TidBITS#13/16-Jul-90
====================
 
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Topics:
    CD-WORMs
    An Apple By Any Other...
    Update/16-Jul-90
    Lasers In the Jungle...
    Cheap IBM Home Computer
    SUM Competition
    Forced Upgrades
    Alternate Limb Controllers
    Reviews/16-Jul-90
 
 
CD-WORMs
--------
  One frustration with the new forms of optical storage is that they
  are mutually incompatible. At least up to now, if rumors on Usenet
  prove to be true. One rumor says that a European company is
  working on an erasable optical drive which can also read the
  CD-ROM disks that are becoming a popular method of distributing
  large amounts of information. This would be a boon to those of us
  who would like to read the occasional CD-ROM but don't use them
  enough to justify a stand-along CD-ROM player. Of course you would
  still have to need the massive storage abilities of an erasable
  optical to justify the undoubtedly higher price of a hybrid unit,
  but that's nitpicking.
 
  A more exciting rumor claims that Yamaha is working on a WORM
  drive that can write to standard CD-ROM platters, which can then
  be read in normal CD-ROM players. The advantages of this method of
  creating CD-ROMs are that the CD-ROM format is standardized,
  unlike the WORM formats, and CD-ROM platters are far less prone to
  damage or data loss than tape or magnetic media, making the system
  ideal for large backup sets.
 
  The ability to create a standard CD-ROM incrementally in a WORM
  drive is extremely interesting, because it's a relatively complex
  and expensive procedure to master a CD-ROM, although the price per
  disk is low after the initial mastering costs. The standard method
  is to create a tape of the information and then transfer that tape
  to CD-ROM, a process which is typically clumsy. This ease of
  production might also increase the use of the sound and digitized
  graphics, both of which are usually space-hungry. So pay attention
  for these products and let us know if you hear anything more!
 
  Information from:
    Philip Machanick -- philip@pescadero.Stanford.EDU
    Eric W. Mitchel -- ewm@mdavcr.UUCP
    The Road To CD-ROM, Nimbus Information Systems -- 800/782-0778
 
 
An Apple By Any Other...
------------------------
  Lapsing from our usual watch for news, we came upon a discussion
  on Usenet about the origin of Apple's name. So no news in this
  article, just an anecdote.
 
  The question first arose when someone wondered about the true
  story behind Apple's name. He'd read that Steve Jobs had fond
  memories of working in an orchard one summer and thought that
  Apple would be a friendly name. Others chimed in with the theory
  that Apple was really something of an abbreviation for appliance,
  which is what Jobs thought the Mac should be. Unfortunately for
  that theory, the Mac came rather late in the company's evolution
  and the appliance theory of microcomputers probably started in Jef
  Raskin's Mac development team. The Apple II was certainly not as
  easy to use as a toaster.
 
  Someone who knows Steve Wozniak contributed a more plausible
  story. Evidently, when Jobs and Wozniak were at the courthouse
  filing the incorporation papers, they still hadn't come up with a
  name. Jobs was eating an apple because he was then (and may still
  be) a "fruitarian," meaning that much of his diet was composed of
  fruit. Having no better option, they wrote down Apple Computer as
  the company name, figuring that they could change it later. Upon
  consideration though, they realized that Apple was early in the
  phone book (and before Atari), sounded friendly, and contrasted
  nicely with the word computer, which was and is still something of
  a scary word.
 
  A final comment was added that the Apple logo was supposed to
  represent the apple with which Alan Turing committed suicide. No
  one has confirmed or denied this rumor though.
 
  We now return you to your regularly scheduled news.
 
