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TidBITS#124/18-May-92
=====================
And now, for something completely sticky, read about the
forthcoming GUM. Then we move into slimy with some more legal
and virus news. Symantec's upgrade policies for Norton Utilities
are all wet, but Dantz will clean up after itself with a free
upgrade to DiskFit Pro. Of course, Apple has some solid new
products, as does CE with QuickMessenger for developers, and
finally, stop needlessly harassing the FCC about that old modem
surcharge proposal.
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/18-May-92
NUM Upgrade Costs Updated
More Utilities, By GUM
DiskFit News
CE Ships QuickMessenger
Warnings and Upgrades
New Products from Apple
FCC Flap
Reviews/18-May-92
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-124.etx; 29K]
MailBITS/18-May-92
------------------
Mark H. Anbinder writes to tell us the latest in the court case
concerning Mark Pilgrim and David Blumenthal, authors of the MBDF
virus discovered this spring. "I just found out today that Pilgrim
and Blumenthal were arraigned in Tompkins County court last
Friday. They each entered Not Guilty pleas, and the matter is
being held for forty-five days by Judge Betty Friedlander to allow
the defense counsels to file any motions. Nothing is likely to
happen until that time... but assuming things go forward as they
are, it seems likely that there will be a trial."
In other, stranger legal news, Judge Vaughn Walker agreed to
reconsider his April decision throwing out a number of the issues
in Apple's suit against Microsoft and HP. Apparently this doesn't
mean that he will necessarily change his mind, but he certainly
couldn't change his mind without reconsidering. Hmm. More news
when it's news. Perhaps even stranger yet was the announcement
that Quorum, makers of Mac emulation software, is suing Apple in a
pre-emptive legal strike. It seems that Quorum wants the court to
rule that Quorum's software does not infringe on Apple's
copyrights or patents, and that some of those patents may in fact
be invalid. I hope Quorum has a lot of legal firepower or it won't
even be a fair fight. Tune in next week when Apple lawyers declare
that Apple actually own rights to the concept of the personal
computer and sues IBM over the original PC - the entire case has
already been picked up by several major cable TV networks as a
spectator sport. :-)
AutoDoubler Support from Fifth
Robert Hess passes on this note. "FileDirector 3.1 from Fifth
Generation Systems includes a brand new version of DiskTools
which, among other enhancements, includes additional support for
DiskDoubler and AutoDoubler from Salient Software. DiskTools has a
new checkbox in the Preferences dialog called Show Indicator on
Compressed Files. If this checkbox is turned on, DiskTools will:
1. Stamp the "DD" on the icon for compressed files in the main
DiskTools File/Folder list and in the File/Folder Info dialog.
2. Show the actual disk space occupied by compressed AutoDoubler
or DiskDoubler files in the main DiskTools File/Folder list NOT
their uncompressed sizes (like you see when you Get Info in the
Finder).
These two are useful for determining from within DiskTools which
files are compressed (and by how much) and which are not,
information that can be extremely useful to know at times.
3. Copy compressed DiskDoubler files in their compressed state.
Why is this pretty cool? Because those of you who use AutoDoubler
& AppleTalk Remote Access can use DiskTools to perform faster
copies by using DiskTools instead of the Finder. Then again, the
"hacked" Finder that increases throughput/cache-size, or 7th
Heaven, will still do better." [It's nice to see some third
parties supporting each other in their products directly because
it makes customized Mac environments more seamless. -Adam]
Information from:
Robert Hess -- ENDPOINT@applelink.apple.com
NUM Upgrade Costs Updated
-------------------------
Sendhil Revuluri recently pointed out that we published an
incomplete set of upgrade prices for Norton Utilities for
Macintosh (NUM) 2.0. Symantec is offering a lower price to
registered users of Norton Utilities 1.1 (as opposed to users of
SUM II or NUM 1.0), so if you purchased that package, you can
upgrade for only $20. I've read reports of Symantec denying the
existence of this offer, so I confirmed this information with a
Symantec customer service representative.
