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- TidBITS#20/10-Sep-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- ROMlib
- IBM/Microsoft Rift
- Free Mail
- Editors' Notes/10-Sep-90
- HyperCard 2.0 Excuses
- Reviews/10-Sep-90
-
-
- ROMlib
- ------
- Two connotations of the above title come to mind. ROM liberation
- and ROM libraries. Both are apt, because ROMlib is a Unix library
- that can simulate the Macintosh ROMs, but which might liberate
- (perhaps not the best choice of words, I suppose) them from Apple.
- For those who aren't up on any of the latest clone reports, this
- is an extremely interesting (and potentially litigious) product,
- because Macintosh source code can be re-compiled on a Unix
- machine. The ROMlib version of the program retains the complete
- look and feel (I hear legal knives being sharpened already) via X
- Windows. The advantages of doing this are the advantages inherent
- to Unix machines - protected virtual memory, Unix development
- tools, "true" multitasking, the Unix file system, and heavy-duty
- hardware. Of course the main advantage is that there are a huge
- number of useful, elegant Macintosh applications that can be
- useful and elegant on a Unix machine.
-
- Needless to say, there are a few small problems. Compatibility
- with the Mac Toolbox calls only extends to volumes 1 through 4 of
- Inside Mac, though the company, Abacus Research & Development
- Incorporated (ARDI), is working on volume 5 and 6. Other stuff
- that isn't supported includes the Printing Manager, Desk Manager,
- Device Manager, Disk Driver, Sound Driver, Serial Driver,
- AppleTalk, Disk Initialization and SCSI Manager. The package
- itself has been ported to a number of Unix boxes, but is only
- supported on the Sun/3s because of ARDI's current size of four
- programmers, a lawyer, an accountant, and a secretary.
-
- ARDI does expect to be sued by Apple because they are aiming to
- sell ROMs for Macintosh clones, but they feel that they are
- completely in the right. They think the issue boils down to
- whether or not Apple owns the look and feel of all Macintosh
- applications regardless of who developed the programs. It seems to
- us that a more dangerous possibility is that Apple can claim
- copyright on the specific names of the routines and thus prevent
- ARDI from using those names. Since ARDI has completely reverse-
- engineered those routines, they are safe on the source code
- copyright aspect, but not being able to use the same routine names
- would be a pain because it would force programmers to change all
- the routine names before compiling under ROMlib (though I suppose
- ARDI could just release an application to change all the routine
- names appropriately).
-
- ROMlib costs $400 (Oh, a round number price!) for a single-user
- license and is currently being bundled with Executor, a non-
- product that can run a good number of Mac binaries on the Sun/3.
- ARDI wrote Executor in the last four or five months to test
- ROMlib. Now that they have released ROMlib, they are devoting more
- attention to Executor. They even posted a list of applications
- from the BCS and BMUG CD-ROMs that they have tested under Executor
- and a number of the programs ran relatively well. None of the
- major commercial programs that they tested (Word, Excel, Wingz,
- SuperPaint 2.0, HyperCard 1.2.2, or MacWrite) ran without a hitch,
- but all but Wingz often break whenever Apple does anything
- different in hardware or software.
-
- Abacus Research and Development
- 1650 University Blvd.
- Albuquerque, NM 87102
- Phone: 505/766-9115
- Fax: 505/247-1899
-
- Information from:
- Clifford T. Matthews -- ARDI
- ARDI propaganda
- Walt Leipold -- leipold@eplrx7.uucp
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
-
- IBM/Microsoft Rift
- ------------------
- It's not exactly the San Andreas Fault, but IBM and Microsoft have
- been getting along poorly, with the latest spat concerning IBM's
- new version of OS/2 that runs in 2 megs of RAM. The problems began
- the fall of 1989 when Microsoft pressured IBM to drop OS/2 "Lite,"
- aimed at DOS users. In April of 1990, IBM said that Microsoft
- would be taking over most of the OS/2 development work. However,
- when Windows 3.0 came out in May, essentially destroying the
- market for OS/2 at many sites, IBM was not among the PC makers who
- announced plans to bundle Windows with their hardware. In June,
- IBM started showing off its own 2 megabyte version of OS/2, which
- was snubbed by Microsoft.
