TidBITS#105/03-Feb-92
=====================
 
 Apple slashes prices this week on many Mac models, but if you
   bought a Mac recently, read on to find out about your free
   software! A brief look at ClarisWorks, an explanation of Word's
   weird numerology, and news of several mysterious bugs with Word
   5.0 and System 7. For those spanning two worlds we've got
   articles on SoftPC and the new ANDOR ONE, a PC expansion card
   that puts a Mac in your PC (a tiger in your tank?).
 
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 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    MailBITS/03-Feb-92
    Apple Prices Slashed
    ClarisWorks Rave
    PC in a Mac/SoftPC
    Mac in a PC/ANDOR ONE
    Microsoft Weird 4.00E
    System 7 Bug
    Reviews/03-Feb-92
 
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-105.etx; 27K]
 
 
MailBITS/03-Feb-92
------------------
  Glenn Fleishman writes to expand on some points about the snazzy
  keynote presentation at Macworld Expo.
 
  Just some points of clarification. The photographer who assisted
  in John Sculley's presentation was Greg Heisler, a leading
  photojournalist, who recently did the Time Man of the Year (Ted
  Turner/CNN) cover (more on that below).
 
  The camera he used was a Kodak Professional Digital Camera System
  (DCS). I work for Kodak more or less and my place of work has two
  of these systems. Kodak doesn't sell the just CCD back for the
  camera; it sells a Nikon F-3 with the back installed along with a
  200 MB hard drive packaged with a tiny monitor and some controls.
  Plans are in the works, I think, to make it smaller and higher
  capacity. The camera comes in several models, storing from 156 to
  600 4.5 MB RGB or black and white files depending on the model.
 
  The Time Man of the Year cover was done at my place of employment,
  the Kodak Center for Creative Imaging in Camden, Maine. Greg
  Heisler came out and spent 10 days working through ideas, and
  walked away with an RGB file (about 20 MB) created entirely in
  Photoshop that Time separated digitally through a CMYK proprietary
  conversion process. Greg's a great guy, and participated in the
  Sculley presentation partially because of this connection with
  Time and partially because he likes the Mac. As it turns out, they
  downplayed the artistic and collaborative end of the demo, because
  Apple apparently wanted to highlight the technology which didn't
  work exactly as planned, despite four days (instead of a promised
  four hours) in Time's offices, setting up the connection.
 
  Information from:
    Glenn Fleishman -- cci.mac@applelink.apple.com
 
 
Apple Prices Slashed
--------------------
  by Tonya J. Engst
 
  On February 3rd, Apple announced price cuts, free deals for
  potentially irate customers, new PowerBooks, and the shipping of
  the Quadra 700 upgrade board.
 
 
Price Cuts
  Those who have watched the Macintosh market over the past several
  years will not be surprised to learn that Apple has announced yet
  another round of list price reductions. Low-end buyers will be
  happy to see a $200 drop in price for a StyleWriter, $500 drop in
  price for a Classic II, and almost $1000 drop in the price of a
  Mac LC. High-end buyers will save lots of cash to the tune of
  about $1200 on a typical IIsi and $2000 on a IIci.
 
  Keen market observers will note that Apple usually drops prices in
  an especially sweet way when it is about to discontinue a model.
  In light of the fact that Apple also announced a future direction
  of having all Classics, Classic IIs, and LCs ship with 4 MB of
  RAM, and that Apple also announced a new 4/40 PowerBook 100, we
  might expect the 2/20 PowerBook 100s, the 2/40 LC and Classic, and
  possibly the 3/40 IIsi to be discontinued rather soon. With the
  rest of the line-up, though, the future is anyone's guess.
 
 
Freebies
  Naturally, recent purchasers of Macintosh systems may want some of
  their money back, since they could have saved enough money to buy
  a few  airplane tickets to somewhere warm and sunny (substitute
  somewhere cold and dreary if you live in a currently pleasant
  climate) if they had only waited a week or two before buying. In
  an effort to salvage customer satisfaction (and presumably to
  increase Claris's installed base), Apple has a special offer for
  some recent purchasers who took advantage of the Macintosh Right
  Now promotion extension (between 01-Jan-92 and 02-Feb-92). So, if
  you bought one of the following packages:
 
* Macintosh Classic with a StyleWriter or Personal LaserWriter LS
* Macintosh Classic II with a StyleWriter
* Macintosh LC with a StyleWriter or any Personal LaserWriter and
  an Apple monitor.
 
