TidBITS#77/19-Aug-91
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Topics:
    MailBITS/19-Aug-91
    Adios, Mac Plus!
    Mac In Space II
    Happy Endings
    Reviews/19-Aug-91
 
 
MailBITS/19-Aug-91
------------------
  Longtime reader and contributor Ken Hancock sent along several
  comments regarding the last few issues. On the subject of data
  compression in the DoveFax+, Ken noted that V.42 is an error
  correcting protocol; V.42bis is the corresponding data compression
  protocol. As for menubar clocks, he recommends SuperClock 3.9,
  which works fine with System 7's menu bar.
 
  While he was at it, Ken sent along the information that Apple has
  released System 6.0.8. This new revision of the System software
  might seem to be a bit backward, but in fact Apple is providing
  System 6.0.8 solely for the benefit of users who need to coexist
  with System 7 users. The 6.0.8 package differs from 6.0.7 only in
  that it includes the same versions of the printer drivers as does
  System 7. This is most important for networked LaserWriter users,
  as all users of a single printer must use the same version of the
  printing software. You can accomplish this by installing the newer
  print drivers in an existing 6.0.7 setup, but Apple decided to
  make it less confusing for users by putting this software together
  in one package. Users who would like System 6.0.8 can get it from
  their usual sources: the local dealer or user group, or some of
  the on-line services. Internet users should be able to find it on
  Apple's anonymous ftp server at ftp.apple.com.
 
  An Info-Mac reader recently asked why merging each week's issue
  with his TidBITS Archive requires so much disk space, and fellow
  TidBITSophile Ian Feldman was kind enough to answer for us. For
  the benefit of others who've been wondering, the merge process
  requires at least as much free disk space as the size of your
  archive plus the size of the new issue. The reason is that, at the
  end of the merge, the TidBITS stack compresses itself (using
  HyperCard's Compact Stack command) to the smallest possible size,
  eliminating any free space within the stack. HyperCard does this
  by creating a brand new HyperCard stack and copying all of the
  cards, in order, from the original stack. It then deletes the
  original stack, and you're left with a new one of the same name.
  Of course, as you've no doubt noticed, the process of copying the
  entire stack can also take quite a while.
 
  A reader on America Online asked me to set the record straight
  regarding the product that opened up the integrated software
  market on the Macintosh. JoelS7 wrote that he isn't sure, but he
  believes that Hayden's Ensemble came first. Can anyone tell us for
  sure?
 
  You may have noticed last week that Adam Engst, the TidBITS
  creator and usual editor, has a new permanent mailing address. He
  and Tonya are settling into their new apartment in Redmond, WA,
  and look forward to hearing from people once again. Adam's
  Internet connections are not finalized yet, but he is on America
  Online regularly, and can be reached there as "Adam Engst," or you
  can send mail to their postal address on the first card of this
  issue.
 
  Information from:
    Ken Hancock -- kenh@eclectic.com
    Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
    JoelS7 on America Online
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
 
 
Adios, Mac Plus!
----------------
  Apple recently sounded Taps for the venerable Mac Plus by removing
  some related items from its price lists. Although the Mac Plus
  itself has been off the price list since last fall, when it was
  replaced by the Mac Classic, Apple has continued to offer the
  upgrades required to turn a 128K or 512K Macintosh into a Plus. As
  of the 15 September price lists, though, these products, the
  Macintosh Plus Disk Drive Kit and the Macintosh Plus Logic Board
  Kit, along with the Macintosh Plus Keyboard, are history.
 
  According to Apple, the upgrade products are being discontinued
  because of the Macintosh Classic, which offers a better value than
  upgrading old equipment. In fact, most dealers have been saying
  the same thing for a long time, though some customers have
  preferred to stick with their trusty original Macs, and have
  upgraded anyway. The current backlog of orders will be filled, but
  no new orders will be taken for these products.
 
  I remember when these upgrade products first became available, and
  I remember having the upgrades performed on my Mac! There's no
  question that the upgrades were useful at the time, but I think
  their usefulness evaporated quite a while ago. It's about time
  that Apple retired them.
 
