TidBITS#39/28-Jan-91
====================
 
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Topics:
    VDT Law in San Francisco
    CE Tiles
    Death of the MarketPlace!
    DeskWriter & HyperCard
    Reviews/28-Jan-91
 
 
VDT Law in San Francisco
------------------------
  By now most people are aware of the controversy surrounding
  extended use of video display terminals. Some people, most notably
  author Paul Brodeur, claim that VDTs emit harmful levels of
  extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic radiation. Others,
  led by the companies that have much to lose, claim that no health
  risks are associated with VDT usage (Yeah, right. I wonder how
  many of them have used a computer for six or seven hours and not
  felt tired and dry-eyed). The truth, as usual, probably lies
  somewhere in the middle. Sigma Designs has reacted to the
  controversy by offering shielded versions of its monitors, and
  Fairfield Engineering has come up with a device that fits over the
  neck of the cathode ray tube of 9" Macintosh monitors ($80) or 13"
  color monitors ($90), thus limiting the ELF radiation. Nanao also
  just released 16" and 20" Flexscan monitors that are supposedly
  low radiation displays.
 
  That's all fine and nice on the technological front, but recently
  a battle was won on the far more bloody political front. Mayor Art
  Agnos of San Francisco recently signed a law requiring employers
  with more than 15 employees to provide those who perform
  repetitive keyboard work for more than four hours at time with
  adjustable workstations and seating, anti-glare lighting, 15-
  minute breaks every two hours, and other safety products such as
  screen guards, wrist rests, and copy holders. I gather that the
  legislation was fought tooth and nail the entire way because of
  the expense involved, if nothing else.
 
  The law calls for the creation of a seven-member committee to keep
  track of the controversy and inform the government of developments
  and issues in the field, including not just the health problems
  mentioned by Brodeur, such as an increased rate of miscarriages,
  but also problems such as muscular and skeletal damage (including
  the dreaded carpal tunnel syndrome) and vision impairment.
 
  In my opinion, it's about time that such legislation became
  widespread. Many people would happily pay another $80 for a
  shielded Macintosh screen, and in the volume that Apple would sell
  them, that price would rapidly drop.** **The EPA (Environmental
  Protection Agency) has finally entered the fray with a study
  suggesting that the 60-Hz magnetic fields from electrical devices
  and power lines might cause cancer (ever notice how laboratory
  studies cause wishy-washyness in scientists?). The EPA will even
  send you a copy of a draft of the study - check the phone number
  below. Of course, the EPA could be more effective, but ex-
  President Reagan cut all its funding for electromagnetic radiation
  in 1986. (His opinion was that he had watched television for a
  long time and even been on it, and he hadn't been affected by no
  electro-whatever-it's-called radiation :-)).
 
    Fairfield Engineering -- 515/472-5551
    EPA ORD Publications Office -- 513/569-7562
      513/569-7566 (fax)
    Nanao USA -- 213/325-5202
 
  Related articles:
    PC WEEK -- 21-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #3, pg. 19
    MacWEEK -- 08-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #1, pg. 173
    PC WEEK -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #1, pg. 137
    InfoWorld -- 24-Dec-90, Vol. 12, #52, pg. 5
 
 
CE Tiles
--------
  Last week I wrote about ThoughtPattern, a free-form database that
  helps you organize files. CE has taken a different approach to the
  organization problem with its new utility ,Tiles, which can be
  thought of a graphical desktop organizer for documents, programs,
  and actions. In some ways, Tiles is similar to the aliases that
  will become popular in System 7.0 - that's mainly conjecture - I
  personally love the aliasing power of System 7.0 - in that it
  creates an icon for any file that opens that file no matter where
  it is stored. In other ways, Tiles mimics zeta soft's Super
  Boomerang by automatically keeping track of all the applications
  and documents that you use in an Open... Tile palette. But these
  two comparisons don't do justice to the elegance of Tiles. A
  System 7.0 alias is merely a pointer to another file - extremely
  handy, to be sure, but limited. A Project Tile can hold a number
  of other tiles, each representing a different document or
  application or even a QuicKey macro. So while you can have an
  alias to your favorite program sitting on your desktop, that's not
  nearly as powerful as a Tile that can open your favorite
  application and several documents and run a QuicKey macro that
  mounts an AppleShare volume all at once.
 