  You should call Apple at 800/695-2506 and be prepared to send them
  a copy of your invoice to get one of the following free gifts:
 
* Resolve
* MacWrite II and MacPaint 2.0 bundle
* MacDraw II and MacPaint 2.0 bundle
* AppleCare for one of the above-mentioned hardware packages.
 
  The offer is good through 14-Mar-92, but you should also keep in
  mind that Claris just chopped the price of MacWrite II from $249
  list to $129 list. So if you were going to pick up that MacWrite
  II bundle, it might be worth snagging a different one and actually
  buying MacWrite II. People who purchased MacWrite II between
  01-Apr-91 (hmm) and 31-Jan-92 will get a free upgrade to MacWrite
  Pro when it ships, hopefully before I retire. If you buy MacWrite
  II now at the lower price, you'll have to pay $69 to upgrade to
  MacWrite Pro.
 
  Apple doesn't have an offer for people who didn't buy one of these
  packages, sorry. I think Apple would do better to make an offer to
  anyone who purchased a now-discounted Macintosh or printer. Such
  an offer would go even further to enhance customer satisfaction,
  and Claris needs to increase its an installed base. Resolve needs
  to compete with Excel and 1-2-3, and MacWrite II needs to maintain
  its installed base since MacWrite Pro has slipped far behind
  WordPerfect 2.1, Nisus Compact, and Word 5, all of which shipped
  recently.
 
 
The Bottom Line
  We won't publish all the new prices, but for those who are
  interested, here are the highlights (model, old suggested retail
  price, new suggested retail price):
 
68000 Macintoshes:
    PowerBook 100 2/20, no floppy 2,299     1,999
    PowerBook 100 2/20, floppy    2,499     2,199
    Classic 2/40                  1,499     1,349
    Classic 4/40                  1,649     1,499
 
68020 Macintoshes:
    Mac LC 2/40                   2,499     1,549
    Mac LC 2/40 w/VRAM            2,499     1,549
      (Yes, these are priced identically. One of those
      marketing mysteries, I suspect.)
    Mac LC 4/40                   2,649     1,699
    Mac LC 4/80 w/VRAM            2,999     2,049
 
68030 Macintoshes:
    Classic II 2/40               1,899     1,349
    Classic II 4/40               2,049     1,499
    Classic II 4/80               2,399     1,649
    Mac IIsi 3/40                 3,769     2,499
    Mac IIsi 5/80                 4,569     2,999
    Mac IIci 5, with floppy       5,269     3,299
    Mac IIci 5/80                 5,969     3,999
    Mac IIci 5/160                6,369     4,599
    Mac IIfx 4, with floppy       7,369     5,099
    Mac IIfx 4/80                 8,069     5,799
    Mac IIfx 4/160                8,669     6,399
 
    StyleWriter                     599       399
 
  Information from:
    Claris propaganda
    Pythaeus
 
 
ClarisWorks Rave
----------------
  This is not a review but a rave. It takes a lot to impress me
  these days, but I've been impressed by ClarisWorks. I'm not even
  all that likely to use it since I mostly do a ton of writing in
  Nisus and uAccess, but I suspect that if I need to do a compound
  document I'll use ClarisWorks. In this day and age of 1.4 MB
  programs that prefer 8 MB of RAM, ClarisWorks is a mere 562K and
  likes only 900K of RAM. For all that you get word processing,
  graphics, spreadsheet, database, and communication capabilities.
  Taking each alone, the modules are fairly unimpressive, but when
  you use them as they were meant to be used, they're great.
 
  Start a letter. Draw a whimsical scrawl right in the letter
  without changing windows. Remember that you need to include some
  simple numbers, and draw out a spreadsheet as easily as you would
  draw a rectangle. Decide you'd like to graph those numbers and
  it's a two-step process. Scale the graph and add a legend as an
  independent text block with the text tools. Move all these objects
  around as in a page layout program. Run the spelling checker on
  the whole thing, including text in the spreadsheet. You can do all
  of this without changing windows or documents or modules - just
  select an object and the appropriate tools are present.
 