  At the same time, Apple announced that it is discontinuing its
  Macintosh II Internal 800K floppy drive, due to the availability
  of the Macintosh II SuperDrive upgrade. In addition, Apple is
  removing its blank diskettes from the price list. As they put it,
  "Floppy media is being discontinued because there are many vendors
  offering floppy media to meet customers demands." Did anyone ever
  really buy Apple-label diskettes anyway?
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
 
 
Mac In Space II
---------------
  The best laid plans of mice and men oft go awry, it's said, so it
  is particularly nice to be able to report that some recent plans
  of mice and men came off just fine. (Well, okay, most of them were
  trackballs of one form or another, not mice.)
 
  I'm speaking, of course, about STS-43, the recent flight of the
  space shuttle Atlantis and its "Mac In Space II" projects. Despite
  a few problems that delayed the start of the mission, and some
  small glitches during the Macintosh phases, the Mac-related parts
  of the mission have been labeled successful by the AppleLink and
  NASA teams that were involved. In addition to the AppleLink
  connection we discussed in issue 74, the Macintosh Portable
  projects included the testing of four cursor-control devices, the
  recording of lower body negative pressure (LBNP) medical test
  results, shuttle flight path tracking, and reminding the crew of
  timed events using a WristMac.
 
  The first AppleLink message from space came through after a few
  tries. It was a simple message, as befits a first attempt:
 
  "Hello Earth ! Greetings from the STS-43 Crew. This is the first
  Applelink from space. Having a _GREAT_ time, wish you were
  here,... send cryo,and RCS! Have a nice day...... Hasta la vista,
  baby,... we'll be back!"
 
 
editor's note:
  cryo = cryogenics (meaning, send more fuel for life support--air,
  etc.)
  
  RCS = Reaction Control System (meaning, send more fuel for
  maneuvering/control) In other words, they wanted to stay up there!
 
  According to Michael Elliot Silver, AppleLink Development Project
  Manager, this success came after two failed connections. An error
  message reading "The modem pool is not responding" was reported by
  the Atlantis crew, apparently caused by a spike in the signal
  putting the ROLM data switching system "back to sleep" after a
  connection had been established the first time. The second failure
  occurred because the ROLM had not reset itself properly. The third
  time was the charm, but because the TDRS (Tracking and Data Relay
  Satellite) was in low-power mode (part of one of the experiments)
  and because the shuttle was at a poor attitude in relation to the
  TDRS, the signal was very weak, and after a couple of minutes the
  signal began dropping in and out and was lost. For more
  information on how the connection worked, see the article in
  TidBITS issue 74.
 
  The cursor-control experiments were designed (by Lockheed
  scientists) to determine what kinds of cursor-control devices
  might be suitable for use on future shuttle missions or on the
  planned space station. Since there is no gravity to speak of in
  orbit, a mechanical mouse, which depends on gravity holding a
  heavy ball against rollers, is useless. The devices that were
  tested were the Mac Portable's trackball, a modified aircraft
  control stick fitted with a thumb ball at the top, a two-inch
  trackball, and an optical mouse. No test results are available as
  yet, but we will try to pass them along as soon as Apple or NASA
  releases them!
 
  According to earlier reports, the Macintosh is not the computer of
  choice for the space program; a DOS-compatible laptop is. However,
  Lockheed discovered that the Macintosh had the widest variety of
  pointing devices available right now, so it became the obvious
  choice for the experiments. Some future experiments will probably
  take place with a DOS laptop, but if this mission is any
  indication, the astronauts will soon be clamoring to get their
  Macintosh back!
 
  The other tasks performed on the Macintosh were less test than
  actual productive work. Eagle Technical Services provided the
  programming for the Lower Body Negative Pressure experiments, in
  which the astronauts collected medical information on how the
  lower body reacts to weightlessness and other environmental
  oddities during space missions. And, using software similar to the
  freeware Hubble Space Telescope tracking utility, the astronauts
  were able to monitor their orbital status and position relative to
  the ground using MacSpOC (Shuttle Portable Computer), a special
  program developed by Dan Adamo.
 
