TidBITS#139/24-Aug-92
=====================
 
 A varied catch this issue, starting with quick notes about Morph,
   Excel 4.0, and European Macintosh distribution, and continuing
   with an interesting article on gray market mail order vendors.
   We have a few more notes from Macworld about neat new products
   from Voyager and new items from Casady & Greene, and an article
   on how IBM may be close on the heels of QuickTime. Finally, the
   VRAM conundrum!
 
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Topics:
    MailBITS/24-Aug-92
    Mail Order Macs
    Watch Out, QuickTime
    VRAM Problems
    More Macworld
    Reviews/24-Aug-92
 
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-139.etx; 27K]
 
 
MailBITS/24-Aug-92
------------------
  Rob Managan writes, "Another use for Morph occurred to me as I
  read the article. Often in scientific work you have images from a
  simulation that are not spaced close enough in time for an
  animation. Morph might provide a way to easily get the
  interpolated frames you need to make a movie!"
 
  Information from:
    Rob Managan -- managan@llnl.gov
 
 
Excel 4 Upgrade
  Mark H. Anbinder writes, "Microsoft Excel customers who are
  stunned by the zippy release of Excel 4.0 and are interested in
  upgrading will be pleased to learn that they can upgrade for
  pseudo-free (there is a $7.50 shipping charge) if they purchased
  Excel 3.0 after 15-Feb-92. Customers should call 800/426-9400 and
  should have their registration information handy. (Please call
  after 25-Aug-92, as Microsoft's _entire_ sales division has been
  partying hard at an annual sales meeting (we're talking Mr. Bill
  running around with a squirt gun, to judge from a second-hand
  eyewitness account) and will be swamped when they return to the
  normal routine on 24-Aug-92!)."
 
    Microsoft -- 800/426-9400
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
 
 
European Distribution
  Povl H. Pedersen writes, "Apple has not dropped the PowerBook 100
  from the price list here in Denmark, but they have lowered the
  price. I am not sure about the consumer or business markets, but
  we still have it in the educational market.
 
  We also still have the Classic here, but educational resellers
  sell the Classic II for about $1.50 (yes, a dollar and a half)
  more than the Classic. This is because Apple has no special price
  on the Classic, which we have at same price as the consumer
  market, but we do have a great back-to-school discount on both the
  Classic II and the LC/monitor bundle. Somehow the LC with 12"
  color monitor ends up about $15 cheaper than the LC with 12"
  monochrome monitor.
 
  Here in Scandinavia Apple now has three competing divisions, each
  of which individually sets prices and must compete against the
  others. That's why we see such large price differences between the
  consumer, educational, and business markets.
 
  Information from:
    Povl H. Pedersen -- ECO861771@ecostat.aau.dk
 
 
Mail Order Macs
---------------
  by Gene Borio -- 70511.342@compuserve.com
 
  The impetus for this article came from an online question, "Where
  do all these mail-order Macs come from anyway?" A loaded question,
  and not one I've ever seen covered. Being in the channel myself
  ("the channel" is the business term for the organizations and
  methods used by computer companies to route products to the end
  user. It encompasses distributors, resellers, VARs [value-added
  resellers], and even direct mail), I find all the undercover
  slipping and sliding and back-stabbing fascinating - and highly
  influential. The traditional magazines tend not to view such
  things as interesting to their readers, so I will try to give a
  brief, "received knowledge" overview. Keep in mind that I work at
  a dealership, so my bias should be obvious.
 
  Apple's Authorized Dealership system indirectly provides the
  impetus for mail order Macintoshes. Apple created its network of
  Authorized Dealers as a method of efficiently distributing
  Macintoshes and off-loading support. Ideally, these Apple Dealers
  would be Mac experts, qualified to turn a PC sale into a Mac sale,
  and trained not only to assist customers with their first fumbling
  attempts to work mice and menus, but also to fix a machine should
  it break down. That was the deal, and Apple implemented any number
  of plans to try to convince salespeople, most of whom had been
  selling Apple ][s or Klones or shoes, to learn a little something
  about the Mac. These attempts at training and Mac-oriented rewards
  were dismal failures. Most salespeople sold what they knew, and -
  as has been bemoaned on CompuServe and in the world at large from
  time immemorial - most Apple-authorized dealers know next to
  nothing about the Mac.
 
