TidBITS#29/12-Nov-90
====================
 
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Topics:
    Electronic Jabberwocky
    DiskDoubler Makes Good
    SimEarth
    No New Viruses
    Reviews/12-Nov-90
 
 
Electronic Jabberwocky
----------------------
  Long ago I read a spoof that poked fun at spelling checkers. It
  was disguised as a letter from an editor to Charles Dodgson,
  better known as Lewis Carroll. The editor was explaining his
  reasons for not publishing Jabberwocky and was trying to make
  sense of the poem after the spelling checker had offered its
  corrections and suggestions. Oh for those slithy troves!
 
  Soon you too might be able to run your favorite spelling checker
  through Jabberwocky thanks to Project Gutenberg, which is
  dedicated to encouraging the creation and distribution of
  electronic English language texts. In a recent experiment, Project
  Gutenberg made Lewis Carroll's Alice In Wonderland available to
  the general Internet public by putting it up for anonymous FTP.
  According to Michael Hart, Project Gutenberg's director, Alice has
  been a great hit with the online community. As an added benefit,
  he said that a number of people who had downloaded the electronic
  text had submitted corrections for typos in the text. In response
  to Alice In Wonderland's success, Project Gutenberg will soon be
  posting Through the Looking-glass and the Snark as well, so
  Carroll fans, be on the lookout!
 
  If you are interested in checking out the electronic Alice, it's
  easy if you have access to FTP. Just type
    -ftp mrcnext@cso.uiuc.edu or ftp 128.174.73.105 (Your system
      may not know the actual name, the second address avoids this)
    -anonymous (This is the login username)
    -Any password works fine
    -cd etext
    -get alice.txt (it's about 150K)
 
  If you do pick up Alice, be aware of Project Gutenberg's policy on
  releasing electronic texts (please note that this statement will
  change slightly in Alice 1.1, available soon with lots of good
  corrections): "This copy of Alice in Wonderland is hereby released
  in the CopyLeft traditions of the Free Software Foundation and
  Richard M. Stallman. This means the document is to be considered
  under copyright, and an individual may make as may copies for self
  and/or friends, etc. and will be under no obligation as long as
  this is not commercial. Not for profit corporations and all other
  corporate entities are not to distribute this file for any more
  cost to the user than $2 and only if a disk is provided for that
  fee. If you find errors, and we are sure you will, please email
  location of the errors to hart@uiucvmd, (BITNET) or
  hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu (INTERNET)." An admirable statement and one
  which we try to follow as well. Remember that any article in
  TidBITS may be freely copied for use in non-profit publications as
  long as we are clearly credited.
 
  Project Gutenberg has taken on an enormous task, as their goal is
  to provide a collection of 10,000 of the most used books in the
  next ten years and to be able to provide those texts at a cost of
  about a penny per book (you will have to pay for your own disks
  and postage). That will put the cost of the entire library at
  about $100 US, which is pretty reasonable for 10,000 books
  (considering that I probably spend that much in a year in a single
  subject area alone). Of course floppy disks may be passe by then,
  but CD-ROMs may still be around and they will be ideal for such a
  storage task, assuming they haven't been supplanted by then by
  another storage medium that is far larger, like holographic
  images. Nevertheless, the task becomes much more imaginable if you
  consider the number of libraries in the US alone. Hart
  conservatively estimates 100,000 libraries, which would mean that
  if each library helped with Project Gutenberg, each library would
  only have to create a tenth of a text. Now admittedly, there is a
  bit more work in creating these things, since even the best OCR
  software makes mistakes and people are far worse (yes, many of
  Project Gutenberg's current texts have been typed in by hand. If
  you'd like to improve your typing speed, I'm sure they would love
  to give you something to work on.). If you are interested, they
  need people to proofread the electronic texts as much as they need
  people to enter them. Suggestions for what books to enter are also
  always welcome.
 
  Project Gutenberg isn't in the slightest bit elitist about who
  wishes to help out. They gladly accept any electronic texts from
  anyone who has the inclination to enter some. If you wish, you can
  send texts to Michael Hart at the above address, or for those who
  can't access the Internet as easily, you can send them to the
  mailing address below.
 
  If you are interested in more information about Project Gutenberg
  and you are on Bitnet or the Internet, you can get it directly by
  subscribing to the GUTNBERG discussion list. Send this message,
  SUB GUTNBERG YOUR NAME (where your name must be at least two
  words) to LISTSERV@UIUCVMD.BITNET. I've been reading and
  contributing to the GUTNBERG discussions for the last few months
  and have found them extremely interesting, though I may be biased
  because of my predilection for electronic texts. Electronic
  communication is the future, but with only a little effort, it can
  be the present as well. Project Gutenberg is one step, and we hope
  that TidBITS is another, but we're still waiting for electronic
  communications to coalesce and become the primary information
  source. We may have to wait for Ted Nelson's Xanadu for that day.
 
