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- TidBITS#16/13-Aug-90
- ====================
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- Macworld Impressions
- No More Peanuts
- Coming Soon, Version 2.0
- Here And Now, The Sequels
- Do It By Hand
- Reviews/07-Aug-90
- Reviews/13-Aug-90
-
-
- Macworld Impressions
- --------------------
- First, a small disclaimer. We both grew up in the country and
- usually get sick when we visit large cities for more than three
- days. Boston is no exception to this rule. That put a damper on
- things, and the 95% humidity and occasional downpours didn't help
- in the damp category either. But we still enjoyed ourselves.
-
- It was a good show, although only a few products were introduced,
- which cut down on the surprise value a bit. Some who had been to
- the San Francisco Macworld said there was no reason to have gone
- to both this year. Most major Macintosh companies were there,
- though there were some notable absences, such as Quark, Letraset,
- and Symantec, and several other firms such as Pinnacle Micro and
- PCPC canceled at the last minute. We were especially distraught
- about the last two, since we had wanted to see Pinnacle Micro's
- 130 megabyte erasable optical drive and PCPC's Flipper monitor
-
- The companies having the most fun were clearly Delta Tao Software
- and Baseline Publishing. Delta Tao showed off its inexpensive
- 32-bit paint program, Color MacCheese, and a utility called Polly
- MacBeep, which allows you to assign weights to different beep
- sounds so the Mac will pick a semi-random (biased by the
- weightings) sound for each beep. Polly MacBeep was $10 and we
- bought it, partly to support the company, which has a refreshing
- view on the software market (make software fun and cheap and give
- the workers titles like "Foundling" and "Girl Friday.") Delta Tao
- was also giving away demo disks and t-shirts to anyone who could
- make a basket with Nerf basketballs, an endeavour which a
- surprising number of people were good at. Baseline Publishing
- (which also sells Color MacCheese) was staffed by people who were
- having trouble taking things seriously because its main product is
- the latest incarnation of the Talking Moose, that Bullwinkle-clone
- who pops up and tells you things you may or may not wish to hear
- during periods of inactivity. Baseline had Moose t-shirts as well
- but weren't giving them away for feats of athletic prowess.
-
- WordPerfect won the prize for best demo, as they managed to garner
- the enthusiasm of a high school pep rally without resorting to
- peer pressure. They appealed to a much baser instinct, greed, by
- giving watchers M&Ms and passing out freebies like WordPerfect
- mugs, pens, and shoulder bags during the demo. We recommend the
- M&M trick for giving a demos since it keeps audience members
- happy, raises their blood sugar to keep them awake, and lets them
- do something with their hands while watching. Extremely effective.
- Worst try goes to Microsoft with its Network News-style demos that
- had two announcers and lots of glitz on multiple monitors. It
- probably didn't help that Microsoft didn't have any new Mac
- products and couldn't get away with showing Windows.
-
- The most satisfying companies to talk to were Paragon Concepts,
- Software Ventures, and Delta Tao. The satisfaction level increases
- with the importance of the person you talk to, which made the
- hour-long discussion we had with the president of Paragon, Jerzy
- Lewak, about the features of Nisus 3.0 and the things which he
- hadn't gotten to fixing yet, a good way to solidify product
- loyalty. We enjoyed talking to Leonard Rosenthol, the programmer
- of MicroPhone II, about the new interface to CompuServe that will
- be included with the next version of MicroPhone II (from what we
- saw, it will be better than the dedicated interface that
- CompuServe is pushing to compete with America Online). Delta Tao
- was fun too, since the only staff they had there were people who
- worked on Color MacCheese and Polly MacBeep. Nothing like talking
- to a programmer in a t-shirt as opposed to a suited-up salesthing.
-
- LaCie won the award for best prize with the bright red Mazda Miata
- it was giving away, but the more realistic prizes were better at
- the LaserMax booth, where we each received a copy of Guy
- Kawasaki's "The Macintosh Way" after listening to a demo.
