TidBITS#16/13-Aug-90
====================
 
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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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