  Of course, now that I've raved about it, let me emphasize that if
  you have sophisticated needs, you'll outgrow ClarisWorks quickly.
  I'd like to see the same sort of tool-based philosophy - "What You
  Need When You Want It" - with all engines at full power. Let's
  face it, I want Nisus's text-processing power, Excel's or
  Resolve's numeric capabilities, FileMaker Pro's or Panorama II's
  database skills, MicroPhone II's communication abilities merged
  with uAccess's UUCP connectivity, and Canvas's drawing power to
  top it off. Oh, and it would be nice to have all of this in a
  pasteboard-style environment from PageMaker or XPress, but that
  might be asking too much for tomorrow. :-)
 
  Seriously, folks, ClarisWorks is good. I've heard good things
  about BeagleWorks too, but haven't had a chance to see it yet. I
  hope that I'll be able to say similar things about it. I said at
  first that this is not a review, but we do have a full review of
  ClarisWorks coming out soon as a special issue, so stay tuned to
  the network ether.
 
 
PC in a Mac/SoftPC
------------------
  I've been a serious slug on this one, and I'd like to apologize to
  Insignia Solutions for taking so long. Some time ago they sent me
  SoftPC to review and I checked it out fairly thoroughly... and
  then somehow just forgot about the review in the shuffle of
  getting married and moving. This is late, but I think still
  applicable.
 
  I'm sure that most of you have at least heard of SoftPC by now, in
  part because Apple loves to advertise that Macs have DOS
  compatibility*, and if you follow the asterisk down to the three
  point type at the bottom of the page, it always says something to
  the effect of "With the addition of SoftPC emulation software from
  Insignia Solutions."
 
  I'm pleased to report that SoftPC lives up to its claims of
  running most PC software on the Mac with no additional hardware.
  All the commercial software I tried worked almost perfectly, and
  the main programs that crashed were public domain and shareware
  games that may not have run on many PCs either, since they were
  obviously breaking programming rules and using illegal tricks to
  directly touch the hardware. I'd hate to try and run some of those
  programs from within Windows.
 
  The other general problem I had, which I'm sure was due to my
  configuration of the PC program and not inherently because of
  SoftPC, was with programs like terminal programs that need to
  access the serial port. SoftPC handles that quite well, but it's a
  confusing enough subject on the PC that it took some
  experimentation to get everything working. Printing was similarly
  confusing, in part because so few PC applications know how to
  handle a PostScript printer. SoftPC basically gives you a choice
  between fooling the PC into thinking you have an Epson dot matrix
  printer or a PostScript printer. Again, I don't fault Insignia for
  this confusion since it's bad enough in DOS. SoftPC's manual is
  generally decent, although the idea behind SoftPC is that you
  should think you're actually using a PC and should therefore
  resort to your PC and DOS manuals - it's not Insignia's job to
  make a PC easy to use.
 
  Herein lies the true problem with SoftPC. Unless you know
  specifically that you have to run a certain DOS program and you
  cannot use a Mac equivalent (like WordPerfect, 1-2-3, FoxBase,
  etc.), DOS software is simply too much of a pain to mess with. In
  my experience, the majority of the people who think they need to
  run PC software really just need to know how to translate files
  better between programs on the different platforms. That said, if
  you need to run a specific program, test it first at a dealer
  before buying SoftPC because Insignia may be unable to help you if
  your program is poorly written and isn't completely PC-compatible.
 
  If you've decided you need SoftPC for a specific program and that
  program does run, you'll encounter the final problem with SoftPC.
  It's pokey. Simple as that. When a Mac, even a high-end Mac, tries
  to pretend that it is really a PC, including support for a 286 and
  coprocessor, EGA graphics, and expanded memory, it just can't run
  all that quickly. On my SE/30 I'd rate SoftPC (I'm using the older
  EGA/AT module with version 1.4) at slightly under the speed of a
  PC XT, although my SoftPC can do things an XT can't, like run
  programs that require an 80287 coprocessor. I suspect that a
  Quadra would significantly speed up SoftPC, perhaps even to the
  point where it would be usable for long periods of time without
  creating undue frustration. Admittedly, I'm sure that the most
  recent versions of SoftPC are somewhat faster, but I'd hate to
  need to do serious work in SoftPC on anything slower than my
  SE/30.
 