  Well, in lieu of knowledge, how about bucks? A highly effective
  sales-incentive method rewarded dealers for selling lots of Macs,
  in the form of "cheaper by the dozen" discounts. The more you
  bought, the deeper your discount. In such a viciously competitive
  market, this meant that in order to stay in business, many dealers
  had to buy far more than they could possibly legitimately sell.
 
  Some resellers then got the bright idea to open their own little
  side-business at another location and sell Macs to a national
  audience at cut-rate mail-order prices. The mail-order house's
  overhead would be low - no retail location, service department, or
  salesperson training necessary - so they could dramatically
  increase volume with only the expenses of telephone bills,
  personnel, advertising, shipping, and accounting. If the mail
  order outlet needed even more stock or certain hard-to-find items,
  it could work out a deal with other resellers looking to reduce
  inventory and build up their own discounts. Some mail order houses
  are totally independent of a reseller and simply provide the
  service for - and get the products from - a number of resellers.
 
  So: dealers over-buy to increase their discounts, and sell the
  excess to a mail-order house. It's not exactly kosher, but not
  strictly illegal either. It's not the black-market, but the gray-
  market. Naturally, Apple tries to protect its legitimate dealers
  and will yank a dealer's authorization if it finds evidence of
  this practice. Apple has done this on occasion, but not often as
  far as I know. Policing costs are high. But dealers do want to be
  careful, so some dealers will alter or completely deface the
  serial numbers on the Macs they sell gray-market so they can't be
  traced back to that dealer. Be sure to check for a damaged serial
  number if you buy a grey-market Macintosh because dealers can
  refuse to provide warranty service for a Mac with a missing or
  defaced serial number. In the unhappy event that a legitimate Mac
  has lost its serial number sticker (possible if it was a demo
  model, for instance), make sure to get that serial number on the
  invoice so you have a record of it for potential warranty
  problems.
 
  When I worked with Mac Emporium in New York City I wondered what
  could be so wrong with having a whole network of small stores
  stuffed with Mac Fanatics who in aggregate would be incredibly
  influential in selling the Mac? We all loved it so, you would
  hardly even have had to feed us; we'd work for peanuts and
  proselytize our little hearts out. But no. Apple demands an
  impossible amount of sales (thus further aggravating the need of
  stores to "move boxes") and has requirements that work against a
  small neighborhood store becoming authorized.
 
  Thus mail order houses get their Macintosh equipment from Apple.
  Apple's dealer and discount policies created this Frankenstein
  monster of the "reseller channel" and the whole raison d'etre for
  the gray-market. It fascinates me that Apple has done nothing but
  slap their monster in the face over the last year. Apple demanded
  that education resellers stop selling competing (DOS) systems into
  the lucrative education market. Then they announced that they were
  taking away "infrastructure" funds, extra money Apple had paid for
  years for various services the resellers could provide for Apple -
  and for many resellers the only reason they could stay competitive
  at such low selling margins. Just recently Apple sold PowerBook
  100 4/40s to Price Club at an obscenely low price. Although Price
  Club sold the PowerBooks at close to half the price the resellers
  had originally paid for their inventory, Apple kept mum, as if the
  reseller channel was so unimportant that it didn't even deserve
  notice. [It now appears that the dealers will get similarly good
  deals on other models of the PowerBook 100, so look for prices in
  the mid $700 range from your local dealer. -Adam] The monster, the
  reseller channel, that Apple created is clearly about to be kicked
  out into the world to fend for its feeble, lumbering self, while
  The Wiz and Circuit City and other consumer electronics outlets -
  and who knows, maybe even Apple, through its own mail order
  division - pour Macs to the world at large.
 
