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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2
- Path: sparky!uunet!gator!towers!bluemoon!slhood
- From: slhood@bluemoon.use.com (Stephen L. Hood)
- Subject: A+/InCider article: ACK!
- Message-ID: <9FPauB7w165w@bluemoon.use.com>
- Sender: bbs@bluemoon.use.com (BBS Login)
- Organization: Blue Moon BBS ((614) 868-998[024])
- Date: Sun, 15 Nov 92 14:32:07 EST
- Lines: 67
-
- I just picked up a copy of the December 1992 issue of "A+/InCider", and I
- am agast.
-
- The "Bridging the Gap" column, written by Greg Keizer, focuses this month
- on the "Gappie" awards, A+/InCider's awards for products that demonstrate
- the best or worst in Apple/Mac connectivity.
-
- The first award was for "Best Technical Performance: GS", and went to
- "Pointless", because, "not only does Pointless let you use TrueType on the
- IIGS, but with a little help from you, it can move Mac, even Windows,
- TrueType fonts to the GS." It is blatantly untrue that Pointless can
- interpret "Windows" format TrueType fonts. Such action requires the use
- of either Mac or DOS applications to convert between the Windows and Mac TT
- formats.
-
- Another award went to GS/OS 6.0 for "Best Missed Opportunity". The
- reviewer claims that GS/OS 6.0 (which the rest of the world calls System
- 6) "should have taken a couple more pages from the Mac's System 7. The
- latter, for instance, can quickly create an alias for any docuement or
- program..." This is an intolerable statement. It infuriates me that Mr.
- Keizer can be so foolish and shortsighted. He completely overlooks the
- HFS FST's merits, mentioning it in the middle of a sentence that resolves
- by stating that Apple "missed the opportunity".
-
- "For all the benefits that 1992's new GS/OS 6.0 offered IIGS owners --
- including a translator that lets the computer read from and write to
- Macintosh floppies -- Apple missed the opportunity to make its most
- powerful Apple II even more powerful, and in the process, match the
- Macintosh operating system's functionality."
-
- The article then goes on for three more paragraphs to describe why System
- 6 is inferior to System 7.
-
- Certainly, I would welcome the addition of aliasing and shared folders.
- But what of System 7? It snagged the "Best Technical Performance: Mac"
- award, mostly because of its shared folder features.
-
- The HFS FST, coupled with the soon-to-be-released MS-DOS FST, allows the
- GS to access the most popular and common disk formats. However, even the
- glorious System 7 cannot directly read lowly ProDOS disks -- you first
- have to go to Apple File Exchange and wait about ten times as long to copy
- a file as you would to copy a Mac file to the IIGS.
-
- I personally want nothing more of the Mac OS than aliasing. The scrolling
- thumbs on the Mac do not resize according to the size of the document,
- creating a very non-intuitive interface. Folding sharing on the IIGS
- would be impractical -- how many schools use GS/OS anyway?
-
- What upsets me most of all is that Mr. Kreizer's article focuses almost
- entirely on the Macintosh. Even the titles of his "awards" are tailored
- to recent Mac products, from Kid Pix to the Performa.
-
- Mr. Kreizer's writings have been much more productive and objective in the
- past. Indeed, "Briding the Gap" has been one of the very few tangible
- products of the incorporation of Mac support into A+/InCider. However, I
- am now quite disappointed by what I feel can only be the result of the
- influence of a new chief editor.
-
- I am upset by this unprofessionalism and intend to write a letter to the
- editor. Watch for it, folks. If it even appears, I'll be surprised if I
- recieve a reply.
-
-
- | Stephen L. Hood Ask me about GNO/ME, the multitasking |
- | Micro Center, Inc. environment for the Apple IIGS! |
- | slhood@bluemoon.rn.com "My Woz, my Woz, why have you |
- | slhood@pro-works.cts.com abandoned me?" |
-