TidBITS#76/12-Aug-91
====================
 
 Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
   publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
   publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
   of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
   registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
   back issues are available.
 
 For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
 Internet: ace@tidbits.uucp -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
 TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    Macworld Expo Boston
    The Highlights
    A MultiMedia Bonanza
    In Conclusion...
    Reviews/12-Aug-91
 
 
Macworld Expo Boston
--------------------
  You were warned! This week's issue is devoted to the Macworld
  Expo, which occupied the lives of an alarming number of Mac
  industry people and enthusiasts last week, who made the annual
  pilgrimage to Boston's Bayside Expo Center and World Trade Center.
  The clam chowder was exceptional, of course, but the Expo itself
  had little of the charm or pizzazz of some past shows. As one
  TidBITS reporter, Ilene Hoffman, put it, regular readers of
  MacWEEK or TidBITS are less likely to be stunned by the Expo and
  its offerings, and "the thrill and anticipation of going to
  Macworld gets diluted."
 
  There were a number of high points, and certainly quite a few
  things worth seeing. Just as important, this trip provided an
  opportunity to meet a number of fellow TidBITS readers, and a wide
  assortment of other fellow Mac fans. I look forward to meeting
  more of you in the future. In the meantime, I'm going to let Ilene
  and Earl Christie give you a feel for what you missed if you
  didn't make it to the show, or a recap if you did.
 
  One of the things Ilene did at the show was to interview a number
  of attendees. It may be a bit backwards to place these end-of-show
  impressions at the beginning of our Expo coverage, but I think
  they will give you a good idea of what the show was like. The
  details will follow. For the record, each of these people were
  asked what they thought the highlights of the show were.
 
  Of a room full of avid bulletin board users, about eight people
  said "Nothing," while others offered more optimistic comments,
  naming More After Dark (Berkeley), Aladdin's SpaceMaker, Double
  Helix 3.5 (Odesta), and Spectre from Velocity, as highlights.
 
  A noted MacUser writer said that the highlights for him included
  all of the integrated software products (BeagleWorks, Claris
  Works, and Symantec GreatWorks), SpaceMaker, Spaceship Warlock
  (Educorp), Mutant's Beach (Insight), HAND-Off II (Connectix), and
  a MacHack CD which was available at one of the conferences. This
  CD contained all of MacHack from 1987-1991. A MacUser editor said
  his highlights included the new Outbound notebook computers, More
  After Dark, Spectre, SpaceMaker, Magic (Paracomp), the Video
  Toaster (Newtek), HAM (Microseeds), HAND-Off II, and Novell's
  Netware. He also added that a dozen or more products would have
  been drooled over a year ago, but now that the state of the art is
  moving so quickly, we've become jaded.
 
  A group of international users from Germany, Australia, and
  England voted for the integrated packages, Hewlett Packard's
  products, and More After Dark. They also commented that there were
  no major products showing, just "lots of little stuff." Other
  random users pinpointed Living Books (Broderbund), TypeStyler
  (Broderbund), Resolve (Claris), the Video Toaster, Canvas 3.0
  (Deneba), MAD (again!), and Silhouette (the trackball from EMAC).
  The best bargain reported by multiple users was BMUG's $40.00
  membership, which included a canvas tote bag and a T-shirt.
 
  Lots of people agreed on a very few items as highlights, it seems.
  In the following articles, we'll take a closer look at some of
  those highlights and what they'll mean for us down the road.
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
    Ilene Hoffman -- Ilene.Hoffman@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
      Fidonet: Ilene Hoffman on 1:101/485
      AOL, AppleLink, & Delphi: IleneH
 
 
The Highlights
--------------
  Adam Engst, our faithful Editor, said last year's Macworld Boston
  show made 1990 the "year of the upgrades." With the introduction
  of System 7, this years' Expo could best be called Upgrade II...
  or is that Pro or 7.x? New products are no longer the height of
  the show; they have been replaced with bigger, better, more-
  feature-laden versions of the products you already know and love.
  That's to be expected as the industry matures and there are fewer
  frontiers to explore, but it still takes some of the fun out of
  it.
 
