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TidBITS#107/17-Feb-92
=====================
Return the survey, maybe win a button - it's your only chance!
Back in the real world, there's a mean DOS virus that even Mac
users should be aware of, a brand new TIDBITS LISTSERV mailing
list, and a possible reason why that Quadra doesn't seem so
fast. A review of Timeslips III and a gripe about unreasonable
international upgrade fees help round out the issue, ably
backed by a special deal for StuffIt Deluxe that is solely for
online users.
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:
MailBITS/17-Feb-92
TidBITS Survey II
Yet More List Stuff
DOS Michelangelo Virus Alert!
Slip Slidin' Away
Quadra Vampires
International Upgrades, Ouch!
Aladdin Deal
Reviews/17-Feb-92
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-107.etx; 29K]
MailBITS/17-Feb-92
------------------
Kent P. Miller writes, "I called Sterling Software today about the
Usenet CD, and the only format available right now is for Sun
workstations. At the end of March they will release a version in
ISO 9660 format that Mac people can read. Around late April they
plan to include a Mac program to browse the archived news."
Information from:
Kent P. Miller -- kpmiller@uokmax.ecn.uoknor.edu
Train Power
Lucius Chiaraviglio writes in regard to this quote from
TidBITS#106 "But then, as someone recently said on the net, "there
are few other media that can beat the bandwidth of a truck full of
CD-ROMs.""
"As a serious railway proponent I am obliged to point out the
following: No media (on land, anyway) can beat the bandwidth of a
train full of CD-ROMs." :-)
Information from:
Lucius Chiaraviglio -- chi9@midway.uchicago.edu
TidBITS Survey II
-----------------
Welcome to our second annual TidBITS Survey! Unlike MacWEEK and
the other "qualified" subscription magazines, all you have to do
to receive TidBITS is be interested. This survey will _only_
appear in this issue of TidBITS, so please fill it out and return
it soon if you can. We realize that you're all busy people, as we
are, and don't have lots of time to spare. So you have three
options.
1) You can send in the entire survey below, at which point you may
win a super-cool TidBITS button like those I gave to a few
enthusiastic people at Macworld Expo. It was the only button at
the show with a penguin on it. We've got 100 buttons to give out
and will give them to every 20th response. If we get more than
2000 responses, we'll space them evenly, so if we get 2500
responses, every 25th person will get a button. Of course, for me
to send you a button, you'll have to include your snail mail
address, but rest assured that those addresses will never go to a
direct mail company.
2) You can just send in a survey response telling us how you get
TidBITS, from Usenet, from sumex-aim, from our mailing list, from
a BBS, or from another source. No buttons for the busy, sorry.
3) You can ignore this entirely, which will make us seriously
depressed. <sniff>
Please send survey responses to:
survey@tidbits.halcyon.com
if possible, but it's OK to send to my personal address if you
have to (i.e. by replying to this note on the Internet). Those of
you on CompuServe and America Online can use our addresses there
instead, 70262,3152 and "Adam Engst" respectively. If you have no
access to any of these electronic mail addresses, feel free to
send snail mail to:
TidBITS
9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096
Redmond, WA 98052 USA
The Short Form
Remember, if you're short on time, please just send back this
form, but we won't be able to send you a button unless you fill
out the whole thing.
I read TidBITS on:
[ ] Usenet
[ ] The SFU mailing list
[ ] The TIDBITS LISTSERV mailing list
[ ] sumex-aim.stanford.edu
[ ] Other anonymous FTP site _________________________________
[ ] CompuServe
[ ] America Online
[ ] A local BBS (name) _________________ (phone#) ____________
[ ] Other ____________________________________________________
The Long Form
I'm curious about the demographics of the TidBITS audience this
year in part because we're thinking of setting up a sponsorship
program like that used by Public Broadcasting (PBS) and the survey
results will help us figure out if that's feasible. Nonetheless,
check out question #17 - we ought to be able to do some good
statistics on that one. :-)
We've tried to give some examples of possible categories for the
questions below, but keep in mind that they are only guidelines,
and if your title is "Girl Friday" (don't laugh, that's a position
at Delta Tao Software), then by all means write that down.
