TidBITS#63/27-May-91
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Topics:
    MailBITS/27-May-91
    SevenBITS/27-May-91
    Storage Notes
    BAT News
    Reviews/27-May-91
 
 
MailBITS/27-May-91
------------------
  Douglas Wyman writes, "At the Las Vegas 90 Fall COMDEX I saw a
  prototype digital camera which used EEROM cards instead of still-
  video floppies to record images. The image was digitized in color
  and stored on the card which could then be read out by a display
  device. The obvious (and visibly apparent) benefit was the
  stability of the output image which did not shudder and shake when
  being displayed. I too have examined the still-video devices such
  as the Canon cameras and do not accept the digital - analog -
  digital approach that their use requires. The rotating analog
  playback mechanisms introduce too much shake to the image and
  require mechanical movement for something that could be all-
  digital and all-electronic. I hope some other vendor is able to
  move ahead with that technology before still-video gets a firm
  hold on the consumer's attention."
 
  Information from:
    Douglas Wyman -- esfm01.SINet.SLB.COM
 
 
SevenBITS/27-May-91
-------------------
  Everyone has been complaining for the last few years about System
  7 needing 2 MB of RAM to run. Given the low price of memory (about
  $40 per MB), getting another megabyte shouldn't bankrupt too many
  people. Still, is 2 MB enough? I personally consider a 1 MB Mac
  Plus pretty unusable for the level of things I do (OK, so I run
  out of memory on my 8 MB SE/30 - what if I'm a tad spoiled), will
  a 2 MB Classic be much different? We've been testing that
  recently, since Tonya just got herself a 2 MB Classic that we
  haven't gotten around to upping the memory yet. We are still
  learning the best way to manage its memory, but it looks as though
  verdict will be that if you want to run memory hogs like Word 4,
  you will be a bit limited in what you can do and everything will
  slow down, sometimes rather significantly. We have also run into
  some strange problems with the System 7 files sharing on our
  mini-LocalTalk network between the Classic and the SE/30 (the
  SE/30 is running 6.0.5). We will report on the details of the
  strange problems if we ever figure them out (it looks like later
  tonight we will install DataClub, which may work more smoothly).
 
  These are the basic System 7 memory guidelines from Apple, though
  we are not yet convinced of their complete accuracy. If you
  currently have 1 MB, use System 6 and one program. If you have 2
  MB, System 7 and one program will work fine. 2.5 MB of RAM allows
  you to run System 7 with maybe two programs, and anything over 3
  MB allows you to run even more programs or a single memory hog
  like Photoshop. Of course, if you have a ton of INITs, whoops,
  extensions, the amount of extra memory shrinks rapidly. Another
  place memory might disappear is if you use file sharing, which
  eats another 260K to 300K of RAM.
 
  We heard that CE Software does not plan to make version 2.5 (soon
  to be released) of their popular QuickMail package completely
  System 7 compatible. The client software will be System 7
  compatible and 32-bit clean, but the QM Server and the QM
  Administrator will not be. CE says that they talked to their
  largest sites and decided not to make 2.5 compatible because the
  sites weren't upgrading their servers to System 7 and because it
  would entail a significant rewrite of QuickMail. CE will
  undoubtedly support System 7 in the future, but since it's taken a
  while for them to finish 2.5, it could be a long time before a
  System 7-studly version of QuickMail arrives. With Microsoft as
  competition, this doesn't seem to be a terrifically bright move on
  CE's part. If you are interested in participating in the
  discussion and wish to make your feelings known to CE, there are
  two things you should do. First, send mail to CESOFTWARE at
  AppleLink (CESOFTWARE@applelink.apple.com) or America Online.
  Second, there is a QM-L LISTSERV at Yale for discussing QuickMail.
  To subscribe, send a one line mailfile saying SUBSCRIBE QM-L Your
  Name (replace Your Name with the appropriate information - I'm
  sure you can all figure it out) to LISTSERV@YALEVM.BITNET. You'll
  then get information on the list along with messages sent by other
  people. CE monitors that list.
 
  On a related note, I've just heard of a new LISTSERV dedicated to
  talking about System 7. I haven't had time to check it out, what
  with getting married and all, but it should be interesting if
  you're having trouble with System 7 or are concerned about issues
  surrounding the upgrade. To quote from the announcement: "The new
  list, SYS7-L, is specifically dedicated to the problems of
  installation, configuaration and features of the new system, as
  well as issues relating to product compatibility. We hope that
  this will serve the Macintosh community well, by providing a
  hopefully closer look at this new product without diluting the
  excellent quality of existing Mac mailing lists." To subscribe to
  the list send a mailfile containing SUBSCRIBE SYS7-L Your Name
  (same deal with replacement as before) to LISTSERV@UAFSYSB.BITNET.
  If you have questions, comments, or problems, ask David Remington,
  the list's owner, at DAVIDR@UAFSYSB or davidr@uafsysb.uark.edu. I
  recommend that you follow a list like this for complete
  information on System 7, since there's no way TidBITS can carry
  all the good information about System 7. We're sticking with the
  most interesting and most important stuff, but there's lots of
  other useful information we can't include.
 
