TidBITS#285/10-Jul-95
=====================

Info this week on a new version of Apple's Sound Manager, plus an
   update on the compatibility of Open Transport, Apple's
   replacement for MacTCP. We also bring news on a set of useful
   Mac-oriented Web sites, speculation on possible contention
   between OpenDoc and the growing trend toward mega-applications,
   and the conclusion of Tonya's two-part review of FullWrite
   2.0, a high-end word processor contender.

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
   Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
   For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
* Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- http://www.halcyon.com/
   Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
* Hayden Books, an imprint of Macmillan Computer Publishing
   Free shipping on orders via the Web -- http://www.mcp.com/
   Mac Tip of the Day & free books! -- http://www.mcp.com/hayden/

Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

Topics:
    MailBITS/10-Jul-95
    OpenDoc & Netscape
    More Mac Web Sites
    FullWrite, Part II of II
    Reviews/10-Jul-95

ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#285_10-Jul-95.etx


MailBITS/10-Jul-95
------------------

**Open Transport 1.0 Woes** -- Orren Merton <orrenm@darkling.com>
  writes:
  Open Transport, Apple Computer's highly-touted new networking
  system (currently only available on the new Power Mac 9500s -
  version 1.1 will reportedly appear this fall for the rest of the
  Mac line), in its current form does not allow for stable,
  consistent PPP connections. Apple has released a patch for Open
  Transport that supposedly improves SLIP and PPP reliability, and
  MacPPP 2.2 is supposedly more Open Transport-friendly than other
  versions, but these fixes do not work for everyone. Hopefully,
  enterprising freeware and shareware programmers can work with
  Apple to make programs work better with Open Transport, and to
  make Open Transport's MacTCP emulation work better with existing
  applications. It is also noteworthy that in my personal
  experience, the most Open Transport-friendly program has been John
  Norstad's NewsWatcher 2.0b27.

ftp://ftp.tidbits.com//pub/tidbits/tisk/tcp/mac-ppp-22.hqx
ftp://ftp.support.apple.com//pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/n_c/
other_n_c_sw/Open_Transport_1.0.1_patch.hqx


**Sound Manager 3.1 Hurrahs** -- Last week, Apple released version
  3.1 of the Sound Manager, which consists of a new Sound control
  panel (version 8.0.5) and a new Sound Manager extension. Along
  with numerous bug fixes (some of which have saved me a lot of
  trouble), Sound Manager 3.1 includes support for IMA 4:1
  compression (often used for 16-bit, CD-quality music) and uLaw 2:1
  compression (often used for voice and telephony applications, and
  the basis of the ".au" file format seen so often on the Web).
  Sound Manager 3.1 also includes more PowerPC-native code and
  (finally!) allows asynchronous playback of alert sounds. If you do
  any audio-intensive work - or just want to give your Power Mac
  games a little boost - it's worth a look. [GD]

ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/Macintosh/
system_sw/other_sys_sw/Sound_Manager_3.1.hqx


**ClarisWorks 4.0 & Kanji** -- Dan Miller
  <72511.420@compuserve.com> of ZiffNet/Mac wrote in regard to
  problems displaying Kanji text in ClarisWorks 4.0 reported in
  TidBITS-284_, saying that he had experienced no trouble using
  ClarisWorks 4.0 with version 1.2 of the Japanese Language Kit
  (although it may well have problems with earlier versions of the
  JLK). Dan Kogai <dankogai@jms.jeton.or.jp> - who reported the
  original problem - adds that on further investigation, the
  troubles he experienced seem related to FontPatchin', a common
  freeware Control Panel that lets applications using Roman fonts by
  default show Kanji correctly. FontPatchin' also comes with an
  extension called UnderLineEnabler, which allows underlining text
  in KanjiTalk - something critical for using the World Wide Web.
  Dan Kogai adds, however, that the HTML translator in ClarisWorks
  still had problems using Kanji. [GD]

ftp://ftp.tohoku.ac.jp//pub/mac/KanjiTalk/fontpatchin2.2.sit.hqx
http://www.austin.apple.com/productinfo/datasheets/as/japanese.html