  One of the few areas with plenty of new activity is the integrated
  software market, which we've talked about the last few weeks.
  Claris and Beagle Bros showed their soon-to-be-released integrated
  products, which like already-shipping products from Microsoft and
  Symantec, are particularly good for new users, small businesses,
  and educational users, who typically need a little bit of a lot of
  things. The key differences are that the Claris and Beagle Bros
  offerings give users the ability to use different tools (i.e. word
  processing, drawing, and database tools) within the same document,
  rather than having to use separate documents with each segment of
  the program. According to Beagle Bros, this reflects "the true
  meaning of integration," and we would have to agree. Otherwise, an
  "integrated package" is just a bundle of separate applications
  with one icon. Microsoft plans to upgrade their Works package, but
  there was no information as to when an upgrade would be available
  or what it would include. Rumours have it that Microsoft discarded
  an in-progress MS Works 3.0 and started from scratch when they saw
  the new crop of integrated packages they were up against.
 
  On the hardware front, Outbound Systems introduced their new
  lightweight notebook computers. There are three basic models
  running at 20 MHz and all weighing in at 6.25 pounds, with
  internal 1.4Mb floppy drives, upgradeable microprocessors, a
  choice of hard drive options, and expandable system memory. The
  68000 and the 68EC030 versions are available now, and a 68030 unit
  will be available after October (the 68EC030 microprocessor is
  functionally the same as a 68030 except that it lacks an MMU,
  needed for virtual memory). Each Outbound Notebook System is sold
  with a used Mac, whose ROM is installed into the Outbound notebook
  before the unit is shipped. In fact, Outbound repurchases the
  ROM-less used Mac shell before the user ever sees it. The result
  of this paper shuffle is that the customer simply receives an
  Outbound with ROM already installed, ready to go. The new
  Outbounds' external connections include an ADB port, sound in/out,
  a 25 pin SCSI connector, and printer and modem ports. The built-in
  keyboard is a standard size, and the pointing device, now called a
  TrackBar, is an optical version of the IsoPoint with only minor
  functional differences. Apple's notebook systems will have to work
  hard to compete with these impressive products, whose retail
  prices range from $2,529 to $4,299. DynaMac, whose portables we
  featured in January's Macworld Expo issue, was also on hand with
  their computers, but are still not quite shipping the most
  impressive products. At least at this show they had working
  prototypes, rather than empty mock-ups.
 
  The biggest news scoop of the show was from Lotus. All of us
  left-out-in-the-cold registered Jazz users (those of us who
  believed in the concept of integrated software from the start)
  will be able to upgrade to Lotus 1-2-3 for $49.00. Specific
  details aren't available yet, but they'll let us know how to
  upgrade when the product starts shipping. If you've moved since
  you registered your copy of Jazz, be sure to send Lotus a change-
  of-address notice!
 
  Anther notable product being shown is Claris's Resolve
  spreadsheet, one of the few Expo highlights currently shipping.
  Resolve fully supports System 7 features, such as publish and
  subscribe, Apple events, Balloon Help, TrueType and virtual
  memory. Owners of Excel, Lotus 1-2-3, WingZ, Full Impact and
  MacCalc can upgrade for $99, and should contact Claris for
  details.
 
  The best bargain and the real honey of the show was Berkeley
  Systems' More After Dark. MAD includes 26 add-on display modules
  for Berkeley Systems' After Dark screen saver (which you must
  purchase separately, though some resellers are bundling the two at
  an attractive price). An AD updater is included to turn your
  2.0-or-later copy of After Dark into the present version, 2.0v,
  which is compatible with System 7 and with the new 68040
  accelerator boards and computers. These modules are really
  something else. One of the modules you get for a mere $39.95 is
  Lunatic Fringe, an addicting game by Ben Haller of Solarian II
  fame. It's as good as any space ship game on the market.
  Candidates for Best Modules included Boris, a cute little purring
  cat; Globe, a spinning globe, which can be customized with the
  picture of your choice; Meadow, which creates a flowered meadow as
  it changes through the four seasons; and Mountains, which builds
  3D ranges to your specifications on different planets. Mowin' Man
  was cute, but remember to turn the sound down if you work in a
  busy office. Another key feature of MAD is Virex-D, a detect-only
  version of Virex, the antivirus utility from Microcom. Virex will
  check your drives while your computer is idle, and put 3-D
  versions of your icons on the screen as it works. The best of the
  best is that fourteen of the fifteen new modules tested fine on a
  Mac Plus running System 6.0.5, including Lunatic Fringe! (Meadow
  required 16 colors or gray-scale.)
 