  Information from:
    Chris Silverberg -- macman@wpi.wpi.edu
    A J Cunningham -- tjc@castle.ed.ac.uk
    Brian Matthews -- blm@6sceng.UUCP
    Mark H. Nodine -- man@eilat.cs.brown.edu
    Steve Hix -- fiddler@concertina.Sun.COM
 
 
Update/16-Jul-90
----------------
  We've been adding new references to articles that we wrote some
  time ago, but a new issue has just arisen. Some of our articles
  are relatively ambiguous because they are based more on rumor and
  conjecture than on fact. To fill in some of the facts, we will be
  including small Update articles every now and then. You can copy
  these updates into the original articles or leave them here-
  whatever is easier for you.
 
 
Lasers In the Jungle...
-----------------------
  Apple has finally released the new Personal LaserWriters, the SC
  and the NT. Ours is on back order, so we can't comment personally,
  but they are based on the same Canon engine as the HP LaserJet
  IIP, which means they print at 4 pages per minute (ppm) at top
  engine speed. In theory, the LaserWriter II's print at a top speed
  of 8 ppm, but seldom reach that throughput in reality. The
  Personal LaserWriter SC will retail for $1999 while the NT will
  list at $3299, although the educational discount for the NT drops
  its price to about $2200. At that price point, a LaserJet IIP with
  extra memory, AppleTalk, and a PostScript cartridge is only
  minimally less expensive. The competition will also come from the
  QMS-PS 410, a PostScript printer based on the same Canon engine,
  but with a faster processor (68020 vs.. 68000), a later version of
  HP's Printer Control Language, and a better method of switching
  between Macs and PC-clones. The QMS printer will list for $2795,
  $500 less than the Personal Laser NT.
 
    QMS -- 800/631-2692
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
    Apple spec sheets
    QMS technical support
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 10-Jul-90, Vol. 4, #25, pg. 1
    Macworld -- Aug-90, pg. 128
 
 
Cheap IBM Home Computer
-----------------------
  IBM has released the PS/1, as their new home computer is called,
  in several large cities around the country to be test-marketed.
  The new name has prompted numerous wags on Usenet to remark that
  at least this computer will be a whole Personal System, rather
  than the halved PS/2. The spec sheet reads modestly, starting with
  a 10 Mhz 80286 CPU, 512K RAM, and a 1.44 megabyte floppy drive,
  but picks up a bit with a mouse, an internal 2400 baud modem, and
  VGA graphics. Options include a 30 megabyte hard disk, a 512K RAM
  upgrade, an AT-style (ISA) expansion box, an audio card, and a
  joystick. Initially, the lack of a hard disk would seem to be
  deadly, but the ROMs include the BIOS, DOS, and the DOS shell (we
  assume DOS version 4.01). The list price for such a beast with a
  color monitor and the hard disk is $1999, but since IBM is selling
  through large retail channels, the street price could easily drop
  to around $1500, which is competitive, if not overwhelmingly
  inexpensive. We're not holding our collective breath on this one,
  if only because even with a DOS shell and everything built into
  the machine, it still doesn't make it as an easy home machine for
  people getting started in basic home computing. Not to be
  chauvinistic, the Mac doesn't really fit that bill either, so
  there is still room for a killer appliance computer that will sell
  like VCRs, er, hotcakes.
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
    IBM spec sheets
 
  Related articles:
    PC WEEK -- 16-Jul-90, Vol. 7, #28, pg. 24
 
 
SUM Competition
---------------
  Several weeks ago we wrote of a potentially dangerous bug in the
  Backup utility that comes with the new MacTools Deluxe package
  from Central Point Software. Since then we have had a chance to
  use the program and even found another bug, a conflict between
  Suitcase II and the Optimizer Help. Needless to say, we weren't
  particularly enthusiastic about MacTools at that point. However,
  our faith in Central Point Software has been restored. We
  received, completely unsolicited, a disk in the mail yesterday
  that included new versions of Backup, Optimizer Help, and Rescue,
  which fix the bugs that we and others had noticed. We still have
  some minor gripes about the interfaces, but on the whole, the
  package is now worth recommending on its own merits. One
  additional comment: for those of you without either GOfer or On
  Location, the Locate DA that comes with MacTools does an excellent
  job of finding text within files and then displaying it for you.
 