OpenDoc & Netscape
------------------
  by Adam C. Engst & Geoff Duncan <editors@tidbits.com>

**Dave Martin** <dave@gerga.tamu.edu> made an interesting comment
  in regard to the MailBIT about how future versions of Netscape
  Navigator will integrate Macromedia Director's Shockwave playback
  technology (see TidBITS-281_). Dave wrote:

  I just thought I'd comment on this increasing rash of what appears
  to be anti-OpenDoc thinking. The whole concept of the Web browser
  being for browsing the Web and the "helper apps" being a user-
  selected preference as to how to view files from the Internet
  seems very OpenDoc-ish. This trend of Netscape's towards
  integrating Director and Acrobat - and who knows what else - goes
  in the other direction. Wouldn't it be enough for Netscape to ship
  with preset settings that would launch an Acrobat viewer or a
  Shockwave player if present, much like any other helper
  application would be auto-launched? This decline towards sumo-
  sized applications makes me wonder whether Netscape will become
  the Word 6 of the Web world.


**Netscape's Horizon** -- Dave's comment caused us to think
  OpenDoc may face a more serious obstacle than user acceptance. The
  hurdle may be the combination of the corporate alliance and its
  attached desire to shut out the competition. Dave is right -
  there's no reason Netscape couldn't come configured to launch a
  Director or Acrobat helper application. But where's the advantage
  in that? Any Web browser could do the same thing, and all of them
  would. By building Shockwave into Netscape, Macromedia wins by
  associating with Netscape, whose public relations rocket continues
  to rise. And Netscape wins by including a technology not present
  in other Web browsers.

  Netscape plans to use the Acrobat and Shockwave technologies to
  add additional value over the helper application approach. Future
  versions of Netscape are slated to do more than simply open the
  appropriate document type within Netscape's window. For instance,
  the Acrobat technology will be page-based rather than document-
  based. So, if you find a 200-page Acrobat document on a site and
  want to see page 132, you'll be able to go to page 132 without
  having to slog through the intervening pages. With today's Acrobat
  player, you can jump to page 132 only after you've downloaded the
  _entire_ file.

  Shockwave will work similarly, allowing users to interact over the
  Internet with Director presentations that reside on remote
  machines without having to download the entire file. Of course,
  typical Director presentations require more bandwidth than any
  modem can deliver to provide a "true multimedia experience." Lingo
  scripts, cast members, high-resolution graphics, animations, etc.,
  would have to be downloaded and played back on the client machine.
  Some effects - transitions for example - might be relatively
  painless, and it'll probably be possible to design some relatively
  effective, low-bandwidth Director stuff for the Web. But anyone
  who's tried to use an interactive Director presentation over a
  LocalTalk network knows how painful that can be - and LocalTalk is
  significantly faster than any modem (or most typical Internet
  connections, for that matter).

  Of course, all this is contingent on support from Netscape's
  partners - not only for the playback code, but also for support in
  the authoring environments so people can create documents for
  direct online use. Both the Acrobat and Director authoring
  environments will probably have to be enhanced to properly support
  these Web-savvy features.


**OpenDoc Alliances?** But this situation with Netscape is perhaps
  an isolated example in regard to OpenDoc's overall future.
  Companies make alliances for a number of reasons, and both
  companies have to benefit in one way or another. Will the loss of
  the exclusivity benefit (since the entire point of OpenDoc parts
  is that they can be replaced) make it significantly more difficult
  for the corporate wheelers to find common ground with their dealer
  counterparts? From a user's standpoint, of course, no one cares,
  but in the real life of the industry, the openness of OpenDoc may
  work against its acceptance.

  Individual developers and small companies will likely work
  together on OpenDoc parts, but support from the big players may be
  necessary for such a sweeping change to take place. So, assuming
  OpenDoc is indeed the right way to do things because of the
  flexibility and choice it offers, the companies promoting OpenDoc
  over the existing method of creating mega-applications and over
  Microsoft's OLE have their work cut out for them. They may not
  have to convince developers, but convincing management may be a
  difficult task.