  I also said that Tiles works like Super Boomerang. You can set
  Tiles up to replace the Open... dialog box with a Tile palette
  that holds a user-specified number of Tiles. Double-clicking on a
  Tile opens a document, exactly as double-clicking on a file name
  in the standard file dialog box does. Tiles could be set up by a
  system administrator for less knowledgeable users to perform some
  basic repetitive actions. The administrator can customize the look
  of the Tiles extensively, because there are large and small tiles,
  and large tile can show a name and a picture, while small tiles
  can show a name or a picture. The pictures can come from icons or
  PICTs and can be either color or black and white.
 
  I haven't had a chance to test Tiles yet, but it strikes me as an
  excellent idea. In keeping with CE's other products, it is simple
  and elegant and doesn't strive to be the ultimate in file
  organization utilities. Tiles is an "immediate" utility, in that
  it works in the present, unlike other utilities, which require
  setting up in the present so that they will work in the future.
  While there is room for both varieties, I can only think of a few
  other programs, most notably Super Boomerang, that provide the
  same level of immediate benefit without forethought. Kudos to CE,
  and I hope that we will get a chance to test Tiles and report back
  on it and more potential applications for it at a later date.
 
    CE Software -- 515/224-1953
 
  Information from:
       CE propaganda
 
  Related articles:
    InfoWorld -- 01-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #1, pg. 35
 
 
Death of the MarketPlace!
-------------------------
  It's nowhere nearly as tragic as "Death of a Salesman," but Lotus
  announced on the 23rd of January that it has canceled Lotus
  MarketPlace:Households. From what we've heard, Lotus has received
  a tremendous number of complaining calls and letters. Lotus
  chairman Jim Manzi said, "At last count we had received more than
  30,000 calls to our name removal service, including calls from
  customers, vendors and others in the industry." In addition, Manzi
  canceled MarketPlace:Business because the two products were
  complementary and he didn't feel that MarketPlace:Business could
  succeed without MarketPlace:Households.
 
  In its press release, Lotus said the cost of addressing consumer
  privacy issues would be prohibitive, as we suggested last week.
  Manzi said "the product is not part of our core business, and
  Lotus would be ill-served by a prolonged battle over consumer
  privacy." It's nice to see that some of the issues we and others
  on the networks raised also occurred to the people in charge of
  this project. In this case, it goes to show that the people in the
  computer industry can influence issues rooted in technology, but
  having far reaching implications. Congratulations to everyone who
  voiced an opinion to Lotus and Equifax.
 
  We applaud Lotus's courage in leaving a bad situation before its
  reputation hit an all-time low. Of course, Manzi said in the press
  release and letter to the Lotus employees that Lotus still felt
  that its safeguards would have prevented any abuse of the product.
  Interestingly enough, Lotus claimed these safeguards were more
  stringent than any currently existing in the direct marketing
  industry. Unfortunately, while this may indeed be true, it does
  not imply (a) that the safeguards currently in use in the industry
  are anywhere near stringent enough - which they're not, as
  evidenced by the ease with which a writer for McGraw-Hill managed
  to get Vice-President Dan Quayle's credit rating from TRW - or (b)
  that Lotus's safeguards were stringent enough to offset the
  increased potential for abuse brought about by MarketPlace's large
  audience (i.e. anybody with a Mac and CD-ROM player). We and
  30,000 others disagreed with Lotus about the stringency of the
  safeguards, and we're the ones who would have been affected. And
  unlike Lotus, none of us would have been making money on the whole
  deal. :-)
 
  Information from:
    Lotus propaganda
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
    Scott McGuire -- smcguire@eagle.mit.edu
    Peter G. Neumann -- neumann@csl.sri.com
    Rick Russell -- WRR@ricevm1.rice.edu
 
 
DeskWriter & HyperCard
----------------------
  Among the mini-debates currently raging (if that is the word ;-))
  in the comp.sys.mac.hypercard group on Usenet is one concerning
  the Hewlett- Packard DeskWriter printer's inability to print half-
  and quarter-size HyperCard cards. For those unfamiliar with the
  DeskWriter, it is an ink-jet, QuickDraw printer that HP converted
  for the Macintosh (it looks suspiciously like a DeskJet), which
  works at a lower resolution with normal Macintosh screen fonts, or
  at the same 300 dpi as most laser printers with graphics as well
  as with its own scalable fonts and with ATM-ized ones.
 