- Unfortunately, the salesthing there didn't know the first thing
- about printer controllers and engines, so we felt a bad about
- getting free hardcover books for two minutes of asking
- unanswerable questions. GCC was giving away lots of sun glasses
- and frisbees and beach balls if you scratched off the three
- circles on its game card, but we won a Polaroid One-Step Flash
- camera that way. The person at the booth was surprised, but gladly
- gave it to us.
-
- Perhaps the most coveted freebie of the show was Apple Developer
- Technical Support's Moof! buttons, which are small green buttons
- with a dogcow and the word Moof! underneath. We received buttons
- for doing TidBITS (thanks to Mark Johnson!) and while we were
- there another Apple employee came to get another button because
- someone had ripped hers off of her blouse the day before. Some
- people will stop at nothing for a dogcow :-).
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
-
- No More Peanuts
- ---------------
- The computer industry is by its nature wasteful of natural
- resources. A computer may last for a number of years, but have you
- ever heard of recycling a dead computer? Some companies are trying
- to reduce waste, most notably Hewlett-Packard, which isn't too
- surprising considering that David Packard's daughter, Julie, is a
- prominent environmentalist. HP announced a toner cartridge
- recycling program a few months ago that recycles cartridges from
- people who would otherwise throw their cartridges away. PC WEEK
- has run articles on what Apple does to recycle paper and other
- goods used in general office life, and cited amazing figures -
- Apple recycled over 365 tons of paper, 600 pounds of aluminum, and
- 4.6 tons of glass from last October to this April.
-
- More recently, though, MacConnection has started to do its part
- and in a way many of us will see. The company has stopped using
- styrofoam peanuts as packaging material, moving instead to better
- sized boxes and newsprint, which can be recycled. (Ever wonder
- what the half-life of a styrofoam peanut is? I figure the
- cockroaches will be living in them after the human race has gone
- by the wayside.)
-
- The only use we found for peanuts was to stuff them into a large
- beanbag we got from an old housemate. With use, the peanuts
- gradually crunch down and make room for new ones as new packages
- arrive. It works well, although the Poof was a bit full after we
- ordered a keyboard from MacWarehouse that came in box the size of
- a 19" television, chock full of pink peanuts. In any event, hats
- off to MacConnection for taking a stand on the issue. They even
- included the book "50 Simple Things You Can Do To Save The Earth"
- in the bag of software we bought at Macworld. Admittedly, it was a
- big bag and we bought small software so there was lots of room,
- but we were surprised and pleased to find the book.
-
- Another way to preserve natural resources is to avoid using them.
- That was one of the motivations behind the distribution methods we
- use for TidBITS. Short of a small amount of electricity that would
- probably be used anyway and the occasional disk, the only resource
- TidBITS uses is time, and we don't think of the time as wasted.
- The other advantage is that costs are low, something which Delta
- Tao Software found with its Polly MacBeep. Like shareware
- programs, you only get a disk. No fancy packaging, no shrink-wrap,
- no printed manual. Delta Tao was able to sell Polly MacBeep for
- $10 (even numbered prices are pleasantly refreshing), which is
- less than many shareware fees, although Delta Tao does get its
- money up front and thus probably makes more.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
- Related articles:
- PC WEEK -- 16-Jul-90, Vol. 7 #28, pg. 117
- PC WEEK -- 30-Jul-90, Vol. 7 #30, pg. 117
-
-
- Coming Soon, Version 2.0
- ------------------------
- As we've said, Macworld wasn't a show full of innovation this
- year. We did see some neat things, and we saw some stuff so
- expensive we didn't even bother to look at it, but mainly it was
- the show of the upgrade. Unfortunately, many of the upgrades
- weren't to be had for mere mortals.
-
- The most notable absentee upgrade was HyperCard 2.0, though
- developers were able to show their stuff running under beta
- versions. Kevin Calhoun, the project leader, gave a nice demo of
- HyperCard 2.0 to the brave souls assembled at the User Group
- Breakfast at 7:00 AM, including a stack listing the top ten
- tongue-in-cheek reasons why HyperCard is not shipping. I stopped
- taking notes when I graduated from Cornell, so you'll have to
- guess at what they are.