-
- OS/2 battles are not the only place where IBM and Microsoft have
- been at odds in the past few years. During the hubbub with Apple
- and Microsoft announcing TrueType for Macs and PC-clones running
- Windows, the ever-conservative IBM endorsed PostScript for OS/2 to
- Microsoft's dismay. IBM's choice of PostScript was interesting
- especially in light of a less conservative decision to license
- Steve Jobs' NeXTStep environment, which use Display PostScript for
- on-screen font rendering.
-
- A final battleground is shaping up on the handwriting technology
- front, because Microsoft is attempting to develop its own
- handwriting recognition technology (no doubt to be integrated with
- Windows some time in the future), while IBM chose to go outside
- again, licensing Go Corp.'s technology. Such unfriendliness.
-
- Unfortunately for those of us who aren't specifically tied to IBM
- or Microsoft products in any way, the two companies still push the
- market around. The good aspect of the growing discord is that IBM
- and Microsoft together may well be unstoppable; separated, they
- carry far less clout. In some ways, it was too bad the
- Lotus/Novell deal fell through, because they (along with
- WordPerfect) were the only companies really strong enough to force
- Microsoft to play nice and not try to take over the entire
- microcomputer industry. Such a takeover must not be allowed to
- happen because even if a Microsoft monopoly was benign in nature
- (if not in interface), it would certainly squash a good deal of
- innovation from smaller developers who would be unable to compete.
- These days, a great product does not guarantee a share of the
- market, especially when it's a market from which Microsoft
- profits.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
- Related articles:
- InfoWorld -- 27-Aug-90, Vol. 12, #35, pg. 1
- PC WEEK -- 30-Jul-90, Vol. 7, #29 , pg. 1
-
-
- Free Mail
- ---------
- Since TidBITS is distributed only electronically (at least by us,
- others may re-distribute in other ways), many of you have probably
- come to rely on electronic mail. Most email runs on mainframes or
- workstations, not because they are better suited to the task, but
- because they are more often connected to networks. Until ISDN
- become available most places in the world (for those of you in
- Europe who already have it, don't hurt yourselves chortling :-)),
- the rest of us will have to rely on other methods of connecting
- our Macs to the e-world.
-
- Until recently, the process of setting up email on a Mac was
- relatively expensive with packages such as CE Software's QuickMail
- and its accompanying bridges. The best alternatives were arcane
- ports of Unix's uucp software with minimal Mac interface options.
- Since MacTCP has been out though, more mail packages are showing
- up because MacTCP makes it much easier for a Mac to communicate
- with a host computer also running TCP/IP. The two latest programs,
- Eudora from Steve Dorner and MacPost from Lund University in
- Sweden, share the admirable feature of being free.
-
- Eudora is at version 1.1 and is available via anonymous FTP from
- ux1.cso.uiuc.edu in the mac/eudora subdirectory. Eudora can use
- the POP3 (can't for the life of me remember what this stands for,
- Post Office Protocol, perhaps?) and SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer
- Protocol) protocols. More importantly for those of us not directly
- linked to the Internet, Eudora works with either MacTCP or the
- Communications Toolbox, though Steve Dorner says "there are some
- gotchas in the latter." Feature include nicknames, multiple
- mailboxes, automatic mail checking, and automatic binhex/de-binhex
- of Mac documents. Source code and a 60 page manual are both
- available, and all Steve asks is that you tell him that you are
- using Eudora and that you send him any feedback you may have. I
- haven't gotten a chance to try Eudora personally, not having
- access to either the Comm Toolbox or MacTCP, but John Norstad,
- author of Disinfectant, said he uses Eudora and finds it extremely
- useful and stable.
