TidBITS#36/14-Jan-91
====================
 
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Topics:
    Couple of Things
    MacUser's Editors' Choice Awards
    TidBITS Macworld Expo Briefs
    Filling the Portable Gap
    Stupid Net Tricks
    Reviews/14-Jan-91
 
 
Couple of Things
----------------
  Once again I have a few interesting items that don't quite merit
  their own articles. Since San Francisco's Macworld Expo just
  ended, I figured you would wish to read about what was there and
  what was not. I couldn't go for various reasons - not the least of
  which was 3000 miles of intervening continent - but Mark Anbinder,
  a local Macophile and president of MUGWUMP, the Ithaca Macintosh
  Users' Group, volunteered to send back some articles. Aren't Mac
  Portables nice? This is good stuff, and Mark even managed to get
  press badge because he was writing for TidBITS. If anyone wishes
  to cover other shows that I can't go to, like Macworld Timbuktu,
  let me know and I'll write you a note on TidBITS letterhead saying
  that yes indeed, you are an authorized TidBITS Cub Reporter and
  should get a press badge. Next thing you know we'll have TidBITS
  Secret Decoder Rings. Seriously, though, if you wish to do this,
  I'll send along article guidelines as well, because a trade is a
  trade and I would expect decent articles in return for a press
  badge.
 
  We recently received some nice brochures from Cork about the Cork
  System 30 (exactly as we reported a few weeks ago). Cork was a
  little premature in printing their brochures, though, as someone
  had to hand correct the price ($2999 up from $2299, unfortunately)
  and the operating system (Apple instead of Cork). Curious. On a
  related note, if you want more information about the Cork, you
  must call or write them. Through an unfortunate formatting
  happenstance, Doug Davenport's name and address were listed in our
  article in a way that made it seem as though he is related to
  Cork. He isn't and can't even reply to email sent to that address.
  So please, don't ask Doug for Cork information, instead, call Cork
  in Texas and talk to them. They're quite friendly, though we'll be
  even fonder of them if they send us a review unit. In the
  interests of science, of course :-). One final note. If you order
  a Cork System 30 before the end of January, you get a $200 rebate,
  though there's no telling when Cork will actually ship their IIci
  clone.
 
    Cork Computer Corp.
    9430 Research Blvd. Bldg. II Suite 250
    Austin, TX 78579
    512/343-1301 (voice)
    512/345-5059 (fax)
 
  Right around Christmas (nice timing) we received a disk from who,
  of all people, but Ashton-Tate. You know, the people who do dBASE
  and can't remember that they have any Macintosh products for a
  minute or so when you call them on the phone. When they do
  remember, they make you call all around California looking for
  help. We were pleasantly surprised to find that the disk contained
  a free upgrade of Full Impact 2.0. Ashton-Tate claims that the
  upgrade fixes some slow recalculation times and also improves the
  memory management to make Full Impact more stable. We haven't had
  any problems with it, but we don't bother to save most of our
  spreadsheets, not being much in the way of serious number people
  and having very little in the way of important numbers.
 
  If you have problems with Full Impact, Ashton-Tate says that
  they've moved their Technical Support for Macintosh products to
  Northern California to improve customer service. I'm not sure I
  see the connection, but perhaps it helps if you've been to
  Northern California, which I haven't. If you're curious, or if
  you're having trouble with Full Anything (shorthand for the whole
  product line and the name they could use for an integrated
  package) call the number below.
 
    Ashton-Tate -- 408/927-0880
 
 
MacUser's Editors' Choice Awards
--------------------------------
  The evening before Macworld Expo opened, MacUser announced this
  year's winners of its series of coveted industry awards. 1990 was,
  the editors' introduction tells us, "a year of great beginnings in
  areas such as 24-bit color, cross-platform connectivity, virtual
  reality, 3-D modeling, and video."  Each category has a winner and
  two honorable mention recipients; we will only provide a list of
  the winners themselves. MacUser will publish its own list
  containing all three finalists for each category, along with
  descriptions of the products and the reasons they came out on top.
 
