TidBITS#33/03-Dec-90
====================
 
 Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
   publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
   publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
   of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
   registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
   back issues are available.
 
 For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
 Internet: ace@tidbits.uucp -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
 TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    TidBITS Survey (2nd chance)
    When I'm 68040...
    Disinfectant 2.4
    Afternoon, The Novel
    AT&T&NCR
    Not Exactly a Prodigy
    Reviews/03-Dec-90
 
 
TidBITS Survey (2nd chance)
---------------------------
  You may have seen (and hopefully answered) our survey in the last
  issue. If you have responded, please click the Delete Card button
  below, so as to avoid redundancy. However, if you have been
  putting off responding for one reason or another, please send a
  completed survey as soon as possible. We've received a number of
  excellent responses (luckily we have a color monitor so we can
  check the RGB values that some people sent for their favorite
  colors) and are collecting and tabulating each and every one. Keep
  in mind, of course, what Mark Twain once said, "There are three
  kinds of lies - lies, damned lies and statistics."
 
  Send completed surveys in any form you wish to any of these
  addresses:
 
* Internet:
    ace@tidbits.tcnet.ithaca.ny.us
    ace%tidbits.uucp@theory.tn.cornell.edu
    pv9y@vax5.cit.cornell.edu
    pv9y@cornella.cit.cornell.edu
 
* America Online: Adam Engst
 
* CompuServe:
    :INTERNET:ace@tidbits.tcnet.ithaca.ny.us
    (or :INTERNET plus any other Internet address above)
 
* GEnie: Sorry we have no account on GEnie and are unaware of any
    gateways to the Internet. You'll have to use snail mail.
 
* Snail mail:
    Adam Engst
    TidBITS
    901 Dryden Rd. #88
    Ithaca, NY  14850   USA
 
 
Basic Questions
 
0. We'll start with the easy ones. What is your name?
 
1. They're not getting much harder. In what town and country do
  you live?
 
2. Another easy one. Do you read TidBITS regularly?
 
3. From where do you download or otherwise acquire TidBITS?
 
3a. If download statistics are listed, approximately how many
  others download each issue of TidBITS from that source?
 
4. Do you redistribute TidBITS to other people or online services,
  such as your mother or a local BBS?
 
4a. If you do redistribute TidBITS, approximately how many people
  read each issue that you redistribute? Really?
 
5. Do you use TidBITS articles in user group or university (or
  other non-profit) publications? (You can, you know, as long as
  you credit us.)
 
6. Have you found the TidBITS Archive useful for looking up
  information?
 
* (For the following questions, 1 is low, 10 is high, and only
  integers exist)
 
7. On a scale of 1 - 10, how knowledgeable are you as a Mac user,
  if a DOS user who has never seen a Mac is 0 on the scale?
 
8. On a scale of 1 - 10, how knowledgeable are you as a HyperCard
  user/author?
 
9. On a scale of 1 - 10, how often do you use the contact
  information to contact companies?
 
10. On a scale of 1 - 10, how often do you use the references to
  related articles?
 
11. Do you have HyperCard 2.0 yet? You'll want to get it soon,
  because TidBITS will require it some time in the future. Of
  course at that point the distribution format will be text, so
  you'll only need it for the archiving features.
 
* Optional Questions
 
12. What do you like best about TidBITS?
 
13. What do you like least about TidBITS?
 
14. What sort of articles would you like to see in TidBITS that
  are not currently present?
 
15. What would make TidBITS easier to acquire and read?
 
16. What other Macintosh publications (paper or electronic) do you
  read regularly?
 
17. Are you interested in writing special issues (like the Xanadu
  issue, #30) or product reviews for TidBITS? If so, please
  contact us via email for more information. We pay only in fame,
  since that's all we get.
 
18. What's your favorite color?
 
  That's 20 questions including the sub-questions, so we'll stop
  now. Give yourself 1 point for each question answered. Scores of
  more than 11 win. Scores of less than 3 indicate that you probably
  won't return the survey, so answer a few more questions and then
  send it in. At most it's a few minutes and a stamp and we
  guarantee never to do telephone surveys (or to sell your name to
  mailing list brokers). Also, we will share the results (especially
  the statistical significance of question 18) in TidBITS. Thanks
  for the enthusiasm, it keeps us going.
 
