TidBITS#08/11-Jun-90
====================
 
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Topics:
    Bookend Indexer
    Macworld Expo Info
    MacAdemia Nuts
    PostScript Alternatives
    Farallon Voice Digitizer
    Recharge or Recycle?
    Editors' Notes
    Reviews/11-Jun-90
 
 
Bookend Indexer
---------------
  The ultimate horror for a desktop publisher using PageMaker 3.0 is
  the end of the year index for a series of newsletters. In most
  cases, embedded graphics and the design of the newsletter make it
  impossible to use a word processor to generate the index (if the
  original word processor can generate indices at all). So back to
  the tried and true methods of hand generation.
 
  Sonar Bookends from Virginia Systems should put an end to that
  tedious chore, though. Sonar Bookends will automatically generate
  a list of every word in the document with the corresponding page
  numbers. That list can then be edited to remove words you don't
  want in the index or table of contents. Alternately, you can
  provide Sonar Bookends with a list of words and/or phrases to
  index and save the time spent culling the common words from the
  master index. The advanced features of Sonar Bookends can create a
  multi-level index with an unlimited number of levels, create an
  index with chapter references with the chapters being in different
  files, and use boolean operations and wildcards in the index
  generation.
 
  If you were wondering, and you probably were, supported document
  formats include: PageMaker, FullWrite Professional, MacWrite,
  MacWrite II, Microsoft Word, WriteNow, WordPerfect, Microsoft
  Works, Ready Set Go 4, text (Nisus files are text files so they
  are supported as well.), and MS-DOS text. As an added bonus, Sonar
  Bookends is A/UX compatible.
 
  Virginia Systems has two other products, Sonar and Sonar
  Professional, that also generate indices, but they are general-
  purpose text retrieval utilities and are priced much higher than
  Sonar Bookends' $79.95 list price. Sonar Bookends requires one
  megabyte of RAM and can run in the background under MultiFinder.
  We suspect that the speed with which Sonar Bookends generates the
  index or table of contents depends on the speed of Mac, but no
  information concerning the minimum or ideal system was mentioned.
 
    Virginia Systems -- 804/739-3200
 
 
Macworld Expo Info
------------------
  [Editors' Note: This information comes to you verbatim from Mitch
  Hall & Associates, the organizers of Macworld Expo.]
 
 
SHOW DATES
  Wednesday, August 8 - Saturday, August 11, 1990
 
 
LOCATIONS
* Bayside Expo Center, 200 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, MA 02125
* World Trade Center, 164 Northern Avenue, Boston, MA 02210
* Wang Center, 270 Tremont Street, Boston, MA 02116, (conference
  only, no exhibits)
 
 
SHOW HOURS (Exhibit Hours & Conference Hours are the same)
* 10:00 - 3:00 on August 8 & 11
* 10:00 - 6:00 on August 9 & 10
 
 
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
* Registration opens at 9:00 a.m. daily
* Cash only at the door
* No registration at the Wang Center
* Exhibits Only - $25
* Conference & Exhibits - $80. Conferences are on a first-come,
  first-served basis with no guaranteed seating.
 
 
PRE-REGISTRATION INFORMATION
  (Pre-Registration coupons can be found in June and July Issues of
  MACWORLD Magazine or call (617) 361-1472 and we will send you a
  brochure which will allow you to pre-register.)
* Pre-Registration Deadline -- July 10
* Exhibits Only - $15
* Conferences & Exhibits - $65. Conferences are on a first-come,
  first-served basis with no guaranteed seating.
* U.S. pre-registrations will be mailed their badges on or around
  July 24. All others may pick up their badges at the "Pre-
  Registration" counter in the Registration Area of Bayside Expo
  Center only beginning Wednesday, August 8.
* There are no group rates or student rates.
 
 
HOTEL INFORMATION
  Several participating hotels are offering preferred rates to
  Macworld Expo participants. Call the hotel of your choice
  directly and mention Macworld Expo.
 
 
AIRLINE INFORMATION
  American Airlines is the official airline. To receive discounted
  rates, call them directly at 800/433-1790, and ask for Star
  File #: S-0580AL.
 
 
EXHIBIT SPACE
  Exhibit Space is sold out. If you would like to exhibit, please
  call (617) 361-8000 and ask for Christina Wood - she will put you
  on the waiting list.
 
  Information from:
    Mitch Hall & Associates
      (via the News Notebook from All American Software)
 
 
MacAdemia Nuts
--------------
  Higher education met the Mac several weeks ago at the fifth annual
  Apple-sponsored MacAdemia conference. Some 800 educators and
  Macintosh enthusiasts gathered in Rochester, New York (USA) to
  view a variety of Macintosh demonstrations with an emphasis on the
  Mac in education. TidBITS editor Tonya Byard attended several
  sessions.
 
  Professor Douglas L. Chute from Drexel University showed samples
  from a HyperCard stack that he projects from a Mac as a visual aid
  to his lectures. Rightly enough, he pointed out that hypermedia
  can be a valuable learning tool, but that the media must contain
  content as well as hype. He has designed his lecture stack so that
  it occasionally has a bit of glitz, but so that on the whole it
  provides a consistent, easy-to-use lecturing tool that is full of
  content.
 
