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- Z*NET ATARI ONLINE MAGAZINE October 12, 1990 Issue #541
-
- Publisher/Editor : Ron Kovacs Assistant Editor : John Nagy
- Z*Net New Zealand: Jon Clarke Advertising: J K Tarpinian
- Z*Net Canada: Terry Schreiber Z*Net Germany: Mike Schuetz
- Z*Net England: Paul Glover Contributor: Dr. Paul Keith
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
- /// EDITORS DESK
- -------------------
- by Ron Kovacs
-
-
- The Z*Net BBS has been getting busier along with the crossnet base. If
- your system is interested in joining the Z*Net Conference, please send
- along your node information to Node 593 today. This issue will be sent
- through the area along with other files released from Z*Net.
-
- Thanks for reading!
-
-
-
- /// Z*NET NEWSWIRE
- -------------------
-
- US AND CANADIAN ATARI NEWS
- ==========================
- Compiled by John Nagy, Ron Kovacs and Terry Schreiber
-
-
-
- START MAGAZINE ADDS Z*NET NEWSWIRE
- Beginning with the December, 1990 issue, the popular Z*NET NewsWire will
- be presented within STart Magazine each month. STart's Tom Byron and
- Z*Net's Ron Kovacs recently signed contracts that make Z*NET the
- exclusive news column in the well known monthly ST specific glossy
- magazine. STart features the largest circulation of any domestic Atari
- magazine, and has recently added the subscribers of ANALOG and ST-LOG to
- their rolls. Z*Net will provide about three pages of news bits and news
- stories for each issue of STart. Says Tom Byron, Editor of STart, "Its
- a natural progression. Z*Net has the reputation and track record for
- solid news reporting." Z*Net Publisher Ron Kovacs adds, "This is a
- chance for Z*Net to reach a wider audience, beyond the modem users and
- user-group members who already get the Z*Net News Services." It is
- expected that the added recognition and credibility that the merger of
- efforts will bring to both publications, will further increase the
- quality and quantity of Atari news presented in all media ventures of
- STart and Z*Net. Z*Net is already a regular part of the news coverage
- of a number of magazines worldwide, including PD JOURNAL of Germany and
- soon ST USER of Great Britain. The Z*Net User Group Newsletter
- Supplement also goes to nearly 4,000 readers in the USA, Canada, Panama,
- New Zealand, Australia, and England.
-
-
- STEREO COLOR MONITOR
- Released to dealers this week was a new color monitor to compliment the
- STE's stereo sound. The SC1435 is the latest edition to Atari's ever
- growing line-up of computer products. With the release of the STE
- line's stereo sound capabilities it was a natural to follow it up with
- the SC1435. The monitor is not a re-structured SC1224 as was first
- thought but of a completely different design.
-
-
- ATARI TO BUNDLE NEODESK 3.0
- Atari Canada released fourth quarter promo packages to their dealers in
- which Neodesk 3.0 was included with every ST or STE sold. Neodesk 3.0
- is an alternative desktop for the ST/STE with many of the features
- lacking in the standard Atari Desktop.
-
-
- ATARI FOURTH QUARTER PROMOS
-
- 520STFM Promo
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- @ 520STFM | @ 520STFM
- @ Neodesk 3.0 | @ SC1224 Colour Monitor
- | @ Neodesk 3.0
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- In addition to the 520 packages two software bundles are being offered:
-
- Bundle 1:
- Typing Tutor, Memory Master, General Store, Magical Math, Magical
- Anagram, Equation Builder, Planetarium, Cracked, Neochrome, Super
- Breakout.
-
- Bundle 2:
- Lombard Rally, Hyperpaint, Typing Tutor, Backgammon, Go-Moku.
-
- Promo 2
- _________________________________________________________________
- @ 1040STE | @ 1040STE | @ 1040 STE
- @ Neodesk 3.0 | @ SM124 Monochrome | @ SC1435 Stereo CLR
- | @ Neodesk 3.0 | @ Neodesk 3.0
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Same software bundles are available for the 1040 packages.
-
- Promo 3
- @ Mega 2
- @ SM124 monochrome monitor
- @ Megafile 30 hard drive
- @ SLM804 Laser Printer
- @ Calamus Software
- @ Outline Art Software
- @ Neodesk 3.0
- @ Guide to Calamus Book
-
- Portfolio Bundles
- _________________________________________________________________
- @ HPC-101 Parallel Adapter | @ HPC-301 Card Drive
- @ HPC-202 64K memory Card | @ HPC-203 128K memory Card
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- CANADIAN COMPUTER SHOW
- The Canadian Computer Show, November 12th thru 15th, International
- Centre of Commerce, Toronto Ontario
-
- Judging from last years attendance records of 30,000 plus this is
- definitely Canada's largest computer show. If you couldn't make it to
- Comdex then plan on trying to make it to this one.
-
- Atari will again be attending this great event held each year in
- Toronto. They will be displaying their full product line (including TT)
- with staff on-hand to answer your questions. Check it out - Booth 3530
- Atari Canada.
