TidBITS#128/15-Jun-92
=====================
 
 This is an issue of the small and the large. First come short
   notes about Super Boomerang, pop-up menus, and three of the most
   popular word processors, Word, Nisus, and WriteNow. Then comes
   the meat of the issue with a preview article on FileMaker Pro
   2.0 for the Mac and Windows, some in-depth analysis of Apple's
   Newton announcements, and a look at works programs by Matthew
   Wall that leads into a special issue on ClarisWorks later this
   week.
 
 Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
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Topics:
    MailBITS/15-Jun-92
    Menu Usage
    Word Processing Notes
    FileMaker Pro 2.0
    Apple Newtons II
    The Works Concept
    Reviews/15-Jun-92
 
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-128.etx; 29K]
 
 
MailBITS/15-Jun-92
------------------
  Early apologies if you see this a little late - we've been married
  exactly one year now and the champagne might get in the way of
  uploading this issue everywhere. Time flies when you're having
  fun.
 
 
QuicKeys ElectroOops
  I completely forgot to mention in TidBITS#127 what CE Software
  included in the QuicKeys upgrade, and I can't expect everyone to
  remember TidBITS#123, which talked about what would be in the
  upgrade. My apologies! It's too late for the upgrade now, but
  still, sorry about that.
 
 
Super Boomerang Tip
  Alberto Ricci writes, "Wow - here is an incredibly useful feature
  that Hiroaki Yamamoto put in Super Boomerang. If you are using any
  application, and you have the Open or Save standard file dialog in
  front, and you've got Super Boomerang installed, clicking on a
  window that belongs to the Finder (one of the windows in the
  background - just click a part of it if it's partially covered by
  other windows) will bring you to that level of the hierarchy in
  the standard file dialog. Click, click, click, and you'll be
  jumping from one place to another of your mounted volumes."
 
  Information from:
    Alberto Ricci -- FRICCI@polito.it
 
 
New Apple Campaign
  We've heard from the estimable Pythaeus that Apple has begun a
  completely new advertising campaign that may address some of the
  complaints Mac users have had with Apple's advertising. The new
  campaign will go head-to-head with Windows, much like Sculley's
  presentation at Macworld SF when he had an assistant try to make a
  PC-clone into a multimedia machine. Some ads might run a bit like
  this...
 
    All I really wanted to do was simplify my job. So I bought
    Windows. I added extra RAM. I replaced my video card and
    monitor. I installed a mouse. I bought a half-dozen new
    programs, configured the system, set the DIP switches on the
    printer, and as I sit here watching my spreadsheet crawl on
    my PC, I'm thinking to myself "THIS IS MAKING IT EASIER?"
 
 
Menu Usage
----------
  by Fred Condo -- CONDOF@CGSVAX.CLAREMONT.EDU
 
  In Howard Hansen's EXCELlent review of Excel 4 in TidBITS#127, he
  makes the following comment about the pop-up menus feature:
 
>When you hold down the command and option keys and click the
>mouse, Excel brings up a pop-up shortcut menu right next to
>your mouse pointer. Select a range of cells, command-option
>click, and Excel allows you to instantly cut, copy, paste,
>clear, delete, or insert, as well as change number, alignment,
>font, border, or patterns formatting. This saves the trouble
>of mousing all the way up to the menu bar, finding the right
>option and choosing it. (I find our ever-increasing computer
>laziness quite wonderful!)
 
  Unfortunately, pop-up menus are inherently more difficult and
  slower to use than are pull-down menus. This is due to Fitts's
  (1954) Law, which governs hand and arm movements. The application
  of Fitts's Law is discussed by former Apple interface guru Bruce
  Tognazzini (1990, May) and by Walker, et al. (in press). Fitts's
  Law essentially states that more precise manual motions must
  proceed more slowly than coarse movements.
 
  The reason for this is that you can mouse off the top edge of a
  pop-up menu, but you cannot mouse off the top of the menu bar.
  This "impermeability," as Walker, et al. call it, makes the menu
  bar essentially an infinitely tall target. The user can therefore
  program a very coarse, quick movement for the mouse hand to access
  the menu bar.
 