    Central Point Software -- 503/690-8080
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editor
    Central Point Software
 
 
Forced Upgrades
---------------
  An interesting problem recently arose on Usenet. It seems that an
  Excel 1.0 user in Holland wanted to upgrade to system 6.0.4, but
  when he did so, Excel stopped working. Microsoft said that it
  wasn't their problem and that he should upgrade to Excel 2.2. The
  cost of an Excel upgrade in Holland equals out to about $370 so he
  had quite a bit of incentive not to upgrade, especially
  considering the added functionality was unnecessary. The question
  was then, who is to blame, and if Microsoft, is this a breach of
  contract? After all, someone must be at fault-that's how the world
  works :-).
 
  Few people were surprised that Excel 1.0 didn't work under the new
  system because Microsoft products are notorious for disobeying
  Apple's programming guidelines, and as such, tend to break when
  Apple updates the system software. Apple isn't at fault for
  Microsoft's flaunting of the rules-in fact, Apple even had code in
  early versions of MultiFinder to deal with Excel 1.5's quirky
  memory requirements (it had to be loaded into the first megabyte
  of memory to work). The feeling in some of the postings (and one
  with which we agree wholeheartedly) is that Apple should let
  Microsoft products crash and burn when updating the system
  software. That way Microsoft might receive enough negative
  comments to start following the guidelines. Even Microsoft's
  position as the largest Macintosh (and microcomputer) software
  company should not afford them such favoritism. In many ways,
  Apple's guidelines have helped the Mac become what it is because
  users can be assured of the interfaces in different programs being
  similar.
 
  Quite some time ago a similar problem arose with Microsoft Works
  on the PC. A group had created a number of macros to handle their
  tasks, but they ran into some major problems with those macros
  when they upgraded to the next version. Unfortunately, they had
  sent back their original disks and replaced the working copies so
  they couldn't easily move back to the older version. At first
  Microsoft wanted to charge them for the older version, but
  complaining vociferously on the net and to the customer support
  people finally convinced Microsoft to just give them the old
  version back again. Such actions might work in this more recent
  instance as well.
 
  We don't have a copy of the Microsoft warranty/software contract
  and are certainly not lawyers, but if the warranty says anything
  about "working as advertised" then a case might be made for a
  breach of contract. In comparison, the MacTools Deluxe warranty
  does say "the SOFTWARE will perform substantially in accordance
  with the accompanying written materials," which implies that bugs
  would be covered under warranty. It may not be possible, but we
  would like to see companies being flexible enough honor odd
  circumstances like this, especially since it is more than worth it
  in customer loyalty.
 
  Information from:
    Norman Graham -- norman@d.cs.okstate.edu
    D. Daniel Sternbergh -- ddaniel@lindy.Stanford.EDU
    C. Irby -- ac08@vaxb.acs.unt.edu
    Steven A. Schrader -- SAS102@psuvm.psu.edu
    Hans Mulder -- hansm@duteca8.tudelft.nl
 
 
Alternate Limb Controllers
--------------------------
  A recent discussion on the net regarding alternate pointing
  devices inspired me to try running my mouse with my feet. It works
  well, though I need a longer mouse cord to maintain the necessary
  position for any length of time (the cord is not long enough for
  the mouse to rest on the floor). For some touch typists or those
  with limited desk space, the mouse has always been limiting. One's
  hand must jump off the keyboard to move the mouse, and the mouse
  often competes with papers, electronic gizmos, food, and plants
  for space. I have read heated debates about the pros and cons of
  removing one's hand from the keyboard. Some advocate track balls
  as the solution to the space problem, and I myself have
  passionately argued for a keyboard offering the j (or the f) key
  as a mini-trackball so I could type and keep my hands on the
  keyboard while clicking and dragging. (I had a number of possible
  schemes for typing a j (or f) when the actual letter was needed.)
 