00) Your Name
Your Company
Your Address
City, State, Zip, Country
01) I read TidBITS on the following online source:
(i.e. Usenet, the SFU mailing list, the TIDBITS LISTSERV,
sumex-aim.stanford.edu, CompuServe, America Online, local BBS,
a local network, other - please be specific!)
02) Your organization's primary activity:
(i.e. education, government, engineering, manufacturing,
legal, communications, retail, consulting, thumb twiddling)
03) Your professional title:
(i.e. president, owner, VP, network manager, engineer,
programmer, scientist, educator, consultant, grand poohbah)
04) Your department's function:
(i.e. education, communications, design, consulting, sales,
MIS, R&D, finance, advanced thumb twiddling)
05) How many people are employed at your organization?
(numbers please, spreadsheets don't understand technical terms
like "gazillions")
06) How many Macs does your organization own?
07) How many Macs does your organization plan to buy this year?
08) How many DOS computers does your organization own?
09) How many DOS computers does your organization plan to buy this
year?
10) How many Unix workstations does your organization own?
11) How many Unix workstations does your organization plan to buy
this year?
12) Do you participate in the purchasing of hardware and software,
both within your company or for others?
13) If so, for how many computers do you have this participation?
14) Has TidBITS influenced your purchasing decisions in any way?
15) If so, how many purchases have you made as a direct result of
information in TidBITS?
16) Please indicate the communications capabilities that the
computers in your organization have.
[ ] Local Area Network
[ ] Networked to workstations, minicomputers, or mainframes
[ ] Communicate with remote computers via modem
17) What is your favorite integer? :-)
Yet More List Stuff
-------------------
It's taken a little while to come up, but we now have a genuine
LISTSERV running at Rice University. Many thanks to Mark R.
Williamson and the other great people there for going to the
effort of setting this list up. LISTSERVs work a little
differently from the mailing list that we currently have at SFU
now, so pay attention if you want to get TidBITS through the
LISTSERV. The fact that Rice exists on both BITNET and the
Internet means that it will probably work better for folks on
BITNET, and we're planning on moving BITNET people from the SFU
list to the LISTSERV for that reason.
LISTSERV instructions
To subscribe to the list, send email to LISTSERV@RICEVM1 if you're
on BITNET and to LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU if you're on the
Internet. In the _body_ of the mailfile, put the line:
SUBSCRIBE TIDBITS (yourFirstName yourLastName)
and you will be automatically added. You should also receive an
acknowledgment from the LISTSERV so you know that you're on. If
you wish to remove yourself from the list, you can send the
LISTSERV a message with this line in the body of the mailfile:
SIGNOFF TIDBITS
SFU Remove Function
Some of you may wish to switch yourselves from the SFU list to the
LISTSERV, or perhaps you just want to shut off the list
temporarily while you go on vacation. It's now possible to remove
yourself from the SFU list by sending email to:
tidbits-subscription@sfu.ca
with the word "remove" (in lower case and without the quotes) in
the Subject: line. Unlike the LISTSERV, the SFU mailer only cares
about the Subject: line and doesn't care one whit about what's in
the body of the message. I realize that this is a bit confusing,
but there's no avoiding it since the two mailing lists are running
with different software on different machines. I'm sure you can
all figure it out.
For those of you reading this on America Online and GEnie and
other places that don't support connections to the Internet, my
apologies for wasting your time. We strongly encourage all
services to connect to the Internet, however, because we believe
in freedom of communication, and limiting access is merely a way
of discouraging free communications. The online community is huge
and is growing rapidly, so it helps all of us when more people can
share their knowledge and skills with the rest of the online
world.
DOS Michelangelo Virus Alert!