-
- The other package, MacPost 1.0b2 is the result of a joint project
- between Apple and Lund University. It is a bit heavier on the
- hardware side because it runs a client/server which requires a
- dedicated Mac running MacTCP as the server. The server must also
- be connected to an SMTP server on the Internet. MacPost is
- available via anonymous ftp from pollux.lu.se (130.235.132.89) in
- pub/mac/comm/macpost. The client and server communicate over
- AppleTalk, which limits the extent of the server to an AppleTalk
- internet, but dial-in access through Liaison or Shiva's NetModem
- is possible as well. So if you are looking for email access to the
- Internet and can get a connection, check out these package. If
- nothing else, they're more than worth the price you pay.
-
- Information from:
- Steve Dorner -- dorner@pequod.cso.uiuc.edu
- John Norstad -- jln@acns.nwu.edu
- MacPost Mailing List -- macpost@ldc.lu.se
-
-
- Editors' Notes/10-Sep-90
- ------------------------
- Before anything else, I want to mention that the most recent issue
- (September) of BYTE magazine is mostly devoted to the discussions
- of many of the notable figures in the computer and electronics
- industries. The subject is the past, present, and future, with an
- emphasis on the future. If you are at all interested in these
- industries as more than a casual user of their products, I highly
- recommend that you check out this issue.
-
- Here's a bit from Michael Kessler on the HUMANIST discussion list
- that shows the perils of computer use. Nasty colloquial
- Find/Replace feature there... :-)
-
- "A correction from the pages of the Fresno Bee: "An item in
- Thursday's Nation Digest about the Massachusetts budget crisis
- made reference to new taxes that will help put Massachusetts 'back
- in the African-American.' The item should have said 'back in the
- black.'""
-
- A few things have changed in this issue of TidBITS, most notably
- the display font. We used to use Bookman 12 point, because it is a
- good, readable font. However, it is a tad large, which results in
- not much text being displayed on the screen at once. From now on,
- we'll be using New York 10 point instead, although you are
- perfectly welcome to change it for each issue you get. We've known
- about this problem for some time now and had planned to fix it
- relatively quickly in TidBITS II. Unfortunately TidBITS II will
- use some of the new features advertised for HyperCard 2.0, which
- is obviously why you haven't seen TidBITS II. We've also been very
- busy with other projects. So changing the font is a bit like
- sitting down to read a good book before people are arriving to
- visit you - they will come all the sooner so you can't read much.
- Perhaps by changing the font, HyperCard 2.0 will appear
- immediately to allow us to start working on TidBITS II. And if
- HyperCard's release date continues slip, we offer the top ten
- excuses direct from the HyperCard 2.0 development team.
-
- Speaking of TidBITS II, there are some interesting ideas we're
- playing with. Potential enhancements include the ability to import
- and export subtly-tagged text files so the distribution files will
- be human-readable. We'll also try to build in filters so popular
- types of online text, such as the Info-Mac digests and clippings
- from Usenet, can easily be archived for future reference. To do
- this, we hope to utilize techniques in HyperCard that should
- increase performance greatly in large archives. The idea is to
- turn TidBITS into a general-purpose text archiver and reader so we
- as an electronic community can store and retrieve our textual
- information quickly and easily. Just think, wouldn't it be nice to
- have all those "readme" files in one place, easily located and
- searched even if you don't have the right word processor handy?
-
- We always appreciate comments and always respond if electronically
- possible. Now even more than before, we would like suggestions for
- future enhancements. We've saved all the suggestions you've sent
- already sent us, so those comments will be taken into account. So
- please send mail with your thoughts.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Michael Kessler -- Michael_Kessler.Hum@mailgate.sfsu.edu
-
- Related articles:
- BYTE -- Sep-90
-
-
- HyperCard 2.0 Excuses
- ---------------------
-
- The Top 10 Reasons HyperCard 2.0 Has Not Yet Shipped
-
- Disclaimer: It's all lies. Lies lies lies.
-
- These lies are fictitious. Any similarity to actual lies, fibs, or
- prevarications is purely coincidental.