If you own SUM II or NUM 1.0, the upgrade cost is $39 plus $8 for
shipping and handing. If you own NUM 1.1, the cost is $20, (plus
$8, I presume, for shipping and handling). On the form I received
in the mail, Symantec also offered a competitive upgrade of $59
for MacTools Deluxe owners, but the customer service person at
Symantec denied that there were any competitive upgrades. Go
figure. I also presume (based on the information TidBITS used to
publish its original article) that if you purchased SUM II or NUM
1.1 after 20-Jan-92 (and can prove it), that you only pay the $8
shipping charge.
But wait, there's more. The guy at Symantec confirmed that users
who paid the $39 fee when they were entitled to the $20 price can
get a $19 refund from Symantec. All I can think is that someone at
Symantec completely forgot about users of NUM 1.1 having already
paid for one upgrade since there was no mention of the $20 upgrade
in any of the user or press information I've received from
Symantec. Call Symantec for details on the refund, and if they
balk, tell them that one of their reps told a member of the press
about it. It would be nice in the future if Symantec could make
upgrading less confusing by figuring out upgrade policies in
advance.
Symantec -- 800/343-4714 -- 408/252-3570 (outside U.S.)
Information from:
Sendhil Revuluri -- s-revuluri@uchicago.edu
Symantec propaganda
More Utilities, By GUM
----------------------
"What does the world need," you may ask if you're one of those who
is always asking essentially rhetorical questions. If you're Guy
Kawasaki and After Hours Software, the answer is another
collection of useful utilities, seemingly along the lines of the
popular Now Utilities from Now Software. The collection will be
assembled by and named after the ever-present Guy, so along with
the strangely-acronymed Symantec Utilities for Macintosh (SUM) and
Norton Utilities for Macintosh (NUM), we'll have the tongue-in-
cheek Guy's Utilities for Macintosh, or GUM.
I can't tell you a lot about GUM, since I don't know very much
myself. I do know that it's in the final stages of assembly, but
Guy and After Hours Software are still looking for truly snazzy
utilities that could not survive in the commercial market alone.
Guy claims that he's looking for utilities that do things like
improve the Finder, menuing, System 7, and the use of the
PowerBooks. Feel free to send your utilities to Guy at any of the
addresses below, but keep in mind that I've already suggested
Sticky Menus, Bubble Help, and DiskDoubleMint, along with a little
utility that keeps the monitor from moving when you chew.
I'm also agitating strongly for some Bazooka Joe comics in each
package, or at least a few baseball cards. I certainly hope that
Guy has the gumption to consider my requests seriously. Of course,
there's no telling when GUM will be out, but if it doesn't get
stuck under the table, it is likely to be more well-received in
higher education than its physical manifestation. Nonetheless, I'm
looking forward to GUM, especially if it doesn't try to overlap
with the other utilities packages already on the market. If so,
I'd probably have to eschew GUM in favor of Now Utilities, which
has had more time to mature into a killer collection and comes out
of one's hair more easily.
Tooth decay notwithstanding, these sort of collections are
becoming more popular. Atticus Software just announced that it is
putting together a less sugary package called Super 7 Utilities,
which includes seven utilities primarily based on previous
freeware or shareware programs. You may recognize some of the
names, including Speed Beep Pro, Helium Pro, Desktop Extras, Trash
Alias, and Mighty Menus. Also included are Printer Picker and
Super Comments, neither of which I recognize from the freeware or
shareware world. Super 7 Utilities will supposedly be available in
July for about $100 list. In addition, users of the shareware
BeHierarchic, which gives you a hierarchical Apple menu, may have
noticed that version 2.0 is supposedly now part of the Kiwi
PowerWindows package from Kiwi Software. So if you've got an
illegal copy of BeHierarchic 2.0, spit it out or swallow it.
Atticus Software -- 203/324-1142
Kiwi Software -- 805/685-4031
Information from:
Guy Kawasaki -- Kawasaki2@applelink.apple.com -- MacWay on AOL
76703.3031@compuserve.com
DiskFit News
------------
Dantz Development's popular backup program, DiskFit Pro, has been
in the net conversations recently, though mostly on CompuServe. It
appears that DiskFit Pro has a few bugs and confusing changes from
previous versions, and those bugs have convinced Dantz to send a
free upgrade to 1.1 to all registered users when 1.1 is done (soon
is all I can say about the timing).