-
-
- EPSON OFFERS DRIVEPORT WITH LAPTOP
- Epson will begin offering Manzana Microsystems' DrivePort free with the
- purchase of an Equity LT-386SX laptop computer. Using an external drive
- port enables laptop owners to maximize the utility of Epson's removable
- hard drive. The promotion, which runs from Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, offers
- customers a $399 savings based on Manzana's suggested retail price. The
- LT-386SX includes 2 MB of RAM, VGA black-on-white backlit display and a
- 2/3 length AT-compatible expansion slot. The unit is available for a
- suggested retail price of $4,599. System requirements for use with the
- DrivePort include MS-DOS version 3.2 or higher and 16K of RAM.
-
-
- SEGA NAMES PRESIDENT & CEO
- Sega announced that Thomas J. Kalinske has joined Sega as president,
- chief executive officer and member of the board. Kalinske was most
- recently president and chief executive officer of Matchbox International
- and president of Universal Matchbox Group. Prior to that he was
- president of Mattel Inc. and had worked for 15 years at Mattel.
-
-
- MOTOROLA ANNOUNCES SETTLEMENT
- Motorola announced this week that it has reached a settlement with
- Hitachi on intellectual property and technology disputes between the
- companies regarding Hitachi's H/8 and H/16 microcontrollers and
- Motorola's 68030 and 88000 microprocessors. Settlement terms were not
- disclosed. Motorola said it will file joint motions with Hitachi
- before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and the U.S.
- District Court for the Western District of Texas, requesting that all
- pending cases involving Hitachi's microcontrollers and Motorola's
- microprocessors be dismissed.
-
-
- MICROSOFT UNVEILS ENTERTAINMENT PACK
- Microsoft announced this week the availability of Microsoft
- Entertainment Pack for Windows. These games were developed by Microsoft
- Windows graphical environment version 3.0 programmers in their spare
- time and became popular at Microsoft, the company decided to market the
- package commercially. Included in the Microsoft Entertainment Pack are
- Tetris, Taipei, MineSweeper, TicTactics, Golf, Cruel and Pegged.
-
-
- SIERRA ON-LINE ANNOUNCES ALLIANCE
- Sierra has announced the signing of a long term publication and
- distribution agreement with Game Arts of Japan, developers of Sierra's
- first Japanese imports Thexder and Silpheed. Together, the two
- companies will produce high-quality games for the Japanese and American
- game markets. Effective immediately, Sierra will begin converting and
- distributing Game Arts products in the United States and Europe.
-
-
-
-
-
- /// 1990 WAACE ATARIFEST REPORTS
- --------------------------------
-
- REPORT #1 by Jerry Cross
- =========================
-
- I want to begin by saying that the WAACE show was one of the best Atari
- Shows I have attended. And I have been involved in or attended a lot
- of them. One of the things I enjoy most about Atari shows is you can
- get a first look at many new products. This show had them in abundance.
-
- Joppa Computer Products introduced "JuST the FAX!". This is a hardware/
- software product that allows you to send FAX messages using 4800 baud,
- Group 3 FAX transmission. It also doubles as an excellent 2400 baud
- modem that will work with any communication program, such as FLASH.
- The software will allow you to convert IMG, Degas, and ASCII files into
- a FAX file for transmission. There are printer drivers to allow you to
- convert Pagestream and Calamus files to FAX, allowing you to produce
- your page and then FAX it to someone. The price for all of this is $169
- suggest retail. It was sold at the show for $139. I did a few quick
- tests, and sent out a couple Pagestream pages to the FAX machine at work
- and it really works nice! There will be some upcoming upgrades that
- will allow both sending and receiving FAX messages at 9600 baud, and
- adds additional features to the modem. For more info contact Joppa at
- (301)679-4102.
-
- Alpha Systems, had two new products. JamMaster is a powerful software
- program digital sampling synthesizer program loaded with features. It
- requires a cartridge based sound digitizer for output, such as Digisound
- Professional, and a MIDI compatible keyboard. You create your own
- sounds and assign them to your keyboard. You can have up to 32
- different sounds and any number of octaves. Instead of using musical
- sounds, try some digitized voices or sound effects. It's great! Also
- introduced was an inexpensive clock card called Watchcart. This is a
- simple, bare bones cartridge that is just what I was looking for. I'm
- not sure what the retail price was (it wasn't in their flyer) but the
- show price was $12.
-
- HiSoft was showing their line of products, including lattice C Version
- 5, and the new HARLEKIN program. Harlekin is a bunch of useful
- utilities rolled into one neat package. Just to name a few, there is a
- word processor, scrapbook, disk editor, terminal program, calendar,
- ascii table, RAMdisk, printer spooler...and on and on. It does require
- at least 1Mb of memory however. Hisoft is a British company, but I
- believe Michtron is a distributor of this product. (Sorry, I was
- reading my notes about this on the plane trip back, and it was too late
- to ask).
