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TidBITS#113/30-Mar-92
=====================
The industry continues to evolve with dramatic twists and turns.
Microsoft spent $173 million to purchase Fox Software and its
database products, and Apple announced products aimed directly
at the Windows market while targeting new distribution channels.
Rounding out the issue we have news of a difficulty with
AutoDoubler, a review of Danny Goodman's new Mac book, and a
warning: get Disinfectant 2.7.1 - version 2.7 has a bug!
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/30-Mar-92
Fox Swallowed by Microsoft
MacWindows
AutoDoubler Controversy
Apple Distribution Changes
Danny Goodman's Macintosh Handbook
Reviews/30-Mar-92
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-113.etx; 26K]
MailBITS/30-Mar-92
------------------
Mark H. Anbinder passes on this important bit of information. John
Norstad of Northwestern University has released version 2.7.1 of
Disinfectant to fix what John calls a "stupid error" in version
2.7, released just days earlier. John wrote, "a note to Mac C
programmers: Assigning a pointer to a Boolean variable is rarely
useful. Releasing your own CODE resources is also a bad thing to
do."
2.7.1 will be available from all the usual suspects. Please
replace your copy of Disinfectant (2.7 or earlier) with 2.7.1
right away.
The Disinfectant INIT has not changed from 2.7 to 2.7.1, but you
should install the 2.7.1 INIT anyway to avoid getting alert
messages about an outdated version being installed.
Information from:
Mark H. Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
More RAM for IIf and IIg
In TidBITS#108/24-Feb-92 we reported a rumor that the LaserWriter
IIf and IIg were likely to be upgraded with extra RAM, and indeed,
that has happened. We hoped that Apple US would follow the lead of
Apple UK and offer free upgrades for people who already bought one
of the printers. This has not happened, and users who wish to add
an additional 4 MB of RAM to the either of the printers will have
to buy a 4 MB upgrade kit, which lists for $249. Oh well, if you
heeded our advice and waited, you can now get a IIf with 4 MB for
$3599 list or a IIg with 8 MB for $4599 list, instead of the
previous 2 MB and 5 MB incarnations.
Information from:
Mark H. Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
Fox Swallowed by Microsoft
--------------------------
I once promised a friend that I would avoid allusions to baseball
in TidBITS, but it's going to be hard to resist the comparison to
the free agent market in this one, and if you can't grow 'em
yourself, buy 'em. Microsoft just announced that it will be
purchasing Fox Software for a reported sum of $173 million
dollars. Fox Software has a well-earned reputation for solid
database products including FoxBASE+/Mac and FoxPro for DOS, and
it's quite obvious that Microsoft wants an immediate database
product since it has been unable to produce a decent one for a
number of years now, either on the high end or the low end (ever
used Microsoft File? I hope not.).
Microsoft claims that it will continue with its Cirrus database
project, which has not been announced or discussed in any detail
yet. It's safe to assume that Cirrus will not compete with Fox's
products and that it won't be available for some time. I've heard
nothing about a replacement for File, partly because Microsoft
Works, as old and decrepit as it is, (ooh, people aren't going to
like that statement :-)) can do much of what is needed from a
simple flat file database with the Microsoft name on it.
So what's this acquisition mean? Lots. There have been two main
gaps in the Microsoft application suite for some time now,
database and graphics. Microsoft still has no graphics package to
speak of, but Fox will bring powerful relational databases on both
the Mac and DOS platforms to Microsoft. Suddenly Claris has a big
competitor because even though FileMaker Pro isn't as complicated
(or powerful) as FoxBASE, a lot of people will buy the Microsoft
FoxBASE just because. After all, no one was ever fired for buying
Microsoft. IBM is another story these days. ACIUS must not be
terribly happy either, since 4th Dimension suddenly has a
competitor with Mr. Bill's money behind it, and although installed
base is extremely important, marketing rules the world. Odesta, by
the way, is no more, and Double Helix, a quirky but fun and
powerful relational database has been taken over by another
company. Many of the original employees were staying on last we
heard, so we have high hopes for Double Helix's continued success.
Finally, there's Blyth, with Omnis on both the Mac and Windows,
perhaps the most direct cross-platform competition for FoxBASE.