-
- CE Software demoed QuicKeys 2.0 (shipping soon for a $49 upgrade
- fee, $39 if you picked up a form at Macworld), and it looks like
- it has added nice features, like a recorder that records your
- movements and plays them back with the same timing as the
- original. The Quick Reference Card is "hot" now, in that you can
- click on a macro listing to run the macro, rather than having to
- quit the card and remember the keystrokes.
-
- Later this fall, WordPerfect 2.0 will become a true Macintosh word
- processor (while still retaining the code system for people who
- find it an aid in analyzing document weirdness), with a better
- interface that allows easy manipulation of column, tables, rulers,
- and the like. WordPerfect 2.0 includes a hefty graphics editor
- that can put graphics under text, on top of text, or within the
- text. The macros are editable and are probably pretty similar to
- the macro language in WordPerfect 5.1 for the PC. Good, but my
- money's still on Nisus.
-
- Adobe hasn't been sitting around either. It announced version 3.0
- of Illustrator, its high-end graphics package. New features
- include improved text handling - ATM 2.0 will be bundled with it -
- graphing abilities, and an improved interface.
-
- CE Software -- 515/224-1995
- WordPerfect -- 800/336-3614 -- 801/226-5522
- Adobe Systems -- 415/961-4400
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 07-Aug-90, Vol. 4 #27, pg. 3
- MacWEEK -- 31-Jul-90, Vol. 4 #26, pg. 1
-
-
- Here And Now, The Sequels
- -------------------------
- The amount of upgrades that you can actually buy now is
- impressive. Nisus 3.0, which sports a full programming language
- for fancy text manipulation, is shipping. Paragon included most of
- the features I asked for, so if you have any suggestions, by all
- means, call them, they do listen. Ashton-Tate upgraded Full Impact
- to 2.0 and the program might have gotten its act together enough
- to seriously compete with Excel. About time.
-
- The only impressive hardware upgrade I remember well was the new
- Bernoulli drives from Iomega. They are a bit more expensive than
- the Syquest mechanisms and are as reliable and crash-free as ever,
- but now they sport access times and transfer rates as fast as the
- Syquests. They look like a good backup medium if you can compress
- your hard disk into 44 megabytes.
-
- Utility-wise, a number of popular programs hit the 2.0 and 3.0
- mark. Salient Software's DiskDoubler is now at version 3.0, which
- marks its third upgrade since this spring. We're using it and like
- it a lot so far (in other words, it provided another 5 megabytes
- of space). After Dark 2.0 from Berkeley Systems is a significant
- upgrade and includes more modules (with Fish! from Tom and Ed's
- Bogus Software), sound capabilities, and the ability to show more
- than one module at once, either overlapping or in separate tiles.
- StuffIt Deluxe looks interesting, and although we didn't get a
- chance to look at it closely, it can do things like move files
- from archive to archive in a manner just like copying files in the
- Finder. Finally, Adobe's ATM 2.0 doesn't include any new features,
- unless you count doubled speed and better screen display quality.
-
- Paragon Concepts -- 800/922-2993 -- 619/481-1477
- Ashton-Tate -- 213/329-9989
- Iomega -- 800/456-5522
- Salient Software -- 800/326-0092 -- 415/852-9567
- Berkeley Systems -- 415/540-5536
- Aladdin Systems -- 408/685-9175
- Adobe Systems -- 415/961-4400
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 07-Aug-90, Vol. 4 #27, pg. 22
- MacWEEK -- 14-Aug-90, Vol. 4 #28, pg. 5
- MacWEEK -- 31-Jul-90, Vol. 4 #26, pg. 5
-
-
- Do It By Hand
- -------------
- Perhaps the largest growing market in hardware is for hand
- scanners. Just a short while ago, there were only one or two
- brands which used the same hardware and were unimpressive unless
- you regularly scanned images less than four inches wide. They
- required a steady hand and even spawned small plastic guides to
- help you scan straight. And if you wanted to scan a full page,
- have fun stitching the images together in your paint program.
