TidBITS#23/01-Oct-90
====================
 
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Topics:
    ANTI-B
    Boomerang Makes Good
    Canon Optical Card
    Portable Computer Clothing
    Reviews/01-Oct-90
 
 
ANTI-B
------
  Well, they're at it again, this time in France. Another virus has
  recently been discovered, though it isn't new. ANTI-B is a
  slightly different strain of the ANTI virus that despite being
  discovered almost two years later, appears to be the initial
  version of ANTI. ANTI-A has some code in it which neutralizes the
  ANTI-B virus, which is the main difference and the evidence for
  the evolutionary sequence. Most virus detection and prevention
  utilities have been updated to find ANTI-B, resulting in new
  search strings for SAM and Virus Detective and a new version of
  Disinfectant (version 2.2). We're not as familiar with the update
  mechanisms for most commercial virus programs because we
  wholeheartedly support John Norstad's Disinfectant. As such, we
  haven't been including the search strings for Virus Detective or
  SAM in recent virus articles - please let us know if that would be
  a more useful service than merely publicizing a new version of
  Disinfectant.
 
  Disinfectant 2.2 includes a few minor bug fixes and enhancements
  along with the ability to detect ANTI-B. Most notable of these is
  the addition of the menu item "Desktop Files" in the Scan and
  Disinfect menus. This option allows you to quickly scan or
  disinfect just the invisible Desktop files for the WDEF or CDEF
  viruses. If you use Disinfectant, we recommend that you get the
  new version, though it isn't quite as imperative as with previous
  versions.
 
  Speaking of CDEF, there has been a bit of a flap in Ithaca, NY
  recently because the author of several Mac viruses (we assume MDEF
  and CDEF) was found to be a 16 year-old high school student here.
  The police are not releasing his name and have said that he is
  cooperating fully. Short of that, we have little information about
  the incident. It is nice to know that not all virus authors get
  away with never being detected, though we have no idea what the
  punishment will be (or has been) in this case.
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
    John Norstad -- jln@acns.nwu.edu
 
 
Boomerang Makes Good
--------------------
  One of the most popular shareware utilities of all time has been
  Hiro Yamamoto's Boomerang. Initially free, Boomerang provides
  several important functions in the standard Open and Save dialog
  boxes. First, Boomerang keeps track of up to the last thirty files
  and folders you have visited and allows you to open one of those
  files or go to one of those folders with a single menu selection
  from the Boomerang pop-up menu. Boomerang also provides a
  "Rebound" feature that remembers the last file you used in each
  folder and automatically highlights it in the scrolling file list.
  That way you don't have to scroll down to the bottom of a folder
  with lots of files in it each time you want to open something that
  starts with the letter "x." There are a host of other useful
  features, such as a Find File feature that is faster than Apple's
  and the ability to create a new folder while still in the Open or
  Save dialog box.
 
  In any event, when Boomerang stabilized at version 2.0, it became
  shareware with the promise that only registered users would
  receive later versions. In addition, Now Software recently made a
  deal with Hiro Yamamoto to bundle it with version 2.0 of their Now
  Utilities package. Version 2.1 of Boomerang adds a hierarchical
  menu to the Open menu item. This hierarchical menu lists the
  recently visited files without the user having to see the Open
  dialog box, among other things. Even more impressive, though, will
  be version 3.0, dubbed Super Boomerang. Super Boomerang will do
  everything that previous versions could do as well as sort files
  in the Open and Save dialog boxes by date, size, etc. Super
  Boomerang will copy, rename, and delete files directly from the
  dialog box. Previously, these features were available only in
  Directory Assistance, an INIT that comes with Norton Utilities.
  Unfortunately, Directory Assistance and Boomerang 2.0 don't
  coexist particularly well, so upgrading to Boomerang 2.1 is
  probably the best way to go. The Find feature will be enhanced in
  Super Boomerang as well, making it one of the fastest Find File
  utilities available (reportedly able to search a 600 meg CD-ROM
  disk in 15 seconds!). Registered users of Boomerang will
  automatically receive Super Boomerang when it comes out and will
  also receive a discount on the Now Utilities.
 
  Whether you opt for the full Now Utilities package or choose to
  stick with the shareware route, we highly recommend Boomerang to
  anyone who works with the Mac - it reduces the time you spend in
  foolish file searching and disk navigating. It is heartening to
  see that a program can start out it's life as freeware (during its
  beta test mode, which was not plagued by many bugs), move to
  shareware, and then earn money for its author as a commercial
  offering. Now if anyone wanted to offer us lots of money just to
  keep providing TidBITS for free... :-).
 
