TidBITS#78/26-Aug-91
====================
 
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Topics:
    MailBITS/26-Aug-91
    ExpoBITS/26-Aug-91
    Adobe & Apple & Ted & Alice
    Macs Galore!
    Reviews/26-Aug-91
 
 
MailBITS/26-Aug-91
------------------
  TidBITS readers are nothing if not opinionated! Reader Andrew
  Lewis commented on our recent article about the Help Menu that the
  "Apple propaganda" seemed a bit much for TidBITS, and that [as Ken
  Hancock pointed out last issue] SuperClock 3.9 works fine with
  System 7 and the Help Menu anyway. Andrew's got a point, but it's
  important to realize that, with a company the size of Apple, not
  everyone is a propagandist! Apple employee Rick Holzgrafe, who
  wrote the original article, is "just" a System 7 user, as entitled
  to an opinion as any of us. :-)
 
  Another opinion-holder is Mike Kobb, who was astounded at Earl
  Christie's evaluation of Intelligent Resources' Video Explorer
  Card as the "multimedia dud" of the recent Macworld Expo. Mike
  wrote that "I spent about a half hour at the booth, and I thought
  it was a stupendous product. The quality was tremendous, and the
  modularity of the product means that you can not only add S-Video
  and composite input modules, but also mix-and-match input
  products, so you can use one RGB source and one S-Video, etc.
  Furthermore, the company is working on a non-linear effects board,
  that will be able to wrap video onto spheres, and other neat
  things. Yes, it's expensive, but with the software bundle, it's
  almost a bargain. Yes, it only does RGB right now, but that'll be
  remedied soon." Phew! Imagine how adamant Mike would be about this
  if it weren't for those two "Yes, buts" at the end. Just goes to
  show you that no two people will agree on the significance and
  value of every product that comes down the road.
 
  Michael Lee, a TidBITS reader and fellow fan of the space program,
  left a message while logged onto Memory Alpha BBS to retrieve the
  file containing details about this month's Atlantis mission and
  its Macintosh-based experiments. Michael says that the folks at
  NASA Spacelink, a free on-line service provided by NASA which you
  can reach by modem at 205/895-0028 (300-2400 bps, N-8-1 settings),
  hope to post MacSPOC, the software mentioned last week, so that
  Mac users can download it soon. Spacelink is located at NASA's
  Huntsville, Alabama facility, and is lots of fun to poke through.
  I spent some time looking through the press releases, technical
  documents, programs, and graphics files that are available on-
  line, and wish I had free long distance phone service so I could
  afford to spend more time exploring!
 
  Apologies to those of you who depend on comp.sys.mac.digest to get
  your weekly TidBITS fix. The distribution of issue 77 didn't seem
  to go as smoothly as usual; most sites only got the first few
  lines of the issue's index, though a varying amount reached each
  site. Issue 77 will be reposted shortly, and as usual, you're
  welcome to take advantage of the other distribution sites if
  you're in a rush, or if such things happen in the future. Two good
  bets are America Online and Memory Alpha BBS, as neither depends
  on the intricacies of the Internet. Anyway, my thanks to all of
  you who reported the distribution problem this week, and I
  appreciate your patience.
 
  Information from:
    Andrew Lewis -- AOL: Andrew El
    Mike Kobb -- mjkobb@media-lab.media.mit.edu
    Michael Lee -- Michael_Lee@memory.ithaca.ny.us
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
 
 
ExpoBITS/26-Aug-91
------------------
  As we promised (threatened?) at the end of our special Macworld
  Expo issue two weeks ago, there's more to say about the Expo that
  just didn't fit. Here's a little bit more material from Ilene
  Hoffman's Expo coverage that doesn't need a special issue but
  deserves mentioning.
 