  Enough complaining, when it comes right down to it, SoftPC does
  what it claims to do and does it well. I genuinely enjoy using it
  on occasion because I don't use PC software enough to warrant
  buying one and SoftPC has yet to fail me. SoftPC creates its own
  C: drive as a 1 MB (or larger) document to hold DOS and other
  required boot files. You can then define a SuperDrive or third
  party drive (like those from Kennect and Dayna) as a PC floppy
  drive, you can create another SoftPC hard disk document as a D:
  drive, and you can define a Macintosh folder as an E: drive. I
  mention this because I truly dislike navigating in DOS, and most
  of the DOS shells are still a step below the Finder. When I'm
  using SoftPC, I create all files on my E: drive (the folder) and
  then switch in and out of the Finder whenever I need to copy,
  rename, delete, or otherwise play with files. The only slight
  caveat to this is that SoftPC gets confused whenever I change the
  files in the E: drive so if I was in a subdirectory on E: it puts
  me back to the root directory on E: to recalibrate.
 
  All that talk of E: drives and subdirectories may sound confusing
  (and to many it is) but what I'm trying to get at is that SoftPC
  running in combination with the Finder is even easier to use than
  a normal PC. It's also hard to accept that PC programs can just
  sit on the Mac hard drive as normal files and still run from
  within SoftPC, but it works fine. It even works fine when
  Salient's AutoDoubler has compressed those PC files, which
  surprised me slightly. I used SoftPC to create some disks of
  public domain games for relatives spending a year in Tanzania with
  only a 286 laptop. It was easier than I expected because I could
  download the files from the Internet and America Online using
  normal Mac software, expand and test the files within SoftPC, and
  then create the DOS disks on a SuperDrive.
 
  These days Insignia has several versions of SoftPC at different
  price points, Entry Level SoftPC for the Mac LC and below at $125
  (discount), Universal SoftPC for all Macs from the Plus on up at
  $195 (discount), and for $300 (discount) SoftAT to add to
  Universal SoftPC for the 80287 coprocessor support, expanded
  memory support, and EGA color support (otherwise you can only use
  CGA graphics). SoftAT requires a 68020-based system at a minimum.
  Insignia also has SoftNode ($105 discount) for Universal SoftPC
  and SoftAT (but _not_ Entry Level SoftPC) that will allow you to
  run Novell Netware PC client software on the Mac, which can be
  extremely useful in some large organizations with Novell networks.
 
  The new versions have some significant enhancements over the
  version I have. The printing support has been enhanced so that you
  can do better graphics printing and wide-carriage printing, and
  there is now support for non-European character sets. More
  interesting given the spread of CD-ROM drives is support for the
  Microsoft CD-ROM Extensions, so you can use CD-ROMs that would
  otherwise be relatively useless on the Mac. SoftPC can now format
  floppy disks internally and supports a second floppy drive, and
  for those of you who actually upgraded, it also supports, but does
  not ship with, DOS 5.0. It still comes with DOS 3.3, if you're
  curious. Insignia also says that they have redone the interface to
  make it easier to use and have added balloon help and access to
  some AppleEvents, although SoftPC has always been able to do some
  copy and paste between the PC screen and a Mac application, an
  extremely handy tool for writing and illustrating documentation.
 
  When it comes right down to the question of should you buy this
  program, I think it's a question that you should be able to answer
  fairly well now. If you need a little access to PC software and
  would appreciate integration of the PC with your Mac software for
  documentation and whatnot, then yes, get it, it's great. If you
  want to avoid buying a PC but still want to run heavy-duty Windows
  software and use the PC as much as you use the Mac, you're fooling
  yourself and you should buy a PC. By the way, I gather that
  Windows will run, if run is the correct word for it. Considering
  that Windows is no speed demon on a real 386-based PC, I'd hate to
  see it amble under SoftPC.
 