-----------------------------
This one's a nasty bugger. The Michelangelo virus is a variant of
the Stoned virus that infects the boot sector of disks. Unlike
Stoned, on a certain date , March 6th (of any year), Michelangelo
destroys data on the startup disk. Why am I telling you about
this? First of all, lots of you probably have to work with DOS
machines in some form or fashion, and it will make your job a lot
harder if you have to recover from a trashed hard disk after
Michelangelo gets through with it. Second, any Mac user running
Insignia's SoftPC or the Mac286 or Mac386 emulators cards from
Orange Micro is at risk as well. It's not quite clear if the virus
just overwrites the FAT (file allocation table) and the boot
sector or if it actually erases all data on all volumes, but if
your SoftPC hard disk is infected and you have the E: drive set to
a Mac folder, it's possible that the virus could damage your
Macintosh files as well.
The Michelangelo virus is one of the most virulent in that it has
spread incredibly quickly and has even been shipped with
commercial software such as DaVinci eMail 2.0 and on preformatted
PC hard disks such as those in Leading Edge PCs. The virus scare
has died down a bit on the Mac side, but it's still worth noting
that the networks are perhaps one of the safer places to get
software since files on well-run servers are usually checked at
least briefly before posting. In addition, the networks are the
best places to get the latest versions of virus protection
software. The upshot of all this is that if you're at all worried
about possibly having infected your DOS machine or SoftPC hard
disk with Michelangelo, do yourself a favor and check it. You've
got plenty of time before the March 6th destruction date to get a
virus detection and removal package from the nets.
Several good packages that will find and remove the Michelangelo
virus include Fridrik Skulason's F-PROT shareware package (2.02)
or the SCAN85 and CLEAN85 shareware programs from McAfee
Associates. These programs should be available from most good
sites carrying DOS software. Internet folks might look on
wuarchive.wustl.edu, but be prepared to search for a bit - there's
a ton of software there.
If you suspect your machine has this virus but do not have an
updated version of a virus scanner, running the CHKDSK program
will report a "total bytes memory" value 2048 bytes less than
expected. For example, a PC with 640K of memory will normally
return a value of 655,360 bytes, with Michelangelo that value
would be 653,312. Unfortunately, having less "total bytes memory"
does not necessarily mean your machine is infected, since some
memory resident programs can affect this value as well.
If your run out of time to check for Michelangelo, but do want to
protect your data, you might try changing the date on your PC's
clock. Set the date for March 7th, and then after March 6th,
reset the date to make it correct. Do not just do this and ignore
the fact that you may have a virus though, since Michelangelo
spreads constantly, and you could infect many other people through
your negligence.
Contact a local DOS guru if you need help with this stuff, but
don't just laugh it off unless you think losing all your data is
generally funny.
Information from:
Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
Tom Young -- xmu@cornellc.cit.cornell.edu
Slip Slidin' Away
-----------------
Do you know how many hours you work? Do you care? I do. I'm a
statistic junkie and I like to know how much time I spend on
certain tasks. After I find out how much, I often wish I hadn't
checked, but that's life. The sort of people who are most in need
of tracking their time are independent consultants and other
professionals who bill by the hour or even by the minute. I used
to do consulting before moving west, and I've had a few requests
for information on this program, so I decided to check out
Timeslips III 2.0 from Timeslips Corporation.
Timeslips III comes in both Mac and PC versions, and I gather they
can share data to a certain extent, although I've only worked with
the Macintosh version. The program is split into two basic parts,
TSTimer, a small timer that you turn on and off to track when
you're working on a project, and TSReport, which brings all of the
data together and turns it into a report or a bill. Timeslips
works on the time slip concept in which you fill out a slip for
every activity that you do. That slip carries with it information
on the client (3400 maximum), the project (should you have
multiple projects for the same client - up to 128), and the
activity (up to 250). You can also have up to 250 users so your
colleagues can work on the same projects and have their work
merged in at the end. I doubt many people will ever run into these
limitations.
