TidBITS#34/10-Dec-90
====================
 
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Topics:
    Scores Author Charged
    Christmas Things
    Last Chance Survey
    Expo Expectations
    Reviews/10-Dec-90
 
 
Scores Author Charged
---------------------
  With all the effort that many of you have put in responding to our
  survey, we hate to ask you to write yet another letter. However,
  you may want to do so depending on your experiences with viruses.
  The Dallas prosecutor's office is going to file charges against
  the author of the Scores virus, one of the first of those nasty
  little beasties. They feel that they have plenty of hard evidence
  in the case, but are looking for more information on the scope of
  the damage done by Scores outside of EDS (the company originally
  targeted by the Scores virus). Any information you provide will
  not be used on a per-item basis and you will not be called as a
  witness. However, this is something you can do to show your
  support of legal action against virus authors. If you wish to help
  out, include specifics on when your computer(s) contracted Scores,
  any damage it did, and approximately what it took in terms of time
  and expense to clean up after it. Any other related data will be
  appreciated as well.
 
 
Send your letters to
    Lt. Walt Manning
    Dallas Police Dept.
    1840 Chestnut. St.
    Dallas, TX 75226
 
  Lt. Manning would also appreciate separate letters on letterhead
  stating that viruses such as Scores are a major problem in the
  computing community and that if possible, their authors should be
  prosecuted under appropriate laws. Evidently he's looking for some
  rational, well-reasoned letters of support that could be used as a
  backdrop to the case.
 
  According to Lt. Manning, they expect the suspect to plead guilty
  when shown the evidence they have against him. No life
  imprisonments here either - they're going to try to get a
  suspended sentence with a public apology and lots of community
  service. We support such sentences so long as they are
  appropriately served. Talented programmers such as this person and
  Robert Morris should be put to work doing programming. No need to
  waste their talents. Of course, if a convicted virus author is
  caught loosing another virus, that's when we should collectively
  break his or her fingers.
 
  That said, we encourage you to write these letters. Even if you
  haven't had the Scores virus itself, the unimaginable amount of
  time that has been spent by everyone who uses computers in
  fighting viruses should be acknowledged to the legal community.
 
  Information from:
    Mark Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
    Gene Spafford -- spaf@cs.purdue.edu
 
 
Christmas Things
----------------
  Before anything else, we'd like to wish you all a very happy
  holiday season, wherever you are and whatever holiday you'd like
  celebrate. Enjoy.
 
  Well, we've been sick, and it was a slow week, and we don't expect
  much more to happen next week either as everything stops for
  Christmas. We will be taking a much-needed break, so don't expect
  to see TidBITS until 1991. We'll probably be missing only two
  issues, and we hope to write some review issues in our time off.
 
  To clear up a question we recently asked (and thanks to
  mingo@cup.portal.com for the first answer), the abbreviation plc
  stands for Public Limited Company and is roughly the equivalent of
  Inc. in the US. So a plc is a publicly-traded company with limited
  liability to its stockholders. This is in contrast to Ltd. which
  is a privately-held company with limited liability. Nice to know
  these sorts of things on occasion. Mingo adds that the German
  equivalent is AG (for Aktien Gesellschaft), and Ltd. is GmbH
  (Gesellschaft mit Beschraenkter Haftung). Consider it your IBL
  (International Business Lesson) for the day.
 
  We said that Michael Joyce's Afternoon is perhaps the first
  electronic novel, and julian@riacs.edu confirmed our suspicion
  that there was indeed an earlier novel, called Brimstone, from
  Synapse and Broederbund. It wasn't particularly popular, in part
  because it wasn't all that interesting, according to Julian. He
  said it was already in the bargain bin at Computerware when he
  found it in 1986, so it probably isn't still around to check out.
  Sorry.
 
  We've started a new folder in the Speak Out section of ForumLink
  on America Online to talk about TidBITS and the articles that are
  either present or should be included. We'll also probably talk
  about things that don't quite merit an article as they stand, but
  are interesting nonetheless. So if you have access to America
  Online, we urge you to check it out. If it goes well, we may see
  about setting up TidBITS discussion groups other places, though
  the best possibility right now would be Usenet, since we don't
  have accounts on CompuServe or GEnie due to lack of funding.
 
 
Last Chance Survey
------------------
  Well, this is it. This is the last week that our survey will be
  included in the issue. If you've responded already, please, we
  implore you, delete this item. If you're seeing this for the first
  time or you haven't yet gotten up the gumption or initiative to
  respond, we'd appreciate it if you did. Don't worry about the
  space this is taking up since it's been a slow week. We're not
  holding out any good news to include the survey this last time. As
  far as we can tell at the moment, we're looking at about a 3%
  return rate. That may be good by normal survey standards, but it
  seems a tad low to us. So be abnormal and tell us about yourself.
 
  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? This one's
  important!
 
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? This one's also important!
 
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 and Andy
  Hertzfeld is 10?
 
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 21 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.
 
