TidBITS#48/18-Mar-91
====================
 
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Topics:
    MailBITS/18-Mar-91
    Input Devices, Newer and Weirder
    Apple Bargain Basement
    Learn Unix the Easy Way
    Reviews/18-Mar-91
 
 
MailBITS/18-Mar-91
------------------
  Some people have suggested that we start a regular letters
  section, so we've decided that a quasi-sporadic, semi-edited
  section does make sense. Some mailfiles will come through
  complete; others we'll edit for space reasons. We will also use
  this article to inform you of TidBITS administrative trivia,
  stupid errors on our part, and the like. Hope you like it. Just so
  we don't have to mention this with every letter we print, please
  assume that we are extremely grateful for this information.
 
  Mark H Anbinder forwarded us this note from Brian Westley of
  DigiBoard "The WDEF A virus was inadvertently included on the
  driver disk for the DigiCHANNEL Nu/Xi serial port board; the disk
  is numbered PN 40000480B. The new driver is PN 40000480C; contact
  DigiBoard customer service at (612) 922-8055 to get the new driver
  (the software is the same). We are also adding the Communications
  Toolbox installer and connection tools to the release, so you can
  get these as well. Sorry for any inconvenience."
 
  Richard Johnson writes that the numbers we gave for IPT in Harry
  Skelton's article, "The Crocodile Smile," were incorrect, each by
  a single digit (bloody typos!). Here are the correct numbers for
  IPT.
 
    IPT -- 800/233-9993 -- 818/347-7791
 
  Karl Smith writes, "Your article in TidBITS about the
  Apple/Microsoft suit didn't mention the League for Programming
  Freedom, a group that is opposed to 'look and feel' copyrights.
  For more information about them, you can send email to
  league@prep.ai.mit.edu, and/or ftp to prep.ai.mit.edu and read the
  files contained in pub/gnu/lpf. Some of their ideas (such as
  boycotting Apple) may not be compatible with yours (or mine), but
  many of their goals overlap with the sentiment expressed in your
  article."
 
  Thomas Robb, an Associate Professor at the Kyoto Sangyo University
  in Japan (so he should know), writes, "A couple of comments on
  your most recent issue. Concerning the new project to develop a
  16-bit standardized character set, you mentioned a number of
  "languages" at the end of the article. Actually, two of them are
  not languages at all, but just alphabets. Devanagari is the
  alphabet used to write classical Sanskrit as well as modern-day
  Hindi. With the population of India being what it is, it is
  probably a good idea to standardize these scripts now before India
  leaps into the personal computer age. Both Oriya and Gurmukhi are
  Indo-Aryan languages related to Hindi, but used by other areas of
  the sub-continent. Their alphabets are originally derived from
  Devanagari, but are rather different in their shapes - sort of
  like the differences between the Greek, Cyrllic and our alphabet.
  Bopomofo is an alphabet, now primarily used on Taiwan, for writing
  Chinese phonetically. I believe it is taught to the children there
  before they are started on learning the Chinese characters-proper.
  Mainland China now uses the Pinyin system which is comprised
  completely of Roman alphabetic characters, thus now a special
  character set is needed."
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
    Richard Johnson -- johnsonr@spot.colorado.edu
    Karl Smith -- ksmith@jarthur.claremont.edu
    Thomas Robb -- TROBB@JPNKSUVX.BITNET
 
 
Input Devices, Newer and Weirder
--------------------------------
  Cool new input devices are always a hard call - on the one hand
  you want companies to challenge the status quo and come out with
  the ultimate in control, but on the other hand, if an input device
  is too strange looking, no one will even think of buying it. There
  have been a number of introductions recently, and a few of them
  are quite interesting. As with any input device, you have to try
  it before you buy it, and it would be nice if these companies put
  a little more effort into supporting user group demonstrations
  (and sending them to TidBITS for review!) so people could get
  their hands on these beasties.
 