  [Editors' note: Congratulations to the winners! Our main regret is
  that there was no category in which TidBITS could compete. Maybe
  next year. Kudos to Mark for gathering all the contact information
  at the end - it must have been a lot of work.]
 
* Best Data-Management Product: ClearAccess 1.21, from Fairfield
  Software.
 
* Best Data Resource: Accents & Borders, from 3G Graphics.
 
* Best Financial-Management Package: WealthBuilder by Money
  Magazine, from Reality Technologies.
 
* Best Communications Product: TelePort A300, from Global Village
  Communication.
 
* Best Page-Design Program: PublishIt! Easy 2.0, from Timeworks.
 
* Best Typographic Program: TypeStyler 1.5, from Broederbund.
 
* Best Presentation Product: MORE 3.0, from Symantec.
 
* Best Color Prepress: ColorStudio 1.1, from Letraset.
 
* Best CAD Software: MiniCad+ 3.0, from Graphsoft.
 
* Best 3-D Modeling/Rendering Package: DynaPerspective 2.0, from
  DynaWare.
 
* Best Animation Program: FilmMaker, from Encore Development and
  Paracomp.
 
* Best Multimedia Software: Authorware Professional for Macintosh,
  from Authorware.
 
* Best Desktop-Video Product: RasterOps Video ColorBoard 364, from
  RasterOps.
 
* Best Connectivity Software: Timbuktu, from Farallon.
 
* Best Connectivity Hardware: EtherPrint, from Dayna.
 
* Best Work-Group Project: Aspects, from Grop Technologies.
 
* Best Executive-Information-Systems Product: Tactician, from
  Tactics International.
 
* Best Data-Acquisition/Analysis Product: LabVIEW 2.1, from National
  Instruments.
 
* Best Development Tool: THINK Pascal, from Symantec.
 
* Best Utility: The Norton Utilities for the Macintosh, from
  Symantec.
 
* Best Compression Product: Compactor, shareware from Bill Goodman.
 
* Best Music Product: Deck, from OSC and Digidesign.
 
* Best Education Program: Discis Books, from Discis Knowledge
  Resource.
 
* Best Recreational Program: The Cosmic Osmo CD-ROM from Activision.
 
* Best Input Device: Voice Navigator II, from Articulate Systems.
 
* Best Display Product: L-*View Multi-Mode, from Sigma Designs.
 
* Best Scanner: JX-600, from Sharp.
 
* Best Monochrome-Output Device: QMS PS-410, from QMS.
 
* Best Color-Output Device: Kodak XL7700, from Kodak.
 
* Best Storage Product: SBT-1288NP, from MicroNet Technology.
 
* Software Product of the Year: Photoshop, from Adobe Systems.
 
* Hardware Product of the Year: RadiusTV, from Radius.
 
* Breakthrough Product of the Year: Virtus WalkThrough, from Virtus.
 
* John J. Anderson Distinguished Achievement Award: Bill Atkinson,
  creator of MacPaint and HyperCard, and the father of much of the
  Mac's interface standard.
 
* Derek Van Alstyne Rising Star Award: Rand K. and Robyn Miller, two
  brothers who are responsible for The Manhole and Cosmic Osmo.
 
  (Anderson and Alstyne were the two MacUser staff members who died
  during the 1989 California earthquake.)
 