    Now Software -- 800/237-3611
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
    Greg Youngs -- GregYoungs on America Online
    Gene -- GeneS3 on America Online
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 11-Sep-90, Vol. 4, #30, pg. 31
    InfoWorld -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #40, pg. 46
 
 
Canon Optical Card
------------------
  Bored by that ho-hum magnetic storage? Yawning at the speed of the
  optical drives? Frustrated by the reliability of floppies? Well
  Canon has something for you. They call it the Optical Card, and it
  is a credit card-sized storage system that can hold about 2
  megabytes of information per card. The card uses WORM technology,
  which disqualifies it from the general purpose uses floppies
  generally fulfill, but is admirable at storing relatively inert
  information, such as (we hope) medical records, maintenance
  records, personal identification, etc. The Optical Card has an
  inner recording layer sandwiched between two hard plastic layers
  for protection against physical damage. The recording layer has
  2500 parallel tracks, on which data is written by a laser beam
  several microns in diameter. A lower-powered laser beam coupled
  with a photo sensor reads the data back from the card.
 
  Because the method of storing information physically puts tiny
  pits in the recording layer, the cards are not susceptible to
  either magnetic fields or static electricity. This level of data
  safety is not true of the popular magnetic strip cards commonly
  used for ID and credit cards nor of the larger IC cards that
  combine CPU and memory chips on a card. The price of the Optical
  Card is also much cheaper than either of the other types in terms
  of the amount of information stored. The real prices are likely to
  be between $4 and $35 for the cards and $1500 and $3000 for the
  Reader/Writers necessary to access the information on the cards.
  Those prices have large ranges because Canon doesn't currently
  know how popular the system will be, and the lower prices require
  volume production. The initial models will only work with the
  IBM-AT bus, but SCSI models for the Mac and other platforms should
  follow shortly.
 
  What will these little things be used for? It's a good question,
  and one which Canon tries to answer in its propaganda sheets. They
  offer suggestions such as a storage medium for medical records or
  vehicle maintenance records, assuming that such information should
  be relatively stable with additions only. Other suggestions
  include secure identification cards, because 2 megabytes is plenty
  of room to store fingerprints, retinal scans, and photographs, and
  data distribution cards for publications or software that is
  unwieldy on either paper or floppy disks. Basically, the issue
  seems to be that applications for the card are those that store a
  relatively small amount of information that is relatively static.
 
  Needless to say, while 2 megabytes is a good amount of
  information, we would all like it if they could hold more. On-
  board compression could effectively double the space without any
  speed loss. Oh, speaking of speed, they aren't all that fast.
  Writing speed is 15.3 kilobits per second, reading speed is 100
  kilobits per second, and access time ranges from 23 milliseconds
  to 2.5 seconds with a 1.5 second average. However, considering the
  paper data the cards might replace, any computerized access time
  will be faster than the human access time searching through a file
  folder of papers.
 
  Because it is unsure of the market for the cards, Canon seems to
  be looking for people to test the units and evaluate their
  applicability in various areas. If you are interested in using
  this technology, contact Bruno Dosso at Canon at the phone number
  below. As with all of our articles, we ask that you mention where
  you heard about the product so we can build our reputation in the
  industry.
 
    Canon -- 516/488-6700
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
    Canon propaganda
 
 
Portable Computer Clothing
--------------------------
  Sure portable computers are nice. It's fun to just set up wherever
  you happen to be and work. Unfortunately wherever you happen to be
  is seldom a good place to set up a machine designed to be placed
  on a table in a relatively well-lit room while you are sitting on
  an ergonomically designed chair. The answer? Portable computers
  need to be integrated into what we wear, so putting on your
  computer in the morning is little different from remembering to
  strap a watch to your wrist. The technology is closing in on this
  goal, though no one that I've heard of has a design for it in the
  works. The Private Eye monitor technology from Reflection
  Technology puts a monitor on a headband (the viewing device is
  only a couple of inches large and uses optics to appear the size
  of a 12" display) and a friend who tried one claimed that it was
  wonderful to use, though a little hard on the eyes when used for
  extended time periods.
 
  Keyboards are another sticky point, though a small chording
  keyboard could be easily attached to a belt without appearing
  bulky. Disk drives would be a pain, but many portables these days
  only have an internal hard drive anyway, so floppy access could be
  external and left at home. A mouse is also a problem, and current
  trackballs don't really solve it. Something like Felix, a mini-
  joystick, or the UnMouse, a pointing tablet, mounted on the back
  of a chording keyboard might help, but more research would have to
  be done in that area. Of course, advances in handwriting and voice
  recognition would be nice too, but they might require a bit more
  thought before they would be as unobtrusive as a small chording
  keyboard with integrated pointing device.
 