The first complaints about DiskFit Pro stemmed from Dantz's
decision to change the Only Applications and Only Documents
selections so that items in the System Folder were not included.
This comes up primarily for people who upgraded from the previous
version but did not create a new SmartSet, because they will
expect their documents and applications in the System Folder to be
backed up. The design implementation is not so much in question as
Dantz's failure to clearly document the change as a change. The
manual and the program say that Only Documents will exclude
documents in the System Folder. They do not, however, say that
applications in the System Folder will be excluded if Only
Applications is checked. Larry Zulch of Dantz has acknowledged the
problem on CIS, and said that they were looking into providing the
same functionality in a manner that would allow the user to more
precisely select what will and will not be backed up.
More serious from the bug standpoint is a pesky varmint that will
on occasion make the Exact Duplicates function, which preserves a
volume's special identification data to retain privilege
information, work like Less Copying, which only copies files if
the file size has changed. The workaround is to avoid using Exact
Duplicates, which would entail fixing some privileges in the event
of a restore, but would not lose any data. Needless to say, this
is a bug that could result in some data not being backed up. Dantz
takes their responsibility as a provider of what is in essence
security software seriously, and this bug compromises DiskFit Pro
1.0's efficacy. Hence the free upgrade that will arrive at your
door soon if you're registered. We're pleased to see this sort of
public response because it instills confidence in a company, and
if a company making backup software needs anything, it's consumer
confidence. No one's perfect, but the best we can all do when we
make mistakes is try and fix them quickly and accurately.
Information from:
Larry Zulch, Dantz Development -- 72477.1322@compuserve.com
Bill Weylock -- 76012.3026@compuserve.com
CE Ships QuickMessenger
-----------------------
by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
Fulfilling an old promise to allow integration between QuickMail
and non-mail applications, CE Software recently announced
QuickMessenger, an API (or application programming interface) that
will allow developers to enable their applications to send
QuickMail messages.
QuickMessenger includes eleven routines that may be called by any
application to perform such operations as sending messages or
files, searching for user addresses via the NameServer, looking up
the contents of QuickMail address books or groups, and obtaining
lists of MailCenters and zones. According to QuickMessenger
engineer Van Kichline, the API "is designed to be a simple but
very robust step toward providing complete QuickMail access to
third party applications." QuickMessenger does not yet allow
applications to receive messages, but the Inside QuickMail API,
which allows developers to create gateways, bridges, or other
utilities that run within QuickMail itself, does allow third-party
software to receive and process messages.
One third-party product that will take advantage of QuickMessenger
is QM Log Translator, from MDG Computer Services. This is a
customized 4th Dimension database that summarizes the mail
activity logs typically sent to the QuickMail custodian. The
database can generate reports and can send notices to users who
are taking up more than their share of space on the server's hard
disk.
Another utility that QuickMessenger will enhance is DiskTwin, an
expansion card (in NuBus and PDS configurations) from Golden
Triangle Computers, Inc., that allows a Macintosh to write all
data to two hard disks simultaneously. With this product,
QuickMessenger will allow a network manager or system
administrator to receive instant notification in the event of a
disk failure.
The QuickMessenger software developer kit, including
documentation, source code examples, and the QuickMessenger Tool
Kit, is available from CE for $125. The Inside QuickMail API is
still available for $100. Purchasers of either package must sign a
trade-secret agreement with CE Software because of the nature of
the information that is included in the documentation.
CE Software, Inc. - 515/224-1995
MDG Computer Services -- 708/818-9991
Golden Triangle Computers, Inc. -- 619/279-2100
Information from:
Sue Nail -- CE Software
Warnings and Upgrades
---------------------
by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
LC II Ethernet Card
Users who have an old Macintosh LC Ethernet Card and need to use
it with a Mac LC II (if, for example, they have upgraded their LCs
to LC IIs) will need to upgrade the card to a Macintosh LC II
Ethernet Card. This requires a simple, and free, ROM swap. This
can be arranged through any Apple authorized service center, who
will be able to order the ROM upgrade for you. Users who are still
using the card in an LC do not need to upgrade the card, but since
the free upgrade will only be available until 30-Jun-93, it might
be a good idea to take care of it just in case.