    3G Graphics -- 206/367-9321
    Activision -- 415/329-0500
    Adobe Systems, Inc. -- 415/961-4400 -- 800/344-8335
    Articulate Systems -- 617/876-5236 -- 800/443-7077
    Authorware, Inc. -- 612/921-8555
    Dayna Communications -- 801/531-0600
    Digidesign -- 415/327-8811 -- 800/333-2137
    Discis Knowledge Research -- 416/250-6537 -- 800/567-4321
    DynaWare Corp. -- 415/349-5700 -- 800/445-3962
    Fairfield Software, Inc. -- 800/522-4252
    Farallon Computing, Inc. -- 415/596-9100 -- 800/344-7489
    Global Village Communication -- 415/329-0700 -- 800/736-4821
    Group Technologies -- 703/528-1555 -- 800/476-8781
    Letraset -- 201/845-6100 -- 800/343-8973
    MicroNet Technology, Inc. -- 714/837-6033
    National Instruments -- 512/794-0100 -- 800/433-3488
    Paracomp, Inc. -- 415/956-4091
    QMS, Inc. -- 800/631-2692
    Radius, Inc. -- 408/434-1010 -- 800/227-2795
    RasterOps Corp. -- 408/562-4200
    Reality Technologies -- 215/387-6055
    Sharp Electronics Corp. -- 201/529-8200 -- 800/526-0264
    Sigma Designs -- 415/770-0100
    Symantec Corp. -- 408/253-9600 -- 800/441-7234
    Tactics International -- 508/475-4475
    Timeworks -- 708/948-9200 -- 800/535-9497
    Virtus Corp. -- 919/467-9700
 
  Information from:
    Mark Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
 
 
TidBITS Macworld Expo Briefs
----------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
 
  For those of you who couldn't attend, and as a recap for those of
  you who could, here are some of the high points - and a few low
  points - from Macworld San Francisco '91. There seemed to be no
  overriding theme at the Expo this time around, which is just as
  well; most of us are tired of the Mac buzz-words of the eighties.
  In any case, there were some noteworthy items.
 
* Slickest Display: SuperMac Technology's booth featured a wall
  covered with video displays, showing a fast-paced series of still
  photographs accompanying Billy Joel's song, "We Didn't Start the
  Fire," to promote their SuperSqueeze still-image compression
  technology. If you were curious, they weren't decompressing all
  that material on the fly, as they did with the full-motion video
  compression display last August; it was a canned demo being run
  using XCMDs under HyperCard 1.2.5, and the multiple monitors were
  being handled by a Dynair video image amplifier and splitter. This
  wall almost, but not quite, managed to overshadow SuperMac's new
  dual-mode monitors.
 
* Best T-Shirt: Much more creative than Apple's shirts, with their
  inspirational Sculley quotes on the back, are CE Software's
  "Connecting people and productivity" shirts. No doubt it's better
  in person, but the back of the shirt is a two-by-two matrix, with
  "Productive" and "Unproductive" across the top, and "Fun" and "Not
  so fun" down the side, like so:
 
                       Productive          Unproductive
 
                    (a whole bunch
    Fun           of CE product icons)        Tetris
 
 
    Not so Fun        Tupperware              Tetanus
 
 
* Deepest Sigh of Relief: WordPerfect Corporation finally shipped
  WordPerfect 2.0 for the Macintosh on the first day of the Expo.
  This long-awaited upgrade offers a far-more-Maclike user interface
  than the company's first Mac offering, but still has optional
  interface features for those who really DID like the original
  WordPerfect Mac (all two of them). A $100 price hike for the new
  version, and some drastic changes for the worse to the way
  WordPerfect handles educational sales (more on this later
  perhaps), may put this product out of the reach of some, but it is
  certainly a strong contender in the diverse Macintosh word
  processing market.
 
* It's About Time: Just a few weeks before the show, Rodime Systems
  introduced a new version of its driver software for the Cobra
  series of hard drives. This driver is finally compatible with the
  free Disinfectant antivirus utility. The new software is available
  to Cobra drive owners, directly from Rodime, or from Rodime
  dealers.
 
* Neatest Product: The WristMac, from Ex Machina (published by
  Microseeds Publishing), is a Seiko wristwatch that stores up to 80
  two-line "screens" of data, such as phone numbers, appointments,
  and to-do lists, complete with an interface cable that connects to
  a Mac serial ports, so you can use the included HyperCard 2.0
  stack to enter and manipulate the data. You can even have the
  watch's alarm function alert you of the appointments that you've
  entered into the database.
 