  One heuristic that might improve pop-up menus is to cause the most
  recently used command to be the one that comes up under the mouse
  pointer. However, unless Excel 4's menu structure is so complex
  that it requires a great deal of cogitation to recall the
  locations of the common commands that pop up, the drawbacks of
  pop-up menus will very likely overwhelm the benefits. Moreover, by
  the time a user of Mac Excel 4 remembers to and does press the
  command and option keys, she or he could likely have moused up to
  the menu bar and chosen the appropriate command.
 
  Now, it is altogether possible that the pop-up menus in Excel 4 do
  make it quicker and easier to use, but it is not for the reason
  Mr. Hansen proposes.
 
 
References:
  Fitts, P. M. (1954). The information capacity of the human motor
  system in controlling amplitude of movement. Journal of
  Experimental Psychology, 47, 381-391.
 
  Tognazzini, B. (1990, May). Pull down menus win hands down.
  Appledirect, pp. 25-27.
 
  Walker, N., Smelcer, J. B., & Nilsen, E. (in press). Optimizing
  speed and accuracy of menu selection. International Journal of
  Man-Machine Studies.
 
 
Word Processing Notes
---------------------
  Much has happened recently in the word processing world, so much
  in fact, that it's starting to become hard to track. For those of
  you who haven't been watching as closely as we have (we're word
  processor junkies, and word processing is probably the most common
  task for which people use computers), here's the news, labeled for
  your convenience by weasels (apologies to Dave Barry).
 
 
New PIMs for Word
  Very good news: Word 5.0's modularity has started to pay off, and
  Microsoft has made new Grammar and Spelling plug-in modules (PIMs
  - and you thought PIM stood for personal information manager). The
  grammar checker had a nasty habit of crashing when running under
  System 7 on a 68000-based Mac, and the Spelling PIM slowed to an
  incredible crawl if you added more than a few hundred words to a
  custom dictionary. Both of those bugs are now fixed, and the
  Spelling PIM has been generally improved. You can get the new PIMs
  by calling Microsoft tech support at the number below and being
  nice. Or, if you wait a few weeks, Microsoft may make the PIMs
  available on the online services.
 
    Microsoft Tech Support -- 206/635-7200
    Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
 
  Information from:
    Laurel Lammers, Microsoft Corporation
 
 
WordBASIC cancelled
  Bad news: All is not completely happy in Microsoft-land, and
  Microsoft recently announced that they will not ship the WordBASIC
  plug-in module for Word 5.0. Period. MacWEEK quoted Microsoft Word
  product manager Leslie Koch as saying that WordBASIC will have to
  wait until the introduction of Word 6.0 in mid-1993. This means
  that all of you who had hoped to automate tasks within Word 5.0
  will have to rely on QuicKeys or nothing at all. The Word 6.0
  release will reportedly share most of its code with the Windows
  version of Word, much as Excel on the Mac and Windows share 80% of
  the core code. This means that the Mac version will be completely
  rewritten, which will hopefully take care of some of the lingering
  problems with figure, footnote, and table numbering discussed on
  the nets recently.
 
  Information from:
    Michael A. McGuire -- mcguire@utkvx.utk.edu
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 08-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #22, pg. 4
 
 
WriteNow 3.0 ships
  Good news: T/Maker has shipped version 3.0 of their small, fast
  word processor, WriteNow. We haven't had much time to seriously
  evaluate it yet, but a review is on its way. In short, WriteNow
  3.0 is small (287K program size, and although it prefers 490K of
  RAM, it can use as little as 325K), fast, and has a really snazzy
  implementation of styles, including both character and paragraph
  styles, a domain previously inhabited only by Nisus among
  Macintosh word processors.
 
    T/Maker -- 415/962-0195
 
 
Paragon Concepts changes name
  Marketing news: As far as we can tell, this has nothing to do with
  their products, but Paragon Concepts, makers of Nisus, Nisus
  Compact, QUED/M, and several other products, recently changed its
  name to match its flagship product, much as SSI renamed itself to
  WordPerfect Corporation some years ago. From now on, Paragon will
  be known as Nisus Software. Making a clean sweep, the company has
  moved to 107 S. Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach, CA 92075.
 