-
- In the Gadgets by Small booth...well what can I say. All sorts of new
- toys over there! Spectre GCR was running on a TT. The 68030 was
- installed and strutting it's stuff. It was running next to a second ST
- running the same bouncing ball demo, at TWICE the speed! The 68030
- upgrade is quite large, and will probably be offered as a Mega upgrade
- only, unless Dave can figure out a way to shrink it down. The Telsa
- coil was a real grin. Can't wait for that to go into mass production.
-
- Sliccware introduced their new product SLICCTOP. WOW! This desktop
- replacement features multi-tasking, code swapping, process queuing,
- unlimited windows, data sharing, code sharing, dynamic memory, and too
- much other stuff to mention! Watch for a review of this product in the
- near future.
-
- ICD introduced their new product, AdSpeed. This is an 68000 accelerator
- for all models of Atari ST's from the 520 through the STE. Using a
- multilayer, surface mount design, the chip is the side of the 68000 chip
- and will be no problem to install. Just unsolder the old chip, install
- a socket and install the AdSpeed. I ordered one at the show and will
- have more information once I can get it installed and play with it. The
- flyer gives the following features: No mouse, I/O or blitter conflicts,
- no jumper wires, software selectable true 68000 8 MHz mode for 100%
- compatibility (switches speeds on the fly without rebooting the
- computer), 32 kilobytes of high speed static RAM for 16k of data/
- instruction cache and 16k of catche tag memory, full read and write-
- through caching for maximum speed, and supports 16 MHZ high speed ROM
- access.
-
- Genie had a few surprises of their own. This month, Genie began their
- new price cutting rates. To help the user even more, they are
- introducing Aladdin. This is a terminal program written by Tim Purves of
- Michtron. You now have full featured program that lets you automate
- your online time by automatically capturing messages and download
- descriptions. You can then read and reply to messages while off line,
- and select files to download. The program will then automatically send
- your messages, and download the files. Full use of the GEM interface
- makes this program a must have for all Genie users. Best of all, it's
- FREE. It should be available for downloading sometime this week.
-
- Add to all of these new products a number of upgrades for many other
- products, and this was a very enjoyable show. The exhibition rooms
- featuring a number of topics were great also! I don't know how they
- lucked out and found a hotel that could fit in so many of these
- "classrooms" but I sure hope they can secure it for future WAACE shows.
-
- But you didn't think I'd leave without complaining about something, did
- you? Will someone please explain the Dulles Toll road to me? You can
- travel from Dulles airport directly to Washington DC for free, but get
- off in the middle and you pay a toll? I smell a loophole in all of
- this!
-
-
- WAACE AtariFest 1990 by Scott Lapham
- ====================================
- Ctsy CompuServe AtariArts Forum
-
-
- I'll start this article out with a one-word first impression of the
- show: WOW. Having been to the last two or three WAACE AtariFests held
- at Fairfax High School, the professional look of this one at the
- Sheraton Reston really impressed me. I think it's the kind of image
- Atari needs to make a comeback in the U.S. I spoke to some of the
- organizers as I was getting ready to leave at about 3:30 P.M. and was
- told their best guess on attendance for the day was 1500. Yes, that's
- one thousand, five hundred! Not bad. The official total was to be
- announced at the 8:00 P.M. banquet. I don't know how accurate the
- number is, but it certainly was crowded the six hours I was there.
- Let's hope tomorrow is as busy.
-
- Now on to the show. There was one very large room that held most of the
- vendors and eight smaller rooms for specialized topics such as
- education, Mac and IBM emulation, midi, games, DTP & productivity, a
- swap meet, users groups and the seminars. Very nice layout. Especially
- with the large turnout. I didn't get to talk to every vendor today, but
- those I missed I'll try to talk to for tomorrow's report.
-
- I'll start with what I thought was the most impressive booth: Gadgets by
- Small. Now I don't even own a Mac emulator (and I don't work for Dave
- Small), but he sure had the STuff to look at!! Would you believe a
- MegaST 4 with 12 megabytes of RAM and running at 18 megahertz!?! I
- actually played with it, too! Boy did that thing fly! And Dave said he
- hasn't even "tweaked" it yet and should be able to get it faster! It
- was equipped with Dave's new 68030 board with 8MB of RAM installed.
- That, along with the 4 megs of the Mega, made up the 12. This may be
- the way to go if you just want blind speed and don't need the extras the
- TT has. No, it's not available yet (nor is the price), but Dave says he
- will be marketing it in the future. He also had Spectre GCR running on
- a TT and a Telsa coil demo at his booth. If you're going to be at the
- show tomorrow, and missed the Gadgets booth today, make sure you take
- the time to check it out.
-
- D.A. Brumleve was there with the latest versions of all her great KID
- programs: KIDPublisher Pro 6.2, KIDGrid 1.6, KIDPainter 2.3a and a new
- one (to the public) called Telgram (already at version 2.5) that allows
- kids to send each other "telegrams", complete with music.