 
  The best new utility for power users at the show was Hard Disk
  Toolkit (HDT), a SCSI formatting utility from hard drive
  manufacturer FWB, Inc. This powerful tool, similar in concept to
  SilverLining, LaCie's universal formatter, will ship within the
  next few weeks. HDT includes a heap fixing tool, flexible
  partitioning, "impenetrable password protection," 15 diagnostic
  tests, bench tests for transfer rates, seek, access, and read
  times. The test results are stored in a library for later use. In
  addition, over 150 different SCSI-1 and SCSI-2 parameters are
  supported. You can even edit your drive's microcode! The manual is
  a comprehensive guide to SCSI and will be over 100 pages thick.
  HDT supports AppleShare, A/UX, and System 7, but its minimum
  requirements are one megabyte of RAM and System 6.0.2 or higher.
  It will retail for about $199.00. HDT gets Ilene's vote for the
  hottest product at the show.
 
  Golden Triangle will release another impressive SCSI utility later
  in the year. DiskMaker, also with full System 7.0 compatibility,
  includes one button installation, password protection with an
  emergency override, partitioning, and an easy to use control
  panel. It is a good consumer product for those who do not need all
  the features of the Hard Disk Toolkit. The suggested retail price
  is $89.00.
 
  The best general utility at the show was the update for HAND-Off
  II from Connectix. The desktop utility has five major features
  including pop-up menus to launch applications, open files, or open
  groups of applications and files (called Briefcases); SuperMenu,
  which allows for hierarchical System 7 Apple menu access like the
  old DAMenuz hack; automatic application substitution, which is
  invaluable for those without MacWrite for opening read-me files;
  AutoHide, which hides applications as they switch to the
  background to keep your desktop tidy; and automatic sound and
  color depth switching. Fred Hollander, the developer, was on hand
  to demonstrate his latest version.
 
  Information from:
    Ilene Hoffman -- America Online: IleneH
 
 
Adobe & Apple & Ted & Alice
---------------------------
  As if the recent pendulum-like events in the Soviet Union weren't
  confusing enough, Apple and Adobe, the on-again, off-again
  adversaries in the type wars, have announced that they've signed a
  letter of intent that calls for the inclusion of Adobe Type 1 font
  technology within a future version of System 7.
 
  Apple's 20 August press release states that the rasterizer
  technology that has been sold as Adobe Type Manager since October
  of 1989 will soon be incorporated into the Macintosh system
  software. Not surprisingly, Apple plans to continue to support the
  TrueType format, which should engender a sigh of relief from the
  font vendors who have devoted the last year or so to creating
  TrueType product lines to go alongside their Type 1 lines.
 
  The inclusion of Adobe technology in Apple's system software means
  that users will have equal access to both common font formats when
  using their Macs and their favorite software, according to Charles
  Geschke, Adobe's president and chief operating officer. The press
  release doesn't mention Adobe CEO John Warnock, whose adversarial
  approach to the issue of separate font technologies fueled the
  "font wars" that we've been watching over the last couple of
  years.
 
  "Implementation of the letter of intent is contingent on the
  execution of definitive contracts," the press release says, but is
  carefully vague on the subject of just when we can expect to see
  Type 1 rasterizing within System 7. Of more immediate interest is
  the statement that Apple plans to make the ATM software and a core
  set of Type 1 fonts available to purchasers of Macintosh systems
  and Apple printers in the meantime, through an "interim offer,"
  which will be available in the Fall of 1991.
 
  Adobe Type Manager is already available very inexpensively in
  several ways. The software itself (with its four included font
  families) is available from dealers and mail-order houses for
  about $60, but it's also available bundled along with an
  increasing number of graphics and font technology products, such
  as Adobe's Type On Call CD-ROM, PhotoShop, and Illustrator, and
  third party products such as the FontCard NTX from Sonnet
  Technologies, the Kodak Diconix M150 Plus printer, and the
  assorted CD-ROM drive bundles that also include Type On Call. The
  FontCard NTX is probably the most interesting of those; more on
  that later. It's certainly nice, though, to hear that the same
  technology will be made available to users in a less-expensive,
  better-integrated manner.
 