* Smartest Acquisition: Connectix Corporation - the brash bunch that
  has brought us Virtual, Optima, and Maxima (an assortment of
  system-enhancing memory utilities for the Mac) and has laughed at
  System 7.0's virtual memory for the last two years - announced the
  purchase of Fred Hollander's HandOff II the day before the show.
  HandOff II, which received an Honorable Mention in this year's
  MacUser awards in the Best Utility category, offers an
  application-launching menu like that provided by OnCue, but also
  document-grouping "briefcases" and application categories, as well
  as application substitution (assigning a specific application to
  handle specific file formats, such as having SuperPaint launched
  when a MacPaint document is double-clicked). It's especially
  useful for all those MacWrite documentation files for those of us
  who don't have MacWrite around.
 
* Best Upcoming Innovation: CE Software introduces yet another
  invaluable extension to the Macintosh interface, with their
  "Tiles" product, to be released sometime this year. Tiles product
  manager John Pence started writing the utility three years ago,
  but only started actively developing it as a product last year.
  This handy gizmo can best be described as an extension of both the
  NeXT icon dock and HandOff II. It allows launching of applications
  or opening of documents simply by clicking on "tiles," which are
  basically labelled pictures. Tiles can also hold "projects," or
  groups of documents created by any number of applications, that
  can all be launched together; as well as any kind of QuicKey
  action or sequence.
 
* Biggest No-Shows: The Mac rumour mill isn't always right, of
  course, and this year's Expo proved that at least twice. One
  product that didn't make it under the wire is Apple's revised
  Macintosh Portable. The improved machine is rumoured to offer a
  backlit LCD screen, and a lighter battery assembly. The release
  has been postponed indefinitely; it's not clear what effect that
  may have on the upcoming joint Apple-Sony project. Not to be
  underdone, Radius has refrained from introducing a color version
  of its flippable Pivot monitor. Instead, they are offering a new
  Pivot that works with the built-in video circuitry in the Mac IIsi
  and IIci.
 
* I-wouldn't-do-this-to-MY-drive category: Iomega drew people to its
  storage-products display booth by attaching a Bernoulli
  Transportable removable cartridge drive to a rotating machine that
  lifted it up and thumped it back down about once a second. All the
  while, an attached IIfx was reading large color images from the
  drive, without interruption. This shocking demo, which prompted
  one viewer to wonder, "If they don't want the thing, why don't
  they just give it to me?!" was intended to illustrate the drive's
  ability to withstand shock forces of 1000 G.
 
* Cutest Give-away: Visitors to the Bay Area might not understand,
  but the "Have a drink on Mainstay" promotion actually provides a
  service. Mainstay, the publishers of such things as MarkUp,
  MarcoPolo, and a prime candidate for biggest non-product of the
  industry, AntiToxin, handed out Coast Guard-approved foil pouches
  of emergency drinking water. These 125 ml pouches (of which you
  need four per person per day) might be handy in the event of
  another earthquake (or a San Francisco Water Department four-hour
  shutoff that affects your hotel late one night during the
  Expo...).
 
* Biggest Non-Product: What the heck, I might as well explain that.
  Mainstay's AntiToxin is an antivirus utility with two parts: an
  application that repairs files infected with known viruses, and an
  INIT that notes the presence of known viruses and prevents
  infected files from being opened. Sounds good, except that when I
  asked how it compared to John Norstad's free Disinfectant utility,
  the Mainstay rep I spoke to agreed with my assessment that the
  product didn't quite live up in terms of features, and added that
  it is not updated as quickly as Disinfectant. Oh well, thanks for
  the water, Mainstay.
 