-
- Debonair Software was represented by J. Andrzej Wrotniak and was showing
- a new version (1.3) of ElCal, the math machine. Star Base v1.02, a
- complex astronomy program, was also on display. Mr. Wrotniak informed
- me that the public domain versions of these two programs (SubCal and
- Star 2000) would be uploaded to CompuServe sometime this weekend, so
- look for them.
-
- Goldleaf Publishing, Inc. had version 1.1 of Wordflair for sale at their
- booth, although you couldn't upgrade version 1.0 at the show even if you
- had brought along your original disk. The upgrade is only available by
- mail. I was told Wordflair 2 would be available right after Comdex with
- LOTS of new features.
-
- HiSoft was there showing Lattice C version 5 (not related to version 3)
- and a new version of their Devpac ST assembler. They wanted everyone to
- know that they were still supporting the ST, even though Michtron, who
- was distributing their products, has decided not to continue to carry
- them anymore. They will also be supporting the TT.
-
- NeoDesk 3 was available at the Gribnif Software booth to both new and
- old users. Upgrading was available to registered user "while-u-wait".
- They seemed to be pretty busy every time I passed by.
-
- Joe Waters of Current Notes was there selling his magazine and wanted
- everyone to know that his entire public domain or Spectre software
- libraries are now available on 44 meg cartridges.
-
- Branch Always Software was upgrading Quick ST II to version 2.2 and
- mentioned that Quick ST III was still in the works. For those of you
- that didn't get a manual with Quick Tools, it was available at the show.
- I got mine and it looks like it will really help me to use all the great
- programs in this package.
-
- A newcomer, Frontier Software, was attending their first U.S. show
- today. They were selling a cartridge-type clock called "Forget-Me-Clock
- II" which allows other cartridges to be plugged into it so the cartridge
- slot isn't lost when using the clock. They also had a product called
- the "Xtra-RAM STe Solder-Free RAM Upgrade" that looked good. For you
- entrepreneurs out there, they mentioned that they are looking for
- dealers and/or distributors in the U.S. for their products. Go for it.
-
- Double Click Software had new version of both DC Desktop and DC
- Utilities and were upgrading at the show. The new versions are 1.2a for
- Desktop and 2.0 for Utilities. If you have older versions of these
- programs, upgrade them. They have been extensively improved.
-
- Talon Technologies had LOTS of SuperChargers for sale. And at a reduced
- price for the show. They included the new version 1.4 of the software
- too, which they were also upgrading for anyone that had earlier
- versions. TC Power was being shown which allows you to use your Atari's
- RAM as expanded memory and 64K of extended memory. A software upgrade
- to OmniSwitch was also available for a reasonable price.
-
- Of course Codehead Software was there with lots of STuff. All the
- latest versions of their software was available to be sold or upgraded.
- Two new programs were being shown too: CodeKeys! (customized mouse and
- keyboard macros for any program) and LookIt! & PopIt! (a file viewer/
- binary editor & desk accessory that lets you assign "hot keys" to your
- DA's). If you need to know if you have the latest version of any
- Codehead program, they are: CodeKeys!-1.1, LookIt! & PopIt!-1.0, G+Plus
- -1.3, MultiDesk-2.1, HotWire-2.3, MaxiFile-2.0, CodeHead Utilities-Rel.
- 3 and MIDIMAX-1.3.
-
- Data Innovations was showing version 2.11 of their excellent hard drive
- backup program Diamond Back II. They were upgrading at the show also.
- 3 in 1 College & Pro Football and Basketball, the Pro Game was selling
- too.
-
- The Atari Corp. booth was pretty busy. It had STE's on display running
- demo's to show off the colors and sound. Quite impressive. One area
- was reserved for the Portfolio and was displaying two new products: the
- Portfolio PC Card Drive (HPC301) which lets your desktop PC read and
- write to Atari Portfolio Memory Cards, with data exchange happening in
- an instant; and a Finance Card, which turns your Portfolio into a
- financial genius with amortization schedules, break-even analyses,
- compound investments and depreciation alternatives.
-
- There were lots of other vendors and I hope to talk to them all
- tomorrow. Look here for another report. But before I finish, I did
- attend one seminar which I'd like to report on today. The Bob Brodie
- and "Atari Corporation: Live!" seminar. This was kind of a special day
- for Bob as it was his 1 year anniversary with Atari. Also, the WAACE
- AtariFest 1989 was the first show he attended in his current job. He
- spoke about his first Atari system (a 400) and his current one (Mega ST
- 4). About how he first discovered "users groups". He got quite a
- response when he told one particular story of his early days as Users
- Group Coordinator. Seems he told his bosses that his policy was to
- always tell the public the "truth" and nothing but the "truth". When
- questioned by his superiors why he thought this policy would work, Bob
- replied, "Because you never tried it before." Let's hope Bob stays
- around for a long time!
-
-
- WAACE ATARIFEST 1990 - DAY 2 by Scott Lapham
- Ctsy CompuServe AtariArts Sig
-
-
- First off, I'd like to apologize to all of the people that I didn't
- write about in yesterday's article who were at the show and showing/
- selling a product. I tried to get to everyone but was not successful.