Those rivalries aside, I think it's clear that the Mac version of
FoxBASE is merely a condiment, and the main course is FoxPro for
DOS (and the future FoxPro for Windows). Perhaps the most notable
acquisition prior to this one was when Borland bought up Ashton-
Tate and added dBASE and its massive installed base to supplement
Borland's own technically impressive Paradox. With that move,
Borland now owns 75% of the PC database market, and Microsoft
hates to see Borland doing so well in that arena. What better way
to suddenly become a force in the database market than buying Fox,
since Fox has a good set of products currently, good people
working on them, and good technology that can be used elsewhere in
Microsoft products. And you too could have all that if you had
$173 million lying around.
One nasty point which may just have become moot is the lawsuit
filed by Ashton-Tate charging Fox with various violations of
Ashton-Tate copyrights. If I remember correctly, there was a bit
of look and feel in that suit as well, but I would hope that
Borland and Microsoft will let the suit go away naturally, if such
a thing is possible, and compete head to head in the marketplace.
I don't have a definite opinion whether this acquisition is good
or bad because it depends on your point of view. If you like
Microsoft, you'll probably like the deal because it patches a
gaping hole in Microsoft's suite of products. If you're fan of
other companies or, like me, are against the concept of large
companies buying up smaller companies all the time, then you
probably won't be quite so pleased. I dislike the concept of
market domination because, as happened with Microsoft Works, the
level of technology stagnates without competition. Now that Claris
and Beagle Bros. and Symantec all have integrated packages out on
the market, Microsoft has to scramble to clean up Works. Even the
promised new version won't compete technologically with the
newcomers, although current Works users will be happy for a real
upgrade after so long.
MacWindows
----------
The computer industry is if anything incestuous. Apple can sue
Microsoft with one hand while agreeing to further enhance TrueType
with the other. And lest I confuse my imagery even more, a third
hand of Apple Shiva (the many-handed Hindi god of reproduction and
destruction, not the people who make the NetModem :-)) is reaching
out to compete directly in the Windows market. I'd say something
about not being able to tell the players without a scorecard, but
that might risk a baseball reference and further muddy the issue
at hand. :-)
In any event, Apple has clearly entered the Windows market in
several different ways in the past few weeks and months. Andrew
Johnston of Seattle's dBUG (Downtown Business Users' Group) passed
on this quote from an article by James Plamondon in a publication
called MADA FrameWorks. In discussing comments by Steve Weyl,
Apple's Chief Honcho of Development Tools at Macworld San
Francisco, James wrote:
"...Steve dropped the bombshell: MacApp would be taken cross-
platform! And he didn't mean Quadras, either! He gave no dates, no
specs, no promises he could later fail to deliver, but he just
darn near chanted 'Windows, Windows, Windows.' It was a sight to
see. I got all choked up. So did some other guys near me.
(Actually, I found out later, the thought of programming for
Windows was making them gag. Oh, well.)"
Interesting stuff. If Apple ports its MacApp application
development environment to Windows, I wonder how that will affect
the suit with Microsoft. I also wonder if we won't get some
cleaner Macintosh-style interfaces out of the resulting programs,
although Microsoft's Visual Basic and Borland's ObjectVision have
a pretty good lock on the graphical application development market
in Windows.
FileMaker Pro for Windows
Also in the software arena, we've heard that work continues on
FileMaker Pro for Windows, a program that is likely to do well in
the Windows market for lack of well-known, low-end database
competition. I'm sure there are some decent products out there,
but FileMaker Pro would come in with a recognized name from the
Macintosh world and with Claris clout behind it. Although Claris
has a ways to go before attaining the kind of recognition in the
Windows market that WordPerfect and Lotus enjoy, the fact that
Claris now markets Hollywood, late of IBM, can't hurt. As much as
I think FileMaker Pro is a good first port into the Windows
market, I can't help but think that MacDraw Pro should follow
closely, and I'd be fascinated to see how well ClarisWorks could
do in the Windows world. I'd love to see Apple port the Finder to
Windows to replace the awful combination of the File Manager and
Program Manager, but I'm not putting any money on that
possibility.
Windows-compatible hardware
More immediate and far less ambiguous were Apple's announcements
last week of two products, one aimed directly at the Windows
market and the other positioned to mix and match. Most interesting
of the pair was the Apple OneScanner for Windows, which consists
of the same hardware as the Macintosh OneScanner, a Windows
version of Light Source's Ofoto scanning software, and a SCSI
adapter for ISA and EISA buses (but not for the MCA bus, the type
used in most IBM PS/2s). Ofoto for Windows offers the same one-
step scanning as the Mac version and supports the common file
formats in the PC world, such as TIFF, PC Paintbrush, Windows
bitmap, GEM Image, Microsoft Paint, and EPS. With one click, Ofoto
can determine if the picture is gray scale or line art, scan the
image, and automatically straighten it. The Apple OneScanner for
Windows stands to do quite well when it comes out in May, given
Ofoto's sophistication and Apple's generally solid engineering.