-
- The early scanners were at the show in newer forms, each with
- better features than before, but still lacking in utility in my
- eyes. However, several companies were showing hand scanners that
- broke through the old limitations. My personal favorite was Mouse
- Systems PageBrush, which does work as advertised. You put a
- picture under a piece of plexiglass and scan it. It really is like
- wiping the fog off of a bathroom mirror or the condensation from a
- windshield. You can re-scan small parts if you make errors in the
- image manipulation, which is a wonderful way to provide Undo
- capabilities. Also, because the plexiglass panel is flexible and
- movable, you can scan uneven surfaces or vertical surfaces (like
- wallpaper). The software it came with was decent, although we were
- so amazed at the PageBrush itself that we didn't look to closely
- at the software. It's fast and only requires 2 megabytes of RAM
- and can save as TIFF files, which OCR programs can import and
- process. Oh, and the whole thing doubles as an optical mouse when
- you don't want to scan. All for a list price of $699. What more
- could you want?
-
- Color, for one. Asuka has a hand scanner which beats the
- PageBrush's 64 shades of grey cold with the ability to scan 4096
- colors. Supposedly the software will have some way of
- automatically stitching images when it ships, but they couldn't
- show us then. Otherwise the Asuka scanner is nothing different
- from the other, older ones. Same method of use, same shortcomings,
- same price range.
-
- Easy OCR, for two. Caere, the people who do OmniPage, were showing
- a new hand scanner called Typist, which does on-the-fly OCR into
- word processors. It also scans graphics, but that was downplayed.
- The Typist sends its output into the keyboard buffer, which is why
- you can use it with any word processor, although we didn't
- actually see it working with Word, so don't hold us to that "any."
- Caere uses the same type of mechanism as the standard hand
- scanner, but it increased the width to five inches, which is too
- small for my tastes, but which can get a letter-sized page in one
- pass if you have really wide margins. It can theoretically knit
- together two halves of a page, though, so with two passes, you
- could scan a regular letter-sized page. It's better for magazine
- work because the columns are thin and the software knows to
- automatically cull out graphics and the halves of columns on
- either side of the one you are scanning. Pretty snazzy.
-
- Information from:
- Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
- Asuka propaganda
- Caere propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 07-Aug-90, Vol. 4 #27, pg. 1
-
-
- Reviews/07-Aug-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- A/UX 2.0, pg. 104
- MacRenderMan, pg. 104
- Maple 4.2.1, pg. 104
- Technical Information Source CD, pg. 104
- Talking Moose 3.0, pg. 114
- Personal LaserWriter NT, pg. 118
- MacTools Deluxe, pg. 118
- Envelope Printing Utilities, pg. 126
- KiwiEnvelopes!
- QuickEnvelope
- Fast Envelope
- MacEnvelope
- MacEnvelope Plus
- NetMinder, pg. 126
- CD-ROM drives, pg. 132
- AppleCD SC
- PortaDrive
- Denon DRD-253
- NEC CDR-35
- NEC CDR-72
- Access CD
- CD-ROM Changer DRM-600
- HiPerformance CD-ROM
- Toshiba XM-3201 A1-MAC
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 07-Aug-90, Vol. 4, #27
-
-
- Reviews/13-Aug-90
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Peer-to-peer Networking, pg. 38
- allShare 1.08
- EasyShare 1.1b
- Personal Server Network
- Sitka (TOPS) Network Bundle
- SuperCard 1.5, pg. 38
- Full Impact 2.0, pg. 44
- Desk, pg. 44
- DoveFAX Desktop, pg. 52
-
- * InfoWorld
- High-end Word Processors, pg. 55
- (not completely Mac-specific)
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 14-Jul-90, Vol. 4, #28
- InfoWorld -- 13-Aug-90, Vol. 12 #33
-
-
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