Unplug that Quadra!
A recent Apple technical memo noted that, because of a +5 volt
trickle charge that the Quadra 900 provides to one pin on each
NuBus card, it is important to unplug the Quadra 900 before
installing or removing any NuBus card. (The manual states this
fact when describing the card installation procedure, but Apple
has received reports that some users have missed this warning.)
The trickle charge is provided so that a NuBus card can be
designed to allow for remote booting.
Personal LaserWriter LS Driver 7.2
Apple has released a new version, 7.2, of the Personal LaserWriter
LS driver. The new driver allows the printer to print closer to
the edge of the page on legal-sized pages. The previous driver
imposed one-inch margins on legal-sized pages, to provide for
backward compatibility with the Personal LaserWriter SC, but in
response to numerous customer complaints, the company produced a
new version that allows the printer to come within a quarter inch
of each side. The new driver will be available from dealers, user
groups, and licensed online services.
Don't Plug that PowerBook!
Kim Cary writes to say that a user plugged their StyleWriter power
connector into a PowerBook 140, zapping the charging circuit and
requiring a $650 repair to let the unit work on battery power
again. Kim guessed that the StyleWriter power connector has a
reverse polarity from the PowerBook's own power connector. So if
you have a PowerBook and a StyleWriter around, be careful when you
plug it in.
Information from:
Kim Cary -- kcary@pepvax.pepperdine.edu
New Products from Apple
-----------------------
by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
Once again Apple has shown they mean business with their plans to
offer a steady stream of new products. Just today, the company
introduced its new series of commercial system enhancement
software, and replaced the Quadra 900, only seven months old, with
the new Quadra 950.
A few months ago, Apple revealed its plan to offer certain kinds
of system software, such as enhancements that only some users will
need, as separate commercial products. The first two offerings in
this series are Macintosh PC Exchange and the QuickTime Starter
Kit, each of which, like the $99 System 7 Personal Upgrade Kit,
comes with a few months of free telephone tech support via Apple's
800 support line.
Macintosh PC Exchange is a $79 package that, like Insignia's
AccessPC and Dayna's DOS Mounter, allows users to mount DOS-
formatted diskettes on the desktop of Macs equipped with Apple's
SuperDrive or compatible high-density floppy drives. In addition,
the utility will automatically launch appropriate applications
from a user-configurable list when the user double-clicks on a DOS
file in the Finder. For example, double-clicking on a Lotus 1-2-3
DOS file will automatically open either Excel or Lotus 1-2-3 for
Mac, whichever you specify. The utility also allows users to
format diskettes for use in DOS machines later on.
The new QuickTime Starter Kit, selling for $169, allows users with
68020, '030, or '040 Macs to take full advantage of Apple's video,
sound, and animation system software. In addition to the extension
itself, this starter kit includes several utilities (MoviePlayer,
Movie Recorder, Movie Converter, and Picture Compressor), and a
CD-ROM containing a wealth of video clips, animation, and still
images.
Last, but certainly not least, of Apple's new offerings, the
Quadra 950 replaces the 900. The 950 has a faster processor (a 33
MHz 68040 instead of the 900's 25 MHz CPU), and provides faster
video, Ethernet, and I/O bus performance as well, thanks to faster
VRAM SIMMs and a new, faster 25 MHz I/O bus. The new Quadra joins
the Macintosh lineup at the same price as the 900, so power-hungry
Mac users can now get more bang for the buck.
For a short time, Apple will even offer a very low price for
Quadra 900 owners who want to upgrade. The $1,499 price lasts
until 27-Dec-92, after which the upgrade price will be $3,000.
This upgrade should actually be available in June or July.