TSTimer
TSTimer comes as a DA for UniFinder users and as an application
for MultiFinder users. Both look the same though, and allow you to
enter information specific to each slip like user, client,
project, activity, date range (entered automatically from the
clock) up to 32K of comments (which can be entered as
abbreviations and which Timeslips will expand automatically, much
like a glossary feature in a word processor), time estimates, and
time spent. TSTimer will of course track the time spent
automatically when it's turned on, but your activities may not be
at the computer. If so, you can enter lots of timeslips in batch
mode. You can even specify if a slip is billable, unbillable, or
no charge, options that let you narrowly specify which actions
generate income. Using TSTimer is simplicity in itself - just
create a new slip (which can carry all the client and activity
settings from the previous slip), select a user, client, and
activity from their respective buttons and click the "Turn on"
button. At that point you can switch TSTimer into its Mini View,
which is a smaller window that shows you only the client, slip
time, and slip value (based on the rate you charge for that
activity or client). There are also two buttons, one for switching
back to Full View and one for toggling the timer. You'll probably
leave TSTimer in Mini View most of the time except when creating
and editing slips.
TSReport
TSReport takes all of the information in the slips and helps you
to sort through it and bring it together in a coherent way. It has
four basic types of reports, each of which can be customized. If
you wish to figure out how long you spend on all your projects and
how those times compare to each other internally, the Timeslips
reports and charts will help. If you wish to merely get a list of
all your users, clients, activities, and projects, the System
report will do that. If you want to see detailed information on
each client, the Clients reports will provide that function.
Finally, but perhaps most important is the Bills report, which
allows you to select which clients and activities to bill and to
print out a nicely formatted bill to send off. Of course, if you
want to export everything to a file and manipulate it with a
spreadsheet that is equally possible.
TSReport also manages all the details of the client and project
information, so you can enter detailed client and account
information in TSReport and have that taken into account when
billing. Once you've billed a client, you obviously cannot change
the slips that correspond with that bill, and TSReport provides
simple mechanisms for backing up all your slips and archiving old
ones that you don't need to see any more but which might be useful
on occasion.
I think I can safely say that if you want to automate your time
and billing procedures Timeslips can do it. There are far more
options and settings than anyone is likely to want or need, but
the end result is that you can get your bills and reports looking
like you want with the information you want on them.
Problems
This is not to imply that the program is perfect. I find the
overabundance of features somewhat confusing, and the terminology
is definitely aimed at professionals who understand what to do
with options like the ability to modify the next aging date and
payments to client funds. I'm sure that these options are
extremely necessary for many people, but I would have appreciated
Timeslips explaining them in the manual or truly useful online
help. I also found it rather difficult when I first started using
it to transfer to using Timeslips from the simple billing system
I'd set up in HyperCard. That was undoubtedly due to my lack of
accounting knowledge, but I don't think you should have to know
that much accounting to bill for your time. One place where the
accounting detail would help is in conjunction with the Timeslips
Accounting Link (TAL), a separate program that makes it easy to
export Timeslips data into popular accounting programs and
provides additional reporting features as well. I haven't used
TAL, though, so I can't comment on it otherwise.
There are a few minor quirks with the program as well. TSTimer is
not smart about multiple monitors, so it will never open in the
same place I leave it on my second monitor. TSReport allows you to
create your own bill layouts in a mediocre MacDraw-style layout
editor, but it can never find the layout I created when I start up
the program, so I have to manually open that file every time I
want to print a bill. You can preview all of the reports on the
screen, which is nice, but it's a pain to move between multiple
pages of any report - you have to repeatedly hit the Continue
button. I wouldn't be surprised if some of these problems stem
from the fact that Timeslips is trying to keep the program as
close to the PC version as possible, and certain interfaces simply
do not translate well. I gather that Timeslips has added to the
program based on user requests, so features that are absolutely
necessary for one profession may be completely useless for
another.