  This is the kind of technological cooperation that can only
  benefit the end user. There's little danger that Adobe, the leader
  in electronic font technology, will stop working on its planned
  innovations, such as the FontMaster technology that promises
  automatic font weighting as simply as Type 1 fonts provide font
  scaling. On the contrary, this agreement should boost Adobe's
  position in the font arena and give it the motivation to keep
  moving. The concern? Despite Apple's promise to continue its
  support for TrueType, it's clear that the company has lost some of
  its enthusiasm for TrueType as the be-all and end-all of font
  technologies. What will TrueType partner Microsoft think about all
  this? If we find out, we'll be sure to let you know.
 
  Information from:
    Pythaeus
    Apple press release
 
 
Macs Galore!
------------
  Thanks to MacWEEK and their ability to sniff out the facts ahead
  of time, we're all starting to get some glimpses of this fall's
  slate of new Macintosh computers. The article in last Tuesday's
  MacWEEK gives us new names for the products we've been expecting,
  which include two 68040 Macs, a 68030 Classic, and three new
  portable Macs.
 
  The new portables, the first Apple computers that can really be
  called notebooks, are called PowerBooks. They fold down to 8.5 by
  11 inches, and the lower section includes a keyboard and a
  trackball placed below the keyboard. Apparently some testers have
  expressed some discomfort due to the trackball's placement, but on
  an eleven-inch panel, there's a limit to the number of places you
  can put a trackball! Obviously having to have a separate mouse
  would not do.
 
  Power users won't be disappointed by the raw power of Apple's '040
  offerings, the Mac Quadra 700 and its big brother, the Quadra 900.
  These are the "Desktop" and "Tower" '040 Macs from earlier
  reports, with snazzier names than the "Macintosh IIex" that had
  been rumoured. One thing the MacWEEK article neglects to mention
  about these machines is the significance of their names. The
  "Quadra" name, from the Latin for the number four, would seem to
  be in atonement for the ill-fated Apple /// computer. Since the
  flop of the Apple ]['s would-be successor and business
  counterpart, Apple has quietly vowed never to name another
  computer with the number "three." It would have sounded silly to
  have a Macintosh IV without having had a Mac III, so they
  presumably did the next best thing and skirted the issue with some
  linguistic fiddling.
 
  The least impressive of the fall's batch will be the Macintosh
  Classic II, a 68030 version of last fall's enormously-successful
  Mac Classic. This machine should really be replacing the Mac
  Classic, rather than the SE/30. With no expansion slot and no new
  features, the Classic II is hardly going to fill the void left
  when the SE/30 is discontinued. The void this machine will more
  likely fill is that created by the Classic itself, that of real
  computing power for the masses. People who've been considering a
  Classic would do well to wait for this new machine, with its
  rumoured retail price of $1900, and those who didn't wait will be
  pleased to learn that an upgrade from Classic to Classic II is
  expected.
 
  Along with two new printers, these six computers represent the
  largest new-product offering from Apple in a long, long time, if
  not ever. They show Apple's return to its commitment to the high
  end, without the lack of attention to the low end that some had
  feared would accompany the '040 Macs. A good sign in an industry
  where diversity in the marketplace is critical.
 
  Information from:
    MacWEEK
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 20-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #29, pg. 1
 
 
Reviews/26-Aug-91
-----------------
 
* InfoWorld
    PixelPaint Professional 2.0, pg. 61
 
* MacWEEK
    Address Express, pg. 35
    PacerTerm, pg. 35
    JAG, pg. 36
    Active Memory, pg. 36
    SideWinder EasyServer, pg. 38
    4th Dimension add-ons, pg. 38
      4D Calc
      4D Write
    Aldus PrePrint 1.5, pg. 40
 
References:
    InfoWorld -- 19-Aug-91, Vol. 13, #33
    MacWEEK -- 20-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #29
 
 
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