- I'm kind of new at this and hope I'll do better (if asked) in the
- future. It was hard trying to concentrate on writing the article and
- seeing all the things that were there to see.
-
- The second day of Atarifest 1990 was much less crowded than the first
- day, but I didn't hear too many people complaining. Overall, the
- vendors were very pleased with the show and from more than one
- perspective. They liked selling all the products (of course), but a lot
- of them also mentioned how nice the people were. Words like "pleasant"
- and "enthusiastic" were often used. One vendor said it was nice to be
- at a show without "Atari-bashers" everywhere. I'll second that motion.
-
- Here are some quotes from day 2 on sales: "We did about the same as last
- year", L&Y Electronics; "We sold out of all the SuperChargers we
- brought. On a scale of one to ten, I'd give the show an 8", Talon
- Technologies; "This was the second best show I've ever been to (behind
- Toronto)", Branch Always Software; "Our first day here was better than
- all of last year", ISD Marketing; "Much better than last year...close to
- best show ever", CodeHead Software; "First day was 50 percent better
- than last year", Debonair Software; "Best show this year...better than
- last year", D.A. Brumleve; "Excellent, although it helps to debut a new
- product", WizWorks; "About the same as last year", Current Notes; "Very
- good...about the same as Glendale, which was the second best show this
- year (behind WOA)", Zubair Interfaces, Inc; "Very good...as good as
- Glendale, which was best ever", Gribnif Software; "Great...better than
- last year", Joppa Computers; "Not quite as good as last year", Best
- Electronics; "Good...made more contacts than expected and almost sold
- out of product", Frontier Software (their first U.S. show); "Great...did
- lots of updates", Data Innovations; "I wasn't selling but all my fliers
- about the 68030 board are gone...lots of interest shown", Gadgets by
- Small; "Good show...best this year", Double Click Software.
-
- The above said, it wasn't ALL positive. There were a few complaints
- about the lack of chairs for the people working the booths. Made for a
- long day. And bigger booths were mentioned too. On the flip side of
- that, Darek of BRA said WAACE did "an incredible job". He said they
- sent "lots" of updates to vendors to keep them on top of what was going
- on before the show. He rates it best in organization and advertising
- this year and thinks WAACE deserves applause.
-
- Before I go, I'd like to mention a few things from the "Atari
- Corporation: Technically Speaking" seminar. Ken Badertscher (the "TOS
- god" according to Bob Brodie) felt the day was right for some "true
- confessions". He said the resolution bug in STE TOS (1.6) "may" have
- been caused by some people working long and hard one weekend to get 1.6
- out the door and "maybe" some of TOS 1.4 code got mixed up with it when
- being put together. He said TOS 1.62 fixes this but doesn't know if
- 1.62 will be available to the public soon or ever. Also, he said the
- DMA problem with the STE "may" have been caused by someone putting in
- the wrong chip at the factory. Even if true, it's not happening
- anymore. Enough of "true confessions". He also said that a new GDOS
- (which supports scaleable outline fonts) was for real. Sounds like good
- news to me. When asked if UIS-III, QuickST, etc. would ever be included
- in a version of TOS, the answer was N-O. Too expensive. Oh, well.
-
- I'll end on a note you "insiders" may enjoy; How much memory does it
- take to open a VDI workstation? Answer: 3K. (hmmmm...it got lots of
- laughs at the show?!) Cheers.
-
-
- WAACE ATARIFEST 1990
- ====================
- Ctsy GEnie ST RT Cat 11 Topic 6
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 121 Sat Oct 06, 1990
- DARLAH [RT~SYSOP] at 18:03 EDT
-
- The show has been really busy. I am not sure of the numbers. The door
- people say there has been about 1200 to 1500 registered but I thought it
- felt like a whole lot more. I know the developers that I talked to were
- all very happy. The booths packed where developers had a hard time
- getting back into their own booths. I am impressed with the quality of
- the show and am glad that they held it in this sort of environment.
-
- Dave Small really did show his Tesla coil. I even helped in holding the
- various light bulbs. I couldn't believe that he brought it. The guy is
- a kick and proved to be a highlight of the show.
-
- GEnie was showing Aladdin for the ST. The general public should see
- this one VERY soon. It will not only automate your time but save you
- the much needed $$ that we all need to do with the holidays coming up.
-
- Numerous developers were available at the show. I think everyone that
- is on the list J.D.BARNES uploaded earlier in this thread showed. Not
- one commented negatively.
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 133 Mon Oct 08, 1990
- J.MEEHAN3 [Joe] at 07:50 EDT
-
- Just Back from WAACE (an 8 hour drive with no sleep)
-
- Some quick notes,
-
- Two 030 boards at the show, working! Estimated delivery late 1990?
- Two TTs seen working!
- A Hyper Card sort of program for the ST.
- Aladdin Working - I had a chance to play with it a little and it looks
- great. Thanks GEnie and Tom Purves (sorry Tom about the spelling)
- Aladdin, a special program to do all you want to do on GEine easier and
- quicker (save$) should be available later this week for download. Only
- charge will be for download. Watch for an announcement in the ST RT
- banner.