I also found it disappointing that for all its power, Timeslips
appears to be designed more for people like doctors and plumbers
in that it has no provisions to automatically track what you are
doing on the computer at the time. For people who work at non-
computer tasks some of the time, Timeslips is great, since it
allows you to track what you are doing whether or not you're doing
it at the computer and easily enter timeslips for both types of
tasks. However, for people who work almost exclusively at the
computer, Timeslips won't figure out what you are doing
automatically. It's certainly easy enough to turn TSTimer on and
off, but quite frankly, it can be a little too easy to forget
either way, and then you have to modify your time manually. A
small program from ASD Software called WindoWatch claims to
provide this sort of functionality, but from a quick look it has
few of the powerful features in Timeslips.
Details
Timeslips has just released version 2.1, which supposedly has 73
new features and 12 new reports. Some of the more interesting
features include the ability to have Timeslips create a new slip
and turn it on upon startup, find and replace information in slips
more effectively, added flexibility in the report layouts, and
numerous levels of security. The upgrade is $49.95 for single
users and a new copy of Timeslips will run about $195 discount. If
you bill for your time, though, the price is well worth it because
Timeslips will help you track more of the time you work and let
you bill for it. Recommended.
Timeslips Corporation -- 508/768-6100
Quadra Vampires
---------------
by Mark H. Anbinder
If you're lucky enough to have a Quadra but you've been wondering
what the excitement was all about, because yours just isn't that
fast... you may be responsible! Rumour has it that the popular,
free menu-bar clock utility SuperClock, among other useful
doodads, can cause significant performance hits on your Quadra. It
seems that many shareware programs, including SuperClock, were
compiled with a version of THINK C lower than 5.0 and are not
fully compatible with the '040 processor. SuperClock in
particular will flush the cache each time a second clicks by, so
you get an incredible performance hit!
[Adam: I asked Murph Sewall about this since he's working on a
Quadra right now, and here are his impressions. In any event,
things like this are a good reason to keep up with the latest
version of your favorite shareware products since the most recent
versions are the most likely to work without difficulty on the
newest Macs.]
Murph Sewall writes, "I've been using SuperClock since I got the
Quadra. On rare occasions, I run with all extensions off, but I
can't say that I've noticed a great speed up when I do. I'll have
to run some specific tests and see if I can find a noticeable
effect. SuperClock may indeed flush the caches every second, but a
whole second is eons to a 25 MHz processor (whatever performance
hit may exist, it's nothing like the whack that occurs when you
turn the caches off)."
Information from:
Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
Murph Sewall -- sewall@uconnvm.uconn.edu
International Upgrades, Ouch!
-----------------------------
by Jean-Philippe Nicaise
I recently received an offer from Icom Simulations to upgrade my
old OnCue to a brand new OnCue II. I don't intend to discuss the
usefulness of OnCue II but instead the price of the upgrade. The
price is just $34.95, which seems reasonable. So what's the point?
Simply that shipping and handling is $6 for US orders and $45 for
international users such as myself, since I live in France. Ouch!
This adds up to $79.95, closing in on Microsoft's high upgrade
prices. I think something is wrong here.
OnCue II is available for around $55 from any of the mail order
firms and with a $25 Federal Express or DHL delivery I'll receive
it within five days, compared to the three to six weeks that most
upgrades take to arrive. So it would only cost a mere five cents
more to get OnCue II in a few days, which is not a bad trade-off
of money for time.
I recently ordered uAccess from ICE Engineering and my air mail
packet cost was only $8.95. A few publishers like Symmetry are so
nice that they send some non-major upgrades (Acta 7 v1.10 for
instance) to international users free, a policy which garners an
immeasurable amount of customer loyalty.