  StuffIt SpaceMaker from Aladdin Systems was another show stealer.
  This compression program can be configured to automatically
  compress any file on your hard disk. The program will compress
  files which have not been modified in a specified amount of time
  or are flagged with a keyword, in the background. SpaceMaker has
  many features, and like Disk Doubler will compress and decompress
  files on-the-fly. Although it was announced at the show, no
  shipping date was available. It will retail for $59.95. In the
  meantime, I'm pretty pleased with System7-savvy Salient Software's
  Disk Doubler 3.7, available since June, slightly higher-priced at
  $79.95. One Salient bigwig was skeptical of the likelihood of
  Aladdin having an effect on their market, but a more forward-
  thinking marketing rep at Salient felt that the competition
  between Disk Doubler and SpaceMaker could only make the market
  bigger and more exciting to be part of.
 
  One other item of note is Abaton's InterShare, a $179 software
  product which allows modems and other direct-connect serial
  devices to be shared on a LocalTalk, EtherTalk, or TokenTalk
  network. It also allows Abaton's and EMAC's fax modems to be
  shared, with full fax functionality available to network users.
  This presents real hardware cost savings to companies who do not
  want to buy multiple modems for their networks. It contains a
  server application and Chooser client software, and works with
  software that supports the Comm Toolbox. The serial server Mac
  needs to be at least a Mac Plus with at least 1Mb of memory, but
  it need not be a dedicated server; any workstation can serve as a
  device server.
 
  The downturn of the economy was evident in the lack of giveaways.
  Fewer companies than usual handed out buttons, bags, visors, hats,
  or sunglasses (items available in large numbers at previous
  shows). Most giveaways were reserved for the patient few who sat
  through whole demonstrations. The presents for those folks
  included hats, T-shirts, carry bags, and demonstration disks.
  Lotteries at some presentations yielded copies of software, Apple
  System 7 kits, and Apple video tapes. The best giveaway was a
  Lotus 1-2-3 watch. Show-goers liked the stick-on moose which
  Baseline gave to unsuspecting passerbys, and the Talking Moose
  himself was wandering around to liven up the show. Microtech gave
  out an audio CD to anyone who answered a set of questions about
  their products. Rumours that one of the companies gave out
  dehydrated ice cream were true, but which company remains a
  mystery to us! In addition, Digital Vision was taking photos using
  a still video camera and their Computer Eyes video capture board
  and returning a disk based TIFF or PICT image to the show
  participant.
 
  Information from:
    Ilene Hoffman -- Ilene.Hoffman@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
      Fidonet: Ilene Hoffman on 1:101/485
      AOL, AppleLink, & Delphi: IleneH
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
 
 
A MultiMedia Bonanza
--------------------
  Those attending the show to see the latest in video and multimedia
  were not disappointed.
 
  The hit of the show for integrated media professionals came from
  Alias Research Inc., who demonstrated "the world's first freeform
  3D illustration and design package," Alias Sketch[tm]. Most 3D
  packages require lathing and extruding shapes in multiple windows,
  showing the object's top, bottom and side views. In Sketch,
  everything is created in a single 3D perspective with freeform
  drawing tools. Very cool! Sketch should ship in October according
  to their marketing people, a month or so later if you talk with
  others in the company.
 
  For 2D drawing & illustration, Deneba Software's Canvas 3.0 stood
  out as the winner. The addition of gradient fills, object
  blending, the ability to convert TrueType and Type 1 fonts to
  editable outlines, CMYK and Pantone support and full System 7
  support makes this upgrade a powerhouse. Registered users of any
  version of MacDraw, MacDraft, Illustrator and FreeHand can upgrade
  to Canvas 3.0 for $149. Do it! Upgrades for Canvas owners are $99,
  or $129, depending on the version of Canvas you own.
 