  [MacWEEK recently reported that Claris had investigated the
  possibility of building cheap Macintosh clones overseas and
  selling them under the Claris label, and apparently Apple is
  considering either selling Macs directly itself through the mail
  or authorizing certain existing mail order vendors to sell Macs as
  well. Apple recently authorized mail order vendors like
  MacWarehouse and MacConnection to sell Apple software, and some
  wonder if hardware can be far behind. Interestingly, these places
  can all sell Macs, but few of them can adequately service or
  support Macs, which may lead to some changes in dealer programs.
  -Adam]
 
  Why Apple originally didn't want to go mail order, why they built
  the reseller channel, why they did all these things in the way
  they did is a complete mystery to me. As David Ramsey, in about
  the harshest criticism of Apple I've heard him give publicly,
  said, "Apple's marketing folks are a bunch of inept yahoos. Isn't
  this obvious after all the years of Apple's bizarre and self-
  destructive marketing practices?"
 
  If I were Apple, I'd have gone to any distribution that would take
  me. Mail order, small dealers, electronics stores - ah! Maybe they
  didn't take these venues because they wanted to play with the big
  boys; they had to combat all that "toy computer" propaganda from
  priesthood-protecting DOSsers. The marketing concept of
  "authorized resellers" for computers had been in practice for a
  long time, and selling the Mac next to a Coleco Adam or a
  MyFirstComputer display in Sears would have enforced the toy
  misconception. I'm sure they had some sort of rationale (which
  would be interesting to hear from an insider).
 
  As I said, this is mostly received knowledge. Not many history
  books cover this stuff. I expect to be corrected in some aspects,
  and hope those more knowledgeable will elaborate upon others.
 
  [Do note that this is not a black and white issue. You will find
  good dealers along with the thoroughly inept ones, and I'm sure we
  have reputable mail order firms (Maya Computer had a good customer
  support reputation, for instance) along with those that will take
  your money and run. We're not trying to make a judgement call
  here, but are rather trying explain the situation so you can
  decide for yourself. -Adam]
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 17-Aug-92, Vol. 6, #30, pg. 1
 
 
Watch Out, QuickTime
--------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
 
  Apple pushers who have enjoyed a few months of uninterrupted
  multimedia advantage thanks to QuickTime are now a bit more
  concerned about what the other side has been up to. IBM reps are
  now showing stunning full-screen, full-motion video and sound on
  the PS/2 Ultimedia Model M57 SLC... and they are understandably
  enthusiastic about what they're showing.
 
  The multimedia-oriented workstation is designed around a custom
  386 SLC processor, essentially an enhanced 20 MHz 386 SX. It
  includes a color touch-sensitive display, CD-ROM drive, and high-
  quality audio, as well as IBM's XGA graphics standard. An upcoming
  enhancement will be a 40 MHz 486 CPU upgrade for the existing
  machine.
 
  What impressed me at a recent computer show at which both IBM and
  Apple were showing multimedia solutions was that, while Apple's
  QuickTime technology is capable of showing full-motion video on a
  fast machine in a small window, IBM's technology can actually fill
  the screen with VCR-quality 30-frame-per-second video for several
  minutes at a stretch, reading the video and sound from the hard
  disk and decompressing on the fly.
 
  This isn't to say that QuickTime is not a stunning technology; it
  is. It has a tremendous potential for providing multimedia at all
  levels, from the casual user on an LC II to the power user on a
  Quadra 950. My point is simply that Apple can't rest on its
  QuickTime laurels. The technology must move forward, because IBM's
  Ultimedia technology is at QuickTime's heels.
 
    IBM -- 800/426-9402
 
 
VRAM Problems
-------------
  Like most computer manufacturers, Apple uses different sources for
  its chips, and this policy, though normally unnoticed, has caused
  some difficulties in upgrading the video RAM (VRAM) in Macintosh
  LCs, Quadras, and 4*8 video cards. Apple differentiates between
  its VRAM SIMMs, so you can make sure you buy the right parts when
  upgrading. However, if already have an upgrade, you may experience
  strange problems.
 