The new Personal LaserWriter NTR that Apple announced last week
for release in April is not specifically a Windows product, but
unlike previous printers, Apple went out of its way to ensure that
the NTR would work well with PC compatibles. Apple gave the NTR
LocalTalk, serial, and parallel interfaces along with intelligent
interface switching so that the printer can determine what sort of
print job is coming in and react appropriately. In the past, it
has been possible to hook LaserWriters to PC compatibles, but
we've received the impression that Apple would have you believe
that the hookup was so hard to do that you might as well go buy a
Macintosh or at least an AppleTalk card for your PC. (You
generally have to locate a serial cable, add a few lines to your
DOS AUTOEXEC.BAT file, and flip a DIP switch). This sort of
capability combined with fast PostScript processing will
undoubtedly make the NTR popular at the expense of the cheaper but
non-PostScript LaserJet printers from Hewlett-Packard.
All these product introductions and directions come down to the
financial bottom line. Microsoft claims to have sold something
like nine million copies of Windows 3.0, and even considering the
estimates that little more than a tenth of those are actually in
use, that's a lot of potential customers. Apple sees no reason to
be pig-headed about its hardware and is just as willing to accept
money from Windows users as from Macintosh users. Of course, I
hope much of that money goes to improving the Macintosh line, and
from some of the rumors I've heard recently, the Macintosh line
will be around for a long time, initially in the form of faster
Quadras and color Classics with more radical upgrades to come, as
they always do.
Information from:
Pythaeus
Andrew Johnston
Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
Chuck Bartosch -- chuck@baka.ithaca.ny.us
AutoDoubler Controversy
-----------------------
There has been a flurry of discussion on CompuServe about a
controversial implementation decision that Salient made when
creating AutoDoubler. For those of you who haven't paid much
attention to compression software, AutoDoubler is a program that
compresses files on your hard disk while you aren't using the Mac
and then expands them quickly when you open them. It is extremely
transparent and quick, and promises to become even quicker and
less obtrusive as time goes on.
Salient feels that any program that touches most of the files on
your hard disk should be entirely reliable and safe. It is
impossible for them to predict and test every possible setup that
a user may have, so they opted for a couple of security techniques
to cut down on conflicts and problems. So far, so good - no one
minds a little extra data security. The problem comes when you
backup the AutoDoubler Control Panel in your System Folder. It
seems that AutoDoubler checks to make sure it has been properly
installed from the original disk by its installer, and if you
_reformat_ your hard disk and then restore the AutoDoubler Control
Panel from your backup, AutoDoubler will notice that the hard disk
has changed and will require you to reinstall from an installation
floppy. AutoDoubler won't complain unless the hard disk has been
reformatted, but that often accompanies the restoration process.
Salient originally intended this feature to ensure that you always
have a clean copy of AutoDoubler installed.
This is not inherently a problem as long as your original floppy
or a backup of that disk is at hand. Unfortunately, in some ways
the people who have the most use for AutoDoubler are PowerBook
users with small hard drives, and PowerBook users seldom have all
their floppies with them. Do note that when AutoDoubler stops
working until it is reinstalled, you can still access _all_ of
your files, even if they are compressed. Another of Salient's
security features is the installation of the ADExpandUtil
application, which can expand compressed files automatically. You
still may have trouble if you had filled your hard disk up with
compressed files, because ADExpandUtil will not recompress them,
so your hard disk could fill up.
Salient has been taking a lot of heat for this feature, and Terry
Morse, the president of Salient, told us that they will change the
next version of AutoDoubler so that it merely warns you that the
hard disk has changed and suggests that it would be best if you
reinstalled, but continues to work after that. We're pleased to
see companies respond to user suggestions so pleasantly, even when
the phrasing of the original comments, like a moth to a candle,
inclined toward the flame.
For those of you who want to avoid this situation now, there is a
simple workaround. Reinstall AutoDoubler from floppy, and _before_
you restart, make a copy of the AutoDoubler Control Panel, lock
it, and store it somewhere else on your hard disk, preferably out
of the System Folder so it can be compressed. Then, if you need a
fresh copy of AutoDoubler, option-drag (which copies the file)
your locked copy of AutoDoubler to the Control Panels folder
(System 7) or System folder (System 6), thus replacing the old
one. Then unlock the new copy (keeping your locked backup
elsewhere on the hard disk), and restart the Mac.