  Apple's Compatibility Checker claims that Disinfectant 2.4 is not
  compatible and should be upgraded to 2.5. Unfortunately, there is
  no 2.5 - it's a myth. Disinfectant 2.4 is compatible with System 7
  as long as you leave the @Disinfectant INIT in the System Folder
  proper, not the Extensions folder. John Norstad has said that he
  is working on Disinfectant 3.0, which will take full advantage of
  System 7 and knowing John, it will be truly snazzy to boot. Along
  with balloon help and the ability to drop icons on the
  Disinfectant icon to have them checked, Disinfectant will have an
  AppleEvent that allows other programs to ask Disinfectant to check
  files. That should help when downloading. I believe that the only
  thing Disinfectant will be unable to prevent is infection via file
  sharing, so watch the rest of the people on your network
  carefully. :-)
 
  Finally, in a thread discussing why Mac word processors don't do
  typesetting like TeX, Brian Diehm mentioned that he'd heard that
  Interleaf for the Mac was a major test site for System 7 because
  it was the first major application being written from the ground
  up for System 7, rather than being ported up from System 6. Brian
  thought that a new release of Interleaf for the Mac, complete with
  a full Macintosh interface and System 7-studliness, might be
  coming soon. Of course, if I remember correctly, Interleaf was so
  expensive that only a site that used it on workstations as well
  and wanted the compatibility would use it. Perhaps this release
  will also bring a price reduction and put Interleaf into the world
  of the affordable.
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.uucp
    David Remington -- davidr@uafsysb.uark.edu
    John Norstad -- j-norstad@nwu.edu
    Brian Diehm -- briand@tekig10.PEN.TEK.COM
 
 
Storage Notes
-------------
  I'm always interested in newer and bigger forms of mass storage,
  and a number of interesting announcements have come out in the
  last few months. Probably the storage device that will gain
  acceptance the fastest is the 88 MB SyQuest drive, which will
  first appear from PLI, MicroNet, and Mass Microsystems. Prices
  will be high at first, a bit under $2000 for the drive and about
  $200 for the cartridge, both of which are more than twice as much
  as you might pay for a 44 MB SyQuest drive from a reputable
  vendor. The drives won't be any faster than their predecessors,
  but SyQuest says that they are more reliable. SyQuest will
  continue making the 44 MB version indefinitely, and the 88 MB
  drives will read but not write existing 44 MB cartridges.
 
  The 88 MB SyQuest drives may hurt the market for another storage
  technology that has been around for a while. Pinnacle Micro
  announced a 130 MB magneto-optical drive quite some time ago, and
  it should start shipping in volume sometime this summer. The
  drives are similar to the 650 MB erasable opticals, but the 130 MB
  drive uses a 3.5" optical disk. The smaller disk allows the heads
  to move a shorter distance, decreasing the access times to about
  35 milliseconds or about the speed of a slow hard disk. Part of
  the problem faced by these drive is the price, which runs about
  $3000, though I'd expect to see that drop once the drives are in
  full production. The SyQuest drives came down in price once they
  became popular, so if the erasable opticals offer enough speed and
  reliability, they could do quite well.
 
  In May, a company called DJK plans to ship a 20 MB floptical (it
  uses high density magnetic media with servo tracks optically
  encoded onto the disk surface) that will use 3.5" floptical disks
  that look like standard floppies. The external SCSI device will be
  relatively slow with an 85 millisecond access time, and it has a
  mean time between failures of 15,000 hours. The developer of the
  technology, Insite Peripherals, claims it achieved its goal of
  being able to read and write standard Mac and DOS floppies (though
  not 800K Mac disks). The main questions still remaining are the
  price and the media reliability. There is an excellent explanation
  of how these beasts work in the Oct-90 issue of BYTE.
 
  CD-ROM and WORM drives are becoming more and more similar all the
  time. A group with the vaguely odd name of the Frankfurt Group
  (JVC, Sony, and Philips are the main members) released a spec for
  a write-once CD-ROM drive that can read all current CD-ROMs,
  although current CD-ROM drives can't read all the writable CDs.
  There are a couple of possible reasons for this limitation. First,
  there might be a different method of laying down the data between
  which the user would have to choose (concentric circles instead of
  a single spiral for instance). Second, there could be other
  variables, such as media tolerances that some standard CD drives
  could read but others couldn't. No telling at the moment. JVC has
  a drive which will probably be priced around $2500 for end users,
  but no word on what each disk would cost.
 