  The Outbound Portable features a pointing device called the
  Isobar. This bar, located just below the space bar, slides left
  and right and rolls up and down. When you push the bar, you
  perform the equivalent of a mouse click. I found this to be a tad
  awkward when I ran into the mouse pad equivalent of running out of
  room on the mouse pad, but on the whole I liked the Isobar, though
  it has received mixed reviews from others I know (like me! -Adam).
 
  Mouses for a number of Unix-style workstations sport three buttons
  to allow users to give different commands depending on what
  combinations of keys are pushed. Proposals for a Mac mouse that
  does this were greeted by statements that the Control-click and
  Shift-click options accomplish the same tasks.
 
  Recently one person proposed adding two dials to the keyboard for
  scrolling. This would be handy, though a number of programs define
  the arrow keys for that task. Another person mentioned a company
  that may be working on an organ pedal-like mechanism for foot
  input. Lest we forget that not everyone is so lucky to have the
  full use of all limbs and digits, it is important that companies
  pursue alternate devices for controlling computers. One
  possibility in that arena is a head-mounted input device, although
  as C Irby points out, that leads to the
  <option>-<shift>-<click>-<headbutt>.
 
  Most people use a mouse and don't question its prominence in the
  input device category. Some use trackballs, a few use styluses,
  and even fewer use devices where their fingers do the walking on
  special pads. I'm looking forward to the development of devices
  that use feet, thus freeing my fingers for typing and letting me
  exercise my weak arches in the process. All that would really be
  necessary would be the mouse unit built into the toe-end of a
  slipper, though some attention should be paid to proper foot
  orientation to avoid overuse injuries. Freeing the feet would also
  allow the use of multiple pointing devices and multiple cursors.
  If the opposable thumb made the difference in human evolution,
  just think what the opposable mouse could do for computer
  evolution.
 
  Information from:
    Tonya Byard & Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS editors
    James G. Smith -- jgsmith@watson.bcm.tmc.edu
    C. Irby -- ac08@vaxb.acs.unt.edu
    Robert Minich -- minich@a.cs.okstate.edu
    James G. Smith -- jgsmith@watson.bcm.tmc.edu
    Dana E. Keil -- dana@are.berkeley.edu
 
 
Reviews/16-Jul-90
-----------------
 
* InfoWorld
    PageMaker 4.0, pg. 76
 
* PC WEEK
    PageMaker 4.0, pg. 80
 
* Macworld
    Accelerators, pg. 134 (too many to list)
    Utility Programs, pg. 144 (too many to list)
    Color Scanners, pg. 152 (too many to list)
    Network File Sharing, pg. 160 (too many to list)
    Fax Modems, pg. 169 (too many to list)
    UltraPaint 1.0, pg. 176
    RagTime 3 3.04, pg. 177
    Now Utilities, pg. 180
    Mitsubishi Optical WORM Drive, pg. 182
    MultiClip 2.0, pg. 187
    Flash 1.0, pg. 189
    MaxSPITBOL 1.12d1, pg. 191
    ProIcon, pg. 191
    Macintosh Allegro Common LISP 1.3, pg. 193
    UpBeat 2.0, pg. 194
    EtherGate 1.45, pg. 196
    Racal-Vadic 9632VP Modem, pg. 198
    Prograph 1.2, pg. 200
    Metamorphosis 1.0, pg. 203
    Palmtop Link for the Macintosh 1.0, pg. 206
    Organizer Link 1.1, pg. 206
    CasioLink for the Macintosh, pg. 219
    The Bard's Tale 1.0, pg. 220
    Tefax System RA-2110 with BackFax, pg. 222
    The Resume Kit 1.0, pg. 224
 
References:
    InfoWorld -- 16-Jul-90, Vol. 12, #29
    PC WEEK -- 16-Jul-90, Vol. 7, #28
    Macworld -- Aug-90
 
 
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