[Adam: I realize that this may sound like another "Why is
everything so expensive for international users?" gripe, but I
think there's more to it than that. I know for a fact that it's
not all that expensive to mail things overseas from the US - in
fact I just mailed Jean-Philippe a one ounce package that cost me
95 cents and took only five days to arrive. I've never seen the
OnCue package, but as a fairly small utility, I can't imagine that
the whole thing, manual and all, weighs more than one pound. One
pound would cost, at air mail letter rate according to the
information I have from the Postal Service, a whopping $12.65. I'm
sorry folks, but like it or not, this is a global economy and if
you want to do well, you have to pay attention to the needs of
international users. Especially as the networks break down the
barriers of time and distance, intelligent companies will have to
learn, as ICE and Symmetry have, that it's worth the customer
loyalty to provide reasonably-priced international service.
You may have noticed that the last issue had an article from Ian
Feldman in Sweden, and TidBITS continues to spread around the
world. TidBITS#82 was translated into Japanese and has been
popular in Japan, and TidBITS#104 has been translated into French
as well. I've recently heard from new readers in Brazil and
Mexico, someone is working on an article on the state of the Mac
in Germany, and even a few people in Russia read TidBITS and other
network information. Representatives of US companies and the US
government reading right now should take note of this - face it,
we're all in this together.]
Information from:
Jean-Philippe Nicaise -- nicky@etca.fr
Aladdin Deal
------------
Here's a good deal for those of you who have been waiting for an
excuse to pick up StuffIt Deluxe. Aladdin Systems and Raymond Lau
have a special Valentine's Day offer _only_ for users of online
services, including the Internet. You can get StuffIt Deluxe for
half price - $50 - which is even less than mail order firms
charge. If you're the t-shirt type, you can get the StuffIt World
Tour T-Shirt at the same time for $8. If you already own StuffIt
Deluxe or are a registered shareware user, the shirt is $11. For
all of these items, Aladdin will pay the shipping charges in the
US and charges $5 for Canadians and $15 for those outside the US -
certainly better than some companies though not as nice as others.
The rest of Aladdin's fine print says that all Aladdin software
carries a 30-day money back guarantee (a thoroughly enlightened
policy), and residents of California and New York must add sales
tax. The deal ends on March 1st, 1992, so if you've been
considering StuffIt, move fast.
Aside from all that StuffIt Deluxe can normally do, if you take
advantage of Aladdin's offer, you'll get a free upgrade to StuffIt
Deluxe 3.0 when that comes out. 3.0 will also include StuffIt
SpaceSaver, a transparent compression utility that works much like
Salient's AutoDoubler. One main difference is that SpaceSaver can
create and extract files from StuffIt archive merely by adding or
removing the ".sit" extension from the filename. I haven't used
either StuffIt Deluxe or StuffIt SpaceSaver seriously, but from
what I saw at Macworld, they are both good programs.
To order, just send Aladdin your name, address, phone number,
online address, MasterCard or Visa number and credit card
expiration date. You can use email, snail mail, call, or fax your
order, but be sure to include the t-shirt size you need
(M,L,XL,XXL) if you're ordering one of them.
Aladdin Systems, Inc.
165 Westridge Drive
Watsonville, CA 95076
408/761-6200 voice; 408/761-6206 fax
AppleLink and America Online: ALADDIN
CompuServe: 75300,1666; GEnie: ALADDINSYS
Internet: aladdin@well.sf.ca.us
Information from:
Aladdin Systems propaganda
Reviews/17-Feb-92
-----------------
* MacWEEK
Animation Presentation Software -- pg. 39
Cinemation
Magic
FreeHand 3.1 -- pg. 39
Backup Programs -- pg. 44
DiskFit Pro
Redux
Total Recall
SurfGuard
FastBack Plus
Retrospect Remote
NetStream
* BYTE
Spreadsheets -- pg. 222
Lotus 1-2-3 for Macintosh
Excel 3.0
Claris Resolve 1.0v2
Wingz 1.1a
Macintosh PowerBooks -- pg. 253
Telebit QBlazer -- pg. 259
SoftNode -- pg. 259
References:
MacWEEK -- 10-Feb-92, Vol. 6, #6
BYTE -- Mar-92
..
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