Apple's new software products will be included in the company's
new software distribution plans. They have signed a contract with
Ingram Micro, a large distributor of computer-related products, to
make Apple's software products available to software resellers as
well as Apple's existing dealer base. This should dramatically
improve software availability from a wide variety of vendors and
dealers. Macintosh PC Exchange and the QuickTime Starter Kit join
the System 7 Personal and Group Upgrade Kits, AppleTalk Remote
Access, and AppleShare 3.0 in this new program. Interestingly, the
deal with Ingram Micro also means that some mail order vendors,
including MacWarehouse, will now be able to sell Apple software
products. In fact, MacWarehouse has wasted no time in advertising
this fact in the latest MacWEEK.
While some users might prefer that Apple include Macintosh PC
Exchange in the system software itself, and provide it free of
charge to end users, the commercial distribution is actually
consistent with past policies. Such things as the AppleShare
server software, which only some users will actually need, have
always been sold as separate products. This allows Apple to
recover the costs of developing such software without forcing
Apple's entire user base to pay for it through increased system
software prices. Apple has long considered changing its policy of
offering free system software upgrades to users who don't require
the manuals that come with the purchasable upgrade packages. We
feel that given the choice between forcing all Macintosh users to
pay for system software upgrades, and asking users who need
specialized extensions to pay for those separately, Apple has done
the right thing.
In the meantime, the QuickTime software that was released a few
months ago is still being distributed free of charge by user
groups, dealers, and some online services, as well as by some
software companies whose software takes advantage of QuickTime. In
effect, the "run-time" software for viewing QuickTime movies is
free, and users who want more power for themselves may purchase
either the (admittedly limited) QuickTime Starter Kit or go for
one of the commercial animation packages. This is similar to the
current Claris approach with HyperCard. All users receive
HyperCard free when they purchase a new Mac, but the Developer's
Kit, which contains lots of sample stacks and HyperTalk code, as
well as developer's utilities, is a commercial product.
Information from:
Apple propaganda
FCC Flap
--------
Those of you on the nets may have noticed a flurry of postings
about a proposed Federal Communications Commission (FCC) surcharge
on modem users. Just to get this out in the open right away, this
rumor is FALSE! Phew, now that we've cleared the air and everyone
can stop being irate at the FCC, let's look at this in a little
more detail.
I can't say that this posting is specifically a hoax, because that
implies willful maliciousness on the part of an individual. That
very well may not be true. It is true that such a proposal came
before the FCC a number of years (ten or so?) ago and was
defeated, in part due to the outpouring of sentiment from modem
users. The problem is that such information on the nets never
disappears, it just gets hidden for a while. Eventually someone
who is new to the nets finds the information, say the posting on
the original case, and assumes that it's true, failing to check
the dates involved and the current FCC docket. At that point, our
well-meaning neophyte immediately forwards the seemingly urgent
posting to everyone he or she knows, some of whom may know that
this is a moot-point; others of whom will react with equal horror.
This continues ad netfinitum until there are enough postings
saying "Stop! It's a hoax!" that everyone cools down for a year or
two. Then some well-meaning net neophyte finds an archived posting
and...
On the face of it, this problem only applies to people in the U.S.
I don't know much about modem surcharges in other countries,
although I gather they are not unheard of. Nonetheless, this
incident does have several lessons for users of the global
networks no matter where you may be located - after all, you never
know which warning will apply to you and which won't.
The FCC surcharge posting appeared first (to my eyes) on a local
user group BBS, forwarded by a well-meaning someone with net
access at Microsoft. The user group members were horrified, and
several of them immediately whipped off letters of complaint to
the FCC, and even posted form letters people could print out to
send to the FCC. This happened within only a few days, and by the
time I saw these messages and posted a note of caution, expressing
my doubt that the proposal was real, a bunch of people had already
complained to the FCC. Luckily, several people acted equally as
quickly on my note, and after checking with FCC, posted
retractions and asked others to refrain from bothering the FCC
further. At first, I thought this reaction might be limited to the
BBS world, but then I received several copies of the posting from
friends who haven't been on the nets long enough to have seen it
the first few times around.