  As CD-ROMs get closer to WORMs, WORMs get closer to erasable
  optical drives. Reflection Systems has a drive that uses a phase
  change technology to flip bits optically, much as magnetic media
  does with magnetic bits. The phase change method is quite a bit
  faster (about 90 milliseconds) than standard magneto-optical
  technology, which has to erase the existing data, write the new
  data, and verify it, taking three passes to the single pass
  necessary with phase change. The phase change technology is fast
  enough that the DVI (Digital Video Interactive) people are
  interested because it combines massive rewritable removable
  storage with decent speed for full motion video. The only drawback
  to the phase change method is that it may cause the disks to wear
  out faster, though only time will tell on that account. The drives
  will be marketed by Panasonic (aka Matsushita, the original
  maker), Corel Systems, Avid and Montage for about $4000  and the
  disks will run about $250 each. That sounds pricey, but each disk
  will hold 1 GB of data (500 MB per side and yes, you do have to
  flip the disk manually), so it's extremely cost effective after
  just a couple of disks. For an explanation of how phase change
  works, check out the article on it in the Nov-90 BYTE.
 
  Back in the mundane world of floppies, it's looking like the next
  size for the standard floppy will be 2.8 MB. NeXT standardized on
  the Sony 2.8 MB drive when it added a floppy to the NeXTstation
  and NeXTcube, and I've heard rumors about Apple putting a 2.8 MB
  drive into future Macs. I gather that people at Apple aren't that
  thrilled with the 2.8 MB technology because switching standard
  disk formats tends to confuse and irritate users for a year or two
  after the switch. In addition, 2.8 MB just isn't that much more
  than 1.4 MB these days. Floppies are primarily used for backup and
  transfer, neither of which require somewhat larger floppies. Now
  20 MB floppies - that's a different story.
 
    Corel -- 613/728-8200
    DJK Development -- 313/254-2632
    Mass Microsystems -- 800/522-7979 -- 408/522-1200
    MicroNet Technology, Inc. -- 714/837-6033
    Panasonic -- 800/742-8086 -- 201/348-7000
    Pinnacle Micro -- 800/553-7070 -- 714/727-3300
    PLI -- 800/288-8754 -- 415/657-2211
    Reflection -- 800/445-9400 -- 408/432-0943
 
    Corel -- 613/728-8200
    DJK Development -- 313/254-2632
    Mass Microsystems -- 800/522-7979 -- 408/522-1200
    MicroNet Technology, Inc. -- 714/837-6033
    Panasonic -- 800/742-8086 -- 201/348-7000
    Pinnacle Micro -- 800/553-7070 -- 714/727-3300
    PLI -- 800/288-8754 -- 415/657-2211
    Reflection -- 800/445-9400 -- 408/432-0943
 
  Information from:
    Pinnacle Micro propaganda
    Joe from Reflection Systems.
 
  Related articles:
    PC WEEK -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 8, #12, pg. 101
    InfoWorld -- 25-Mar-91, Vol. 13, #12, pg. 8
    MacWEEK -- 26-Mar-91, Vol. 5, #12, pg. 29
    MacWEEK -- 19-Feb-91, Vol. 5, #7, pg. 1, 8
    BYTE -- Oct-90, pg. 301
    BYTE -- Nov-90, pg. 289
 
 
BAT News
--------
  One of my favorite people to talk to is Ward Bond, president of
  Infogrip, because he always pushes the envelope of technology.
  Infogrip makes the BAT chord keyboard, which should show up in the
  Mac market after they get enough money to pay an industrial
  designer to snazz it up for picky consumers. It's already being
  sold to CAD users, I gather, since they don't care much what it
  looks like as long as it saves time, which it does.
 
