TidBITS#35/07-Jan-91
====================
 
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Topics:
    Happy New Year!
    Stuff That Installer
    VCR Backups
    Cut Rate Borland
    Out of the MarketPlace
    Reviews/07-Jan-91
 
 
Happy New Year!
---------------
  What better time to look back at the fun-filled events of 1990
  than now. You were having fun, weren't you? Actually, a few people
  suggested an article like this in their survey responses, and hey,
  we respond to feedback (well at least most of the time :-)). I
  will admit that I'm going to cheat and look back in my TidBITS
  Archive to better remember 1990's hot news, so if you missed
  something mentioned here, check your archive or look for back
  issues at your favorite free software repository. Oh, for those
  few of you who didn't know what the archive is and mentioned so on
  the survey, try reading the instructions on the first screen and
  then experiment with the Merge button.
 
  I don't think I can possibly rank these events in order of
  interest, but high on the list is the introduction of Windows 3.0
  for PC-clones. Microsoft dumped something like $10 million into
  marketing Windows 3.0 and, surprise, they sold a lot of copies,
  around two million. I'd like to see how some other programs could
  sell with a $10 million ad campaign. After using Windows for a
  bit, my feeling is that it's just fine if you use high-end PC-
  clones anyway, but no matter what people say, Windows does not
  give you a Mac, except perhaps in sheep's clothing, to stretch the
  allusion. The best part about Windows is that it helps to
  legitimize graphical interfaces (I hate the acronym GUI - it
  reminds me of chewing taffy and having my mouth cemented shut)
  even further.
 
  Despite the fall of the junk-bond king, Mike Milken, the computer
  industry has been prey to the vagaries of Wall Street and the
  stock market. First Lotus and Novell announced a planned merger,
  which would have made them larger than Microsoft. That deal
  quickly fell through, for reasons including unhappy Novell
  shareholders and Novell's chairman wanting lots of power. Lotus
  bounced back from that defeat by buying Samna, whose Ami and Ami
  Professional number among the best of the Windows word processors.
  And then, just recently, AT&T tried to buy NCR for some vast
  amount of money, but NCR said that vast wasn't enough and it
  wanted more. I believe the specifics were that NCR stock was
  trading in around $55 per share and AT&T offered $90. NCR refused
  $90 and asked for $125, at which point AT&T said $100 and that's
  it. NCR refused again, and AT&T, last we heard, was trying to
  effect a hostile takeover. We actually saw the transcript of the
  process including the full text of the letters between Robert
  Allen and Charles Exley, better known in the letters as Bob and
  Chuck. I didn't think you could call someone Bob or Chuck when you
  were talking about multi-million dollar deals - it doesn't sound
  serious enough.
 
  As far as new machines went last year, IBM pushed its PS/1 -
  finally, an IBM computer that isn't divided by 2, but last we
  heard, the Macintosh Classic was the real story in the cheap
  computer market. Apple was so surprised by the popularity of the
  Classic that it started sending Classics to the US (from the plant
  in Singapore) by air instead of ship because it couldn't come
  close to meeting demand. Even still, we've heard of 3-month
  waiting lists. The Mac LC and IIsi were also released and have
  proved popular as well, though there is some feeling that Apple
  scrimped to lower the prices on these two computers, particularly
  on the power supplies. NeXT finally released new versions of its
  workstation, the NeXTstation and the NeXTcube, along with some hot
  color hardware called NeXTdimension. NeXT is shipping now that
  Motorola has the 68040 in mass production, which hadn't happened
  at the time of the NeXT introduction.
 
  The year of the clones may not have come yet, but it will soon. A
  number of Macintosh clones were announced last year, including
  software that runs on Unix workstations, a SPARC laptop computer
  that can emulate a Mac and PC, a IIci clone from Cork Computer
  Corp. that should be interesting, and right at the last minute, a
  board for PC-clones called Hydra that runs Mac software. Don't
  forget the Outbound laptop, which requires Apple's ROMs, either.
  Apple bought the Outbound technology and then licensed it back to
  Outbound, which clarified the legal situation, supposedly. Other
  than the Outbound, none of these have hit the mass market, but it
  will be interesting to see what happens when they do. We've been
  muttering for a long time about how Apple should license the 128K
  ROMs from the Mac Plus and let clone makers saturate the low-end
  of the market, which would whet buyers' appetites for the snazzier
  machines that Apple puts out. One way or another, it looks like
  Apple should recognize that companies have more or less cloned the
  Mac and it would be in Apple's interests to have license fees
  coming in from all those sales.
 