    Michael S. Hart
    Duncan Research
    P. O. Box  2782
    Champaign, IL 61825
 
  Information from:
    Michael Hart -- hart@uiucvmd -- hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
 
 
DiskDoubler Makes Good
----------------------
  Here's an interesting phenomenon. Remember the hullabaloo about
  keeping public archives in public formats? Most people were
  talking about how wonderful Compactor and StuffIt Deluxe were,
  with an occasional mention of Diamond as well. DiskDoubler was
  mentioned a couple of times, but was never included as a serious
  contender to StuffIt Deluxe, which has history behind it, and
  Compactor, which is the shareware challenger.
 
  Well it turns out that DiskDoubler hasn't been doing all that
  badly after all. It has simply found a subtle niche that the other
  two compression utilities don't really fill - personal compression
  and archiving. The most common use of compression utilities up to
  now has been to related to telecommunications - to reduce
  transmission time and limit use of expensive storage space. Some
  people used StuffIt (because that's all there was back then and it
  was good) to manage archives of programs and files, but StuffIt
  really wasn't very good at that despite all the little add-on
  programs Ray Lau created for it. No one would have called StuffIt
  transparent.
 
  That's where DiskDoubler comes into play. It is ideal for managing
  hard disk space. I have a 105 meg drive that is constantly filling
  up, just as my previous 30 meg drive did. Now, however, before I
  throw something out, I look around for something I seldom use and
  compress it using DiskDoubler. If I want to use a it, DiskDoubler
  quickly expands it, and, keeping track of it when I'm done,
  recompresses it to save my disk space again. DiskDoubler usually
  manages about 50% compression in my experience, and it allows me
  to avoid throwing stuff out randomly. It doesn't prevent me from 
  doing housekeeping on my drive, but at least I can schedule it for
  when I have time. One drawback to my compression habits is that
  MacTools Backup considers all the files that I've compressed to be
  new versions and backs them up again. Oh well, win some, lose
  some.
 
  I thought until recently that DiskDoubler was losing out in the
  compression wars because it didn't seem to be the
  telecommunications compressor of choice. However, I just heard
  that DiskDoubler is doing surprisingly well, and in some
  interesting places other than the world of telecommunications.
  According to Computer Currents, DiskDoubler ranked 5th of all of
  MacConnection's sales in terms of units sold for the first week of
  November. I'm glad they rated it in terms of units sold; a lot of
  those sorts of statistics are done in terms of total dollar sales,
  which immediately removes reasonably priced utility software from
  the ratings because utility software can't hope to compete with
  high-priced word processors and spreadsheets like Word and Excel.
 
  I've also heard from Salient that they have a new version, called
  DiskDoubler Plus, only for people doing JPEG (Joint Photographic
  Experts Group - finally found out what the acronym stood for)
  compression with C-Cube's Compression Master board. DiskDoubler
  Plus has extensions to handle 24-bit color and will be bundled
  with the C-Cube board. I hope Apple's forthcoming video
  compression hardware/software (perhaps to appear in March) is as
  transparent. And no, we don't know anything more about Apple's
  stuff short of a positive report from Pythaeus. Of course, Apple
  might do something similar considering that they just purchased a
  worldwide site license for DiskDoubler from Salient. I wonder how
  much a worldwide site license runs.
 
    Salient -- 415/852-9567
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
    Lloyd Chambers
      -- LChambers @ AOL
      -- Salient @ AppleLink
      -- 76516.1574@compuserve.com
    Pythaeus
 
 
SimEarth
--------
  SimCity from Maxis was the hit game of last year. Not too
  surprising really, if you think about all the human vices that the
  game satisfied. Greed, violence, cruelty. Lust was probably the
  only one that didn't figure in. (Perhaps that will be coming soon
  in SimRelationship :-)). Some people felt, well, a little cramped
  by SimCity. After all being the mayor of a city is fun, but it's
  not like being a demi-urge.
 
  SimEarth, Maxis's new game, allows you that power. You are a deity
  in charge of a planet and have control over the physical landscape
  and the evolution of life. Sim life forms can start out at the
  most basic level and progress up to intelligent life forms capable
  of interstellar travel. Felt like tearing up a swamp or
  eradicating a particularly bothersome life form (I don't think
  there is a life form corresponding to your co-workers)? Well, it's
  all possible in SimEarth. If you are feeling especially ruthless
  you might think about some appropriate disasters, a plague
  perhaps, or maybe an earthquake, or what about an ice asteroid?
 
  The $69.95 SimEarth is designed by Will Wright, creator of
  SimCity. Wright was aided in the task by James Lovelock, whose
  Gaia hypothesis treats the Earth as a single self-regulating
  system instead of separate systems of biology, geology, human
  culture, etc. One of the seven worlds that ships with SimEarth is
  DaisyWorld, a computer version of Lovelock's model of how life can
  regulate the environment to create conditions favorable to its
  continued well-being.
 