-
- These lies are the property of the HyperCard Development Team. Any
- rebroadcast, retransmission, or use of the pictures, descriptions,
- and accounts of these lies without the express written consent of
- the HyperCard Development Team would really be a bad thing, and in
- poor taste too.
-
- Additional Disclaimer: These are last month's lies. This month's
- lies are very different.
-
- 10. Bill left without telling us how it worked.
-
- 9. We were saving it as a going-away present for Jean-Louis.
-
- 8. It took months to get the color out after we discovered that
- the manuals didn't mention it.
-
- 7. We introduced it at the annual developers' conference, and we
- thought there was a rule that says that anything you introduce at
- a developers' conference you can't ship until after the next
- developers' conference.
-
- 6. Bowling shirts just take longer than T-shirts.
-
- 5. For most of us, it was a great way to avoid sweltering in
- Boston in August.
-
- 4. It took months to devise all those phony seed releases, with
- all those phony bugs, which we were doing only as a clever ruse,
- of course.
-
- 3. Nobody told us you were supposed to finish the thing first.
-
- 2. Howard Spira had his money on System 7.0.
-
- 1. We couldn't ship until we had tested it with the new Macintosh
- LX, the one with the impressive performance, quiet ride, and
- distinctive styling, all for under $25,000. See your dealer today.
-
- Information from:
- Kevin Calhoun -- jkc@apple.com
-
-
- Reviews/10-Sep-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Ethernet Networking, pg. 45
- GatorBox
- GatorCard E/II
- Liaison
- EtherPort II
- EtherPort SE/30
- EtherPort SE
- MacGateway AT
- Switchboard, pg. 47
- XPress 3.0, pg. 54
- Kodak Diconix, pg. 54
- PowerKey, pg. 58
- DesignScript, pg. 62
- CopyFlow 2.0, pg. 62
- Apple Cache Card, pg. 66
- Remote Control Software, pg. 66
- Timbuktu
- Carbon Copy Mac
-
- * Macworld
- OCR Programs, pg. 177
- AccuText
- OmniPage
- Read-It
- ReadStar II Plus
- TextPert
- TextScan
- TopScan
- Laser Printers, pg. 184
- (too many to list)
- (too many to list)
- Statistics Programs, pg. 210
- JMP 1.0
- DataDesk 3.0
- StatView II 1.01
- Minitab Statistical Software 6.2
- Systat 5.0
- SPSS 4.0
- Grey-scale Scanners, pg. 218
- Datacopy GS Plus
- UG 80
- ClearScan Color Scanner 2, pg. 219
- InterFACE, pg. 220
- Hand-held Scanners, pg. 227
- Lightning Scan 400
- ScanMan Model 32
- GeoQuery 2.01, pg. 233
- Alchemy II 1.01, pg. 235
- Remote Control Software, pg. 237
- Timbuktu 3.1
- Carbon Copy Mac 1.04
- FontStudio 1.0, pg. 239
- EZ Vision 1.0, pg. 242
- SPSS for the Macintosh 4.0, pg. 244
- MacroMind Director 2.0, pg. 249
- Wireless Remote Controllers, pg. 251
- On-Command
- SilentPartner
- Q-Sheet A/V 2.0, pg. 253
- Graphing Programs , pg. 256
- FlexiGraphs 1.1
- Graph Wiz 1.0
- Security Software, pg. 260
- QuickLock 2.0
- MacSafe II 2.0
- Warner New Media Audio Notes Series: The Magic Flute, pg. 264
- Laser Award Maker , pg. 267
- Personal Reference Catalog 2.0, pg. 277
- MacLit, pg. 277
- Time & Money 1.0 , pg. 277
- MacSurvey 1.5 , pg. 278
- StudyMate 1.0, pg. 278
- Letter Writer Plus 1.0, pg. 278
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 11-Sep-90, Vol. 4, #30
- Macworld -- Oct-90
-
-
- ..
-
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