    Insignia Solutions -- 800/848-7677
 
  Information from:
    Insignia propaganda
    Dave Hull -- insignia@netcom.COM
    Jason Proctor -- jason@insignia.co.uk
 
 
Mac in a PC/ANDOR ONE
---------------------
  I can see wanting to run the occasional PC program on your Mac,
  after all, I just spent 45 minutes writing about just that topic
  above. But I'm less sure about wanting to run the occasional Mac
  program on your PC. It's possible now, thanks to Hydra and its
  ANDOR ONE.
 
  The ANDOR ONE is a PC expansion board that works with all PC-
  compatible computers (though not most laptops due to the slot
  limitations) that use an ISA or EISA bus, although it won't work
  on a Micro Channel bus. You must add your own Mac 128K ROMs and
  Macintosh system software (yes, it works with System 7), much like
  emulators for the Atari ST and the Outbound Portables. As far as I
  can tell from Hydra's press information - which is very complete
  by the way, these people did their homework - the ANDOR ONE is
  essentially a slightly souped-up Mac Portable in the sense that it
  uses a 16 MHz 68000 and is thus twice as fast as the Classic,
  although still about half the speed of an SE/30. The speed of the
  host PC doesn't make too much difference, except when it comes to
  disk access times, which of course drop significantly on the
  faster PCs.
 
  From what I gather, Hydra designed the ANDOR ONE so it can share a
  PC hard disk much as SoftPC shares a Mac disk by creating a single
  file that looks like an entire hard disk inside. I'd prefer to
  have be able to see all the PC files from within the Finder and
  all the Mac files from within DOS, but it doesn't look like ANDOR
  can do that. However, with some clever software, Hydra has made it
  possible for the ANDOR to read, but not format, Macintosh 400K and
  800K (but not 1.4 MB) floppies directly in most 3.5" PC floppy
  drives, which is something of a feat. Realizing that the PC
  connectivity is still limited in terms of connecting to Macintosh
  peripherals, Hydra also put two SCSI ports (one 50-pin and one
  25-pin) and an AppleTalk RS-422 port on the ANDOR card, so you can
  still hook up directly to most Macintosh peripherals directly.
 
  I played with one of these running on a 486 at Macworld, and it
  did indeed run all the standard Mac software that was installed on
  their hard drive, including PageMaker 4.0 and Word 4.0. The speed
  was certainly acceptable, though not on the level of an SE/30, and
  the only problem I had was that I couldn't figure out how they had
  mapped the option key. The PC Alt key seemed to equate to the Mac
  command key, and shift did what you'd expect, but control did not
  equal option. It's not a big deal, and I probably just missed it,
  but I'd hate to be without an option key in PageMaker and many
  other applications.
 
  The ANDOR ONE is not cheap at $995 list price, and adding 4 MB of
  RAM and the Mac ROMs will add another $600 or so. The question
  comes up immediately: "Why should I buy this instead of a
  Classic?" Hydra provides four answers to this question, three of
  which are pretty good (I said that they did their homework). The
  first answer is that the ANDOR ONE is faster. That's true, but big
  deal, so is a PowerBook 100 and I'd far rather have a PowerBook
  100 than a Classic. However, Hydra goes on to point out that an
  ANDOR, because of its host PC, has many more networking options
  than a normal Mac, an ANDOR ONE can run both PC and Mac software
  at full speed, and finally, purchasing restrictions may prevent
  some people from buying a true Macintosh but a PC card that
  happened to run Macintosh software would be OK. I like the way
  these people think, but I'm afraid that unless they significantly
  reduce the price of the ANDOR ONE it won't sell particularly well.
 
    Hydra Systems -- 408/253-5800
 
  Information from:
    Hydra propaganda
 
 
Microsoft Weird 4.00E
---------------------
  Word is starting to sound like Old MacDonald's Farm: "E I E I O."
  As promised, Microsoft released version 4.00E of Word to resolve
  problems with Word and the 68040 caches. If you have a Quadra and
  don't want to upgrade to Word 5.0, which also works with the 68040
  caches enabled, you can get a free upgrade to 4.00E by calling
  tech support or customer service. Support for the Quadras is the
  _only_ difference between Word 4.00E and 4.00D, the current
  version, and Microsoft has not tested 4.00E on machines other than
  the Quadras since there's no real point - most people will either
  be happy with 4.00D or will upgrade to 5.0.
 