    Hydra Systems -- 408/996-3880
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 18-Dec-90, Vol. 4, #42, pg 1
 
 
Stuff That Installer
--------------------
  There's an odd trend I've been noticing. People have been
  complaining about StuffIt Deluxe's installer and several months
  ago, people complained about StuffIt Classic's installer. I
  thought of writing an article then, but refrained after I
  downloaded StuffIt Classic and tried it myself. I saw why people
  might complain - StuffIt creates a bunch of folders and files in
  the System Folder without being entirely up front about the
  process - but didn't think that it was that big of a deal. It
  helped that StuffIt Classic's installer created folders that
  adhered to Apple's guidelines about where to store preferences and
  help files. There have also been complaints that StuffIt Classic
  reports some files as infected by viruses when no virus checking
  program can confirm the infection. I'd double check with the
  latest Disinfectant if you run into this.
 
  Now I don't personally use StuffIt Deluxe for various reasons.
  Nonetheless I was surprised when a number of people claimed that
  StuffIt Deluxe's installer had created a variant of the so-called
  "Folder from Hell" problem. If you haven't already heard of the
  Folder from Hell, it's an empty folder that you cannot throw out
  without resorting to some ugliness with ResEdit or using Norton
  Utilities (which doesn't always work either). In this variant, the
  installer program created multiply-nested folders that could not
  be thrown out due to a lack of Finder memory (or at least that was
  what the error message said, and the Mac wasn't admitting to
  anything else). Backup and reformat time. This sounded like an
  obscure, if nasty, bug but one which stung a few other people on
  Usenet, judging from the discussion.
 
  Luckily, Aladdin helped explain the mess. Evidently, the bug is
  real, but Aladdin can't reproduce it consistently and it has only
  affected a tiny fraction of the StuffIt Deluxe users. There is an
  interaction between the installer and a system or toolbox call
  that handles bad sector information (though some of the people in
  question checked their disks and found no bad sectors). It's
  unclear whether the fault is with the installer or with Apple -
  these things are often hard to pin down completely. I was relieved
  to hear from the people who had experienced this problem that they
  were still extremely fond of StuffIt Deluxe despite the installer.
 
  Even better is news from Aladdin that the installer has been
  rewritten for StuffIt Deluxe 2.0, a free upgrade that Aladdin will
  release this week. So enough of the bad news, and if you've bought
  but not installed StuffIt Deluxe 1.0, you might want to register
  quickly and stick with 2.0 to avoid that 1 in 10,000 chance that
  your hard disk drew the short straw. StuffIt Deluxe 2.0 will be a
  significant upgrade to 1.0, but in an extremely nice move, Aladdin
  is making it a free upgrade. I'm not saying that every company
  should do that since upgrading programs can be a lot of work, but
  when I get a free upgrade I usually walk around for a few minutes
  muttering about how much I like that company.
 
  The top of the list in new features and enhancements includes
  "tremendous" speed boosts (I'm not touching that one until
  someone's done a comparison), a "Best Guess" feature for picking
  the smallest compression format, the ability, as in StuffIt
  Classic, to create self-unstuffing archives, and a bunch of
  StuffIt Tools and Optimizers. StuffIt Deluxe is rapidly becoming
  one of the most heavily accessorized programs, with a whole load
  of XCMDs, QuicKeys2 extensions, DAs, and who knows what else. I
  think that's good, although many people will be somewhat
  overwhelmed by the variety, and there is certainly room for  tools
  that don't come with a catalog of accessories as long as the one
  that comes with Barbie dolls. One way or another, the upgrade will
  be showing at Macworld in San Francisco, so check it out if you're
  there.
 