 
When I'm 68040...
-----------------
  By now I'm sure that most of you have heard of Motorola's speedy
  new chip, the 68040. Motorola finally announced this week that it
  will start shipping the 68040 in quantity, an announcement which a
  number of companies were waiting anxiously for. Of those, NeXT is
  probably the most important since the new NeXTStations and
  NeXTCubes can't ship until the 68040 arrives in bulk. Motorola is
  rushing the chips out in an effort to meet manufacturers' needs.
 
  This is all well and good for Apple as well, since it's no secret
  (or at least we don't think it is :-)) that Apple has been working
  on a 68040-based Macintosh. However, Apple has also been rumored
  to be working on a RISC-based (reduced instruction set computing)
  computer that would use Motorola's 88000 line of processors. There
  is a slight problem with the Motorola chips though. In true Nancy
  Reagan spirit, Motorola recently instituted a drug-testing policy
  for its employees, a policy that caused a number of Motorola's
  engineers, most significantly the ones in the 68040 and RISC
  departments, to resign in protest. That may be another reason
  Motorola rushed the 68040 ship date - they didn't want
  manufacturers getting worried about chip availability
 
  It's unclear whether or not the Apple RISC machine will be a
  Macintosh or not, although I personally think it would be a large
  mistake to introduce yet another platform into the market. Such a
  RISC machine should at least have a Macintosh emulation mode.
  Apple has said that it will only use the 68000 family in the Mac,
  but some people wonder if this is true, in light of last week's
  news that Apple and VLSI Technology and Acorn Computer Group plc 
  formed a new company in Cambridge, England (would someone in the
  UK please tell us what that plc stands for?).
 
  The company, Advanced RISC Machines (ARM) will develop cheap RISC
  processors that consume little power. Such processors would be
  extremely useful in the next generation of portable computers,
  perhaps even the sort that General Magic is working on. Another
  likely possibility for the RISC processor would be in a laser
  printer's rasterizing board. The greater the resolution of a laser
  printer, the greater the need for processing power, particularly
  with complex images, and Apple no longer has a high-end laser
  printer now that 600 and 1000 dpi printers are readily available
  from companies such as LaserMax. Apply that logic as you will,
  we've heard nothing specific and are merely connecting related
  points of information.
 
  Information from:
    John Catsoulis -- jtc@latcs1.oz.au
    Nigel Cliffe -- ncliffe@axion.bt.co.uk
    Ian Harries -- ih@doc.ic.ac.uk
    Lawrence D'Oliveiro -- ldo@waikato.ac.nz
 
  Related articles:
    PC WEEK -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #48, pg. 17, 153
    InfoWorld -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #49, pg. 5
 
 
Disinfectant 2.4
----------------
  It's gotten so that we can't even think of good titles for this
  article any more. It's repetitive, we know, and there's not much
  we can do to make it interesting short of telling lawyer jokes (no
  offense to any lawyers of course, most of our lawyer jokes come
  from lawyer friends. "What!" you say. "These people have friends
  who are lawyers? And here we thought they were normal!").
 
  In any event, there is a new version of Disinfectant. The version
  number is 2.4, and you should grab a copy next time it's
  convenient. We probably don't sound terribly alarmed and in truth
  we aren't. The new virus that 2.4 finds is a new strain of the ZUC
  B virus, which originated in Italy. We initially thought there
  wasn't much cause for concern, but just this week, a copy of ZUC B
  was found here in Ithaca, New York, USA. There are a few other
  minor fixes and small things that John cleaned up in 2.4 and it's
  worth having, in case a ZUC B virus tries to sneak into your
  computer. Pick it up from your favorite purveyor of free software.
 