Information from:
Terry Morse, President of Salient -- 76174.2440@compuserve.com
Apple Distribution Changes
--------------------------
You won't be able to pick up a Classic at your local fruit stand,
but given the recent changes in Apple's distribution channels,
that's not far off.
The most recent, and in some ways most shocking, change is that
Apple will be working with Sears to sell special Macintosh
bundles. You won't be able to find a Mac in just any Sears though,
because the contract includes only Sears Office Centers, of which
there are about 70 around the country, though primarily on the
East coast. The bundles will include the Mac Classic, LC II, IIsi,
and PowerBook 140, along with the StyleWriter and Personal
LaserWriters. Other pieces of hardware and software may also be
included, most notably ClarisWorks, although that decision is
apparently up to Sears and not Apple.
Apple is probably turning to Sears for a couple of reasons. First,
the people who would buy hardware and software at Sears most
likely wouldn't buy it elsewhere, more through lack of knowledge
of other sources than anything else. If this wasn't true then
dealers would be rather upset, although the dealers aren't likely
to be too happy about some of the other distribution changes
anyway. Second, working with Sears is a great way for Apple to
learn a bit more about selling in the consumer electronic market,
a market Apple has an intense curiousity about at the moment.
Based on our unrepresentative and extremely limited experience
with Sears and Sears Office Centers, Apple could have picked a
better partner, although we hope that our experiences truly were
unrepresentative. Nonetheless, it will be extremely nice to have a
Classic sitting next to one of those clumsy little IBM PS/1s that
Sears already carries.
VAR Distributors
More likely to upset dealers are Apple's other two new
distribution directions, first to vertical market value-added
resellers (VARs) through three of the big distributors, and also
to the CompuAdd superstores. The three distributors include Ingram
Micro, Merisel, and Tech Data Corporation, and these three will
(starting this fall) recruit VARs to resell Apple products,
although Apple will retain the right to final authorization.
Look at that, a whole paragraph of market-speak. Let me try to
translate. The basic upshot is that these three massive
distribution companies will be able to supply Apple hardware to
consulting firms and suppliers who serve specific (that's what
vertical means in this instance) markets, like legal, engineering,
real estate, architecture, and so on. Apple wants this to happen
because these specific markets often get stuck in a rut of having
to use a certain program or type of computer because everyone else
does, not necessarily because it does the job well. For instance,
a lot of lawyers only use WordPerfect for DOS because, the phrase
goes, all lawyers use WordPerfect. Those lawyers tend to have
specific consultants who can sell them DOS machines and
WordPerfect and then provide support, so if Apple can get these
consulting firms to also sell the Mac line via the large
distributors, then Apple stands a chance of getting a foot into
some of the specific markets.
The authorization of CompuAdd as an Apple dealer isn't so much
interesting for the fact that CompuAdd has a rapidly-growing chain
of superstores around the country (though primarily in Texas, I
gather), but because CompuAdd also runs a mail order business.
Apple has _not_ authorized CompuAdd to sell Macs through the mail,
but I believe that CompuAdd is one of the first big companies with
both a superstore and mail order presence to receive dealer
authorization. If the distribution via CompuAdd's superstores
works out well, Apple just might authorize CompuAdd to sell Macs
via the mail as well, causing trouble for all the grey-market mail
order companies who sell Macs now.
Information from:
Pythaeus
Danny Goodman's Macintosh Handbook
----------------------------------
by Jon.Hersh
Ever tried to get a gut feeling for the size of an acre? It's
about the size of an American football field without the end
zones. That example is from a book by Richard Saul Wurman called
"Information Anxiety," which explains how to convey information
easily and painlessly. Its clear, lucid thinking has just come to
the computer book world in the form of a new general Macintosh
book from Danny Goodman, called "Danny Goodman's Macintosh
Handbook."
Goodman's book is a real departure from the usual look and feel of
other computer books because of the partnership with Wurman, who,
in John Sculley's own words, is "a world-class information
architect." I've been a fan of Wurman's work for quite some time
now. He has done a large volume of books through his company,
AccessPress, specializing in transmitting information to people
about anything and everything.
Wurman started with travel guides to various cities, a guide to
the summer Olympics in LA, a guide to football, a guide to medical
procedures (intended to help people understand what the doctor is
saying and to codify a wide variety of medical procedures for easy
access), the Wall Street Journal's book on money and investments,
and Pacific West's Yellow Pages. He specializes in rearranging
information so that it becomes easy to learn and find. OK, I gush.
