Sewall@UCONNVM.BITNET (Murph Sewall) (10/29/90)
VAPORWARE Murphy Sewall From the November 1990 APPLE PULP H.U.G.E. Apple Club (E. Hartford) News Letter $15/year U.S. - $18/year Canadian P.O. Box 18027 East Hartford, CT 06118 Call the "Bit Bucket" (203) 569-8739 Permission granted to copy with the above citation "We will learn to walk and chew gum" - Michael Spindler, chief operating officer, Apple Computer. The Latest Word. A little known research and development company has announced a major breakthrough in speech recognition software. Emerson & Stern's "Soliloquy" uses a method based on the way the human vocal tract produces spoken words. With this new approach, Soliloquy can recognize voices of children and people with accents or colds. The method is CPU and RAM intensive, and Emerson & Stern recommend the minimum processor should be a 68040 running at 25 MHz. The demonstration code is in the form of C routines written for the Macintosh. On a Macintosh IIci the software has a vocabulary of about 200 words. Experts say that a vocabulary of 1,000 words would be sufficient for 95 percent of most people's everyday conversation and 2,000 words would be adequate for 99 percent of ordinary conversation. Soliloquy offers a real possibility of conversing naturally with computers within a few years. - PC Week 1 October 128 Mbyte 3.5 inch Drive. Most Inc., a subsidiary of Nakamichi Peripherals, will market a $2,500 magnito-optical disk drive sometime during the Winter. The rewritable 3.5 inch media is expected to sell for about $128. The drive's average seek time is 35 milliseconds and average data access time is 47 milliseconds. The drive will be fully compatible with the emerging ANSI standard and future versions are planed with a capacity of up to 512 Mbytes. - InfoWorld 24 September True "Notebook" Computing. NCR will bring a four pound pen-based notebook PC to Fall Comdex for private showings. The pen-based system promises to automate such paper intensive tasks as field data collection and inventory management. NCR's active digitizer is said to be more "paperlike" than the glass surface used by the Grid pen-based system. If NCR decides to put their "Handwriter" into production, it should be shipping by Spring Comdex. - PC Week 8 October Flash Cards. Volume quantities of Intel's one and four Mbyte non-volatile Flash Memory IC cards should be shipping by Christmas. The cards can revise and store applications and sequential files. At present, the cards cannot rewrite data at the file level (one file per card; revising requires rewriting the entire file). The cards should be a boon to laptop users; no battery backup is required for code retention. - InfoWorld 8 October Apple II Compatibility. The "no compromises" Apple II card for the Macintosh promised by John Sculley appears to represent a substantial compromise. The under $200 NuBus board has been announced as an Apple //e card which will not support recent Apple IIgs applications. The card isn't expected to ship until next March and will have a connector on the back for a 5.25 inch disk drive. - PC Week 1 October 50 MHz i486. Intel expects volume production of the 50 MHz version of the i486 CPU sometime in the second quarter of 1991. The speedy processor will be offered in a highly integrated module that will include an internal 256K static RAM cache with a cache controller. Performance is expected to exceed that of the 33 MHz version of the i486 by as much as 50 percent. Anticipated prices for most 50 MHz i486 systems are expected to be in the $8,000 range. - PC Week 1 October Don't PS/1 It! In a letter to corporate customers, IBM has indicated it will void the warranty on any PS/1 with a Token Ring board installed (IBM alleges the PS/1 is only a home computer). - InfoWorld 24 September and PC Week 8 October All 386 PS/2's. The 80286-based PS/2 Model 30 will soon be replaced by the Model 40SX with a 80386SX CPU. This model will continue to be distinguished by an AT (not Micro Channel) bus. - PC Week 24 September and InfoWorld 1 October New Windows. An upgrade to Microsoft Windows 3.0 may ship during the first half next year (recall that this product, first announced in 1984, helped to popularize the term "vaporware"). Windows 3.1 will feature True Type scalable fonts, but difficulty developing this technology have been reported. Version 3.1 will also have shell improvements, greater network support, and "richer imaging." Chairman Bill Gates predicts more than 1,500 applications developed for Window's graphic environment by next year. - PC Week 1 October and InfoWorld 8 October Macintosh System 7 Delayed Again (What Else is New?). The good news is that System has gone from alpha to beta. The bad news is that beta testing typically takes six months. Apple has announced another postponement of the product until "the first half of next year." It appears the product will miss it's originally planned shipping date (last summer) by about a year. - PC Week and InfoWorld 24 September Windows Under OS/2 OS/2 eventually will run Windows applications code without modification using a binary compatibility layer to map Window's into Presentation Manager. The extra layer of software will cause some loss of performance. OS/2 version 3 will be designed to run Windows applications directly from OS/2 without performance degradation (which raises the question - is PM necessary?). Microsoft chairman, Bill Gates, also says that the plan is to include both Adobe Type Manager and True Type in OS/2. Also in the works is "portable" OS/2 (also known as OS/2 "New Technology") which will be designed to port to multiple processors including Motorola 68000 and 88000 families (OS/2 on a Mac?). - InfoWorld 1 October DOS 5.0. The latest beta version of Microsoft's DOS 5.0 includes task switching similar to the capability provided by SoftLogic Solutions' Carrousel. Microsoft is expected to release DOS 5.0 by the middle of 1991. - PC Week 24 September Productive Pricing. Microsoft is said to be offering Project for Windows for $99 at Windows 3.0 seminars. However, at Engineering Productivity Seminars, Microsoft asks $199 for the same software. - PC Week 8 October Full UNIX System V, Release 4 Implementation. While the mainframes and minis are still waiting for AT&T's UNIX V.4, freshman at Virginia Tech are busy running this latest release on their UNIX system of choice -- the Amiga 3000! - InfoWorld 8 October Look Ma, No Windows. Microsoft Word 5.5 for MS-DOS will feature pull-down menus similar to the interface used in Word for Windows. The choices will be represented in text, not graphics. The upgrade will be announced this month and ship by the end of the year - PC Week 15 October Need Persuasion? Aldus will release it's $595 Persuasion 2.0 for Windows by the end of the year. It will be bundled with Adobe Type Manager. - PC Week 15 October Delivery Postponed. Oracle has previewed version 7.0 of their fully distributed, portable relational-database management system at the company's annual user conference but also pushed back release until next year. - PC Week 1 October SAS for NeXT. SAS Institute plans to port its entire line of decision support and data analysis applications to the new Motorola 68040-based NeXT system. SAS/Insight which is not yet available on the PC platform will be available on the NeXT workstation. SAS/Insight is a data analysis program which provides three dimensional charting tools and permits users to analyze data graphically. - PC Week 17 September SPARCs Are Flying. Opus Systems and CompuAdd both plan to announce new Sun SPARC compatible systems. Look for demonstrations at Comdex. - PC Week 15 October Poqet Clone. Toshiba will show a one-pound, palmtop PC code-named the PC Companion at Comdex. The computer bears a marked resemblance to the similar sized Poqet. - PC Week 1 October HyperActive. The new HyperCard 2.0 for the Macintosh may not be announced officially until mid-November, but user groups received copies of the disks during the first week of October. Maybe printing the documentation is taking an extra six weeks? - I have the disks but not the docs Bailouts (Forever Vaporware). Borland International will not develop any more versions of its Sprint word processor. Applications technical support manager Mark Williams says the firm will devote their resources to their core Paradox, Quattro, and language products. Banyan Systems is cancelling development of network server hardware and will focus attention on its VINES networking software. - PC Week 15 October -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (####) (#######) (#########) (#########) __&__ (#########) / \ (#########) |\/\/\/| /\ /\ /\ /\ | | (#########) | | | v \/ \---. .----/ \----. | (o)(o) (o)(o)(##) | | \_ / \ / c .---_) ,_c (##) | (o)(o) (o)(o) <__. .--\ (o)(o) /__. | |.___| /____, (##) c _) _c / \ () / | \__/ \ (#) | ,___| /____, ) \ > (c_) < /_____\ | | | / \ /----' /___\____/___\ /_____/ \ oooooo /____\ ooooo /| |\ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
taob@pnet91.cts.com (Brian Tao) (10/31/90)
> Apple II Compatibility. > The "no compromises" Apple II card for the Macintosh > promised by John Sculley appears to represent a substantial > compromise. The under $200 NuBus board has been announced > as an Apple //e card which will not support recent Apple > IIgs applications. The card isn't expected to ship until > next March and will have a connector on the back for a 5.25 > inch disk drive. - PC Week 1 October Well, that goes to show how much these PC Week folks know about the Apple II... the card is an Apple //e (actually //c) emulator! Have they assumed that the GS is functionally equivalent to the //e?!? This lack of GS advertising sure manifests itself in strange ways... BT \/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/ | UUCP: torag!pnet91!taob | / WARNING: \ | INET: taob@pnet91.cts.com | \ / |-------------------------------| / Sig is under \ | | \ construction / | "That's it, that's all..." | /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ | |
jh4o+@andrew.cmu.edu (Jeffrey T. Hutzelman) (11/01/90)
taob@pnet91.cts.com (Brian Tao) writes: >> Apple II Compatibility. >> The "no compromises" Apple II card for the Macintosh >> promised by John Sculley appears to represent a substantial >> compromise. The under $200 NuBus board has been announced ^^^^^ >> as an Apple //e card which will not support recent Apple >> IIgs applications. The card isn't expected to ship until >> next March and will have a connector on the back for a 5.25 >> inch disk drive. - PC Week 1 October > > Well, that goes to show how much these PC Week folks know about > the Apple II... the card is an Apple //e (actually //c) emulator! Have > they assumed that the GS is functionally equivalent to the //e?!? This > lack of GS advertising sure manifests itself in strange ways... > >BT Not only that, but it's not a NuBus card - it's a 68020-direct card. -------------------- Jeffrey Hutzelman America Online: JeffreyH11 Internet: jh4o+@andrew.cmu.edu BITNET: JHUTZ@DRYCAS >> Apple // Forever!!! <<