  Three button devices are showing up more frequently these days now
  that Apple has A/UX and X Windows running on the Mac, since X
  Windows basically requires three mouse buttons. Logitech, a long-
  time mouse maker, has two new input devices, a mouse and a
  trackball, both with three buttons. Mouse Systems (with whom I'm
  still irritated for not releasing the PageBrush hand scanner
  already) has the $169.95 A3 (that's A cubed, but HyperCard 1.2.x
  can't handle superscripts), which like the Logitech $129 MouseMan
  and $149 TrackMan has three buttons and works with A/UX and X
  Windows. All three devices have Control Panels that allow users to
  assign macros to the buttons during normal Macintosh use, and at
  least the A3 can be configured so that left-handed people can use
  it easily. And if three buttons isn't enough for you, the $29.95
  MVP Foot Switch from Curtis works with the company's $149.95 MVP
  Mouse (which, despite the name, is really a three-button
  trackball). I've been haranguing for a long time about foot
  controls, and I'm glad that someone has finally issued one.
 
  Logitech has been busy. Aside from the MouseMan and TrackMan, they
  are working on a small trackball that works with portable
  computers. This is obviously mostly a problem for PC portables,
  since the main Macintosh compatible portables have built-in
  pointing devices, either a trackball or the Isopoint. I don't know
  offhand what Colby and Dynamac use for pointing devices, though.
  Microsoft also has a $175 trackball for portables, called the
  BallPoint, that will clip on the side of the computer and can be
  used with either hand, because it has two sets of two buttons on
  the side the unit. The Logitech trackball will probably look
  somewhat similar but will have the added advantage being able to
  work standing alone or held in the user's hand. The obvious
  problem with these devices is the slow refresh rate of portable
  LCD screens. Fast cursor movements disappear while the LCD
  displays refreshes, which is irritating and might be maddening if
  coupled with a bumpy plane trip. Nonetheless, Compaq will bundle
  Microsoft's BallPoint with its LTE and SLT portable PC clones
  between now and June 30th, 1991.
 
  Apple is almost certainly working on handwriting recognition
  software with the announcements of PenPoint and PenWindows.
  However, you may not have heard that a small company,
  Communications Intelligence Corp. (CIC) has been working with
  Apple on a tablet-like device that can recognize Kanji characters
  as well as certain gestures, much like PenPoint. In theory the Mac
  Handwriter, as the device is called, could be modified to accept
  and recognize other alphabets.
 
  EMAC has been advertising an interesting looking trackball
  recently. Called the Silhouette, the trackball is cut away on the
  top right side so you can get both your thumb and forefinger on
  the ball (which comes in a number of colors, to judge from the
  advertising). That design should provide quite a bit more control.
  The $99 Silhouette is ergonomically designed to fit the curve of
  the hand and offers well-placed buttons and a lighted lock button.
  Spark International's new trackball and mouse can't compete in the
  aesthetics department, but both are cordless, a welcome feature on
  many cord-covered desktops. The trackball will list for $185 and
  the mouse for $175, and in theory, both can operate up to 15 feet
  from the infrared receiver. Depending on the setup, an infrared
  pointing device could be very handy in a presentation setting
  because you could control the Mac from a different spot in the
  room.
 
  The BAT keyboard's entrance to the Macintosh market (which I
  talked about earlier) is delayed slightly, in great part because
  it wasn't snazzy looking and Infogrip is concerned that too many
  people will care about its appearance. Infogrip will first target
  the PC CAD market with the serial version of the BAT and then will
  release Mac and Unix versions with a fancier design. Some people
  are already using the BAT in an interesting way - to provide a
  better controller for disabled people (my apologies if I've
  offended anyone, I couldn't bring myself to write "people of the
  disabled persuasion" :-)). California State University at
  Northridge has a universal interface where you can plug whatever
  device you need, be it the BAT, a normal keyboard, or a head-
  mounted pointing device, into any of the computers they have. For
  those of you who are especially interested in access to computers
  for disabled people, there will be a conference on the topic at
  the Airport Marriot in Los Angeles on March 20th through 23rd.
  Infogrip will be in the Genovation (the people who worked with CSU
  on its system) booth if you want to see the BAT.
 
  One way or another, we at TidBITS are going to have to do
  something, because our mouse has started to skip and stick
  seriously despite rigorous cleaning. We're about ready to relegate
  it to the cats, who would enjoy it immensely, and get something
  else. Suggestions anyone?
 