  The chip companies are doing their bit for smaller computers (pun
  not intended). Intel is reportedly working on a new version of the
  386SX chip that will combine a 386SX processor with a cache and
  memory controller. A later version will include a 387SX math
  coprocessor. Both versions of the chip will have built-in sleep
  modes to conserve power, which is another bugaboo for lightweight
  portable computers. Intel is going farther too, with the Genesis
  chip, which integrates a 386SX, I/O ports, a memory controller,
  and a display controller on a single chip.
 
  Not to be completely outdone, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) last
  week announced that they have succeeded in putting almost an
  entire IBM-AT-clone motherboard (286  CPU, memory controller, DMA
  [direct memory access] controllers, interrupt controllers, real-
  time clock, expanded memory manager, and a bus controller) on a
  single chip, the AM286ZX. Another chip, the AM286LX, will include
  power management functions as well, making it ideal for low-power
  portables. AMD says the chips will be available in 12, 16, and 20
  MHz versions, and a computer with the 20MHz AM286LX chip will
  probably be as fast or faster than 386SX computers at the same
  clock speed. The speed increase is probably due to the closeness
  of the components on the chip in comparison to the closeness of
  the components when they are strewn around a motherboard.
 
  AMD's main problem is not with speed, but with the fact that the
  world is moving towards 32-bit chips like the 386 and 486 (not to
  mention the 68030 :-)). Many buyers are avoiding 286 machines
  because they are unable to run 32-bit applications or concurrent
  DOS applications. One way or another though, these chips point at
  an increased level of integration and power management, both of
  which will be necessary for tomorrow's computer clothing.
 
    Reflection Technology -- 617/890-5905
    Intel -- 800/538-3373
    AMD -- 408/732-2400
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
    Matt Lewkowicz
 
  Related articles:
    InfoWorld -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #40, pg. 6
    PC WEEK -- 03-Sep-90, Vol. 7, #35, pg. 1
    PC WEEK -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 7, #39, pg. 1
    PC WEEK -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 7, #39, pg. 137
 
 
Reviews/01-Oct-90
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Client-Tracking Programs, pg. 59
       C*A*T III
      Client/Mac 2.1
      Leads!
      Market Master Manager II+
      TeleMagic Release 10
    VideoQuill, pg. 59
    4D 2.1, pg. 66
    4D Compiler, pg. 66
    PosterWorks, pg. 66
    Screenshot, pg. 68
    MultiClip, pg. 70
 
* InfoWorld
    4D Compiler, pg. 85
    Individual Training For Word, pg. 85
 
* PC WEEK
    Video Frame Grabbers, pg. 85
      QuickImage 24
      RasterOps 364
      DigiVideo Color
 
* Macworld
    Frame Grabbers, pg. 210
      DigiVideo Color
      RasterOps 364
    Quark XPress 3.0, pg. 212
    Phaser PX Color Printer, pg. 214
    Color MacCheese 1.04, pg. 220
    Balance of the Planet 1.0, pg. 227
    Beyond 1.5, pg. 229
    Letterforms & Illusions 1.0, pg. 231
    Jack Nicklaus' Greatest 18 Holes of Major Championship Golf,
      pg. 233
    Think Pascal 3.0, pg. 236
    DrawTools 1.0, pg. 238
    ComputerEyes Professional, pg. 240
    DiskExpress II 2.04, pg. 243
    Fast Forms 2.0, pg. 245
    MacBravo 2.0, pg. 247
    TopDown 2.0, pg. 249
    C*A*T III 1.0, pg. 250
    VideoPaint 1.0, pg. 252
    Send Express 1.0, pg. 254
    Inspiration 2.0.4, pg. 256
    MiBAC 1.2.1, pg. 259
    The Duel: Test Drive II, pg. 261
    Sybil 2.0, pg. 263
    Aranda 1.0.1, pg. 265
    Card/Fax 2.0, pg. 269
    Bass Champ 1.1.1, pg. 269
    The Athlete's Diary 1.1, pg. 270
    Cyclist's Logbook, pg. 270
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 02-Oct-90, Vol. 4, #33
    InfoWorld -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 12, #40
    PC WEEK -- 01-Oct-90, Vol. 7, #39
    Macworld -- Nov-90
 
 
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