TidBITS#80/09-Sep-91
====================
 
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Topics:
    MailBITS/09-Sep-91
    ROM Troubles Over
    DeskWriter C
    TerraTrends/09-Sep-91
    Reviews/09-Sep-91
 
 
MailBITS/09-Sep-91
------------------
  My mail link still isn't completely solid, and it's certainly not
  as quick as I was used to when I connected to the Internet via
  Cornell, but at least most mail is getting through now. I have two
  accounts that should forward correctly, and mail that goes to my
  old address will be forwarded as well. So please, send me
  information for TidBITS along with the usual gamut of comments and
  suggestions. If you have trouble getting mail through to me, you
  can still send it to Mark, who will forward it.
 
    polari!tidbits!ace@sumax.seattleu.edu
    sumax!polari!tidbits!ace
    ace@tidbits.uucp
 
  This account is my Mac running uAccess from ICE Engineering (an
  excellent implementation of UUCP) and connecting to polari, a
  Seattle-based public access Unix machine. Some time in the future,
  I hope to have another mail feed that will give me a domain name,
  thus making mail easier, faster, and more reliable. In particular,
  ace@tidbits.uucp won't work well for a month or so yet because of
  the time lag in updating the UUCP maps around the world.
 
    penguin@polari.uucp
    polari!penguin@sumax.seattleu.edu
    sumax!polari!penguin
    penguin%polari.uucp@sumax.seattleu.edu
 
  This account is my interactive account on polari. It is currently
  forwarding all mail to tidbits, and is often easier to reach from
  the Internet.
 
    pv9y@vax5.cit.cornell.edu
    pv9y@crnlvax5.bitnet
 
  This is an old account at Cornell that merely forwards mail to
  polari and then on to tidbits. It is easily reached from anywhere
  on the Internet and equally as easily from Bitnet. However, it
  exists on the whim of Cornell, so should not be relied upon.
 
  And, for those of you who read TidBITS but can't connect to any of
  the networks I'm on, here's my snail mail address.
 
    Adam C. Engst
    TidBITS
    9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096
    Redmond, WA  98052
 
  If you're thinking of buying a high-end Mac and you're not
  planning to wait around for the '040 Quadra Macs to arrive in late
  October, you'll be glad to hear that one of your options just
  became more attractive. Apple has quietly announced that the
  Macintosh IIci will now ship with a cache card installed.
  Depending on what kind of work you'll be doing with your IIci, a
  cache card can vastly improve its computing performance, by using
  very fast memory to cache information that would otherwise have to
  be read from "slow" 80ns memory. This is similar in concept to
  using a disk cache, using RAM to cache slow disk information. In
  fact, the cache card makes the IIci compete very favorably against
  the IIfx on price/performance terms. No doubt third-party cache
  card manufacturers, such as Atto and DayStar, will be irritated by
  Apple yanking most of their market away (they can still sell to
  existing IIci owners, of course), but this move clearly reaffirms
  Apple's commitment to the IIci as a high-end member of the
  Macintosh family.
 
  Murph Sewall writes, "The start of a new term is as good an excuse
  as any to discard the flotsam and jetsam of past academic years to
  clear some shelf space for paperwork anew. I seem to have gotten
  more carried away than usual this Fall, or simply concentrated on
  one particularly disreputable shelf. Anyway, I came across a 1977
  "Microcomputer Handbook."  The cost justification may be of some
  interest, particularly for those who plead poverty with respect to
  the cost of present day systems.
 
  The main (8080 CPU) was only $931, but it was missing a few little
  conveniences such as memory (24K that's 24,576 bytes, folks only
  $1,674 - roughly the price of 41 MB at 1991 prices), a keyboard
  and (monochrome) monitor (only $900 for both, a bargain), I/O
  board and cables ($400), and (90K) floppy disk drive ($1,150).
  Throw in an 80 column dot matrix printer ($1,253) and an operating
  system ($150) and the total is $6,458 before buying the first
  application (of course, in those days you pretty much had to "roll
  your own").
 
  But wait, those are LIST prices! So with academic discounts the
  price for the whole packages diminishes to **ahem** ONLY $4,430
  (what a steal).
 
  Also, consider that those are 1977 dollars, before the
  inflationary runup of the 1980's. I haven't checked the consumer
  price index for 1991 versus 1977, but I'd guess the inflation
  factor is about 1.8 ($4,430 in 1977 = something like $7,975
  today). For nearly $8,000 you can you can buy something like a
  top-of-the-line 1991 workstation, but you can also buy a pretty
  satisfactory computer for much less than even 1977's $4,430.
 