I really admire the slant this guy has taken on how to disseminate
information and make it pleasing to the eye at the same time.
Goodman's book is very Mac-like, with a heavy emphasis on visual
presentations (that's adult-speak for "lots of pictures") that
makes this book a solid training tool for beginners, but with
enough high-end information to satisfy more advanced hobbyists and
technoweenies.
There's a great section on how to set up System 7 File Sharing,
explaining in clear, concise, uh, pictures, what to do and why.
There's information on ergonomics, hooking up equipment, maximum
RAM loads, and a large trouble-shooting section.
Each page is visually delimited with color blocks to offer
beginner, intermediate, and advanced information. My one complaint
is one that Wurman doesn't seem to get clear of in any of his
publications: the type size is just a bit too small, and when he
reverses type it often runs the risk of being hard to read; at
least tiring to the old eyes (ask any professional graphic
designer; like ME for instance!). But all in all, it's a gorgeous
book and one that deserves a place on your bookshelf.
I picked up my copy of "Danny Goodman's Macintosh Handbook" (1992
Bantam Books) at Crown Books for $29.95 retail, $26.96 discounted
at Crown. If you're a book freak like me, take a look.
Reviews/30-Mar-92
-----------------
* MacWEEK
Aldus Persuasion 2.1 -- pg. 43
MicroPhone II 4.0 -- pg. 43
MacLabelPro 1.5 -- pg. 46
TimeLog -- pg. 46
Master Juggler 1.57 -- pg. 47
Suitcase 2.0 -- pg. 47
Retriever II -- pg. 47
* MacUser
Microsoft Word for the Macintosh 5.0 -- pg. 50
SuperPaint 3.0 -- pg. 52
Intouch -- pg. 56
TouchBASE 2.0 -- pg. 56
Aldus Gallery Effects -- pg. 58
HP ScanJet IIc -- pg. 70
Help! -- pg. 72
MacInTax -- pg. 76
Color It! -- pg. 83
Multi-Ad Search -- pg. 91
SuperDisk! -- pg. 91
@Risk -- pg. 91
Azimuth -- pg. 93
Aqua Blooper Piper -- pg. 95
Graphics Tablets -- pg. 98
CalComp DrawingBoard II
Kurta IS
Numonics GraphicMaster
Numonics GridMaster
Summagraphics SummaSketch II
Wacom SD420E
Large Hard Drives -- pg. 108
(too many to list)
Email Gateways -- pg. 142
CommGATE
QM-Connect Gateway
AppleShare Server 3.0 -- pg. 150
*Macworld
Color Printers -- pg. 136
(too many to list)
Project Management Software -- pg. 146
(too many to list)
Lotus 1-2-3 for Macintosh -- pg. 174
Microsoft Word 5.0 -- pg. 175
Voice Express -- pg. 178
Voice Navigator II -- pg. 178
Connections 2.0 -- pg. 178
PowerTrax 1.1 -- pg. 178
MacInTax 1991 -- pg. 182
HyperTax Tutor -- pg. 182
Aldus Gallery Effects 1.0, Volume 1: Classic Art -- pg. 185
HAM 1.0 -- pg. 185
PEMD DiscoVery 1.3.1 -- pg. 187
DiskFit Pro -- pg. 187
Carbon Copy/Mac 2.0 -- pg. 189
Mirror 600 Color Scanner -- pg. 189
MacGlobe 1.0 -- pg. 199
World Atlas 1.2 -- pg. 199
RasterOps Expresso Personal Slide Scanner -- pg. 199
First Things First 2.0 -- pg. 200
SimAnt 1.0 -- pg. 200
FastBack Plus 2.6 -- pg. 202
Color It! 1.0 -- pg. 202
DayMaker 1.01 -- pg. 204
QuickTel Xeba 9600 -- pg. 204
TeMath -- pg. 206
The Desktop Lawyer 3.0 -- pg. 206
Legal LetterWorks -- pg. 206
Crash Barrier 1.0.1 -- pg. 208
QuadFlextra -- pg. 208
* BYTE
Cameo Personal Video System, Model 2001 -- pg. 51
Graphics Programs -- pg. 226
(too many to list)
NEC MultiSync 4FG -- pg. 262
References:
MacWEEK -- 23-Mar-92, Vol. 6, #12
MacUser -- Apr-92
Macworld -- Apr-92
BYTE -- Apr-92
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