    Aladdin -- 408/685-9175
 
  Information from:
    Bill Johnston -- johnston@oscar.ccm.udel.edu
    Marco Gonzalez -- aladdin@well.sf.ca.us
    Garance Drosehn -- Garance_Drosehn@mts.rpi.edu
    Dave Newman -- daven@svc.portal.com
    Leonard Rosenthol -- leonardr@svc.portal.com
    Ken Weaverling -- weave@brahms.udel.edu
    John Starta -- starta@tosh.UUCP
    Ken Hancock -- kenh@hscfsas1.harvard.edu
    Rich Holmes -- rsholmes@rodan.acs.syr.edu
    Peter Colby -- peter@hari.Viewlogic.COM
    Brad Cox -- cox@stepstone.com
 
 
VCR Backups
-----------
  I'm sure many people have thought of doing disk backups to a VCR
  tape, particularly the poorer crowd that can't afford all sorts of
  snazzy backup hardware. I know I thought of doing it several years
  ago, but gave up because I couldn't find information on how. That
  was before I knew how to navigate the nets. Well, someone else has
  realized that a VCR is basically a big, dumb, slow tape drive. The
  trick is figuring out how to hook your computer to your VCR -
  those little RCA plugs that connect to your stereo won't cut it.
 
  The net people produced information on a product that allows you
  to do this. It's called Videotrax from a company called Alpha
  Micro. Videotrax is a combination of an external SCSI controller
  and software that provides basic backup features and talks to the
  controller. It's not terribly expensive, at $499 or $1299 if you
  want the special Videotrax VCR that does automatic backups as
  well. Unfortunately, it's not a lot cheaper than the no-name
  SyQuest drives. Videotrax saves 80 meg on a normal cassette, which
  is better than a standard SyQuest's 42 meg, but a good backup
  program like Retrospect or MacTools Backup can come close to 80
  meg of original data with file compression.
 
  I've heard that using a VCR to backup computer data is relatively
  dangerous in that videocassettes and VCRs aren't designed to the
  exacting specifications that computer equipment must to work at. A
  single bit of data doesn't make the slightest difference in
  displaying an image on the TV screen, but it could destroy a file.
  I had a similar idea about converting a cheap audio CD player into
  a CD-ROM drive, and was told basically the same thing - a skipped
  bit in music is nothing, but a skipped bit in your program is
  fatal. This low level of accuracy might be a reason why we aren't
  all using the Videotrax, because otherwise it's a good idea
  subject to a few logistical problems, such as the separate
  locations of my VCR and computer. Details, mere details.
 
    Alpha Micro -- 800/253-3434 or 800/821-0612 in CA (old #)
 
  Information from:
    David Elliott -- dce@smsc.sony.com
    John Kratochvil -- moebius@mofh
    Ted Morris -- morris@ucunix.SAN.UC.EDU
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
 
 
Cut Rate Borland
----------------
  I've been getting all sorts of offers in the mail from Borland.
  Borland isn't well known in the Mac market, but it is a big player
  in the PC market and its spreadsheet, Quattro Pro, may be the best
  one for the PC despite Lotus 1-2-3 and Microsoft's Excel. Anyway,
  Borland wants to sell Quattro Pro 2.0 to me for $99 and has
  offered its powerful database, Paradox, to me for the same price.
  I have two problems that prevent me from taking Borland up on this
  kind offer. Problem #1: I don't much use a PC even though I do
  consult on them and have been known to check stuff out in SoftPC.
  Problem #2: I hardly ever use either spreadsheets or databases,
  and I'm unlikely to buy a PC spreadsheet and database to use under
  SoftPC when Full Impact and HyperCard serve me perfectly well. As
  I said, I'm not big on spreadsheets and databases.
 