  Dorothy Mulligan talked about her college's Project ISDN. At
  Jersey City State College, video conferencing with remote
  classrooms has become reality, using regular telephone wires to
  send real-time sound and video two-ways, between the classroom
  having the teacher and the remote students. Mulligan pointed out
  that the key advantage of using existing telephone wires was that
  the cost and mess of installing special networking cables was
  eliminated.
 
  Robert Dwyer and Raymond Melcher, both from University of
  Massachusetts at Boston, demonstrated a prototype hypermedia
  archive for a collection of video tapes, photographs, and news
  articles concerning America in what Americans call the Vietnam War
  (We at TidBITS are unsure what the rest of the world calls it).
  The project (given time and funding) will integrate vast amounts
  of data. It will use what is called a videodisk jukebox, whereby a
  number of disks can sit in the jukebox, ready to play when called
  upon. Using HyperCard interface, researchers will be able to
  perform complex searches and take data away with them in the form
  of a laser printout, video tape, or audio tape.
 
  Chris Espinosa, System Software Project Manager, from Apple,
  demonstrated system 7.0. We saw Helvetica TrueType functioning and
  many other features which at this point have been previewed ad
  nauseam in most computer magazines. The version that Espinosa had
  running did not crash and even performed as he said it would.
 
  Information from:
    Tonya Byard -- TidBITS Editor
 
 
PostScript Alternatives
-----------------------
  Last summer, Hewlett-Packard made an aggressive entry into the
  Macintosh printer market with its DeskWriter, a 300 dpi inkjet
  printer. As a substitute for the ImageWriter or as a compromise
  between a dot matrix and a laser printer, the DeskWriter works
  well. But with its slower speed and lack of PostScript imaging
  capabilities, the DeskWriter falls short of the LaserWriter IINT.
 
  This summer Hewlett-Packard continues its efforts in the Macintosh
  arena with its introduction of an AppleTalk cartridge for several
  of the newer models of its LaserJet printer. For a long time now,
  you could attach a Macintosh to an HP LaserJet using third-party
  software drivers, but these drivers could not do PostScript for
  you. As of this writing, they still cannot.
 
  To make a LaserJet print PostScript, you must first purchase a
  PostScript cartridge for the printer. We have spotted these
  cartridges available from Hewlett-Packard, Adobe, and Pacific
  Page, all priced around $500. These PostScript cartridges come
  with all the printer fonts found in the standard Apple LaserWriter
  set. Then, you must purchase the AppleTalk option from Hewlett-
  Packard, which comes with a software printer driver for your Mac
  and the appropriate screen fonts. And, finally, you must upgrade
  your printer's memory to at least 2 MB, maybe 3 for comfort. All
  told, purchasing all these options is cheaper than purchasing a
  new LaserWriter, though that may change in July if Apple does
  release its $3300 Personal LaserWriter NT. Hewlett-Packard offers
  this option for its LaserWriter IIP, IID, and III. It is not
  available for any of the older LaserJets or for the LaserJet
  Series II. The cheapest of the bunch would be the IIP, which would
  carry a list price around $2960 with the requisite AppleTalk,
  PostScript cartridge, and added memory. Still not cheap, but
  closing in on affordable with standard discounts.
 
  Hewlett-Packard offers more than just an attractive price. For
  those in a "mixed computing environment," though you have to plug
  and unplug the printer between PC-clones and Macs, it is works
  well in either environment, and depending on what you need to
  accomplish and what equipment you already have, this can be a big
  plus (although there are also ways to network PCs to Apple
  LaserWriters). In addition the LaserJet III looks exciting. It has
  a capability which Hewlett-Packard calls "Resolution Enhancement
  Technology." This capability allows the printer to use the extra
  processing bandwidth available in its 68020 CPU to think about the
  printout and fill in jaggies and small serifs on letters or small
  areas in designs with smaller-than-average dots. Hewlett-Packard
  claims that this gives a crisper printout and on initial
  examination, we were rather impressed with the output.
 
    Pacific Data Products -- 619/552-0880
    Hewlett-Packard -- 800/752-0900 ext. 1168
    Adobe -- 415/961-4400
 
  Information from:
    Tonya Byard -- TidBITS Editor
 
  Related articles:
    InfoWorld -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 12, #24, pg. 24
 
 
Farallon Voice Digitizer
------------------------
  Last week Farallon began shipping a voice digitizer that should
  make voice mail and voice additions to files an easy reality.
  Farallon's new product, the MacRecorder Voice Digitizer, can be
  used to input voice messages to many Macintosh electronic mail
  systems, including QuickMail 2.2x from CE Software, Microsoft Mail
  2.0, and WordPerfect Office Mail.
 