  Information from:
    John Norstad -- jln@casbah.acns.nwu.edu
      America Online: JNorstad
      CompuServe: 76666,573
      AppleLink: A0173
 
 
Afternoon, The Novel
--------------------
  It's not just a state of mind, it's a time of day. Afternoon is
  also the title of perhaps the first work of fiction that requires
  a computer to be read. I stress the phrase "work of fiction"
  because most people immediately think of the text adventure games
  popularized by Zork and others from Infocom. However, Afternoon is
  different. It is truly fiction and bears no resemblance to a game
  or puzzle. There is nothing to solve, nowhere to go, no prize to
  capture. In essence, there is no more goal in Afternoon than there
  is in Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" or any other papertext.
  With fiction, if there is a goal at all, it would be what some
  have called the completion of self, i.e. when you feel that you
  are satisfied with the fiction. In papertexts, that usually
  happens at the end, though I've stopped reading a book in the
  middle because it was completed to my satisfaction (a nice way of
  saying it was lousy). In hyperfiction, you may never read
  everything, but that doesn't matter so long as you feel that
  you've read a complete story.
 
  If you like modern fiction, and particularly if you like the idea
  of an ever-changing, fluid fiction, I highly recommend Michael
  Joyce's Afternoon. It runs on the Mac 512KE and above, sells for
  $19.95 from Eastgate Systems, and if you act fast, you may even
  get an autographed disk. Afternoon is the first fiction written in
  Storyspace, a program that Michael Joyce helped to create.
  Storyspace will also be marketed by Eastgate and is specifically
  designed for writing hypertext. I shouldn't say too much more
  about it for now, since it will be released soon, but suffice it
  to say that Storyspace is an excellent hypertext authoring system.
  I personally have written the equivalent of over 250 pages in it,
  so I should know what I'm talking about. Stay tuned...
 
    Eastgate Systems -- 800/562-1638 -- 617/924-9044
 
  Information from:
    Mark Bernstein, Eastgate Systems
       CompuServe -- 76146,262
       Internet -- 76146.262@compuserve.com
 
 
AT&T&NCR
--------
  What a lot of letters! It may become reality if AT&T succeeds in
  its bid to buy NCR. So far NCR has refused (and I may not have
  this exactly right - stocks are not my strong suit) stock offers
  of $85 and $90 per share, but AT&T isn't giving up. There's been
  talk of $100 per share, and NCR has proposed $125 per share. One
  way or another, it's a lot of money.
 
  AT&T is probably looking at NCR as a excellent way to finally get
  a decent computer line. NCR makes a huge family of computers and
  just released a whole slew of new ones. AT&T, on the other hand,
  has had poor results in the computer market. Computers like the
  AT&T PC 6300 and a pseudo-personal Unix box flopped in the market.
  So on that account, AT&T could get back into what it must see as a
  lucrative market, especially considering that AT&T Unix is a
  popular operating system and a number of the NCR computers run
  Unix.
 
  The deal goes both ways, of course. NCR isn't known for their
  customer service, or rather they are known for mediocre customer
  service, whereas AT&T usually gets decent ratings on that score.
  In addition, NCR recently announced WaveLAN, a wireless network,
  though little has been said about it since its introduction.
  AT&T's clout behind WaveLAN might give it a serious boost in what
  is bound to become a large market eventually. Motorola has
  announced a more ambitious radio network, Apple has asked for FCC
  clearance for a portion of the bandwidth, and just recently
  Toshiba announced that it was working on the low end, a method of
  wireless communication between peripherals, which would eliminate
  the massive wire nest behind everyone's desks (where the wire rats
  live :-)). Who knows what AT&T could do with WaveLAN if it managed
  to acquire NCR and quickly pushed WaveLAN into the marketplace?
 
  Related articles:
    InfoWorld -- 26-Nov-90, Vol. 12, #48, pg. 21
 
 
Not Exactly a Prodigy
---------------------
  The US political climate is about as strange as the average Ithaca
  weather in that it's seldom predictable, but often involves slush.
  Battles have been waged over issues like flag burning (does it
  count if I throw a TIFF image of the American flag in my Mac's
  trash can?) and other free expression issues. Electronic freedoms
  have been in the news as well, what with the FBI seizing the
  equipment of suspected electronic burglars. It's even gone so far
  that Mitch Kapor and others formed the Electronic Frontier
  Foundation, a group dedicated to educating both the government and
  the public about electronic freedoms.
 