    CE Software, Inc. -- 515/224-1995
    Mainstay Products, Inc. -- 818/991-6540
    Iomega -- 801/778-4494 -- 800/456-5522
    Radius Inc. -- 408/434-1010
    Microseeds Publishing, Inc. -- 813/882-8635
    Connectix Corp. -- 415/324-0727
    Dynair Electronics, Inc. -- 619/263-7711 -- 800/854-2831
    SuperMac Technology -- 408 245-2202
    Rodime Systems, Inc. -- 407/994-5585
 
 
Filling the Portable Gap
------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
 
  Apple recently announced a delay in the hoped-for updated version
  of its Macintosh Portable computer system, originally scheduled
  for release at this Macworld Expo. Rumours had suggested that the
  new computer would include a lighter battery assembly and a
  backlit liquid crystal display, taking care of two of the most
  pervasive complaints about the original Portable.
 
  Other rumours in the same field focus on Apple's joint efforts
  with Sony to develop a significantly smaller and lighter portable
  Mac, and on Apple's purchase of technology developed by Outbound
  Systems and subsequent licensing of that same technology back to
  Outbound.
 
  Outbound is one of several vendors trying to fill the demand for
  portable Macintosh computing. Another vendor, with several new
  products for the portable arena, is Dynamac Computer Products,
  Inc.
 
  Taking advantage of Apple's new Macintosh LC, Dynamac has
  introduced three items that should fill many people's needs for
  portability and power. The first is the Dynamac IIsf, originally
  code named the "StarFighter"), a battery-operated laptop with a
  backlit liquid crystal Kyocera display, a built-in UnMouse[tm]
  TouchPad graphics tablet, support for external Apple 12" and 13"
  monitors, and, at its heart, a Macintosh LC logic board with a
  68020 microprocessor. An enhanced version, the IIsf/30, offers a
  68030 processor and 68882 math coprocessor, a data/fax modem, and
  extended video capabilities for handling external monitors.
 
  Dynamac also offers new options for users who want their LC's
  intact, but not tied to their desks, including the LCDisplay and
  the LCPortable. The LCDisplay is a 640 by 480 flat-panel display
  unit with an easel stand on the back and a recess in the front to
  hold Apple's new LC microphone. The LCPortable takes that a couple
  of steps further, including a battery in the back for three to six
  hours of operation, and the LCPower bundle of 68030 CPU and 68882
  coprocessor, to enhance the LC's performance much the same way the
  Dynamac IIsf package does.
 
  Just as revolutionary as Dynamac's new products is its three-year
  "TLC" (Traveler's Logistics Center) Warranty. For a period of
  three years from purchase, TLC offers both-way FedEx shipping of a
  covered computer if it needs repairs with one-day repair
  turnaround at the other end, or Dynamac will ship repair parts
  overnight so users can perform their own repairs.
 
  Less headline-making but still newsworthy is Outbound. Outbound
  introduced its original Outbound Laptop System in March of 1990,
  offering a compact, lightweight laptop system requiring a Mac Plus
  or SE ROM chip to make it complete. Improvements since then
  include a bundled Microsoft Mouse, for those who can't stand the
  "Isopoint[tm]" rolling-bar pointing device, an external floppy
  drive, and a "SCSI Adapter and Emulator" that allows users to
  connect the Outbound to any SCSI-equipped Mac.
 
  Outbound's new offerings at this week's Expo included a line-
  powered, 2.4 ounce, pocket-sized portable modem; a software-based
  numeric keypad emulation utility, a soon-to-be-released universal
  power supply, and Outbound support for the Mac 512KE and the Mac
  Classic.
 
  Despite the disappointment from Apple, it seems that Mac
  enthusiasts who need portability and power without the excess
  weight or premium prices won't have to wait any longer. Apple may
  not have their juggling act together, but companies like Dynamac
  and Outbound should keep the market up in the air for a while.
 