  Naturally, trying to do all these experiments at once was
  difficult. According to Silver, astronaut Jim Adamson put it best
  when he said, "The problem is, we only have one Macintosh on
  board." With luck, the successes from this mission will convince
  NASA planners to include Macs on future shuttle missions... and
  with the smaller, less-bulky Mac Portables on the way, that should
  be even easier than before.
 
  If you are interested in more of the details about the shuttle
  mission, the material released by Apple's Michael Elliot Silver
  (which includes a complete set of Debra Muratore's official NASA
  progress reports) should be widely available by now. One place to
  check is the Memory Alpha BBS, at 607/257-5822, in the "STARNET"
  file section.
 
  Information from:
    Rick Holzgrafe -- rmh@apple.com
    Michael Elliot Silver -- AppleLink
    Debra Muratore -- NASA
    Pythaeus
 
 
Happy Endings
-------------
  It's always nice to hear about a company that provides an
  unusually high level of customer service, and when I do, I like to
  pass the news along so that the company's efforts are rewarded.
  Reader Tom DeBoni sent this to us a few weeks ago after having a
  good experience with Questronex, Inc:
 
  I recently came across a new need I didn't know I couldn't fill. I
  solved a problem with the help of some friendly and helpful folks
  at a company called Questronex, and I'd like to let others know
  about the problem, the company, and their product.
 
  I wanted to run A/UX from a small partition on a hard disk
  dedicated to doing only that. This is necessary, as the A/UX
  Startup app wants to run from a very vanilla system - anything
  added to it will likely prevent it from working. But, I also
  wanted to be able to run a full blown Mac System 6.0.5 from
  another partition of the same disk. In spite of the advent of
  System 7, I still need the old system often enough to want to keep
  it handy. I had thought the Startup Device control panel would
  give me the ability to switch boot partitions at will, but I was
  wrong. Turns out that the control panel allows only the choice of
  a physical device; which partition of the chosen device is used
  depends on the way the drive and its software are designed. I had
  received the Questronex hard disk formatting software with a 300
  MB drive I'd ordered for running A/UX, and during the setup of the
  drive, this problem came up.
 
  I had no trouble using an early (and free) version of Questronex
  StorageWare to format and partition the drive, setting it up for
  both A/UX and the Mac System, but StorageWare didn't address the
  startup partition problem. I was stymied. So, I contacted the
  vendor of the software and they gave me some good advice: get a
  goodie they were developing. I did and it worked.
 
  The people at Questronix were very friendly and helpful,
  explaining the nature of my problems, and sending me the software
  I needed as part of an upgrade to StorageWare.
 
  The new version of their product is called StorageWare 4.0, and it
  is similar to LaCie's SilverLining, but has a better interface. I
  used StorageWare to set up my drive, updated the driver with
  StorageWare 4.0, and now use the extra goodie they sent me, the
  StorageWare Assistant control panel, to choose a boot partition.
  Both the application and the control panel have many features I'm
  not mentioning here. The software comes with a manual that does a
  fair job of documenting the product's features. The control panel
  allows the specification of passwords and write-protection for
  selected partitions, among other things.
 
  I can't quote a price for their stuff, as I got it free with a
  drive, but it's worth any reasonable price. I recommend these
  folks highly, if you're looking for an aftermarket SCSI utility!
 
    Questronex, Inc.
    1050 Calle Negocio
    San Clemente, CA 92672
    Phone: 714/498-5154
    Fax: 714/498-7825
 
  Information from:
    Tom DeBoni -- deboni@diego.llnl.gov
 
 
Reviews/19-Aug-91
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Multiprotocol Routers, pg. 39
      Shiva FastPath 5
      Cayman GatorBox CS
    Microsoft Schedule+, pg. 39
    RasterOps 24STV, pg. 44
    Capture 4.0, pg. 44
    TokaMac SX, pg. 46
    @RISK, pg. 48
    Lapis DisplayServer, pg. 50
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 13-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #28
 
 
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