 
Expo Expectations
-----------------
  Unlike the Macworld Expo in Boston this year, the San Francisco
  Expo promises to show some products that haven't been thoroughly
  squeezed of interest by the press (including us :-)). The computer
  industry and Apple in particular has a strange fascination with
  leaking information, wavering between battening down the security
  hatches and making sure that "unofficial" information is freely
  available. The three recently-introduced Macs are the best example
  of this latter phenomenon since almost everyone knew exactly what
  they could do well before they actually appeared. For this
  upcoming Expo on January 10-13 in San Francisco, though,
  everyone's staying quiet. We've got a few ideas about what might
  be released there, some backed up with evidence, some just based
  on educated speculation.
 
  The main thing to look for at the Expo is Apple's new laptop. It's
  rumored to be a bit lighter than the current one, and may use a
  different pointing device (the leading contender is the Isopoint,
  the one used in the Outbound portable). We haven't heard whether
  or not a new screen will be included, but there have been lots of
  talk of Apple working with Toshiba and Sony, both of whom could
  contribute a lot to the new portable's screen capability. We
  originally thought that the Portable's screen was quite good, but
  in using a borrowed one more, we're not all that impressed. We
  have heard of several people who can barely use a luminescent
  screen because of eye problems. For them, an LCD screen is a must.
  There's also been talk of lighter portables coming out later in
  the year, which we certainly wouldn't complain about.
 
  We've been thinking (and saw mention of this in the 10-Dec edition
  of Robert X Cringely's rumor column in InfoWorld) that Apple may
  actually ship System 7.0 at this Expo, rather than in the spring
  as had been the previous indication. We have seen System 7.0 up
  and running and have seen few crashes, although the fancier stuff
  like virtual memory and file sharing wasn't quite complete. If
  System 7.0 shipped at the Expo, and if third-party developers were
  ready for it, that would mean a whole slew of new System 7.0
  versions of programs like Word and Excel, which are both looking a
  little grey around the edges (and I don't mean grey-scale) in
  comparison to their competitors. We'll just have to wait and see.
 
  We're betting on a color version of Radius's popular Pivot monitor
  to show up at the Expo too. Radius hasn't said anything concrete
  about it yet, but one inquiring soul was given a solid "No
  comment." Now if we asked in true journalistic style, "Do you deny
  that you were avoiding the question of whether or not there will
  be a color Pivot introduced at the Expo?" then we'd know for sure
  what was happening. Lucky for Radius, we're not nasty journalists
  and we like their monitors. So one way or another, we hope there
  is a color Pivot introduced, if only because we'd love to see a
  review unit and because they would sell like hotcakes if they
  weren't too expensive. Who knows, maybe PCPC will even show the
  Flipper monitor at the Expo too. If so, it would be the first time
  we'd heard of a confirmed sighting. Our money (if we had any) is
  on Radius.
 
  Information from:
    Michael Kobb -- mjkobb@media-lab.media.mit.edu
 
  Related articles:
    PC WEEK -- 10-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #49, pg. 1
    InfoWorld -- 03-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #49, pg. 1
 
 
Reviews/10-Dec-90
-----------------
 
* PC WEEK
    DEC Pathworks, pg. 111
 
* BYTE
    Norton Utilities for the Macintosh , pg. 179
    VideoQuill, pg. 229
 
* MacUser
    Kodak XL7700 Color Printer, pg. 62
    4D Compiler, pg. 65
    Aldus PrePrint, pg. 70
    Desk, pg. 74
    TelePort A300, pg. 79
    HookUp!, pg. 83
    Project Scheduler 4, pg. 86
    2400 Baud Modems, pg. 100
    AU/X, pg. 118
    SQL Implementations, pg. 138
      DAL
      SQL*Net
      SequeLink
    Low-End Word Processors, pg. 156
      MacWrite II
      Works 2.00
      WordMaker 1.01
      WriteNow 2.2
 
* Macworld
    Graphics Accelerators, pg. 136
    Image Manipulation Software, pg. 144
      Photoshop
      ColorStudio
    24-bit Display Systems, pg. 152
    NeXTstation, NeXTcube, and NeXTdimension, pg. 160
    MacRenderMan 3.1, pg. 176
    QuicKeys2 2.0, pg. 178
    FrameMaker 2.1, pg. 180
    Amazing Paint 1.0, pg. 184
    MacProteus 1.0, pg. 188
    Aldus PrePrint 1.0, pg. 195
    MediaTracks 1.0, pg. 198
    Where In Time Is Carmen Sandiego?, pg. 200
    EtherPrint, pg. 202
    Darwin's Dilemma 1.0, pg. 203
    TCP/Connect II 1.0, pg. 207
    Desk 1.0, pg. 209
    MacTools Deluxe, pg. 210
    Point of View, pg. 214
    Ask It 1.0, pg. 215
    The Mathematics Teacher's Workstation 1.0, pg. 215
    TrakHur 1.5, pg. 215
    Afternoon, pg. 218
    Report Ideas, pg. 218
    AgreeMentor, pg. 218
 
References:
    PC WEEK -- 10-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #49
    BYTE -- Dec-90
    MacUser -- Jan-91
    Macworld -- Jan-91
 
 
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