    Nisus Software -- 619/481-1477
 
 
Nisus XS slips
  Bad news: Jim Bates of Nisus Software Tech Support reported on
  CompuServe that Nisus XS, the module to provide System 7-savvy
  features to Nisus, has been postponed again. Jim says that Nisus
  Software anticipates releasing Nisus XS at the end of the year.
  Orders are no longer being taken for XS, but if Nisus Software is
  standing behind loyal customers who have already ordered the
  update. If you ordered Nisus XS before 09-Jun-92, you will receive
  the update for free when it does ship, and your credit card will
  not be charged. If you have already paid for Nisus XS or had your
  credit card charged because the Nisus XS purchase was combined
  with another product, your money will be refunded and you will
  receive XS for free when it ships.
 
  I must say that I am extremely disappointed to hear that the
  release date has slipped again, but I hope that Nisus Software
  uses the extra time to come up with a truly amazing product. As
  powerful as it is, Nisus has perhaps even more potential than
  power, and for those of you who still wonder how it compares to
  Word, keep an eye out for a _short_ comparison from Matt Neuburg,
  author of our definitive Nisus review in TidBITS#116-#118.
 
  Information from:
    Jim Bates, Nisus Software -- 75300.1243@compuserve.come
 
 
FileMaker Pro 2.0
-----------------
  Claris has given notice that it intends to pull no punches in the
  Windows market. At PC Expo in a few weeks, Claris will show a
  pre-release version of FileMaker Pro 2.0 for Windows, along with
  its almost identical twin for the Mac. The marketing elves have
  been working long and hard on this release, and the press
  materials are extensive and useful, hopefully foreshadowing the
  program itself. Claris's emphasis on the Windows version of
  FileMaker Pro 2.0 is especially interesting given Apple's
  forthcoming ad campaign against Windows - perhaps this shows that
  Claris is not completely under Apple's control.
 
  But enough of the marketing nonsense - you want to read about the
  programs. Perhaps the most interesting thing is that the two
  versions of FileMaker Pro are almost identical, sharing 85% of the
  core code,. If you've used FileMaker Pro on a Mac, you'll be able
  to use it under Windows, and you'll even be able to transfer files
  directly, without any sort of conversion. From the promotional
  pictures that Claris distributed, the two versions can create
  databases which even look almost identical save for the Windows-
  specific interface elements like the ugly underlining of the Alt
  key character and the short filename in the title bar. One of
  FileMaker Pro 2.0's main selling points on the Windows side is the
  interface since Claris is known for producing well thought-out
  interfaces that bring the power of the programs to the surface.
 
  Other useful features that may not be common in Windows databases
  include ScriptMaker, which allows you to create scripts by
  selecting items from menus and clicking on buttons, extensive
  graphic tools for designing layouts, sophisticated text handling
  that makes FileMaker Pro into an excellent platform for database
  publishing, and instant updating of multi-user databases, even
  over mixed platform networks. There's also automatic record
  locking and release for ensuring data integrity, and FileMaker Pro
  2.0 still has its multi-user file server technology, so you don't
  have to have a file server to take advantage of the network
  capabilities.
 
  This isn't to imply that the versions are entirely equal. The
  Windows version uses Dynamic Link Libraries to support Novell
  NetWare and PhoneNet Talk networks, and it supports TrueType,
  Bitstream Facelift, and Adobe Type Manager fonts. Windows-based
  help is included, and for those of you with extra PC sound
  hardware, you can even add sound to your databases. QuickTime is
  still limited to the Mac version, although that will change when
  Apple ships QuickTime for Windows. The Mac version also supports
  Apple Events in scripting, so FileMaker Pro 2.0 can talk to other
  Apple Event-aware programs like HyperCard, Resolve, QuicKeys, and
  Frontier. Claris included other System 7 features, so much so that
  Claris claims it is "System 7 omniscient," including support for
  the Data Access Manager, Balloon Help, and TrueType, along with
  the Apple Event support mentioned above. Finally, you will be able
  to reorder layouts, reserialize records, and use wildcards in
  searches, and for those of you who do database publishing,
  FileMaker Pro 2.0 has more complete style control for text.
 