  Since I'm among that group who remembers when 8080 CPU's and the
  CP/M operating system seemed pretty amazing, the prices for
  today's systems with all the bells and whistles don't seem so
  outrageous." [Since I was in 5th grade at the time, I won't
  pretend to remember the 8080. But thanks, Murph, for putting
  today's price complaints into perspective.]
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@memory.ithaca.ny.us
    Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UNCONNVM.BITNET
 
 
ROM Troubles Over
-----------------
  If we had presses, we'd have to stop them for this story. Apple
  has dealt with the dirty ROM problem by making a deal with
  Connectix to distribute MODE32 free of charge (yes, you read that
  right) to all users. Not only that, but Apple will support MODE32
  completely on their free Customer Assistance line (that's the free
  support line that anyone can call at any time, not the limited
  time number you can call for help with System 7). But wait,
  there's more, and we're not talking Ginsu knives here. Apple will
  be distributing MODE32 on all the licensed online services
  (including the Internet FTP site at ftp.apple.com, America Online,
  and Memory Alpha BBS, among others) and through dealers and user
  groups as well. For those of you who needed 32-bit cleanliness
  enough to buy MODE32 from Connectix (rather than just grumble like
  the rest of the world), Apple will buy that copy back from you.
  Just call the Apple Customer Assistance Center at the 800 number
  below and get information on where to send your original disk for
  a $100 rebate. If you paid more, you'll need a valid sales
  receipt, but Apple will pay up to $169 plus tax. If you paid more
  than that, you got rooked. The other two details are that you have
  to have purchased MODE32 before 05-Sep-91 and you must send in
  your disk before 31-Dec-91. So get a move on if you want your
  $100.
 
  Of course, Apple can't please everyone with this move, but I think
  they should be coming close. Some people will hold out for the
  true new ROMs, little pins and all. There's no real reason to do
  that, though, since the system software has lots of patches for
  code in the ROMs. In other words, patching the ROM code with
  system software is already standard practice.
 
  Then you'll get the belly-achers who are leery of patching the
  system software. These are the same people who think that all
  extensions (gotta get into using that word in place of INITs) are
  evil. The answer to these malcontents is that there's nothing
  wrong with patching the system with an extension either. Do you
  think Apple would include so many extensions of its own if there
  were? Basically the use of patching the system externally (at
  least from my non-programmer background) is that those who don't
  need the extension don't have to waste the space or memory on it.
  Come on, how many of you have kept the DAL Extension around even
  though you're never going to access a mainframe database?
 
  Finally, there's going to be the group that aren't sure they can
  trust something like this from a company other than Apple. Apple
  certainly has this technology in house and will include it in
  future versions of the system software, but what they don't have
  is thousands of users and thousands of hours of use behind a patch
  based on their technology. Connectix has both of those. In
  addition, the programmers at Connectix are memory wizards. Apple
  did come out with their own virtual memory scheme, but Connectix
  will continue to develop Virtual because they can make run it
  faster than Apple's implementation. I wouldn't be surprised if
  MODE32 is similarly slightly faster than what Apple has been
  playing with. Oh by the way, this deal applies only to MODE32, not
  to any of Connectix's other excellent products. So please don't
  start posting them to the nets claiming that it's OK because of
  the Apple deal.
 
  So overall, who wins? Users win because they get something for
  free that can increase productivity. Connectix wins because
  they're probably getting something from Apple in return for MODE32
  (though they're not telling what), and at minimum, Connectix gains
  a huge amount of publicity and name recognition, which is nothing
  to scoff at. Apple wins because they are finally appeasing many
  angry users without charging a cent. The only people who don't win
  are those that used the dirty ROMs as a reason to slam on the Mac.
  You'll have to find a new whip, guys.
 
  The main thing I regret about this entire issue is that it had to
  happen at all. If Apple had recognized the problem while
  developing System 7, they could have built a 32-bit patch into the
  system software. Alternately, if Apple had admitted the problem
  right after releasing System 7 and used the same escape route of
  distributing MODE32 for free, they would have avoided a lot of bad
  press. Still, I think the bad press that appeared in TidBITS,
  MacWEEK (thanks to Henry Norr, who also alerted me to this deal
  before I heard from Connectix), InfoWorld (thanks to Bob
  Cringely), and Macworld (the October letters section) played a
  large part in convincing Apple to follow this route. Along with
  Lotus pulling MarketPlace:Households, this event goes to show that
  people can affect the policies of multibillion dollar companies.
 