-
- Many thanks to all the hard working WAACE people and all those who put
- this very professional and fun show together. Thanks for the tickets
- Russ.
-
- Charles Johnson gave a great speech at the dinner Sat night. How about
- posting the text in the library? I have my copy but I am sure that
- others would be interested.
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 134 Mon Oct 08, 1990
- NEVIN-S at 09:30 EDT
-
- The WAACE show was GREAT. It was my first show displaying Tracker/ST
- and as a vendor I was very happy. I met a bunch of my registered users,
- and had a lot of success selling both to the general public and to the
- stores that had booths at the show. I think all of the other vendors
- were very happy as well.
-
- Since I was at the Step Ahead Software booth all day I didn't really
- have a chance to see much else. Gadgets and Jim Allen each had their
- own separate 68030 boards (at different booths). They both seemed nice.
- CodeHead was doing blockbuster business and there were always a bunch of
- people at the Gribnif booth. Joppa introduced a Fax system for the ST.
- Mr. HyperLink came down from Canada to introduce his product (but I did
- not see his speech). Nathan was at the Toad Computer booth showing
- folks the entire Calamus line. The happiest area of the show seemed to
- be the Dorothy Brumleve table next to the WizWorks/Dr. Bob table. There
- were always a few young folks using KidPublisher Pro and smiling, and
- people lined up to use MugShot and check out Image Cat. Lots of folks
- got videotaped (including me) for a Mug Shot compilation disk. That 2
- table area was definitely hopping.
-
- Charles speech was very good and it has already been uploaded as part of
- ST Report.
-
- Neil Harris was at the show and he looked great. I think working at
- GEnie (not working for Atari??!!) agrees with him.
-
- Darlah looked more beautiful than ever and was showing Aladdin with help
- from Jeff Williams and author Tim Purves. Dan McNamee had SoftSource
- running on a Moniterm.
-
- I did not have a chance to go to any of the seminars. But the show was
- definitely a success. The hotel was nice, the exhibition space was
- good, the crowds were good, people were in a good mood and no shots were
- fired. <grin>
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 135 Mon Oct 08, 1990
- ISD [Nathan] at 15:45 EDT
-
- It was a great show. The organization by WAACE was excellent and let me
- add my congratulations to their chairman, Russ Brown for the superb job.
- All the Developers enjoyed themselves without exception. We all met
- lots of our customers and there was an excellent turnout overall. The
- response to Aladdin was great. I might also add that at one point Eric
- Rosenquist of Steno/Stalker fame manned one of the GEnie stations
- showing off his product as well. Eric came down from Ottawa, more than
- a few hour drive. :-) Bob Brodie talked to a packed house. The room
- held 216 seats. Every seat was taken and then so were all the walls.
- :-) Can he pack them in. :-) Let me also thank all those of you that
- attended the Calamus seminar that I put on. It wasn't quite as packed
- as Bob's as there were maybe a few dozen empty seats, :-) but there were
- more than enough to make for an interesting discussion. Thank you to
- all that attended. The banquet was packed. Not an empty seat in the
- place and Charles' speech was highly entertaining. One excerpt comes to
- mind, something about picturing Jim Allen as the white rabbit in Alice
- in Wonderland. Those that have met the diminutive Jim, imagine him in a
- bunny suit if you will. :-) I'm sure that many other posts will appear
- in the next few days so I will leave it to those more erudite than I to
- fill you in. Great show Russ, thanks!!
-
-
-
-
- /// KIDPUBLISHER PROFESSIONAL
- -----------------------------
- ST DTP Program For Young Writers!
-
- by Penny Ormston
- (Reprinted from the Puget Sound Atari News, September 1990)
-
-
- I was quite surprised when I looked in the mail last week and discovered
- a package from Jim Chapman. I was even more surprised when I saw what
- was in it; a copy of Kidpublisher Professional and a request for a
- review! Well, I like good surprises.
-
- Kidpublisher Professional comes with one red disk, a red registration
- card, an Instruction manual for Parents and Teachers, an instruction
- sheet for the kids, and four extra disk labels for your own copies.
- There is no copy protection on the disk, and you are encouraged to make
- as many copies as you need.
-
- CUSTOMIZING
-
- There is an installation program on the disk that allows you to
- customize each disk. One selection offers either 5 or 10 pages of text
- and pictures in memory, depending on preference and computer memory.
- The pages will then be automatically loaded along with the program. The
- installation program also allows/disallows a LOAD function. With the
- load option, other sets of pages can be entered from the program. These
- loaded pages must come from a separate disk and have several large alert
- boxes to make the disk-swapping easier for youngsters. You can also
- allow/disallow a TITLE option with the installation program. The Title
- option prints out a title page without a picture that includes a story
- title, author and artist credits, all centered on the page. The last
- option available with the installation program is the QUIT function.
- This allows you to exit to the desktop after saving your work.