**Why Not OpenDoc?** Continuing to use Netscape as an example,
  could Netscape use OpenDoc to accomplish its goals if they wanted
  to? There are a few sticky issues to consider:

* More than the Mac in mind: Netscape has to provide these
  capabilities on at least three platforms (Mac OS, Unix, and
  Windows). Despite the best efforts of Apple and Novell, there's no
  realistic way OpenDoc can be leveraged across all those platforms
  in the near future (Mac and Windows, perhaps; Unix is less likely,
  although admittedly a smaller market). Furthermore, Adobe and
  Macromedia have already sunk significant development resources
  into making their products work on other platforms. By integrating
  those technologies as they stand, Netscape can leverage off their
  experience.

* Technological dependency: Netscape is licensing Acrobat and
  Shockwave technology, not writing it from scratch. The more third-
  party code Netscape integrates, the more control they surrender in
  regard to schedule, delivery, and the techniques used to develop
  the components. If Macromedia and Adobe decide not to go with
  OpenDoc - and there's nothing to suggest they would - Netscape
  can't do anything about it. Similarly, if Macromedia decides
  Shockwave must have OLE, then Netscape will be obliged to install
  OLE; if Acrobat decides ATM is necessary, then Netscape will be
  obliged to install ATM.

  If you think this sounds suspiciously like "the road to
  bloatware," you're right.


**So Where Might OpenDoc Fit In?** OpenDoc proponents shouldn't
  despair: a lot of the idea behind OpenDoc is to let developers be
  fast on their feet, creating small, reusable, wildly useful
  components that do one or two things _really_ well. This
  development approach can run circles around bloatware
  applications, especially those that have significant dependencies
  on outside companies. And Netscape so far has shown no inclination
  to put all its eggs in one basket. Given the right pitch, it's a
  good bet Netscape could be persuaded to put OpenDoc hooks into its
  applications. You have a better way to handle FTP? Great - plug it
  in. You have a better bookmark manager? Great - plug it in. You're
  a small, efficient startup company that's made an OpenDoc
  component that plays Director movies? Great - plug it in. It's in
  Netscape's interest to keep their browser as flexible as possible
  so they don't get blindsided by savvy, platform-specific products
  - like Cyberdog - that might beat them at their own game. (It
  remains to be seen to what, if any, extent Cyberdog will be cross-
  platform thanks to its OpenDoc heritage.)


**Before the Fat Lady Sings** -- Predicting the future of a major
  new technology is always difficult, but in the past, the industry
  has proven tenaciously conservative, particularly on the Windows
  side of the fence. That conservatism, combined with the realities
  of today's fast-paced world of software development, may prove
  dangerous for OpenDoc's acceptance. We'd hate to see OpenDoc fail,
  but these deals between Netscape and Adobe and Macromedia may
  foreshadow the difficulty of the task OpenDoc faces.


More Mac Web Sites
------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  I don't want to continually list Web sites that contain Macintosh
  information, since for the most part, they're all linked on the
  Web itself. We'll make this the last time for a while...


**Well Connected Mac Moving** -- Elliotte Harold
  <elharo@shock.njit.edu> informs us that his Well Connected Mac
  site is moving to:

http://www.macfaq.com/

  The old URL will server as a mirror for a while, but will
  eventually disappear.

  Elliotte said the move was prompted in part by the fact that the
  old URL was almost impossible to remember and hard to type
  properly. He also commented that he was a bit concerned about the
  trademark implications of the "Mac FAQ" name, and getting the
  domain name for the Well Connected Mac site reduced those
  concerns.

  However, the main impetus for moving the site and getting a new
  name is that a group called c|net, the Computer Network, has
  licensed the Well Connected Mac, so they will help support
  Elliotte financially. Elliotte can use that money to spend more
  time and money improving the Well Connected Mac site.

http://www.cnet.com/

  I think it's great to see someone provide an excellent service to
  the Macintosh community for free, and to reap some financial
  rewards for all that hard work. But then again, I'm biased about
  that sort of thing.


**Australian MacCyberCentre Appears** -- Although it's still under
  construction, you might want to check out a useful new site at:

http://www.ozemail.com.au/~pkortge/mac/mum.html

  The site is aimed at Macintosh users in Australia, and it has
  sections on user groups and Macintosh magazines and the like with
  not only Australian entries, but also entries from the U.S., U.K.,
  Japan, and so on. It may not always be obvious, but it's good to
  remember that the Internet is international, and so is the
  Macintosh.