  For instance, if you have the wrong VRAM on a 4*8 card, the
  monitor may come up after a cold boot (turning the power switch
  on) in black & white mode without the "millions of colors" option
  available in the Monitors Control Panel. Restarting (a warm boot)
  will cause that option to appear, but the problem will recur every
  cold boot.
 
  If you use inappropriate SIMMs in a Macintosh LC, a few pixels
  along the left edge of the screen may intermittently change color.
  Similarly, inappropriate SIMMs in a Quadra may cause pixels to
  drop out on large monitors.
 
  To solve the problem, buy the right VRAM expansion kit from Apple
  or make sure your dealer replaces a defective VRAM SIMM with a
  correct one. If you bought your VRAM from a third party vendor,
  complain to them to get a correct SIMM.
 
  Here are the Apple part numbers for the original VRAM SIMMs:
 
    Part Number  Description
    M0517LL/A    Mac LC 512K VRAM SIMM
                   Use with Macintosh LC only
    M5953LL/A    Macintosh VRAM Expansion Kit
                   Use with Macintosh Quadra only
    661-0609     VRAM SIMM, 256K
                   Use two SIMMs to upgrade Macintosh Display Card
                   4*8 only
 
  Defective VRAM should be replaced with the following service part
  numbers:
 
    Part Number  Description
    661-0609     VRAM SIMM, 256K - use with Macintosh Display Card
                                   4*8 only
    661-0649     VRAM SIMM, 512K - use with the Macintosh LC only
    661-0722     VRAM SIMM, 256K - use with CPUs (Quadras and LC)
                                   only
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
 
 
More Macworld
-------------
  by Ilene Hoffman -- ileneh@aol.com
 
  Initially I felt Macworld 1992 was less busy than in past years,
  but on the second day I revised my opinion when I could not even
  see the booths through the people at the World Trade Center. Upon
  arriving at the Bayside Exposition Hall on the next day, an audio-
  visual assault confronted me. It was loud, hot, and many booths
  had their own flavor of music (isn't multimedia wonderful), none
  of which complemented each other. No rest for the weary in this
  building! Overall, I felt that the show, although lacking in
  hoopla such as the WingZ exhibit in 1990, was a crowded success.
 
  Due the large size of the show, I decided to write about new
  products that were announced and shipping at the show. I skimmed
  the press packages to find those few gems, and, interestingly,
  found only one company who had their press information in disk
  format. So much for the paperless office. As it turns out, few new
  products were actually announced and shipping, and some of those
  we've already covered. Here are some notes on several more.
 
 
Voyaging Onward
  My vote for the most interesting and entertaining product goes to
  the Voyager Company for an entertainment CD ROM for adults, called
  Rodney's Wonder Window. Rodney's Wonder Window's creator, Rodney
  Alan Greenblat, calls his artistic work an interactive gallery
  exhibit. He created 23 interactive modules offering animation,
  whimsical stories, QuickTime vignettes and just plain mindless
  fun. Greenblat's humorous art draws from and reflects such varied
  sources as vaudeville, PeeWee Herman, Saturday Night Live, and
  Yellow Submarine. I found it thoroughly entertaining.
 
  Too many CD-ROMs are a compendium of unrelated art with tinny
  electronic music and boring snippets of marketing material, such
  as the Macworld ExpoCD given out free at the show. In contrast,
  Rodney's Wonder Window, as one user said, is the first art-form on
  CD-ROM which is one man's talented vision. It has unity of purpose
  (fun), focus (art), and it worked correctly. The only bugs in this
  product are Greenblat's creations. The $39 CD-ROM officially
  requires 4 MB of RAM; System 6.0.7 or later; and a 13", 256-color
  monitor (or better). However, I ran into screen redraw problems on
  a 4 MB Mac and had to add 4 MB more RAM to run it without any
  problems - so make sure you have at least 4 MB free when using
  Rodney's Wonder Window.
 