  Without having seen a pre-release copy of the program, it
  certainly sounds like Claris has a winner with the dual-platform
  FileMaker Pro 2.0. We'll only know in the fall when it ships ($399
  list, $89 upgrades for existing owners). Interestingly, the press
  information also implies that Claris wants to release another
  Windows product soon, and high on the list is MacDraw Pro,
  although my sources have said that ClarisWorks might be even more
  likely.
 
    Claris -- 408/727-8227 -- 800/544-8554
 
  Information from:
    Claris propaganda
 
 
Apple Newtons II
----------------
  Last week I talked briefly about what the Newton technology
  entails, setting myself up for this week's analysis. If you
  haven't seen last week's issue, I recommend you take a look.
 
  Underneath all of Apple's hurrah over Newton being a Personal
  Digital Assistant (PDA), I see Apple attempting a paradigm shift.
  This paradigm shift may not be in the way people use computers but
  in the way people think about computers. It may not equal being
  clunked on the head by an errant fruit, but it's still important.
  And, to quote Foghorn Leghorn, that famous cartoon chicken, "Clunk
  enough people on the head and we'll have a nation of lunkheads."
  Hmmm...
 
  Newton fits into Apple's class of Personal Digital Assistants, but
  most, if not all, of the technologies in Newton make up most, if
  not all, of what you would need for a full operating system.
  Apple's marketing folks may not want this to get out, but a Newton
  device is a computer that can do computer-like tasks given
  appropriate software. The question is, then, why has Apple
  sidestepped the terminology?
 
  The term "computer" comes loaded with linguistic baggage linking
  it with numbers. After all, the first computers were machines that
  merely did basic math quickly. Computers have changed, and despite
  the ubiquitous spreadsheet, the vast majority of the time you use
  a computer you do not directly work with numbers. When you move
  the mouse, type on the keyboard, or look at a graphical display on
  the screen, you are not directly manipulating numbers, and in
  fact, one of the reasons for the Mac's popularity is that it
  removes even more of the explicit numerology from using the
  computer. You can drop into EDLIN under DOS and play with
  hexadecimal, but a Mac in its default mode will try its hardest to
  avoid spewing indecipherable numbers at you.
 
  Despite this move away from numbers, the Mac is a computer, and no
  one pretends otherwise. Here's the trick. Apple wants all the
  people who have avoided a computer in the past to buy a Newton
  device, because the Newton is _not_ a computer. It's a Personal
  Digital Assistant, and the fact that it doesn't do everything
  (which is often expected of computers) is fine - you wouldn't
  expect a human assistant to do everything for you either, although
  that person might help out a great deal in keeping track of your
  addresses, your schedule, and so on.
 
  I've heard that one way to visualize how Apple intends the PDAs to
  complement today's computers is via a time-based graph. Along the
  Y-axis is the ability to perform a task well, while the X-axis is
  a time line for a project from start to finish. Computers,
  including the Mac, generally start out low at the beginning of a
  project and become more useful as the task progresses. It's not
  your imagination - it is hard to get started with brainstorming
  and conceptualization on a computer. That's where the PDAs come
  in. They start off high at the beginning of the project, and move
  down since their capabilities after the initial conceptualization
  are limited. Presumably, when the lines on the graph cross, it
  would be a good time to move work from the PDA to a computer,
  where it will be easier to solve the now-established problems. The
  power of Newton devices will certainly increase as time goes on,
  but with the addition of Newton technology in our Macs, the
  utility of computers at the beginning of projects will also
  increase.
 
  Of course, this graph applies primarily to the so-called "early
  adopters" who will buy something at almost any price because they
  know they need it, and that set of people largely overlaps with
  the set of current Mac owners. Hence the additional emphasis on
  wireless communications and all that, which is in reality just
  magic that many people won't care about, assuming, again, that the
  primary audience will be non-computer users who will get started
  on Newton and then may even decide to try a computer.
 