  Borland dropped its prices on these products only to owners of
  competing products, but I get the impression if your friend's
  father once used a pirated copy of Lotus 1-2-3, Borland would
  still sell you Quattro Pro for $99. It's all a marketing scheme,
  of course. (I'm beginning to suspect that all the world is a
  marketing scheme and not a stage, as William Shakespeare thought.
  Does that make me cynical?) Well a public word to Borland. It's
  working. I feel guilty for not buying Quattro Pro each time I read
  one of your offers. It's just that I really don't need the
  program. Now a Ronco slicer-dicer, that I could use. :-)
 
  Seriously, Quattro Pro has gained a lot of market share from Lotus
  1-2-3. It helps that Quattro Pro is probably a better program, but
  the low price is what's done the trick. I'm writing this, not
  because I want you to run out and buy Quattro Pro or a Ronco
  slicer-dicer, but because I heartily approve of lower prices for
  quality products. I would like to look back on this article in a
  year or two and see this marketing gimmick as the end of the $795
  business programs. Sure, it may be slightly worse in the PC world,
  but have any of you priced a copy of Macintosh Quark XPress
  recently? $530 mail order! Sure, it's a good program, maybe the
  best, but that's a lot of money. So I say more power to Borland,
  and may it someday put out a decent Macintosh program.
 
 
Out of the MarketPlace
----------------------
  You may or may not have heard of Lotus MarketPlace:Households yet.
  It's a CD-ROM disk from Lotus that lists over 120 million names in
  over 80 million households in the United States. Wanna put money
  on whether or not you're in there? There is also
  MarketPlace:Business that lists over 7 million American
  businesses, but part of the point of being in business is being
  easy to find. That's not necessarily the point of life - though if
  the world really is just a marketing scheme, I could be wrong. The
  idea behind MarketPlace:Households is that if you run, say, a
  sleazy pseudo-legal chain letter, oops, I meant to say, multi-
  level marketing business, then for a mere $695 you can buy this
  disc and the right to use any 5000 names on it. Further 5000-name
  units cost another $400. By my quick calculations, buying all the
  names would cost $9,600,295 before taxes, which I don't want to
  think about until I review MacInTax. Microsoft could have bought
  all the names and still had some $400,000 left over to spend on
  Windows propaganda to send to everyone.
 
  That's not the way most businesses will use it, of course, because
  you can select the 5000 names you want by region and lots of other
  categories. These businesses hope that they will be able to peg
  you perfectly based on name, address, age range, gender, marital
  status, dwelling type, income range, lifestyle, and shopping
  habits. Once they've picked you as a potential customer, the junk
  mail barrage begins. Ideally, they would be right every time and
  you'd only get interesting mail, but it doesn't work that well
  now. I just received an offer to subscribe to a magazine on health
  issues for people over 50. My grandparents are over 50, but my
  parents aren't, to give you an idea of how appropriate this offer
  was.
 
  You have a chance to save yourself from tree-eating, landfill-
  filling, junk mail generated by every bozo who thinks he knows how
  to do complex searches. For this address, I thank Robert X.
  Cringely, of InfoWorld, who listed it in his year-end column. To
  get your name removed from the database, write to this address and
  tell them to remove you from all of their databases. I've already
  done so.
 
    Equifax Options
    P.O. Box 740123
    Atlanta, GA  30374-0123
 
  Information from:
    Lotus propaganda
    Robert Cringely, InfoWorld -- 24-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #52, pg. 62
 
  Related articles:
    InfoWorld -- 26-Nov-90, Vol. 12, #48, pg. 8
 
 
Reviews/07-Jan-91
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Graphics Accelerator boards, pg. 67
      Radius QuickCAD
      Artist XJS Graphic Controller
    Pathworks, pg. 67
    Calendar Software, pg. 74
      CalenDAr 1.1
      Alarming Events
      Agent DA 1.03
      Smart Alarms 3.03
      My Time Manager 3.0
    IThink, pg. 74
    Aspects, pg. 82
    Retrospect Remote, pg. 82
 
* PC WEEK
    Networking Software, pg. 107
    Netware for Macintosh 2.0
    3+Open for Macintosh 1.1
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 18-Dec-90, Vol. 4, #42
    PC WEEK -- 17-Dec-90, Vol. 7, #50
 
 
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