  In any event, Infogrip has two new products which fit right in
  with what I've been saying for a long time about peripatetic (a
  nice Greek word meaning "performed while moving around")
  computing. The most exciting of these products from a retail
  standpoint is the Mini-BAT, which is palmtop computer like the
  Sharp Wizard or the new HP 95LX. Like the Sharp Wizard, the Mini-
  BAT does not use DOS, which can either be good or bad, depending
  on your compu-religious affiliation. The Mini-BAT comes with word
  processing software, calendar/alarm software, database software,
  64K of memory, and a NiCad battery pack that lasts for 40 hours of
  working between charges. For more money on top of the retail price
  (less than $600) you can add up to 576K of memory, a Lotus 1-2-3
  compatible spreadsheet, a pocket fax modem, an alphanumeric pager,
  a kit for transferring data to a PC or a Mac, and last but not
  least, foreign language translation programs for Spanish, French,
  and German. That's pretty impressive for a non-DOS palmtop. Like
  both the Wizard and the 95LX, the Mini-BAT has a full (if
  something 3.5" x 7" x .8" and weighing less than a pound can have
  "full" associated with it in any way) keyboard. Unlike the other
  two, or any other portable computer of any size, the Mini-BAT also
  includes a special seven-key chord keyboard so you can actually
  type on it, even without looking. A friend lent me a Digital Diary
  for a while, and although I liked what it could do as far as
  keeping track of information, I hated entering information on its
  pseudo-keyboard so much I finally stopped using it out of pure
  irritation. In the BYTE review of the HP 95LX, they say that its
  main downfall is its abysmal keyboard. The reviewer even made a
  nasty comment about how not only was typing the Great American
  Novel not possible on this keyboard, even the Great American short
  story would be pretty hard to manage. The Mini-BAT should be able
  to put all current portable computer keyboards to shame because
  anyone can learn to touch-type on a chord keyboard quickly since
  you don't have to move your fingers around to different keys. The
  ability to type without looking at either the screen or the
  keyboard should minimize the Mini-BAT's main limitation, which is
  a small LCD screen.
 
  Infogrip's other new product gets around the Mini-BAT's screen
  limitation, and if your compu-religious affiliation involves
  bowing toward Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond five times a
  day, you will like the Walk-Around Chordable Computer with Private
  Eye. It's a long name, but basically you get a portable 8086,
  80286, or 80386 computer running DOS. You wear the computer around
  your neck like a guitar, and use a BAT chord keyboard to enter
  information. Display is handled by the head-mounted Private Eye,
  which weighs less than three ounces and provides what looks like a
  full-size screen floating a few feet in front of you. No need to
  worry about electromagnetic fields with this baby, although you
  might walk into walls occasionally. That's all we know about the
  Walk-Around, so call Ward at Infogrip if you want more
  information.
 
  Another project that Infogrip is working on but hasn't mentioned
  to the popular press is something with the terrible name of
  CompCap. The company that thought of the name and the product is
  Park Engineering, and the machine is an 8086 DOS computer
  shoehorned into a hardhat. A Private Eye provides the display and
  if everything goes right, a BAT should be included for text entry.
  For those of you who wear hardhats a lot (architects, construction
  people, engineers, people with soft heads, etc.), a CompCap is an
  excellent way to keep the computing power close at hand, or
  perhaps I should say, under your hat.
 
  Ward said that he was talking to people at Apple, so if we're
  lucky a future Apple portable will have a reasonable keyboard.
  I've heard from a couple of people now that Apple may release some
  small, possibly pen-based, machines using RISC or 68040 chips in
  the next year. Perhaps the most interesting of these will be an
  el-cheapo handheld in the $600 range that would be ideal with a
  BAT keyboard. Actually, since it's looking as though there will be
  separate pen-based, handheld, and notebook machines, the BAT would
  work well with all of them, and would take care of my main
  complaints with pen-based computers. You use the pen for the
  simple stuff and the BAT for the real text entry and you get the
  best of both worlds without a massive keyboard weighing you down.
  Nice thought, that. Anyone at Apple listening?
 
    Infogrip -- 504/336-0033
    Park Engineering, Don Merriam -- 206/747-3309
 
  Information from:
    Ward Bond, Infogrip
    Infogrip propaganda
    Bob Cringely
 
 
Reviews/27-May-91
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Excel 3.0, pg. 64
    NetUpdater, pg. 64
    MathWriter 2.0, pg. 68
    form*Z 1.02, pg. 68
    GEOvista 1.1, pg. 71
    INtouch, pg. 72
    TouchBASE, pg. 72
    Crystal Ball 2.0, pg. 72
    PC/Mac Translation Programs, pg. 79
      MacLinkPlus/PC 5.0
      Word for Word/Mac
      Software Bridge Mac
      LapLinkMac III
 
* InfoWorld
    HP LaserJet IIIP, pg. 149
 
* BYTE
    HP 95LX Palmtop, pg. 44
    Apple Personal LaserWriter LS & StyleWriter, pg. 48
    FreeHand 3.0, pg. 62
    Storm PicturePress compression board, pg. 263
    Kodak Color Diconix, pg. 287
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 21-May-91, Vol. 5, #20
    InfoWorld -- 20-May-91, Vol. 13, #20
    BYTE -- May-91
 
 
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