  Looking at that set of non-computer users, Apple's bean counters
  started drooling. There are millions of personal computers in use
  right now, but there are many times more people who have never
  touched one, and probably will avoid it as long as possible. I'm
  sure you all know people who have less than no interest in and may
  even be hostile toward computers. And then there are people who
  might like computers and may even be using them, but for whom the
  generalized power of the average computer just isn't quite right.
  This is why I've talked a lot about a Newton "device" - Apple
  intends to create many different types of Newtons for different
  specific ("vertical" in the jargon) markets. One example is a
  Newton for architects that would have a large screen that the
  architect could sketch on while talking to clients, the Newton
  cleaning up the sketch all along and saving it for further
  embellishment in a CAD program. Another example involves building
  Newton technology into student desktops so that the students can
  all communicate with one another and the teacher, who would have a
  desktop and a blackboard-sized display on the wall. No more dusty
  hands and spine-shivering chalk squeaks, but just think of the
  note-passing abilities! Actually, the realities of the school
  environment (little money and hard use) would seriously limit the
  efficacy of such a Newton, but it's still a neat idea.
 
  I think there are several other rationales behind not calling the
  Newton devices computers. Despite Apple's acknowledged better
  graphical interface and well-thought out hardware, the majority of
  computer users (PC-compatible users) see Apple and the Macintosh
  as small fry, and quite frankly, many of them are so biased that
  they refuse to even try a Mac because "I'm just not a mouse person
  and it's not a real machine." There's no way Apple could sell a
  little pen-based computer to those people - they can't get past
  their mental blocks about Apple's computers. But a cute little
  Newton device that talks to their PC as well as it talks to
  Macs... that's another story.
 
  Also, by positioning themselves outside of traditional computer
  market, Apple escapes the otherwise-inevitable comparisons with
  GO, IBM, Microsoft, Compaq, etc., and moves into an arena with
  Sharp, Casio, and Sony. I don't wish to imply that these companies
  are easy competition, but just think of Apple's two main
  advantages. First, although Newton is not a computer, Apple is a
  more obvious computer company, so despite the contradiction, that
  fact makes Apple appear stronger in comparison. Second, Sharp has
  licensed the Newton technology, and Sony and other selected
  companies will soon follow. These licensing deals, prominently
  mentioned, put Apple at the top of the heap before they've even
  introduced a product because it says that this Newton stuff is so
  cool that only Apple could have created it and everyone else has
  to license it from Apple. Of course, all this is moot for the time
  being, and we have to wait until the Newton devices show up in
  stores before making any final judgements. Nonetheless, I think
  Apple has done some intelligent positioning that just might pay
  off big.
 
  Information from:
    Pythaeus
    Jeremy Norberg -- tlk@u.washington.edu
 
 
The Works Concept
-----------------
  by Matthew Wall -- wall@cc.swarthmore.edu
 
  [This is an introduction to Matthew's full review of ClarisWorks,
  which will be a special issue immediately following this weekly
  issue. Keep an eye out for it! -Adam]
 
  The _works_ program - a single application combining several
  functions - has long been a strange and orphaned beast. The idea
  of a program which seamlessly (and at low-cost) integrates a
  variety of types of data is an appealing one. If perfectly
  executed, the works concept would be the perfect implementation of
  the basic Macintosh philosophy: the computer interface should be
  an easy-to-use and intuitive tool that builds on consistency to
  make the work process simpler.
 
  The basic concept is not unique to the Macintosh or even to
  microcomputers. The lack of easy integration of both data and
  tools - standards is another word - might be considered the
  fundamental problem of computing technology since its inception.
  Differing file formats and types of data have been a consistent
  bugaboo for end users, as have the frustrations of learning
  different tools and interfaces for performing the same tasks
  across different applications. One need only look at the otherwise
  inexplicable continuing popularity of DEC's All-in-One or any set
  of Microsoft products as evidence that any solution promising
  integration is preferable to none in some environments. In fact,
  one of the most popular programs in history was AppleWorks on the
  Apple II, which some estimate to have sold over four million
  copies since 1984.
 