-
- USING KIDPUBLISHER PROFESSIONAL
-
- --The Drawing Board
-
- The drawing screen for Kidpublisher Professional is very similar to
- Kidpainter. However there are no colors, only 10 fill patterns
- (including solid black), and there is no text option. As with
- Kidpainter, the drawing program in Kidpublisher is very easy to use.
- There are usually several children at my house every day (aside from my
- own four), so there were many eager hands to try this program out. They
- had fun drawing their pictures with Kidpublisher Professional, although
- there were several times when someone would complain about the lack of
- color. I can understand the lack of color, it is a publishing program
- and the color would not show in the printout anyway.
-
- What I did not understand was the limit of only 10 fill patterns, and
- the absence of text on the picture area. The text option alone would
- add considerable versatility to the program, allowing a title at the top
- of a page, cartoon-like dialog boxes, etc. Instead the picture can only
- be a picture.
-
- There are functions for circles, boxes, lines, and free drawing which
- all work in the usual way. There are erasers in three different sizes
- for erasing large areas to tiny specks. There is an UNDO function for
- correcting mistakes, and a BLANK function to erase the entire screen.
- The entire drawing program is extremely user friendly. Even the
- children who were unfamiliar with computers or with using a mouse had no
- difficulty using the program.
-
- --The Text Screen
-
- The text screen allows you to type in text up to seven lines of thirty-
- three characters each. This is not very much to someone like me who is
- always locked into verbose mode, however none of the children who tried
- it found it limiting at all. There is an underline function to
- underline key words, but none of the children tried it. There is a
- FONT function which allows you to change fonts. There are four built in
- fonts and the option to create your own font, but a DEGAS-compatible
- paint program must be used to create it. Only one font is allowed at a
- time, but the kids didn't mind that either. When a font is changed, it
- doesn't mess up the layout of the text, which is nice.
-
- Typing in the text is very simple, and the program automatically word-
- wraps at the end of each line. Each space on the "page" is shown and
- the mouse can be used to move the cursor to an exact line and space on
- the page. If the cursor is moved in front of some text, any new text is
- automatically inserted at the cursor position. Likewise, if delete is
- pressed the cursor is moved one space to the left and any text following
- the cursor is also moved one space to the left.
-
- All in all, the text portion of the program is extremely simple and very
- easy to use even for young children.
-
- PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
-
- The layout of pages for Kidpublisher Professional are always the same.
- The top half of the page is the picture and the lower portion is the
- text. There is no way to change this format, and there is no way to add
- text to the top portion of the screen. There is a form included with
- Kidpublisher Professional to get a text only program, similar to
- Kidpublisher only with text on the entire page, but you must send in an
- additional $10 for this program. It would have been much better if it
- had been included instead.
-
- Page numbering is optional, but is limited to the 5 to 10 set in the
- Installation program. If you have something saved as page 3 and you
- want it for page 1 there is no way to change this. Even if you are very
- careful when setting up the pages, you are out of luck if your story
- goes beyond page 10. (If you want the pages numbered, that is). I
- found it better to just leave off the page numbering.
-
- In spite of the limitations I have stated above, I can forsee many uses
- for Kidpublisher Professional. The kids already like using it to write
- short simple stories, or to teach things. It can make nice additions
- to normal letter writing, so that even the usually non-writing children
- can add something personal. I plan on using it with my sunday school
- class to make handouts for special lessons, or leave the top portion
- blank so the children can draw a picture to go along with some
- prewritten text. The very things that make it limiting also make it
- fast and easy to use.
-
- D. A. Brumleve
- P.O. Box 4195
- Urbana, IL 61801-8820
- (217) 337-1937
-
-
-
- /// GADGETS BY SMALL'S 68030 BOARD
- ----------------------------------
- A MEGA 12 AT 18.4 MHZ!!!
-
- ----------------------
- Messages captured from
- the GEnie GADGETS RT
- reprinted by
- permission
-
-
- Category 2, Topic 25 Message 185 Mon Oct 08, 1990
- STACE [RT SysOp] at 19:36 EDT
-
- After the WAACE show this last weekend it is now no secret that both
- Fast Technology (Jim Allen) and Gadgets by Small (Dave Small) are
- working on 68030 boards INDEPENDENT from one another.
-
- I have been informed that the 030 board that Gadgets showed at WAACE
- also contained 8 megs of on-board RAM (boosting a Mega 4 to 12 megs of
- RAM total) as well as a 68882 math co-processor. The unit shown at
- WAACE was running at 18mhz.
-
- Mark
- ------------
- Category 2, Topic 25 Message 187 Tue Oct 09, 1990
- G.RICHARDSO1 [G.RICHARDSON] at 08:10 EDT
-
- Mark, I can give you more info on the 68030 board, but I'm kind of
- biased and won't compare it to Jim's board (since I designed Dave's
- *grin*).