  MacroMind showed its upcoming System 7 savvy upgrade of Director.
  Version 3.0 supports Apple events, the ability to play sounds
  while a movie is loading, better memory management and anti-
  aliasing.
 
  A number of vendors demonstrated QuickTime-compatible versions of
  their software in an Apple suite off the show floor. Acius showed
  a QuickTime 4D database and Gold Disk, Inc. incorporated QuickTime
  movies into its Animation Works program. The hardest hit by
  QuickTime may be those developers who forged ahead of Apple and
  developed their own proprietary compression utilities. Storm
  Technology may survive QuickTime's introduction because its
  Picture Press hardware and software combination offers enormous
  control over how an image is compressed.
 
  The major players in the video display arena treated the crowds to
  much of the same as in previous expos, but bigger, faster, and
  with more colors. RasterOps announced its MediaTime board which
  combines CD quality audio with 24-bit real-time video and graphics
  display. RasterOps also introduced the Expresso, a personal slide
  scanner. Imagine a microscope designed by Krupps that scans 35mm
  slides and puts out an NTSC video image that can be captured with
  any video frame grabbing device. You've just imagined the
  Expresso.
 
  Radius introduced the Ergo:Shield, a custom-fitted glare shield
  that reduces ELF and VLF emissions from their monitors to be in
  compliance with Swedish emission standards.
 
  The longest line at the show wrapped around SuperMac's booth where
  show goers were posing in front of a blue screen waiting to have
  their image overlaid onto one of Faneuil Hall Marketplace to
  create a four second video postcard on disk. SuperMac accomplished
  this with the aid of its VideoSpigot card, which digitizes
  incoming video and stores it in a compressed movie form. These
  movies can be edited together into longer pieces using SuperMac's
  ReelTime software.
 
  MASS Microsystems showed the JPEG & System 7 savvy version of
  their QuickImage 24 video capture card, and a video card that
  outputs flicker-free 8-bit NTSC video
 
  The most impressive video output device at the show, the NewTek
  Video Toaster, does not run on a Macintosh. This amazing device is
  based on a Commodore Amiga and can take multiple live NTSC video
  sources and create broadcast quality transitions between them or
  overlay graphics onto them. It can also read Macintosh PICT and
  EPS files and convert them into broadcast quality video. The
  Toaster comes standard with a 24-bit paint program and a 24-bit 3D
  animation program. All this for $3995. The folks at NewTek are
  working on a version of the software which will control all of the
  features of the Toaster from a Mac. If you need to create high
  quality desktop video but are on a budget, check out the Toaster.
 
  Digital F/X announced upgrades to the Video F/X system that
  include support for A/B roll, non-linear editing, and PICS
  animation. A/B roll is the process where one full motion video
  source transitions in to another using a wipe or a dissolve. This
  ability is one of the most fundamental parts of professional video
  production, yet is not addressed by most Macintosh video
  solutions. In non-linear editing, editors work with digitized
  pieces of video and sound to avoid the time spent waiting for
  video tape machines to shuttle back and forth. It may not sound
  like much to a Mac user, but very few professional video houses
  can offer the sophistication of non-linear editing.
 
  CalComp Inc. has announced a challenge to Wacom's (pronounced
  Wack-com) dominance of the graphics tablet market with the
  introduction of pressure sensitive pens to CalComp's Drawing Board
  II series of graphics tablets. The CalComp pens offer 256 levels
  of pressure compared to Wacom's 64 pressure levels, but Wacom has
  succeeded in getting the developers of all of the major 24-bit
  software to support its product in the past year. If CalComp can
  match Wacom's compatibility, they could have a winner.
 
  The multimedia dud of the show was Intelligent Resources' Video
  Explorer Card. The arrival of this $8000 card has been anxiously
  awaited since its slick demo tape was shown at last year's Boston
  Expo. Now shipping, the card requires RGB video input and output
  rather than the more common composite or S-Video connections.
  Unfortunately, this means that to interface with most pieces of
  video equipment, the card requires an expensive RGB encoder and
  decoder. To offset this deficiency, Intelligent Resources is
  bundling the card with the ElectricImage[tm] Animation System,
  Time Art's Oasis[tm], MacroMind Media Maker[tm], and Letraset's
  LetraStudio and ColorStudio for $8800. Hopefully, Intelligent
  Resources will offer inexpensive, composite NTSC and S-Video input
  and output modules for the Video Explorer in the near future.
 