  The works concept is entering its third era on the Macintosh. The
  first era was completely defined by Microsoft Works, the first,
  and until recently, the only integrated product. Considering the
  paucity of Mac products on the market at the time, Microsoft Works
  came as a great revelation. In the pre-MultiFinder days, people
  wishing to work on word processing and a spreadsheet at the same
  time could use Works. Works quickly grabbed a huge market share,
  to the point where even in 1992 Macworld lists Works as the number
  four bestselling Mac application (behind Word, Microsoft Office,
  and Excel) [according to Macworld Jan-92 p. 286. Interestingly
  enough, Works fell to sixth in May and eleventh in July.]. But in
  typical fashion, Microsoft sat on its big fat market share and on
  further Works  development for five years. A set of tools once
  revolutionary now seem childishly simplistic. Only the inherent
  inertia and resistance to change among the typical computer user
  has kept Microsoft Works alive at all.
 
  MultiFinder ushered in the second era of works on the Mac. With
  the maturation of MultiFinder in System 6 and the coinciding drop
  in memory prices, buying more than one application and running
  them simultaneously became practical. Users had access to a wider
  variety of choices for individual "modules" under MultiFinder, and
  software publishers began to allow formatted exports and imports
  to file formats of their competitors. (In my opinion, APDA's push
  of XTND and easy file exchange is the single most important
  development for Mac applications in the era between MultiFinder
  and System 7.) Microsoft Works became far less attractive to
  people needing a full featured spreadsheet or word processor but
  having little or no need for one of the other modules.
 
  We're now in the midst of a works renaissance of sorts, with the
  release of three new works programs - ClarisWorks, BeagleWorks,
  and GreatWorks, and the announcement of the development of
  Microsoft Works II. I'm not sure how four companies suddenly
  decided that the time was ripe to develop new generations of works
  programs, but I suggest some possible reasons:
 
1. There's no real reason for a Works program, but software
  developers couldn't ignore Microsoft's continuing profits from
  Microsoft Works.
 
2. With the migration of major word processing, spreadsheet, and
  database programs to high-memory, large disk-space, and zippy-
  processor Macintoshes (cf. Word 5.0, Excel 4.0, FileMaker Pro, et
  al.) a new market has emerged for the still-lively installed base
  of low-end Macs.
 
3. The introduction of the already immensely popular PowerBook
  line has created a new need for a low-memory, small disk-space
  "notetaking" integrated application.
 
4. The idea of integrating data and tools under one application is
  basically a good one and is receiving new life on its own merit.
 
  The commercial motivations for developing the new works products
  are probably some combination of the above factors, and your
  reason for buying a works program likely corresponds closely to
  one of the following:
 
1. You've been using Microsoft Works and are dying for something
  better.
 
2. You need to keep up with how the high-end users use the Mac,
  but you're stuck with a low-end computer.
 
3. You have a PowerBook and need to run more application types
  than you have disk space or memory.
 
4. You like the idea of a single, low-cost, easy-to-use
  application and you don't need most of the fancy features of
  high-end programs.
 
 
The Future of Integration
  The constraints of the works concept in its current incarnation -
  low cost, low memory requirements, and low disk space requirements
  - demand that the individual modules of a works program represent
  "low-end" applications. This shouldn't necessarily be so, but most
  developers seem to be relying on System 7's Publish & Subscribe
  and Apple Events technologies as the future of application
  integration. Indeed, the Communications Toolbox is an early model
  of the operating system providing a mix-and-match supporting
  framework for users supplying their own customized tools. The
  future of application software will probably be modular, much as
  the future of programming itself is object-oriented. In the
  meantime, the new generation of works program deserves some
  consideration if you find yourself in one of the situations
  described above.
 
 
Reviews/15-Jun-92
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    Color Flatbed Scanners -- pg. 64
      DPI Art-Getter
      HP ScanJet IIc
      HSD Scan-X Color
      Microtek ScanMaker 600ZS
      Mirror 600 Color Scanner
      Mustek MFS-6000CS
      Sharp JX-320
      UMAX UC630
      UMAX UC1200
      XRS 6c OmniMedia
    FourMat Learning Processor 2.0 -- pg. 74
    ExpertWriter 1.0 -- pg. 74
    QuickLetter 2.0 -- pg. 74
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 08-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #22
 
 
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