  It's high time to clear up some confusion about various versions
  of Word. The _program_ version is 4.00E, but the _invoice_ version
  is 4.00I and it will appear on the invoice as such, confusing the
  heck out of everyone in sight. Microsoft knows about this "bug"
  and is working to fix it, but remember, the 4.00I revision is
  completely imaginary and was made up by the invoice elves that
  inhabit Microsoft's mainframes and are known to play tricks late
  at night when only the Windows debugging teams are still awake.
 
  Actually, the Word 5.0 debugging teams are also cluttering the
  atmosphere with the by-products of some midnight oil, trying to
  fix a problem that appears only on 68000 machines. It seems that
  if you are running on a 68000 machine and open the Grammar
  Checker, Word occasionally crashes for no known reason. Microsoft
  is aware of the problem and is trying to gather more information
  about it since it hasn't been tracked down any further than we've
  just described.
 
    Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
    Microsoft Mac Word Technical Support -- 206/635-7200
 
  Information from:
    Pythaeus
 
 
System 7 Bug
------------
  Perfect timing once again. Just after we send out our issue on
  System 7 with information about a couple of problems it has,
  another pops up. Apparently a few people, not a lot, have been
  having files and folders disappear mysteriously from their hard
  drives. Using the Finder's Find command will make them temporarily
  reappear, but at first it seemed that the only way to fix the
  problem was to reformat the hard disk and restore from a backup.
  Now it appears that you can fix the problem by forcing the Mac to
  rebuild the Desktop DB and Desktop DF files manually (by using a
  utility like DiskTop to make them visible, renaming them
  differently and then rebooting, or by using the Desktop Reset
  utility that ships to registered users of Salient's DiskDoubler
  and AutoDoubler). I'm not sure why you can't use the normal method
  of holding down command-option when the Mac starts up to rebuild
  the desktop, but no one has mentioned that as a fix yet and I
  haven't lost any folders so that I can test it. For that matter,
  restarting under System 6 and then again under System 7 might have
  the same effect.
 
  The bug does not appear to discriminate (that's what we like,
  equal-opportunity bugs) in that it affects users of System 7 and
  7.0.1 on different types of Macs and different brands of hard
  drives. Once again, Apple knows about the bug and is working to
  fix it (what do you think - they'd just apologize and throw up
  their hands?). If you feel the need, you can call Apple Customer
  Service, but I'd recommend just fixing the problem.
 
    Apple Customer Assistance -- 800/776-2333
 
  Information from:
    Mike Fessler -- MIKEF@brownvm.brown.edu
    Alan Hewat -- Hewat@Frill.bitnet
    Stephen C. Harmony -- sharmony@nova.ta52.lanl.gov
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 03-Feb-92, Vol. 6, #5, pg. 3
    MacWEEK -- 27-Jan-92, Vol. 6, #4, pg. 1
 
 
Reviews/03-Feb-92
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Adobe Premier -- pg. 39
    Mirror 600 Color Scanner -- pg. 39
    CD-ROM drives -- pg. 40
      Apple CDSC Plus
      CD Technology Porta-Drive 3300
      Chinon CDC-431
    SpeedyCD -- pg. 40
    Backup programs -- pg. 45
      Retrospect 1.3
      DiskFit Pro 1.0
      Fastback Plus 2.6
      NetStream 2.1
 
* MacUser
    Lotus 1-2-3 for Macintosh -- pg. 42
    ClarisWorks -- pg. 44
    Mouses -- pg. 48
      A3 Mouse
      Little Mouse
      MouseMan
      Spark Cordless Mouse
    ReadIt Pro -- pg. 50
    ReadRight for Macintosh -- pg. 50
    Masquerade -- pg. 52
    File Utilities -- pg. 54
      Cataloger
      Offline
      ColorDex
    JMP 2.0 -- pg. 58
    DeskWriter C -- pg. 63
    TeleFinder Pro -- pg. 77
    Tesserae -- pg. 77
    DynoPage -- pg. 77
    AgentDA -- pg. 79
    FolderBolt -- pg. 79
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 27-Jan-92, Vol. 6, #4
    MacUser -- Mar-92
 
 
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