  Voyager had a few other announcements, including their $295
  Expanded Book Toolkit, which allows Mac users to produce their own
  multimedia books. The Expanded Book Toolkit will ship this month,
  and we hope to bring you more detailed information about it in a
  later issue.
 
  [Those of you on the Internet might want to try this with some of
  the electronic texts from Project Gutenberg. You can subscribe to
  the Gutenberg LISTSERV by sending email to LISTSERV@UIUCVMD.BITNET
  with this line in the body of the mailfile: "SUBSCRIBE GUTNBERG
  your full name" For those you wanting to try this on the cheap,
  there is a freeware stack called BookBuilder available via FTP on
  <ftp.apple.com> in the /ftp/alug/hypercard directory. No
  guarantees - I haven't even downloaded it. -Adam]
 
  Voyager shipped four new Expanded Books, which are designed to be
  read on the PowerBooks, but can be read any large screen Mac.
  Voyager's most recent Expanded Books are Ken Kesey's "Sailor
  Song," and William Gibson's cyberpunk trilogy "Neuromancer,"
  "Count Zero," and "Mona Lisa Overdrive."
 
  Voyager has available two new music related CD-ROMs. "Richard
  Strauss: Three Tone Poems" and Volume 1 of So I've Heard. So I've
  Heard is music critic Alan Rich's five volume series of the
  history of music. Volume 1, "Bach and Before" covers musical
  history from ancient Greece to the mid-18th century in a nine-part
  essay with 48 music samplings. The Strauss CD is a nine-part
  HyperCard program, allowing users to explore Strauss's music
  in-depth.
 
    The Voyager Company -- 310-451-1383 -- 310/394-2156 (fax)
      voyager@applelink.apple.com
 
  Information from:
    Voyager propaganda
 
 
A Varied Line from Casady & Greene
  Casady & Greene, makers of QuickDEX, announced six new products at
  the show, including font collections, games, and system
  enhancement utilities. Casady & Greene upgraded Fluent Laser
  Fonts, an exceptional font package, to Fluent Laser Fonts Library
  2, adding 40 typefaces to the original 80-font library. Fluent
  Laser Fonts Library 2 now offers the fonts in PostScript or
  TrueType. Owners of Fluent Laser Fonts can upgrade to the new
  package for $30 for one type of font or $50 for both packages.
  Otherwise, the package retails for $179.
 
  In September Casady & Greene will release two other font
  collections: The Glasnost Cyrillic Library 2 and the Eastern
  European Library. Apple and Microsoft have unfortunately
  standardized on slightly different character sets for these
  libraries. Consequently, the Mac version of these fonts will
  include the Windows standard for offices which use both platforms.
  Casady & Greene will also release a library of Hebrew fonts later
  this year.
 
  Game enthusiasts will appreciate Casady & Greene's new Pararena
  2.0, an upgraded version of a shareware offering. I can't quite
  describe the play action - it's something of a soccer/rollerball
  sports simulation. You play against the computer or another player
  on a network. Pararena 2.0 adds color graphics, six new players,
  and more skill levels to the smooth animation and challenging play
  of the original. I'm not partial to this type of game, but it
  impressed me nonetheless. With practice, the game should appeal to
  those who like (and are good at) arcade-style games.
 
  Casady & Greene has just contributed Innovative Utilities to the
  burgeoning field of bundled utilities. Innovative Utilities
  includes four System 6- and System 7-compatible utilities -
  Conflict Catcher, Color Coordinator, Whiz-Bang Window Accelerator,
  and HotDA. A fifth utility, Memory Maxer, only works under System
  7.
 
  Conflict Catcher, the flagship utility, is a diagnostic tool and
  system extension manager. As the name implies, it helps diagnose
  extension and control panel conflicts at startup. I particularly
  like the system extension manager because it creates a disabled
  folder, much like Extension Manager 1.6 does [as will Now Startup
  Manager 4.0, I believe -Adam]. Conflict Catcher also lets you
  change the loading order of all extensions and control panels, no
  matter where in the System Folder they reside, and will also make
  sure the startup icons wrap neatly into two or more rows as
  necessary. No telling how well it diagnoses conflicts just yet,
  but it seems to automate the process of loading startup documents
  one by one to identify conflicts, although it's also somehow
  tracing code after startup. Casady & Greene will also make a
  Conflict Catcher Key Lock version available as a stand-alone
  product for developers and software publishers to include with
  their products. This version will allow tech support people to
  give users a code to enable Conflict Catcher for three days,
  theoretically helping to track down odd extension conflicts.
 