**Robert Lentz's Welcome to Macintosh site** was mentioned by a
  couple of readers as having excellent technical information along
  with the more-standard information that you can find elsewhere.
  The most obvious feature to note is Robert's "What's New" section,
  where he lists important software releases and events. If kept up
  to date, such a feature could be handy for those overwhelmed by
  the massive amount of new software that appears every day for the
  Macintosh.

http://www.astro.nwu.edu/lentz/mac/home-mac.html


FullWrite, Part II of II
------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  This review continues from last week's issue, TidBITS-284_. Last
  week I looked at how a high school student (my youngest sister)
  and how a graduate student (my other sister) might use FullWrite.
  This week I wrap up the review by looking at how my Mom and myself
  might use FullWrite.


**Home User** -- I'd like my Mom to use a Mac, but my parents use
  Windows machines because my Dad uses Windows at his job. If Mom
  were to get a Mac and use FullWrite, she'd use it for desktop
  publishing, editing jobs, and for creating signs and information
  sheets relating to the upcoming exhibit of her paper collages.

  Mom would probably start with the Base Styles dialog box, where
  she would set the font, size, space before a paragraph, indents,
  and tabs for the default document style and other common document
  elements, such as headers. When she set tabs for the default
  document style, she could take advantage of a nice feature - say
  she set a tab stop at .66 inches and wanted the stop to repeat
  every .66 inches after that. She could set the stop to "Repeat
  Every" .66 inches.

  After setting the default indents and tab stops, if Mom needed to
  change them for a particular paragraph, she'd insert a Paragraph
  Ruler and change the indents or tabs on that Ruler. The new
  settings would apply to all text until they ran into a different
  Paragraph Ruler. If Mom selected a block of text before inserting
  a new Paragraph Ruler, FullWrite would insert two Rulers: one at
  the beginning for Mom to adjust, and one at the end so the
  original formatting stays applied to text after the selection.
  Paragraph Rulers can be copied, pasted, and deleted.

  In addition to the simpler default styles set in the Base Styles
  dialog box, Mom will want to use the Edit Custom Style dialog box
  to define custom styles for headings, quotes, and other special
  elements. She'll manage fine, although the box  needs to be
  simplified. There are no quick ways to create styles using quirky
  keyboard shortcuts or clicking techniques. On the plus side, it's
  easy to delete a batch of styles for a document.

  If you change the tabs or indents in a custom style, the changes
  override formats dictated by the default document style or by a
  Paragraph Ruler. This makes sense, but because FullWrite shows no
  visual cue as to what style a paragraph is in, users may become
  confused when text beneath a particular Ruler ignores the Ruler's
  settings. By a visual cue, I mean a symbol or word might show left
  of a custom-styled paragraph in Icon Bar View, or the style name
  might appear somewhere onscreen when the styled paragraph is
  selected. To verify that a style is applied to a paragraph, you
  must click in the paragraph and look at the Style menu.

  If Mom gets more involved with the styles she may become
  frustrated - there's no hierarchical styling where you can set
  things up so that - for example - changing the font in one "base"
  style changes the font in a series of styles based on that style.
  She may miss options for controlling widows and orphans and miss
  formats that make one paragraph always stay on the same page as
  the next one or that make the text in a particular paragraph
  always stay together on one page. She may also wish she could set
  a border as part of a style.

  Mom is likely to use columns. Snaking columns must be of the same
  width, but the controls for their width, separating space, and
  position on the page are easy. Thumbnail-like objects (called
  proxies) in the Chapter Layout dialog box make it easy to see what
  you're doing. You also get several options for setting column
  rules (vertical lines that separate columns) though they do not
  show well in the proxies and only show in the One- and Two-Page
  Views. The rules can be quickly changed in the One- or Two-Page
  View by double clicking them to display a box of options. The
  rules come in 16 flavors (2 single and 14 double).