    Connectix Corporation -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100
    Apple Customer Assistance Center -- 800/776-2333
 
  Information from:
    Connectix/Apple propaganda
 
 
DeskWriter C
------------
  [Editor's Note: Even though I wrote a bit on the DeskWriter C last
  week based on my impressions at the dBUG meeting, I felt that this
  piece was more complete and accurate, coming from a knowledgeable
  person inside HP who has used the printer extensively. My
  apologies for any repetitions. -Adam]
 
  by Dave Neff
 
  This article is based on a bunch of email I have received. People
  seem to have many questions about the DeskWriter C. So, by popular
  demand, here is some information:
 
  I did not work on the DeskWriter C (although it does contain the
  AppleTalk firmware I wrote for the DeskWriter) but have logged
  many hours beta-testing it for some time, both at home and work.
 
  The printer is a 300 DPI monochrome printer (like the DeskWriter)
  and it can use the normal DeskWriter black ink cartridge or it can
  use a 300 DPI three-color cartridge. The user must manually swap
  the cartridges in and out of the printer. This is bit of a pain,
  but it really gives you two printers in one. The printer comes
  complete with a "garage" for storing ink cartridges when not in
  use - you can't leave a removed cartridge on the desk or it will
  clog. It has all the monochrome capabilities of the DeskWriter,
  including both serial and AppleTalk I/O. The DeskWriter C has one
  additional monochrome capability over the original DeskWriter; it
  now has three print modes for both black and color - draft,
  normal, and best. When using the best mode the printer uses
  multiple print passes to improve print quality; in particular,
  color is generally better and grey shades (when printing with the
  black cartridge) are better. Best mode is about half as fast as
  normal mode but can be worth it for the improved quality.
 
  In monochrome mode, the DeskWriter C works just like a DeskWriter.
  When you plug in the color cartridge you have a 300 DPI plain
  paper color printer (although better color can be obtained with
  special paper). It also prints on special transparencies. The
  quality is fair on copy paper, pretty good on Gilbert bond, and
  really nice on special PaintJet XL paper. The transparencies turn
  out very well.
 
  HP is targeting the printer at the pie chart/bar chart
  presentation graphics crowd, although 8-bit and 32-bit color
  graphics (PICTs, TIFFs, and GIFs) also print quite well -
  especially considering the cost of the printer ($1095 list). Of
  course, once you start playing with fancy color, you may find that
  you have an inadequate amount of RAM. In my opinion, my 5 MB IIsi
  at home was just barely usable with the DeskWriter C (with System
  7 and spooling enabled). As usual, it depends on what you are
  printing. Simple color from Word or Excel can work with the
  minimum 2 MB configuration as long as you don't want to spool, but
  I would strongly suggest 4 MB or more to allow for spooling and
  fancier color stuff.
 
  In the highest quality mode, the DeskWriter C driver uses
  shingling (or checkerboarding) to increase the print quality in
  both black and color by doubling the number of print head passes.
  In fact, the driver is responsible for most of the features, as
  the printer itself is a simple graphics-only printer with only 8
  basic colors. All the fancy color mapping, dithering, depletion,
  etc. are done by the driver. The firmware just puts 300 DPI dots
  of ink (cyan, magenta, or yellow) on top of other 300 DPI dots of
  ink. Because all the real work is done in the driver, you can only
  use the DeskWriter C with a Macintosh (with the driver and an
  appropriate amount of RAM, of course).
 
  Nothing is perfect, and the DeskWriter C is no exception. Color
  print time is not fast because the color print head only has 16
  nozzles for each color. Also, depending on the resolution of the
  drawing, there can be a huge amount of color data for the driver
  to handle. Assuming the Mac can keep up with the printer, typical
  print times for images run between three minutes (draft mode) and
  20 minutes (transparency mode), with five to eight minutes per
  page typical for color output. No speed demon, but the spooling
  helps. The driver never asks the user to swap cartridges within a
  page, only between pages. Furthermore, the driver will separate
  color pages and black only pages, so that the user need only swap
  cartridges once for a typical document.
 
  The new driver works under System 7, but is not fully System
  7-friendly. Spooling with System 7 is not officially supported but
  can be made to work.
 
  One problem with the printer is when the color cartridge is
  installed, you only have three colors available, cyan, magenta,
  and yellow. The printer must build black from these colors, and
  this "composite" black does not look as nice as the actual black
  from the black cartridge. As mentioned above, we decided not to
  swap cartridges inside a page, so any black on a page with color
  is this "composite" black. The color print cartridge won't do as
  many pages as the black cartridge either, and costs around $35,
  which is a bit more.
 