There are a number of risks here. First, it's trivial to spread a
false warning around the globe in a matter of days so it's likely
that this sort of thing will happen again. In this situation, the
thing to do is to check the source as carefully as you can before
basing any serious action on that warning. Second is the case of
The Net That Cried Wolf. Distributing warnings via the nets is an
extremely powerful and useful method of informing lots of people
quickly, but we cannot abuse that power or else everyone will
ignore net warnings because they're so common. Third, although
this particular proposal is false, you may remember an editorial I
wrote some time ago about how the Department of Justice wanted to
require telephone companies to make it easy to tap phone systems.
That incident proves that we cannot necessarily trust the
government to leave us alone, happily telecommunicating away. This
is an issue because if modem users periodically bombard the FCC
with complaints about this non-existent surcharge proposal, the
FCC is less likely to take us seriously as a group in the future
when our combined clout might become necessary.
So the moral of the story is not so much "Look before you leap,"
but "Think before you post." We'll all be better off for it.
Unlike the false posting that merely gives some general addresses
to write to but no specific information about the fictitious
proposal, the memo from the FCC we've seen does have specific
information. If you wish to verify for yourself that this
surcharge proposal is indeed a hoax, call the number below.
Federal Communications Commission
Common Carrier Bureau
Enforcement Division
Informal Complaints and Public Inquiries Branch Suite 6202
Washington, D.C. 20554
202/632-7553
Reviews/18-May-92
-----------------
* MacWEEK
Accountant, Inc. 3.0 -- pg. 39
PowerPlay for the Macintosh -- pg. 39
Fontographer 3.5 -- pg. 42
Print Central -- pg. 42
WindoWatch -- pg. 44
* Macworld
Accelerators -- pg. 146
(too many to list)
Alternative Input Devices -- pg. 154
(too many to list)
Integrated Programs -- pg. 160
BeagleWorks
ClarisWorks
Desk
GreatWorks
HandiWorks
Microsoft Works
Ethernet Hubs -- pg. 166
(too many to list)
3-D Rendering Software -- pg. 176
(too many to list)
Macintosh 16" Color Display -- pg. 184
Showplace 1.1 -- pg. 185
GOfer 2.0 -- pg. 188
ON Location 2.0.1 -- pg. 188
MouseMan -- pg. 188
TrackMan -- pg. 188
A3 Mouse -- pg. 188
Muse 1.0 -- pg. 190
Educational Games -- pg. 192
Number Munchers 1.1
Super Munchers 1.0
Word Munchers 1.0
Wordscan 1.0 and Wordscan Plus 1.0 -- pg. 194
Dycam Model 1 -- pg. 197
Canon RC250 -- pg. 197
ArchiCAD 4.02 -- pg. 199
Bose RoomMate -- pg. 201
MacSpeaker -- pg. 201
Nobunaga's Ambition -- pg. 202
Aldus FreeHand 3.1 -- pg. 202
Prograph 2.5 -- pg. 204
StudyWare for the SAT 3.7N -- pg. 204
SICOS Cordless Rechargeable Mouse -- pg. 206
SICOS Cordless Trackball -- pg. 206
PageBrush Professional -- pg. 206
Minitab 8.2 -- pg. 207
Pro-Cite 2.0 -- pg. 207
FolderBolt 1.02 -- pg. 208
Patton Strikes Back: The Battle of the Bulge -- pg. 208
Wordtris 1.0 -- pg. 210
Expert Color Paint 1.0 -- pg. 210
Animation Clips -- pg. 213
Notify 1.0 -- pg. 213
WordPerfect for the Macintosh 2.1 -- pg. 215
PowerPort/V.32 -- pg. 215
LightningScan Pro 256 -- pg. 224
RateFinder 1.5 -- pg. 224
ComStation 2 and ComStation 4 -- pg. 225
Citadel with Shredder -- pg. 225
The Complete Annotated Alice -- pg. 226
NetWorks 1.0.1 -- pg. 226
Creepy Castle -- pg. 227
Aspects 1.01 -- pg. 227
References:
MacWEEK -- 11-May-92, Vol. 6, #19
Macworld -- Jun-92
..
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