  The table controls are easy to use and quick to respond, and
  she'll be pleased that scrolling past a table goes quickly. You
  can stack separate tables one on top of the other to create
  complex tables with different numbers of cells in different rows.
  Looking more deeply at the table feature set, I'd like to see
  features added. There's no quick way to select an entire column or
  entire table, and a row cannot be taller than a page. Applying
  borders to tables is a-learn-as-you-go process, and there are no
  shortcuts for applying typical bordering patterns.

  Sidebars, documents within a document that can be positioned at
  will on a page, will come in handy for Mom's more complex layouts.
  Sidebars help with placing graphics such that text wraps around
  them (including some wrap-to-shape capabilities, not just wrapping
  to the rectangular size of the note), setting different numbers of
  columns within the same chapter, and placing topic headings or
  comments in a side margin. You can position sidebars relative to
  the text they go with or in a fixed position on the page
  containing the text they go with. You can reposition sidebars
  through a dialog box or by dragging them. Sidebars are not
  FullWrite's easiest feature, nor are they the hardest. From a
  Microsoft Word perspective, though, they are frames done right.

  The kerning function is surprisingly capable. The feature enables
  you to kern individual letter pairs from the keyboard in
  increments of .05 em (an em is the length of an em-dash, the
  longer dash you get by pressing Shift-Option-Hyphen in most
  fonts). You can get even more precise kerning in the Kern dialog
  box (your printer may not print in as fine increments as FullWrite
  can kern). You can use the Replace function to kern all letter
  pairs in a document alike.

  Mom would appreciate Change Bar View, which shows gray or black
  change bars and (optionally) displays changed text in a variety of
  formats. You can accumulate changes forever or start them fresh at
  any time. You can also start fresh every time you save, which
  means that you always know what has changed since the last save,
  in case you want to revert to the last saved version of the
  document.

  FullWrite has a number of printing features that Mom would
  appreciate. FullWrite helps you print two-sided documents - it
  prints the odd pages and an instruction sheet for how to re-insert
  the paper and print the even pages. The directions were wrong for
  my LaserWriter Select 360, or - more charitably - they were
  ambiguous. Another feature helps you print two-up booklets with
  the pages correctly reordered so you can fold them in half and
  create a two-sided booklet. I expect it works nicely once you play
  with it; I failed on my first attempt. Other printing features
  print change bars, two-up, with collation, in reverse order,
  registration marks, and more. You can use any MacPaint, PICT, or
  EPS graphic (or raw PostScript code) as a watermark, and FullWrite
  comes with several watermark graphics.

  FullWrite would be a poor choice for someone intending to do much
  indexing or print merging - both features are present, but they
  are extremely basic. With only a few exceptions (such as the
  kerning), FullWrite is also a poor choice for someone who likes to
  have lots of design options _and_ is picky about implementing them
  just so.


**Professional Writer** -- Now that I've covered features Mom
  might care most about, I'm going to talk about myself. My work
  ultimately ends up dropped into PageMaker or converted into setext
  or HTML for online consumption, so I don't much care about layout
  or printing features.

  I'm concerned about Word 6. I know how to use Word 5 very well,
  but I've tried Word 6, and I don't much like it. If you are
  currently looking to switch from Word, and you know Word fairly
  well, you'll find it much easier to switch from Word to FullWrite
  than to switch from Word to Nisus Writer. (I haven't spent much
  time with WordPerfect or other word processors.)

  FullWrite doesn't have a Word converter, and it's a shame because
  many writers must submit their work in Word format. FullWrite does
  support XTND; unfortunately, it doesn't do the trick. Akimbo is
  aware of this problem and may have a solution in the future.

  Writers will appreciate FullWrite's Get Info command, which lists
  tidbits about a document including: number of sessions, time
  overall and time for current session, characters, words, and
  readability. On my Duo, it took three seconds to pull up Get Info
  statistics on a fifteen page document, five seconds for a thirty
  page document.