  Hewlett-Packard will offer a trade-in/upgrade program for current
  DeskWriter owners. The DeskWriter C is quite different
  mechanically and electrically than the DeskWriter so the upgrade
  plans I have heard will be rather expensive (around $450). If you
  currently have a DeskWriter and are considering a trade-in, you
  might first check out the possibility of selling your DeskWriter
  and buying a new DeskWriter C. Street prices for the DeskWriter
  and DeskWriter C presently run $500 and $800 respectively. So if
  you can sell your DeskWriter for $350 or more you would be better
  off selling the DeskWriter and purchasing a brand new DeskWriter
  C. On the other hand, I suspect that most people will have a hard
  time getting $350 for a used DeskWriter, so the trade-in/upgrade
  is a viable option despite its high price. I believe it really is
  a trade in, not an upgrade, and that the DeskWriter C that HP
  sends you will not contain any parts from your old DeskWriter. I
  also believe we don't care if you trade in a serial-only
  DeskWriter or one of the newer AppleTalk DeskWriters. In either
  case, I think the price is the same, and you end up with a
  DeskWriter C with AppleTalk. So especially if you've got an old
  serial-only DeskWriter, the trade in would be an excellent way to
  get a brand new printer for a reasonable amount of money.
 
  The DeskWriter C is a solid printer, and it's fun to play with
  color. The product does have some drawbacks, but at its price
  point it gives you the faster and better black quality than the
  DeskWriter and the option to pop in a three-color cartridge
  whenever you want.
 
    Hewlett Packard -- 800/752-0900
 
  Information from:
    Dave Neff -- neff@hpvcfs1.HP.COM
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 06-Aug-91, Vol. 5, #27, pg. 5
 
 
TerraTrends/09-Sep-91
---------------------
  [Editor's Note: This is the first in what will hopefully be a long
  string of columns from John C. Fuller probing the edges and the
  futures of computing. We have no plans for a regular production
  schedule, so TerraTrends will come out whenever John has a column
  ready to go - same sort of semi-sporadic schedule as our other
  pseudo-regular columns. Please feel free to send comments,
  questions, and suggestions to John at jcf@tidbits.uucp. 
  Alternately, if you can get mail to me, I'll forward it. -Adam]
 
  by John C. Fuller
 
  History has shown me mercy by presenting so much to write in the
  month of August as I prepare this first issue of TerraTrends, in
  particular the joining of Apple and IBM in what we users might
  refer to as a hopeful parallel to "Industrial Light and
  Magic[tm]". For that is just what we could hope for, were we to be
  so hopeful in this purview.
 
  The title TerraTrends has a multiplicity of meanings in reference
  to the trends of the world we live in, the mega-mega-trends which
  will follow the Megatrends of Naisbitt, which will be teratrends
  within our lifetimes if the explosion of technology continues in
  the manner to which it has become accustomed. This first column
  will lay the groundwork for the columns to be built upon it in the
  future, and hopefully lay the groundwork for some interaction
  between TidBITS readers and your columnist. To effect this
  beginning your columnist would like to present a very small,
  telescoped history of where our technology is, where it came from,
  and where it will be shortly.
 
  How do the current generation of inexpensive computers compare to
  what we have seen in the past? And how will they compare to those
  of the future? Let us take a 386SX or a Mac LC as an example.
  Generally the Mac prices are not quite in the same competitive
  league as what we see for PC clones from discount firms. (Your
  columnist is not involved with any retailer or manufacturer.) For
  the sake of using a popularly available comparison, please
  tolerate the examples of 80x86 machines available from a wide set
  of distribution sources.
 
  These current machines are available for approximately $1500, in
  what is currently advertised as complete systems. (Apparently
  there must have been some feedback from the earlier advertising
  campaigns which included systems priced without monitors, et al)
  They have reasonable speed and reasonably high resolution, but not
  enough of either to delve into the current graphics bug-a- boo,
  fractals. Nonetheless, your columnist is not aware of too many
  folks out there who require their computers to do much in the way
  of number-crunching or better than VGA graphics. The storage of
  these mid-priced computers is heading toward the 100 MB barrier,
  and floppies are standardizing at 1.44 MB. A different variety of
  bundled software is available at most distributors. If you happen
  to like what they give you, great for you, but if you don't, it is
  unlikely you will find any value to it. A year ago a similar
  amount of money would have bought you only a 286 and half as much
  storage, and you probably would have had to pay extra for the same
  quality monitor and video card. Unless the bugs Intel is having
  with the 486-50 cause lower level troubles, the prices of slower
  486 machines should enter the above arenas in another year or two.
  What does this mean to the average user?
 