-
- The Gadgets 68030 is currently a Mega only expansion board that replaces
- the 68000 in your machine. Remove the 68000, put in a socket, pull the
- TOS chips from the motherboard and plug in the '030. No other wires or
- connections are required. There is no "68000 compatibility mode",
- although most stuff that doesn't depend on the 68000 stack size should
- work. For those of you with 520's, 1040's and Ste's, after this board
- is on the market, Gadgets hopes to market reduced implementations for
- your machines.
-
- Now the specs: The board is completely asynchronous to the ST bus, which
- means we can run it from a minimum of about 16.2mhz anywhere up to a
- possible max of 33mhz. At the time of the show we only had 16 mhz 68030
- chips, but were running them at 18.4mhz. More speed, more cost seems to
- be the only limit so far. The board has TOS 1.6 on board. Atari has
- committed to licensing TOS 1.6 to Gadgets for use in the board. This is
- required because earlier TOS's were not processor independent. The
- board has a socket for a 68881/68882 math co-processor. There is also a
- full 32 bit expansion bus connector on the card. Unlike the TT which
- has only a 16 bit VME bus, the '030 has a connector which brings all the
- 68030 processor signals out for use by expansion boards. I'm afraid to
- talk about all the ideas that have been proposed for using this bus.
-
- Now the gotcha: The board has no cache outside of that inside the
- processor. Why? Because it can have up to 8 megabytes of high speed
- ram that supports 68030 burst mode for up to 0 (yes ZERO) wait states!
- This is the equivalent of the TT FastRam. It cannot support video or
- DMA (same as TT) but any programs run from Fast ram are more than just
- fast. Let's say that you're running at exactly 16 mhz and your friend
- has a 16 mhz 68000 board with cache. Both boards have a clock cycle of
- 62.5 ns. The 68000 board requires 4 clocks for one access. Assuming
- that all the information required is in the cache, to access 4 long
- words (32 bit wide) would take 32 clocks or 2000 ns. On the 68030 board
- only 2 clocks are required for an access to the 32 bit wide fast ram.
- And in burst mode the next 3 accesses can be done in 1 clock each! So,
- with one wait state on the 1st access (3 clocks) and no waits on the
- next 3, (3 more clocks) the total access time would be 6 clocks or 375
- ns! That's 5.33 times as fast as ANY 68000 accelerator at the same
- clock speed (and the board can go more than twice as fast as the fastest
- 68000), and 10.66 times the speed of the standard ST at 16 mhz. Who
- needs a cache?
-
- George Richardson
- Biased Designer
- Merlin's Associates
- ------------
- Category 2, Topic 25 Message 194 Wed Oct 10, 1990
- T.GREENE at 21:16 MDT
-
- George - You gave a startling performance comparison between your 030
- board and the basic 68000. Would the 030 have to be executing specific
- 030 instructions to perform the memory move in so few cycles? I doubt
- that much 030 specific software will ever show up for the ST.
-
- ------------
- Category 2, Topic 25 Message 195 Thu Oct 11, 1990
- DAVESMALL at 00:35 EDT
-
- Nope, that's executing plain-Jane 68000 code. That's why the 68030 is
- such a screamer when running in our system -- the way George did it.
-
- We'll be posting benchmarks as soon as we're done with the system
- software end. The board is very, very strong.
-
- We now have 33 Mhz 68030 chips and can start getting into third gear
- with the system, and the fastRAM support really isn't all that bad to
- code up. I don't perceive that as a time factor.
-
- Interest at the show was extreme. We gave out three boxes (the big
- Xerox ones that hold two 8 1/2" reams of paper side by side, a foot
- deep) of literature in *one day* -- and I can tell you, the board has
- nose prints on it from being looked at so closely.
-
- The wonderful thing about fastRAM, to me, is that it's 8 megabytes of
- RAM that runs at warp speed (the realistic limits are WAY above 16 mhz)
- and the video contention inside the ST doesn't strangle things. Good
- stuff!
-
- Anyway, this was the world-wide debut of the board, and we're happy it's
- done. (Chuckle: I toasted George at a dinner Friday night. Next table
- over in the restaurant were some ST people, including Gordon and Ralph
- -- you should have heard the dead silence when I congratulated George on
- the 68030 board being done!)
-
- We have some software to do, and George has normal cleanup on the board
- to polish off, then we're set.
-
- Price cannot be set until we get quantity pricing on parts. But we'll
- keep you up to date.
-
- Incidentally, yes, we split with Jim Allen during the summer, and are
- trying to keep things amicable between us.
-
- The comparisons between the two boards ought to be quite interesting
- -- especially depending on who writes them!
-
- -- thanks, all / Dave / Gadgets
-
- p.s. Mega-12/68030. Now that's a machine.
- ------------
- Category 2, Topic 25 Message 196 Thu Oct 11, 1990
- J.ALLEN27 at 01:37 EDT
-
- Those ram access figures are quite impressive George, congratulations.
- For comparison the MacIIci is a 25Mhz machine that runs burst cycles of
- 5,3,3,3 or 560ns for 4 longwords. They are using 80ns nibble mode rams
- but still use a cache to get another 30% out of the system, sounds like
- you've beat them!!!
- ---------------------
-
-
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