  The new Voice Digitizer does not come with sound editing software
  and is targeted to people who wish to add simple sounds or voice
  to a Macintosh file. People who need sound editing capabilities
  will still find them in Farallon's two-year-old MacRecorder Sound
  System, which comes with editing software and an input jack for
  sound from a stereo system. In exchange for its reduced
  functionality, the Voice Digitizer lists for $149, $100 less than
  the list price for the Sound System.
 
  Voice mail is an exciting application for the new digitizer, but
  because its lower price may make it a realistic purchase for more
  people, we might find other, perhaps more interesting, types of
  applications accepting voice input. For example, FrameMaker (a
  desktop publishing application), when running on the NeXT machine
  (we've never seen it running on the Mac or any other workstation,
  so we don't know if this only applies to the NeXT) has a facility
  for incorporating sound into files. The sound is represented by an
  icon which can be clicked to hear its message. This is handy for
  critiquing a colleague's work on screen. If you didn't like the
  design or wording, you could explain it verbally instead of trying
  to show it on the screen or writing a message. It is also handy
  for leaving messages to yourself and for hypermedia-like
  applications where the document is intended to be read online.
 
    Farallon -- 415/596-9000
 
  Information from:
    Farallon Press Release
 
  Related articles:
    InfoWorld -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 12, #24, pg. 41
 
 
Recharge or Recycle?
--------------------
  Computers are fairly good about not using natural resources and
  not creating unnecessary waste products. In fact, one of the
  design features in our original conception of TidBITS was that it
  would never generate waste paper. By its very nature, it cannot
  properly exist on paper.
 
  The main culprits in resource waste are printers, especially laser
  printers. Paper can often be recycled, but until recently the
  large amount of plastic and metal in toner cartridges could only
  be saved by having the toner cartridge refilled, which can cause
  some problems if it is not done correctly. We'll hopefully have
  more on recharging in a future issue of TidBITS.
 
  Now there is an alternative if you don't want to recharge your
  toner cartridges and don't have an easy place to sell them to.
  Hewlett-Packard will pay the postage for you to return the used
  cartridge to them. All you have to do is pick up a recycling kit
  from an authorized HP dealer and follow the instructions contained
  in it. HP will re-use some parts of the cartridges in making new
  ones and others parts, such as the aluminum drum, will be melted
  down and recycled as raw materials.
 
  The project will run on a test basis from June 1st to December
  31st, 1990 in 11 Western US states (including Arizona, California,
  Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah,
  Washington, and Wyoming), Germany, and Switzerland. HP hopes to
  expand the program to the rest of the US and Canada and more
  European countries in 1991. As an added incentive, for each
  cartridge returned, HP will donate 50 cents each to the National
  Wildlife Federation and The Nature Conservancy.
 
  HP Technical Support told us that they would take any toner
  cartridge that can be used in an HP LaserJet printer, which
  includes cartridges that are used in LaserWriters. You would have
  to get a recycling kit from an authorized HP dealer though, but if
  you buy HP cartridges, a kit will come with new cartridges. HP
  should be commended highly for instituting this program, although
  in all fairness we must say that they are saving a bit of money on
  toner parts by paying only several dollars for postage for a used
  toner cartridge. Capitalistic quibbles aside, the program is very
  well-intentioned and we hope it succeeds.
 
    Hewlett-Packard -- 800/752-0900
 
  Information from:
    John at HP Technical Support -- 800/752-0900 #3
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 12-Jun-90, Vol. 4 #22, pg. 14
 
 
Editors' Notes
--------------
  We currently face a dilemma with TidBITS. We have found
  alternative sources of information so we no longer rely on the
  trade magazines much at all any more. The advantage to this is
  that it removes us from the grey area of misappropriation in
  copyright law. The disadvantage is that we cannot provide
  references to articles in magazines if what we choose to write
  about has yet to be covered in the magazines. So herein lies the
  question for you, our all-important readers, to answer.
 
  Do you use the references provided in TidBITS to read related
  articles in the trade magazines?
 
  We do intend to continue citing our sources (good little academics
  that we are) and including contact information whenever possible.
  We also hope to distribute an update stack several times each year
  that will update the items for which we have found references (we
  do keep track of new references in our master TidBITS Archive).
 
  If you have an opinion on this subject, please tell us. You can
  reach us most easily via email, but snail mail is fine although it
  will take longer for a reply. Our various addresses are on the
  initial "About" card at the bottom under CONTACT INFORMATION.
 
  Many thanks and we hope to hear from you. - Adam & Tonya
 
 
Reviews/11-Jun-90
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Word for Windows, pg. 29 (not Mac-specific)
    Grammar Checkers, pg. 29
      MacProof
      Sensible Grammar
      Correct Grammar
      Grammatik Mac
      RightWriter
    Calera TopScan, pg. 42
    Shiva NetModem V.32, pg. 42
    MacroMind Director 2.0, pg. 42
    INITPicker 2.0, pg. 45
    Super Fontina, pg. 45
    NOW Utilities, pg. 46
 
* InfoWorld
    Anti-virus programs, pg. 86
      Antitoxin
      SAM
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 12-Jun-90, Vol. 4 #22
    InfoWorld -- 11-Jun-90, Vol. 12 #24
 
 
..
 
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