  The Find feature helpfully gives you three choices for what
  happens when a search string is found: the string can be
  highlighted, or the insertion point can be positioned directly
  before or after the string. The Find feature uses intelligent
  keyboard shortcuts and can search and replace based on font, size,
  style, and so on, but does not feature the more sophisticated GREP
  (global regular expression parser) searches present in Nisus
  Writer. The simple wildcard feature gives you the ability to
  search on a single wildcard character or to search on a wildcard
  group. If you search on a group, you can "replace with found" to a
  certain extent. For example, if I search for any instance of
  "TidBITS" followed by a number, I can replace each instance with
  "TidBITS Magazine" and then that same "found" number. You cannot
  search across multiple documents simultaneously.

  FullWrite supports some Apple events, but does not include an
  AppleScript dictionary. Also, FullWrite has no built-in macro
  facilities, making it unrealistic to implement a find and replace
  macro that does a series of searches for common errors in a
  document.

  I'm addicted to the functionality of Word's outliner. FullWrite
  offers that same basic functionality, and for that I give it a
  hearty thumbs-up. I could happily use FullWrite's outliner, though
  I would first review the outline instructions in the manual, make
  a cheat sheet, and post it near my Macintosh until the techniques
  became second nature. Unfortunately, the manual incorrectly
  documents several of the menu commands. Outline items can be
  numbered using a variety of common outline styles (Harvard,
  Chicago Manual of Style, etc.). I encourage Akimbo to add outline
  levels to the Base Styles dialog box, such that different styles
  can be set and automatically applied to headings created in a
  FullWrite outline.

  You can have FullWrite pull a table of contents from outline
  entries or from special contents notes.

  FullWrite's glossaries lets you store commonly typed blocks of
  text (such as your address) and then quickly insert them. You can
  set FullWrite to insert a glossary entry in response to your
  typing a code. For example, you could set FullWrite to type:
  "World Wide Web" in response to your typing "www". A glossary can
  be used to make FullWrite correct typographical errors, and
  FullWrite comes with a glossary of common errors.

  FullWrite's Variable feature enables you to insert pre-defined
  variables such as the date or page number (or end-of document page
  number or end-of-chapter page number), or you can make your own
  variables, such as a price that might change.


**Wrap-Up** -- FullWrite users should plan to read the short
  manual. Why? Because you need to get oriented to FullWrite in
  order to use it efficiently. This holds true for most word
  processors, but I've received a number of comments from people who
  didn't like the FullWrite demo, and - in most cases - they started
  on the wrong foot and made incorrect assumptions about how the
  program works.

  FullWrite lists for $295, though academic/non-profit pricing is at
  $99 and competitive upgrades from other word processors cost $120.
  Akimbo is committed to FullWrite, and plans to release a PowerPC-
  native version soon. Akimbo is also hard at work on version 3.0,
  and they face the difficult task of improving the program without
  overloading it. FullWrite doesn't offer every possible feature,
  and I don't think it should. All word processors cannot be all
  things to all people, and we need programs like FullWrite so that
  there will be lots of choices. If FullWrite sounds like your cup
  of tea, I urge you to purchase it, read the manual, and use it as
  it was intended - as a mid-level word processor for Macintosh
  users.

  FullWrite-related documents and software, as well as a demo are
  available at:

ftp://ftp.std.com/vendors/Akimbo/
gopher://gopher.std.com/11/vendors/akimbo

  For information on Math Type and Cambridge Scientific's
  engineering and chemistry programs (mentioned in Part I of this
  review), check out:

http://www.mathtype.com/mathtype/
http://www.camsci.com/normalhome.html

    Akimbo Systems -- 800/684-9888 -- 617/776-5500
      510/843-6888 (international sales) -- 617/776-5512 (fax)
      <fullwrite@akimbo.com>
    Cambridge Scientific Computing -- 617/491-2200
      <info@camsci.com>
    Design Science -- 800/827-0685 -- 310/433-0685
      310/433-6969 (fax) -- <do629@applelink.apple.com>
    Niles and Associates -- 510/649-8176 -- <nilesinc@well.sf.ca.us>


Reviews/10-Jul-95
-----------------

* InfoWorld -- 26-Jun-95, Vol. 17, #26
    Power 100 -- pg. 1
    Live Picture 2.0 -- pg. 76

* InfoWorld -- 03-Jul-95, Vol. 17, #27
    ClarisWorks 4.0 -- pg. 74


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