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- VAPORWARE
- Murphy Sewall
- From the April 1993 APPLE PULP
- H.U.G.E. Apple Club (E. Hartford) News Letter
- $24/year
- P.O. Box 380027
- East Hartford, CT 06138-0027
- Call the "Bit Bucket" (203) 257-9588
- Permission granted to redistribute with the above citation
-
- ** SPECIAL NOTICE **
- As announced last month, this column which ends nine years, will be my
- final one. I'd like to acknowledge the many kind messages I've received
- in the past month. Even though I haven't had time to answer each one
- individually, I really appreciate the support. I'd particularly like to
- thank the relatives of beta testers, former employees of developers, and
- occasional honest-to-goodness insiders who've been kind enough to pass
- me a scoop or two. Being able to accurately describe the LC III a month
- before MacWeek was particularly satisfying. Several people have asked
- whether it would be possible to find someone to continue the column.
- The possibility is open to anyone with the desire to do the reading and
- writing. I have no copyright on the title (a term I obtained from an
- Atari executive quoted in the Wall Street Journal late in 1983). Most
- of the information appearing in the column comes from reading InfoWorld,
- PC Week, MacWeek and any other industry publication that catches my
- attention. Keeping current probably requires access to at least two of
- those three weeklies. Many libraries carry all three, but it might
- prove difficult to meet publication deadlines unless you receive
- personal copies. As many as would like to are welcome to take up the
- challenge. Send your efforts to all the major lists (info-ibmpc,
- info-mac, info-apple2, info-micro, and so forth). If you send a copy to
- me, I'll send you my select list of list addresses, newsletter editors,
- subnet redistributors, and assorted privileged characters who have been
- receiving a direct copy of the column. A typical column (9 to 14K) is
- small enough to fit through everyone's gateway. An account on America
- On Line, Compuserve, or MCImail will serve as well as one on BITNET or
- the Internet. I'll look forward to seeing whatever follows.
-
- Some Long Range Thoughts.
- The personal computer industry has moved from high growth to the onset
- of maturity over the course of the past nine years. Bill Gates appears
- to have gotten it right before everyone else--the future is in the
- software. It is beginning to appear that for the next generation of
- personal computer, the hardware won't matter as much as what
- "personality" (or personalities, for the wealthy) you decide to
- purchase. A "personality" will be a system add-on for running
- Macintosh, Windows, OS/2, MS-DOS, or UNIX operating environments and
- unmodified shrink wrapped applications. The PowerPC in 1994 probably
- will be the first system to offer the full range of personalities, but
- you may want to simply admire the initial PowerPC 601 (never buy version
- 1.0 of anything) and wait a year for the PowerPC 604 (or a notebook
- containing the "oxymoron CPU," that is, the low-power PowerPC 603). The
- specs for the PowerPC 604 suggest that its performance will be to a 33
- MHz i486 as the i486 is to a 1981 Apple II. Are you ready for the idea
- of 32 MBytes of RAM as limited memory and one gigabyte random access
- storage with a seek time of 2 milliseconds at prices affordable by the
- masses? That situation appears likely to be less than five years away.
-
- Macintosh PowerPC Clones.
- Several third parties, including Radius and DayStar Digital, are
- negotiating with Apple to develop PowerPC hardware compatible with
- Apple's Macintosh Compatibility Module (the Macintosh "personality").
- Although Apple hasn't finally decided whether to license the
- Compatibility Module itself, the Mac ToolBox will be built into the
- PowerOpen architecture which anyone may license. Hence, it will be much
- easier for a PowerPC licensee to produce a Macintosh clone than is the
- case for the 680x0 machines. - InfoWorld 22 February
-
- PC "Plug and Play" At Long Last.
- Intel and Microsoft have collaborated with twelve other hardware and
- software developers on a set of "plug and play" standards for expansion
- cards that will work in existing ISA and EISA PC's (under Windows). A
- plug and play card can be added to any open slot and used immediately
- without reconfiguring the system, a feature that has always been
- available with the Macintosh architecture. One problem that remains to
- be addressed is how users can mix older boards with the new plug and
- play variety. - InfoWorld and PC Week 8 March
-
- Migrating to Taligent.
- IBM has announced that the microkernel version of OS/2, WorkPlace OS,
- will support the look and feel of the forthcoming object-oriented
- Taligent OS. Beta versions of Workplace OS are expected in May with a
- final product scheduled for the end of this year. Meanwhile, OS/2 2.1's
- shipping date has been delayed until Spring Comdex in May; another beta
- was released at the end of the first quarter. Version 2.1 will add full
- support for Windows 3.1 and full implementation of the 32-bit graphics
- engine. - InfoWorld and PC Week 8 March
-
- New Macs to Take Dictation.
- Adding an optional high fidelity microphone to one of Apple's Digital
- Signal Processor (DSP) Macintoshes (see last July's column) will be
- sufficient to make full use of MacPlainTalk (formerly codenamed Casper
- see last April's column), the speech software that ships with them.
- MacPlainTalk reportedly will recognize speech from any adult speaking
- North American English, with no prior training. Due for release this
- summer, the Macintosh Tempest will be share the case and CPU of the
- Centris 610 model while the more powerful 40 MHz Cyclone will be housed
- in the same case as the Quadra 800. - MacWeek 22 February
-
- Removable Media for Notebooks.
- SyQuest Technology is developing a removable media drive capable of
- storing 100 MBytes on a 1.8 inch disk. - MacWeek 22 February
-
- QuickDraw GX Printers.
- Next year, Apple will release hardware and software to turn the
- forthcoming upgrade to the Macintosh screen imaging model, QuickDraw GX,
- into a full-fledged page description language. In addition, QuickDraw
- Interchange Format software will convert PostScript output from
- applications into resolution independent QuickDraw GX code. QuickDraw
- GX is expected to become the basis for a new line of low-cost Apple
- printers. - MacWeek 8 March
-
- Apple Online Services.
- CEO John Sculley told a communications conference audience that Apple
- will expand AppleLink into an on-line services business with features
- such as news, weather, entertainment information, and transaction
- services such as banking and software sales. Mr. Sculley indicated that
- Apple Online Services could be come Apple's largest business by the end
- of the decade. - MacWeek 22 February
-
- Handheld CD-ROM.
- Later this year, Apple will introduce two lightweight, portable CD ROM
- units that will play Macintosh, multisession Photo CD, and audio disks.
- The basic model, due in May, will offer NTSC and (European) PAL video
- output and list for $500. A more elaborate model, codenamed Popeye,
- will be released in the fall with a 640 by 480 LCD touch screen and a
- PCMCIA slot. The anticipated list price for the two to three pound
- Popeye is $1,000. - PC Week 22 February
-
- Windows For Workgroups 3.11.
- An upgrade for Windows For Workgroups (WFW) that adds a 32-bit protected
- mode file system, auditing features, and loading of network drivers into
- upper memory is already in beta testing. A Microsoft official indicated
- that a final decision about the full list of new features has not yet
- been made. - InfoWorld 8 March
-
- Macintosh Client for Netware 4.0.
- There will be a Macintosh client for Netware 4.0, but it isn't expected
- to ship until June. - MacWeek 8 March
-
- High Performance at Lower Prices.
- DEC has announced plans to slash the price of its Alpha CPU chip by
- nearly 40 percent as soon as Intel's Pentium begins to ship in volume.
- The price reduction should make high performance systems available at
- lower prices, but the personal Alpha PC awaits release of Microsoft's
- Windows NT (currently scheduled for the second quarter of this year, but
- believe it when you see it). - PC Week 8 March
-