    CIC -- 415/328-1311
    Curtis Manufacturing -- 603/532-4123
    EMAC -- 415/683-2222
    Infogrip -- 504/336-0033
    Logitech -- 415/795-8500
    Mouse Systems -- 415/656-1117
    Spark International -- 708/998-6640
 
  Information from:
    Lots of propaganda
    Ward Bond of Infogrip
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 29-Jan-91, Vol. 5, #4, pg. 10
    InfoWorld -- 11-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #10, pg. 21
    InfoWorld -- 04-Feb-91, Vol. 13, #5, pg. 3
    InfoWorld -- 21-Jan-91, Vol. 13, #3, pg. 38
    PC WEEK -- 11-Mar-91, Vol. 8, #10, pg. 15
    PC WEEK -- 07-Jan-91, Vol. 8, #1, pg. 4
 
 
Apple Bargain Basement
----------------------
  A lot of people had to quiet down when Apple introduced the
  Classic, LC, and IIsi because those machines aren't priced to
  compete with workstations. They are quite affordable (though it's
  still easy to find PC users bellyaching about how expensive Macs
  are), and Apple has lowered prices on a number of other machines
  to spread the savings across the product line.
 
                  New Suggested Retail Price          Reduction
    Mac IIfx 4/floppy          $7,369                   $1,600
    Mac IIfx 4/80HD            $8,069                   $1,800
    Mac IIfx 4/160HD           $8,669                   $2,300
 
    Mac IIci 4/floppy          $5,269                   $700
    Mac IIci 4/80HD            $5,969                   $700
 
    Mac SE/30 4/40HD           $3,369                   $1000
    Mac SE/30 4/80HD           $3,869                   $1700
 
    Personal LaserWriter NT    $2,599                   $700
    LaserWriter II NT          $3,999                   $500
    LaserWriter II NTX         $4,999                   $1000
 
  In addition to these new prices, Apple is increasing the standard
  memory for the IIsi to 3 MB (we think that Apple will accomplish
  this using 512K SIMMs in the IIsi) and for the IIci to 5 MB. With
  the price of RAM these days, the move allows Apple to get rid of
  some 256K SIMMs in the IIci's and make a few friends in the
  process.
 
  And finally, Apple officially dropped IIcx and IIx. Considering
  how useful they still are to those who own them, I doubt that
  muttering anything to the effect "Rest in peace" would be
  appropriate, especially considering that you can upgrade a IIcx to
  a IIci and a IIx to a IIfx.
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
    Apple propaganda
 
 
Learn Unix the Easy Way
-----------------------
  by Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
 
  Undoubtedly many reviewers have heralded the epic and factual
  qualities of Cliff Stoll's book "The Cuckoo's Egg." Indeed, his
  account of how he first discovered and then dealt with an
  anonymous intruder in the computer system that he managed is a
  potent read, and I found it difficult to lay down the book to
  attend to everyday chores. By virtue of being the first
  extensively documented case, "The Cuckoo's Egg" has largely
  dispelled the doubts about whether or not such intrusions occur,
  what proportions they take, and what possible consequences they
  may lead to. On the side it has also effectively killed the
  Hollywood myth of computer break-ins being some kind of War Games
  scenario: a pair of well-scrubbed suburban teenagers guess a
  secret password to a super-duper military computer in a Pentagon
  basement (complete with an array of randomly-blinking lights),
  start a make-believe thermonuclear war, then succeed in tracking
  down the computer's elusive chief scientist just prior to the
  initial ICBM launch. This killing of a Technicolor[tm] myth should
  be considered Stoll's major achievement, literary and otherwise.
  And for that reason alone the book cannot be recommended highly
  enough, the best $5.95 US/ $6.95 CAN (paperback) investment one
  could ever make.
 
  Another side to this book has hardly been mentioned because it
  feels so, well, mundane. I'm thinking of its value as a textbook
  for teaching the basics of computer networking, software,
  hardware, and everyware. This applies for both the computer-
  illiterati and those with more varied electronic experiences.
  Stoll manages to clearly explain the interdependencies of a
  computer's operating system and its managed programs, the very
  principles of computer security, and the basics of what it takes
  to maintain a complex, many-tentacled computer system. Indeed,
  over the years having read a great many books about computer-
  basics (not to mention 'hacking') I can think of no other that
  approaches "The Cuckoo's Egg" in terms of clarity of thought and
  presentation of complex knowledge. All this while retaining the
  tension of a good spy thriller. Remembering my first, very
  frustrating months of learning Unix on my own, I'm sure that I'd
  have it much easier had I'd been able to read the book prior to my
  initial login.
 