  The debate started when someone complained on the net that
  HyperCard wouldn't let him print anything but full-size cards on a
  DeskWriter. Martin Gannholm of the HyperCard development team soon
  replied, explaining that the printer was at fault. Another user
  called Hewlett-Packard's tech support and was told by a
  spokesperson, Vicki, who, "reading from a comments sheet," said
  that HyperCard's reduced card-size printing options only work with
  PostScript devices, in effect laying the blame completely on
  HyperCard. Soon someone else called the problem "a bug," one still
  present in the latest version 2.1 of the DeskWriter driver, also
  suggesting that DeskWriter owners start pressuring HP to do
  something about it.
 
  Alas, much as I hate to dispel anybody's doubts, the DeskWriter
  driver's inability to print at other than full scale resolution
  (because that's what it amounts to) is not merely a software bug,
  but a direct result of HP basing it on a specific internal
  imagining model. Indeed, from the "DeskWriter Printer Information
  Update," a pink sheet that came with version 1.00 of the software,
  we learn that "the printer resource was developed by Hewlett-
  Packard Company and is based on the imagining kernel from Palomar
  Software, Inc."
 
  Joel West of Palomar Software and Earle R. Horthon each
  contributed to a series of articles in MacTutor describing
  development of a general QuickDraw printer driver with variable-
  resolution and few other facilities. The code wasn't geared
  towards any specific hardware but was meant to be adaptable to
  different printers' requirements. Therefore it never particularly
  touched upon sophisticated features like multiple scales, output
  rotation, and smoothing. Nor did it concern itself with the more
  mundane (but no less important!) questions of memory management
  that HP faced when bringing its 300 dpi printer to the Mac -
  chiefly of what to do when there's not enough memory to print a
  full 300 dpi page.
 
  I may be wrong but it wouldn't surprise me a bit if this was the
  kernel that HP bought and then wrapped in an RDEV shell of its
  own. After all, it seems to me that HP is not primarily in the
  printer driver business, and few people make Macintosh drivers
  anyway. HP's chief objective was not to produce a printer driver
  that would satisfy everybody's needs and offer 100% compatibility
  with all major features of all major Mac programs, but an
  acceptable product that would perform 90% of all operations well
  and make a profit. In that HP has certainly succeeded.
 
  The DeskWriter driver clearly suffers from the generality of its
  original design and from the consequences of the decision to
  permit it to function with 1 MB RAM machines (and the choice of
  method for dealing with it). In such unfavourable memory
  conditions the driver uses a technique called "banding" to image
  (draw in memory) a part of the page, print that out, and then
  proceed with the next band and so on. That turns printing at any
  scale other than the full 1:1 representation of a QuickDraw page
  into a nightmare. Therefore one shouldn't expect it to be patched
  or adapted for printing HyperCard's downscaled overview cards
  anytime soon, if ever.
 
  In fact, short of HP suddenly switching to a new imaging model for
  the driver, in effect redoing the development effort all over
  again, I don't see any solution to this problem. A late-comer to
  the Mac printer scene already, Hewlett-Packard may not have
  understood the importance of HyperCard (including its printout
  requirements) for many Mac users - after all, until recently there
  has been nothing like it for the MS-DOS line, therefore it
  couldn't be worth paying attention to (irony!).
 
  From a Mac user's point of view, it is insulting to hear that an
  inquiry about this printing "disability" was met by HP's
  spokesperson with a corporate passing of the buck. What is worse,
  the problem (problem, what problem?) isn't mentioned in the
  DeskWriter User's Manual either, which is beginning to resemble
  yet another instance of a "let the users find out the limitations
  the hard way and then forever hope for an upgrade" model of
  business decision making. Unfortunately for the individual
  DeskWriter owners that bought it right away and hoped to use it
  with HyperCard, neither the Macintosh user community nor the trade
  press sounded warnings in regard to this major (at least to
  HyperCard users) absence of a feature.
 
  Perhaps there is a lesson to be learned in all of this, or at
  least a reminder that we live in a world where little approaches
  perfection. Our best bet, strange as it may sound, would be to
  appeal to knowledgeable independent "grassroots" programmers, like
  Ari Mujunen and Olli Arnberg, two Finns who wrote the freeware
  HPDJ driver for the DeskJet, to write a HyperCard-optimized
  version for the DeskWriter.
 
    Opinion by Ian Feldman, ianf@random.se
    c.s.m.h submissions by:
    Bob Soron, bobsoron@world.std.com
    Martin Gannholm, gandalf@apple.com
    Ralph Lombreglia, ralph@world.std.com
    ['Vicki' at Hewlett-Packard, 208/323-2551]
    Russel S. Finn, rsfinn@athena.mit.edu
    Ari Mujunen
    Olli Arnberg
 
  authors of the HPDJ driver for the DeskJet printer, published
  April of 1989, available from sumex, reachable via "hpdj-
  bugs@hut.fi", also (perhaps still) individually at
  s29851c@taltta.hut.fi (Ari) and s29749s@saha.hut.fi (Olli).
 