  In the midst of this thicket of confusion, up pops Prodigy, the
  online service run by IBM and Sears, two of the more conservative
  companies in the solar system. On the face of it, Prodigy sounds
  like a great deal, a flat rate of $9.95 for a month no matter how
  long you spend online. There are a few drawbacks, such as a fifth
  of the screen devoted to advertising and an interface from hell,
  but people didn't mind that. Then came the slush. Prodigy decided
  that it wasn't making enough money, so it raised the monthly rates
  and started charging 25 cents for each mail message over 30 per
  month. Considering that it costs the same amount to send real mail
  and have someone pick it up at your house and deliver it your
  friend, people became unhappy. First they started grumbling in the
  bulletin board areas, then in private mailing lists when Prodigy
  informed them that their griping was uninteresting and wouldn't
  allow it posted. That wasn't enough, so Prodigy changed its
  guidelines to make such mailing lists illegal. In addition,
  Prodigy expelled the most vocal of the dissenters and starting
  screening even private mail to be sure its guidelines aren't
  weren't violated. Now there's a nasty job.
 
  Due in part to the massive bad press, though, Prodigy now says
  that it will reinstate the people it expelled if they sign letters
  admitting that they harassed other Prodigy members and advertisers
  with their protest. From what we've heard, Prodigy's offer has
  been turned down cold. The other online services have been happily
  taking the users who are unhappy with Prodigy's censorship
  practices.
 
  This ugly incident point more towards a larger issue of the
  boundary between email and normal mail. Opening a letter that's
  not addressed to you is a US federal crime, and it's no better for
  a mail carrier to do so. Similarly, free speech guarantees that
  you can say what you want in person, but that doesn't seem to
  apply to electronic discussions. In our opinion, freedom of
  expression should not be limited by the medium of expression, but
  only by its ability to directly harm another person. An excellent
  example is Usenet, where lots of unpleasant and controversial
  subjects are discussed. You can say anything you wish without fear
  of legal reprisal (except for some local computer abuse laws).
  However, if what you say is deemed inappropriate for any reason,
  prepare to be flamed. That internal set of checks and balances
  serves to properly compartmentalize topics, so if your message
  belongs in alt.sex.chains&whipped_cream, it had better not show up
  in comp.sys.mac.misc. In the vast majority of cases, the existence
  of appropriate forums is enough; and in the few exceptions, public
  uproar serves to keep the peace. If only the rest of the
  electronic world were so reasonable.
 
  Information from:
    Heidi Aycock -- heidia@samba.acs.unc.edu
    Don -- donc@microsoft.UUCP
    Clayton Cramer -- cramer@optilink.UUCP
    David Lemson -- lemson@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu
 
  Related articles:
    PC WEEK -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #48, pg. 13
    InfoWorld -- 26-Nov-90, Vol. 12, #48, pg. 5
    MacWEEK -- 04-Dec-90, Vol. 4, #41, pg. 36
 
 
Reviews/03-Dec-90
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Accounting Packages, pg. 61
      Great Plains Accounting Series
      Insight Expert Accounting Series
      SBT Database Accounting Library
      (these things don't come in parallel :-))
    Studio/32, pg. 61
    Adobe Illustrator 3.0, pg. 74
    Sonar Bookends, pg. 76
    Editorial Advisor, pg. 78
    Solarian, pg. 78
    Might & Magic II, pg. 79
    OCR Systems, pg. 107
      OmniPage 2.1
      Parallel Reader
      Typist
      TopScan CDP 9000
      TopScan CDP 6000
      ScanReader
      TextPert 3.5
      Read-It! O.C.R 2.1
      Read-It! O.C.R Personal 2.1
      Datacopy AccuText 2.0
 
* InfoWorld
    Adobe Illustrator 3.0, pg. 64
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 04-Dec-90, Vol. 4, #41
    InfoWorld -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #49
 
 
..
 
 This text is encoded in the setext format. Please send email to
 <info@tidbits.uucp> or contact us at one of the above addresses
 to learn how to get more information on the setext format.