    Dynamac Computer Products -- 303/296-0606 -- 800/234-2349
    Outbound Systems, Inc. -- 303/786-9200
 
 
Stupid Net Tricks
-----------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
 
  Among the product categories that were evident at Macworld, if you
  took the trouble to categorize things, were neat networking
  products. None of them were earth-shattering, but each takes us a
  step forward in Macintosh networking.
 
  Closest to earth-shattering, I suppose, is Apple's new line of
  Ethernet products, which set a new standard for ease of
  installation and flexibility. These include a Macintosh LC
  Ethernet card, new transceivers, and self-terminating cables that
  can be connected and disconnected without interrupting network
  services. Several other companies, including Ethernet veterans
  Asante and Farallon, also introduced new (and less expensive)
  products supporting Apple's new standards.
 
  Network file transfer utilities include two desk accessory and
  INIT combinations, relative newcomers Send Express, from Gizmo
  Technologies, and Mac To Mac, from Caravelle Networks Corporation.
  Send Express, written by a group of Apple alumni, allows sending
  of files, notes, or clipboard contents to one or multiple network
  users, who can then look at and file away the received
  information. Mac to Mac does not offer multiple recipients, but it
  does have the advantage of unattended bidirectional transfer and a
  split-screen chat mode reminiscent of a neighborhood BBS.
 
  Network management takes an upward turn, with an update to an
  existing product, and a few new ones. Pharos has released a new
  version of Status*Mac, which now offers direct network workstation
  profiling without depending on Microsoft Mail or a file server.
  Similar, though less powerful is Technology Works' GraceLAN, which
  we'll talk more about in an upcoming issue. CSG Technologies, a
  division of Management Science Associates, Inc., introduced
  Network Supervisor at the show. This new "network information and
  management tool," a compiled 4th Dimension database, offers real-
  time information gathering in various network environments. The AG
  Group is offering a pair of networking tools, NetAlert and
  LocalPeek, to help round out the networker's toolbox. NetAlert
  monitors various aspects of a network's performance and notifies
  the manager if something goes wrong. LocalPeek is a network packet
  monitoring and decoding tool, providing a deeper analysis of
  traffic on a network.
 
  An item that's been long awaited in the Mac industry is FaxPro,
  from Cypress Research. It's a networkable 9600 baud fax-sending
  modem with a Chooser-level interface and fax call accounting
  capability. The software works by queueing files on a network file
  server, but if you don't have one of the many compatible file
  sharing packages (including AppleShare, TOPS, 3COM, Novell, or any
  AppleShare-compatible packages including the shareware
  SingleShare), for an additional $100, Cypress will include its own
  fully-functional file sharing software.
 
    The AG Group -- 415/937-7900
    Asante Technologies -- 800/662-9686
    Caravelle Networks Corporation -- 613/596-2802
    CSG Technologies -- 412/471-7170 -- 800/FON-4-MAC
    Cypress Research Corp. -- 408/752-2700
    Farallon Computing, Inc. -- 415/596-9000
    Gizmo Technologies -- 415/623-7899
    Pharos Technologies Inc. -- 513/984-9273
    Technology Works -- 800/688-7466
 
 
Reviews/14-Jan-91
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Ventura Publisher, pg. 83
    Graphing Programs, pg. 83
      CA-Cricket Graph
      DeltaGraph
      KaleidaGraph
      MacGraphX
    SQL Data Tools, pg. 94
      ClearAccess 1.2
      GQL 2.1 modules
      Data Prism
    QuickDraw Accelerators, pg. 98
       Apple 8*24 GC
      Spectrum/24 PDQ
      RasterOps Accelerator
      Radius DirectColor/GX
    RadiusTV, pg. 98
    FilmMaker, pg. 104
    The Animation Stand, pg. 104
    INIT Manager, pg. 110
    Type Manipulators, pg. 112
      Illustrator 3.0
      LetraStudio
      TypeAlign
      TypeStyler
    Org Plus, pg. 112
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 08-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #1
 
 
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