  Michael Greene of Casady & Greene posted on CompuServe recently,
  saying:
 
    Conflict Catcher can catch crashes caused by INIT X and
    INIT Y running unless INIT Z is running. It even found a
    bug in my own QuickDEX that required Adobe Type Reunion
    1.3 AND Suitcase 2.1.1 to be running. Any other versions
    of either INIT, there wasn't a problem. QuickDEX is a DA
    so the crash was coming well after INIT load time but was
    influenced by the presence of the two INITs. During beta
    testing, we found five way conflicts that literally
    required five specific INITs running to cause a problem.
    Drop any one of the INITs and the problem went away. Of
    course the user would think on adding the fifth INIT to
    his mix "Gee things were going just fine until I added
    this INIT, so it MUST be this INIT's fault." Depending on
    which hapless INIT was the fifth one in, it was the one
    blamed. You can image what a headache that would be to
    find by hand.
 
  Color Coordinator allows you to link different monitor bit-depths
  to different applications, so you can have the Mac automatically
  switch to black and white for a certain application, and when you
  switch back out to another program, change back to 256 colors,
  something which freely-distributable utilities do manually, but
  not automatically. Whiz-Bang Window Accelerator supposedly speeds
  up drawing of the zoom rectangles, though frankly, if you're
  concerned about zoom rectangle speed, you can easily shut them off
  entirely with ResEdit. See TidBITS#99/Finder_Fun for the
  instructions.
 
  Casady & Greene claim that HotDA allows you to open any DA with a
  hotkey, which may be useful to users who need limited automation,
  but is better accomplished with the more powerful QuicKeys from CE
  Software
 
  The remaining System 7-specific utility, Memory Maxer, holds
  somewhat more interest for the power user. It allows an
  application to request all the available memory under System 7 no
  matter what you have set its memory partition to in the Get
  Info... box. Memory Maxer can also optionally quit the Finder,
  freeing up another 300K or so for applications. These features are
  useful, especially for users of RAM hogs like Photoshop, but the
  shareware AppSizer provides the same memory setting abilities, and
  other shareware or freeware applications allow you to quit and
  restart the Finder.
 
  On first look, it appears that Innovative Utilities will appeal to
  users who dislike using multiple freely-distributable utilities or
  the similar and heavily entrenched Now Utilities, soon to be
  updated to version 4.0 (I own Now Utilities, but have never really
  liked it [unlike us :-) -Adam & Tonya].), or who deal with
  extension conflicts constantly, since only Conflict Catcher
  provides innovative features completely unavailable elsewhere. Of
  course, such commercially bundled utilities usually share similar
  interfaces and are far less likely to conflict with each other.
 
  Casady & Greene is selling the software direct to users without
  the packaging for 50% off the list price of $79. I don't know if
  the offer will continue once the packaging is ready to ship, so
  don't delay if this product appeals to you.
 
    Casady & Greene -- 408/484-9228 -- 408/484-9218 (fax)
      D0063@applelink.apple.com
 
  Information from:
    Casady & Greene propaganda
    Michael Greene -- 76327.636@compuserve.com
 
 
Reviews/24-Aug-92
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK -- 17-Aug-92, Vol. 6, #30
    LetraStudio 2.0 -- pg. 43
    Sony CVD-1000 Vdeck -- pg. 43
    Mirror Portable 80 -- pg. 51
    IdeaFisher 2.0 -- pg. 52
    OmniPage Direct 1.0 -- pg. 54
    VoxelView/Mac 1.0 -- pg. 56
 
 
..
 
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