MacTutor printer-driver-related articles:
    Printer Sleuthing
      by Joel West, Western Software Technology, March 1987
    How to write a printer driver
      by Earle R. Horton, Dartmouth College, Nov 1987
      [describes development of the 'Daisy' printer driver, the
       basis for Ari Mujunen's and Olli Arnberg's later work]
    20 Steps to Printing Incompatibility
      by Joel West, Palomar Software, Inc, June 1989
      [also known for Colorizer DA and PICT Detective]
    A Look at the PREC Resource
      By Dave Kelly, August 1989
    Dot Matrix Printer Driver
      by Earle Horton, [now at Microsoft], Oct 1989
 
 
Reviews/28-Jan-91
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Lotus MarketPlace:Business, pg. 31 (but see below)
    SiliconDisk Pro 1, pg. 31
    Audiomedia, pg. 36
    Security Software, pg. 45
      (too many to list)
 
* PC WEEK
    Add-on Fax Boxes, pg. 87
      FaxConnection
      JetFax II
      Fax-O-Matic
 
* InfoWorld
    ScanMan, pg. 84
    Org Plus 1.0, pg. 84
    Adobe Illustrator 3.0, pg. 67
 
* MacUser
    Illustrator 3.0, pg. 50
    Studio/32, pg. 52
    MacProteus & Deck, pg. 54
    Full Impact 2.0, pg. 58
    Spyglass Dicer, pg. 60
    Alarm Programs, pg. 74
      Smart Alarms
      Alarming Events
    Inside Information, pg. 78
    Timeslips III, pg. 80
    if:X Forms Designer, pg. 82
    Utilities for Microsoft Word, pg. 86
      DocuComp
      Stylist
      TechWords
      Microsoft Foreign Language Dictionaries
    Freedom of Press, pg. 93
    Freedom of Press Light, pg. 93
    UltraScript for the Macintosh, pg. 93
    Cheshire, pg. 93
    Trax, pg. 94
    EZ Vision, pg. 94
    HandOff II, pg. 95
    VideoPaint, pg. 96
    Armor Alley, pg. 97
    interFACE, pg. 98
    VideoQuill, pg. 99
    LifeGuard, pg. 100
    Beyond, pg. 100
    Full Page Displays, pg. 176
      (too many to list)
    Removable Cartridge Drives, pg. 206
      (too many to list)
 
* Macworld
    Page Layout Programs, pg. 142
      PageMaker 4.0
      Quark XPress 3.0
    Network Management Programs, pg. 152
      (too many to list)
    Digital Audio Boards, pg. 160
      (too many to list)
    Color Printers, pg. 168
      (too many to list)
    Mac Video Products, pg. 178
      (too many to list)
    Adobe Illustrator 3.0, pg. 196
    Switchboard, pg. 198
    BLP IIS, pg. 200
    QMS-PS 410, pg. 200
    Timbuktu/Remote Access Pack, pg. 204
    Anti-virus Programs, pg. 211
      Rival 1.1.4
      SAM 2.0
    Norton Utilities for Macintosh 1.0, pg. 213
    Nisus 3.01, pg. 215
    Go Junior, pg. 218
    Playmaker Football 1.0, pg. 220
    Customizing Utilities, pg. 222
      ClickChange 1.01
      Personality 1.0.1
    WPduet, pg. 224
    FileMaker Pro, pg. 226
    Typist, pg. 231
    Removable Cartridge Drives, pg. 234
      Bernoulli Transportable
      Microtech R50
    PLOTTERgeist 1.0, pg. 236
    Macintosh Bible Software Disks, pg. 239
    KiwiFinder Extender 1.02, pg. 239
    Astrix 1.0, pg. 239
    MacSleuth 1.0, pg. 239
    Word Count DA 1.2, pg. 240
    Cataloger 1.01, pg. 240
    TrackMate 1.0, pg. 240
    Quality Artware, pg. 240
    Keyboard Shelf, pg. 240
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 22-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #3
    PC WEEK -- 21-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #3
    InfoWorld -- 21-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #3
    MacUser -- Feb-91
    Macworld -- Feb-91
 
 
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