  Intruder-hunter or no, Stoll excels in teaching. He explains the
  security aspects in an environment of 'multitasked processes in a
  computer' in terms of a house subdivided into many apartments,
  each of which does function and houses [sic!] people independently
  of one another, each of which can be opened by a superintendent's
  key. Steal the key and you're in, er, business. Steal a Unix super
  user's password and you're doubly in business, holding the system
  hostage whenever dark forces are in you, reading others' mail,
  peeping-tom-ing, wrecking havoc, wiping out the entire accumulated
  data contents with a single system-wide 'rm -r *' command. Such
  power at your unaccountable beck and call! The concept and
  consequences of multitasking (and multithreading [and multi-
  anything]) may be easy to explain in abstract terms to a bunch of
  future computer science students but it hardly is IOTTCO all on
  its own ("Intuitively Obvious To The Casual Observer", an acronym
  spewed out by the book's resident VMS guru to describe his
  system's command syntax superiority over Unix. Strange, Unix gurus
  find it seldom worth while to compare their systems with VMS.
  Tells a load, doesn't it?).
 
  One could argue of course that reading about computers' operating
  systems doesn't exactly sound like entertainment for the casual,
  non-hacking bystander. Not enough sex-appeal or something. Only in
  this case it does, the story being incomplete without Stoll's
  account of his attempts to find a military or counter-espionage
  government body to pursue the investigation (then being accused by
  a housemate of "dealing with people without a sense of humor"),
  nutty conversations in SMERTCH-Russian in the shower ("Ees time
  for ze secret plan 35B." "Brilliant, Natasha! Zat will vork
  perfectly! Ah, darlink... vhat is secret plan 35B?"), and a cookie
  recipe (later termed "grotesquely unhealthy" in the BYTE magazine
  review of the book [all that sugar, no doubt]). Perhaps the most
  choice nugget of cloak-and-dagger humor comes on a visit to the
  CIA headquarters. Stoll discovers a battery of lovely "Top Secret"
  rubber stamps of various shapes, which he uses to make himself a
  nice memento-mori on an otherwise empty sheet of paper, then has
  it questioned and ultimately confiscated by a guard because "they
  take security seriously around there."
 
  In short: read the book, don't wait for the movie. There aren't
  enough blinking lights on Stoll's computer for Hollywood to take
  notice. Then again, what do I know of movie making. Add a teenager
  or two and maybe it's 'hackertime-in-Hackerville' all over again.
 
  [Editors' note: Hollywood it's not, but PBS (Public Broadcasting
  Service) recently aired a one hour version of "The Cuckoo's Egg"
  called "The KGB, The Computer and Me." PBS escaped the flashing
  lights and well-scrubbed teenagers by using no professional
  actors. Everyone in the TV show plays themselves and does so
  wonderfully, all of which adds to the effect of Cliff Stoll's
  excellent narration. The show was written and directed by Robin
  Bates, so ask your local PBS station to show it. We've watched it
  three times now, and we're sorry we couldn't find out any more
  specific details.]
 
 
References:
    Clifford Stoll, "The Cuckoo's Egg/Tracing a spy through the
      maze of computer espionage", Pocket Books (nonfiction), 1990
    Hugh Kenner, "Our man in Berkeley", Print Queue, a review of
      the book in BYTE, March 1990, pp. 360-362.
    Don Libes and Sandy Ressler, "Life With Unix/ A Guide For
      Everyone", Prentice-Hall, 1989. Should be second on a reading
      list of anyone trying to learn Unix.
    J. R. Hubbard, "A Gentle Introduction To The VAX System", TAB
      Books Inc., 1987. A concise and fairly straightforward teaching
      book of the VMS operating system.
    "The KGB, The Computer and Me," written and directed by Robin
      Bates, Public Broadcasting Service, 1990.
 
 
Reviews/18-Mar-91
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Personal Press, pg. 32
    GraceLAN 1.1.1, pg. 32
    Forms Programs, pg. 38
      Fast Forms 2.0
      SmartForm series
      if:X Forms Designer 1.1
      Informed series
    Ashlar Vellum 2.0, pg. 38
    Correct Grammar 2.0, pg. 43
 
* InfoWorld
    FileMaker Pro, pg. 72
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 12-Mar-91, Vol. 5, #10
    InfoWorld -- 11-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #10
 
 
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