  Information from:
    Earl Christie -- Earl.Christie@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
      Fidonet: Earl Christie on 1:101/485
      AOL: EarlChr
 
 
In Conclusion...
----------------
  Don't get us wrong, there was lots to see and do at the Macworld
  Expo this time around. A number of nifty new products and a whole
  host of updates to old acquaintances. One of the expected
  bonanzas, though, was in the area of updates that fully supported
  System 7. Too many of the updates are not yet shipping, and of
  those that are, most take advantage of only some of the key
  features: Balloon Help, publish and subscribe, TrueType, Apple
  events, virtual memory, and 32-bit addressing. No doubt next
  January's Macworld Expo in San Francisco will be full of companies
  touting their products' System 7 Savviness, but by then it will be
  old news.
 
  For now, we'll be satisfied with talking about what did make it to
  this Expo. We have lots of products to review in future issues,
  and lots more products that deserve brief mentions, so you can
  count on seeing more information gleaned at the Expo over the next
  few weeks.
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
    Ilene Hoffman -- Ilene.Hoffman@f485.n101.z1.fidonet.org
      Fidonet: Ilene Hoffman on 1:101/485
      AOL, AppleLink, & Delphi: IleneH
 
 
Reviews/12-Aug-91
-----------------
 
* MacUser
    Voice Navigator II, pg. 48
    Adobe Photoshop 2.0, pg. 50
    Two 2D CAD Programs, pg. 54
      Blueprint
      PowerDraw
    Ray Dream Designer, pg. 56
    Text Reference Software, pg. 62
      EndNote Plus
      Bookends Mac
      Publish or Perish
    Image Compression Utilities, pg. 68
      ColorSqueeze
      ImpressIt
      PicturePress
    Spyglass Transform, pg. 75
    StuffIt Deluxe 2.0, pg. 87
    Shortcut 1.5, pg. 87
    MacPro Plus Keyboard, pg. 87
    OverView, pg. 88
    Music Writer, pg. 88
    MyAdvancedLabelMaker, pg. 90
    MyAdvancedMailList, pg. 90
    Last Resort, pg. 92
    Personal Financial Software, pg. 96
      CheckFree 1.5
      CheckWriter II 3.1
      MacMoney 3.5
      Managing Your Money 4.0
      Quicken 1.5
      WealthBuilder 1.0
    Grammar Checkers, pg. 112
      Correct Grammar 2.0
      Grammatik Mac 2.0
      MacProof 3.2.3
      RightWriter 3.1
      Sensible Grammar 1.6.2
    Workgroup Printers, pg. 128
      Apple LaserWriter IINT
      Apple LaserWriter IINTX
      Dataproducts LZR1260i
      Dataproducts LZR1260ess
      GCC BLP IIS
      Kyocera Q-8010
      Panasonic KX-P4455
      QMS PS 810 turbo
      QMS PS 820 turbo
      QMS PS 2210
      Qume CrystalPrint Express
      Texas Instruments microLaser XL PS35
      Xaente Accel-a-Writer II
    Personal Printers, pg. 150
      Apple StyleWriter
      GCC WriteMove
      Hewlett-Packard DeskWriter
      Kodak Diconix M150 Plus
      Apple Personal LaserWriter LS
      GCC PLP II
      GCC PLP IIS
    10BASET Ethernet Solutions, pg. 174
      too many to list!
 
* MacWEEK
    FrameMaker 3.0, pg. 105
    Bernoulli 90 Transportable, pg. 105
    Oracle Server, pg. 112
    Panorama II, pg. 114
    QuickDEX II, pg. 114
    Instant Update, pg. 118
    ColorMaster Plus, pg. 120
    Microsoft Project, pg. 126
    Hewlett-Packard IIIP, pg. 134
 
References:
    MacUser -- Sep-91, Vol. 7, #9
    MacWEEK -- 06-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #27
 
 
..
 
 This text is encoded in the setext format. Please send email to
 <info@tidbits.uucp> or contact us at one of the above addresses
 to learn how to get more information on the setext format.
