in
- face to face communications partially through unconscious lip-
- reading, though hints such as context and previous conversations
- help to fill in the rest, especially on the telephone or in other
- situations where lip-reading isn't feasible.
-
- MacInTalk has certainly made a difference for the Macintosh; it
- has allowed games to speak, but it has also allowed sightless Mac
- users to "hear" what's on the screen through software such as
- OutSpoken. A new version that sounds like natural speech and works
- on new Macs will be welcome.
-
- Information from:
- Michael Newbery -- newbery@rata.vuw.ac.nz
- Matthew T. Russotto -- russotto@eng.umd.edu
-
-
- Integrated Software Wars
- ------------------------
- Back in the early days of Macintosh, when a list of all the
- software available for the Mac could be printed in the back of
- every issue of MacUser, a small company called Lotus introduced a
- new product class for the Mac: integrated software. Jazz, which
- included word processing, database, communications, and charting
- functions, wasn't based on a completely new idea; Apple had
- AppleWorks for the Apple ][ series, and there were some similar
- products for DOS. But it was a new thing for Mac users, who until
- then had usually had to swap floppies, and often change startup
- disks, to switch tasks.
-
- Jazz fell by the wayside a long time ago, and its planned
- successor, Modern Jazz, never materialized. In the meantime,
- Microsoft, which has been accused of following a "me-too" software
- approach after making a name for itself with MS-DOS a decade ago,
- introduced Microsoft Works. Works was similar in approach to Jazz,
- but a lower price, better compatibility with other software, and
- Microsoft's market clout gave it a much bigger market share.
-
- Even Microsoft Works was not an outstanding package. It has
- existed at the front of its category for a long time mainly
- because there were no other players, and not that strong a demand.
- When Apple introduced its three new inexpensive Macs last fall,
- though, they created a relatively new market: low-end users with
- low-end pocketbooks to match. These users thought that being able
- to buy a single, inexpensive package that filled most of their
- software needs was a great idea.
-
- At this point, some other developers realized that there was a
- market to forge. Symantec, Beagle Bros, and Claris have all
- announced integrated software packages, and in fact Symantec has
- shipped their entry, called GreatWorks. BeagleWorks was presumably
- the subject of the "we could tell you, but then we'd have to kill
- you" ad a few weeks ago, and Claris Works offers the standard
- interface that most Claris products have in common.
-
- Symantec and Beagle Bros sound like unusual sources for this kind
- of productivity software, but in fact this move makes sense for
- them. Symantec has been looking to leap into the Mac productivity
- arena for a while; they have a strong presence in the utility
- software and programming environment areas, but their general
- productivity software has existed only on DOS platforms. Beagle
- Bros is a company well known among old-timers for its innovative
- utilities for the Apple ][, but what's probably less known is that
- they wrote AppleWorks 3.0 for Claris, according to a recent
- MacWEEK article. This makes them a great candidate for designing a
- new product in the integrated category for the Mac.
-
- It remains to be seen how all of these products will fare,
- especially since the new entries are up against the Microsoft
- monolith. Microsoft has already taken the first step towards
- securing its market share, or at least as large a chunk as
- possible, by lowering the retail price of Microsoft Works from
- $295 to $249. (The other integrated packages have, or are expected
- to have, suggested retail prices of $295 or $299.) That's not a
- huge price reduction, but in this low-end market, that almost $50
- cut could make a big difference to buyers. Without that price
- differential Microsoft Works would no longer stand out; in fact,
- GreatWorks seems overall to be a better package; but with it, the
- buyer has another reason to lean towards the Microsoft product.
-
- I wouldn't be surprised to see some changes to the retail pricing
- of BeagleWorks and Claris Works before they ship, but it would
- probably be a mistake for Symantec to reduce the GreatWorks price
- immediately. We'll provide additional coverage to the Integrated
- Software Wars as events warrant, but in the meantime it should be
- amusing to watch Microsoft fighting a battle it thought was long
- since won.
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 7-16-91, Vol. 5, #25, pg. 1
- MacWEEK -- 30-Jul-91, Vol. 5, #26, pg. 7
- Playboy -- Sep-91, Vol. 38, #9, pg. 134
-
-
- Reviews/5-Aug-91
- ----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- MacroMind Three-D, pg. 41
- GreatWorks, pg. 41
- MacDraw Pro, pg. 44
- GraceLAN 2.0, pg. 44
- At Your Service, pg. 46
- CD-ROM Drives, pg. 50
- CMS Enhancements PCD-600
- Hitachi CDR-1750S
- Liberty 115CD
- MacProducts Magic CD-ROM
- NEC CDR-73
- Procom HiPerformance CD-ROM
- Relax Vista CD-ROM
- Toshiba TXM-3301E1-MAC
- ContoursPro, pg. 50
- MacroMind Director 3.0, pg. 57
- Carbon Copy Mac 2.0, pg. 60
- ScanMaker 1850S, pg. 60
-
- * InfoWorld
- Claris Resolve, pg. 64
- My Advanced Database, pg. 65
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 30-Jul-91, Vol. 5, #26
- InfoWorld -- 29-Jul-91, Vol. 13, #30
-
-
- ..
-
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