  One of the most interesting parts of the game is that it can be
  goal-oriented or exploratory, as the player wishes. If you simply
  wants to see what happens when you work on getting dinosaurs up to
  the level of interstellar space travel or maybe to see what
  species will survive in an icy environment, so be it. There isn't
  much of the traditional winning or losing. In addition, SimEarth
  has been praised by environmental groups as a learning tool for
  illustrating what humans can do to the environment.
 
  There are also the usual slew of hidden codes in SimEarth. If
  you're a ResEdit explorer you'd probably run across these too, so
  I don't feel bad about revealing anything (besides, I don't know
  what most of them do :-)). Try typing "joke," "erad," "smoo," and
  "rand". But be warned that you may not want to see what they do to
  your favorite planet. Erad in particular sounds nasty. Jake
  Hoelter of Maxis did reveal that "smoo" stands for smooth and
  smooths out your terrain.
 
  The response I've heard to SimEarth has been extremely positive.
  In fact, people have been complaining about not being able to get
  a copy because all the stores are sold out. Unfortunately, we're
  waiting until Christmas when we have time off to play games for a
  day straight (that's right, TidBITS will not be coming out around
  that time for at least a week, maybe two. Even we deserve a break
  every now and then.). If you are looking for more presents still,
  Maxis also will release, probably in time for the holiday season,
  two graphic sets for SimCity. Set #1, Ancient Cities, will include
  Ancient Asia, Medieval Times, and Wild West graphics. Set #2,
  Future Cities, will include Future Europe, Future America, and
  Moon Colony graphics. Be aware that these are simply different
  graphics - there has been no change in the city simulator itself.
  But if you were getting tired of the basic old city graphics,
  being able to zone a cemetery and a corral might be fun. Maxis
  hasn't set a price on the graphic sets yet, nor is there a firm
  release date.
 
    Maxis -- 800/521-6263 -- 415/492-3200
 
  Information from:
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
    Jake Hoelter -- Maxis @ AOL
    Aaron -- Aaron14 @ AOL
    SimEarth @ AOL
 
 
No New Viruses
--------------
  It's a fine week when I don't have to write about the latest and
  slimiest virus on the block. However, there is a small piece of
  news that everyone should be aware of. Chris Johnson's excellent
  utility, Gatekeeper Aid, has been updated to version 1.1.
  Gatekeeper aid works by itself in stopping and eradicating WDEF,
  MDEF, and CDEF viruses whenever any file containing the virus is
  used. Gatekeeper Aid can be used in conjunction with Johnson's
  Gatekeeper 1.1.1, a more general purpose utility for preventing
  viral activity on one's Mac, or with John Norstad's Disinfectant
  INIT.
 
  The main fixes in Gatekeeper Aid 1.1 are in finding and
  eradicating WDEF and the latest MDEF C virus and to intercept
  possible mutations of these types of viruses. Also, Gatekeeper Aid
  1.1 incorporates a retroactive fix for a conflict between
  Gatekeeper and System 6.0.7. This conflict manifests itself as
  Res(Sys) privilege violations (this conflict manifests itself when
  the ImageWriter printer is chosen and applications are executed
  under Finder, rather than MultiFinder). This was the side-effect
  of an unexpected change in MacOS 6.0.7 and not a bug in
  Gatekeeper. So if you use Gatekeeper and System 6.0.7, be sure to
  get this new version of Gatekeeper Aid.
 
  Gatekeeper Aid is available from the usual online sources. If you
  can't find it anywhere near you, and you have access to a modem,
  it's available from the Memory Alpha BBS in Ithaca, NY at 607/257-
  5822. 2400 baud, No parity, 8 data bits, 1 stop bit.
 
  Information from:
    Chris Johnson -- chrisj@emx.utexas.edu
    Adam C. Engst -- TidBITS Editor
    Mark Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
 
 
Reviews/12-Nov-90
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    FileMaker Pro, pg. 70
    Disk Mirroring Software, pg. 70
      DiskMount 2.0
      MacinStor Installer
    8*24 GC video card, pg. 74
    FullWrite Professional 1.5, pg. 74
    The Art of Interface Design, pg. 76
 
* InfoWorld
    Macintosh Classic & IIsi, pg. 159
 
* PC WEEK
    Ink-jet Printers, pg. 197 (not Mac specific)
 
* BYTE
    Ventura Publisher for the Mac, pg. 132
    Huge Hard Disks, pg. 172
      (too many to list)
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 13-Nov-90, Vol. 4, #39
    InfoWorld -- 12-Nov-90, Vol. 12, #46
    PC WEEK -- 12-Nov-90, Vol. 7, #45
    BYTE -- Nov-90
 
 
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