  First will be the speed. A 16 MHz 486 should be four to five times
  faster than the 386SX, which will make tedious jobs far more
  bearable. This type of machine will probably also break the 100 MB
  barrier and will probably come with 4 MB of RAM, all as standard
  features in a machine that will probably start its career at
  approximately $3,000 and eventually be the $1500 special of the
  month. Unix users will probably find uses for ever increasing
  amounts of memory (some 486 Unix boxes already have 64 MB of RAM,
  which is hard to consider when so many machines currently on the
  market have approximately the same amount of magnetic storage). It
  appears likely that we will eventually have machines in which all
  the normal applications will be stored in RAM with only the large
  outputs from those applications stored on the disks.
 
  With the joining of Apple and IBM, rumors have appeared that the
  80x86 chip is going the way of the dinosaur. If this is the case,
  then the above will have to translated into terms of 680x0 prices
  and performance. Since TidBITS is a primarily Mac-oriented
  journal, it might be helpful for your columnist to solicit
  information on the 680x0 chips and their related hardware from the
  readership.
 
  Since the orientation of TerraTrends is toward applications of
  personal computers in all areas, including networking, the
  discussions of machines and operating systems would necessarily
  have to include DOS, Mac, and Unix and the hardware discussions
  would have to include 680x0 and 80x86 chips. As other items of
  hardware and software enter and leave the arena, the discussion
  will have to be somewhat modified.
 
  Your columnist has heard of current machines with storage on the
  order of terabyte amounts, and of discussions of future types of
  storage which will be measured in LOC's (1 LOC is the storage
  requirement of the entire Library of Congress). Apparently the
  specs on the 80786 have been out for some time, and a few samples
  of the 80586 are out there at quite high prices, though they are
  much faster than any of the 80486 chips. Partitions of hundreds of
  megabytes are available now in all operating systems. Since few
  personal computers of the mid-1980s had more than a small multiple
  of five megabytes of disk space, and since more and more PCs have
  multiples in the gigabyte range, it would be hard not to predict
  terabytes in the not-to-distant future.
 
  Hopefully this initial column has neither said too much nor too
  little. If either is the case, a helpful prod would be most
  appreciated from the readership. Next time a slight jump ahead
  into the non-technical applications requiring massive storage and
  speed.
 
  Until then I remain,
  Your obedient columnist,
   
  John C. Fuller
 
  Information from:
    John C. Fuller
 
 
Reviews/09-Sep-91
-----------------
 
* MacUser
    Radius Rocket, pg. 58
    Microsoft Mail 3.0, pg. 60
    PixelPaint Professional 2.0, pg. 66
    DataShaper, pg. 70
    Infini-D, pg. 72
    ThoughtPattern, pg. 76
    Two Satori accounting modules, pg. 81
      Components Accounts Receivable
      Components Accounts Payable
    3 in Three, pg. 87
    After Dark 2.0, pg. 87
    Amazing Paint, pg. 87
    BannerMania, pg. 88
    One Shot Worksheet, pg. 88
    Budget Spreadsheet Programs, pg. 112
      BiPlane 2.03
      DeskCalc 3.03
      Full Impact 1.1
      MacCalc 1.2
      Works 2.0
    Digital Audio Tape (DAT) Drives, pg. 116
      ADIC MacBack DAT
      APS Archive Python
      CMS Platinum DAT
      DynaTek DAT 1300
      EMAC Metro DAT
      FWB HammerDAT 1.3G
      HDI POWERDrive 1.3 Gig DAT
      Irwin 9131Se
      MacProducts MagicTape 1.3GB
      MacTel INDEX 2.0 GB DAT
      MicroNet CPKD-2000
      PCPC DATStream
      Peripheral Vision PV-DAT
      PLI DAT Drive
      Procom MDAT1300/M
      Relax 1.2 Gig Tape Vista
      Tecmar DATaVault
      Third Wave DATadrive 2.0 GB
      TTI CTS-4M
    Color Inkjet Printers, pg. 140
      Hewlett-Packard HP PaintWriter
      Hewlett-Packard HP PaintWriter XL
      Sharp JX-730 Color Ink Jet
      Tektronix ColorQuick
 
References:
    MacUser -- Oct-91, Vol. 7, #10
 
 
..
 
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