Sewall@UCONNVM.BITNET (Murph Sewall) (07/27/90)
VAPORWARE Murphy Sewall From the August 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 "Windows puts a stake in the heart of OS/2. I don't see OS/2 going anywhere." - Sun Microsystems VP Bill Joy MS-DOS 5.0 Beta testers say DOS 5.0, intended for release this fall, is smaller, faster, and has an array of nifty new utilities. The new version frees memory on 286 and 386 machines with at least 64K of extended memory by relocating part of the operating system above the conventional 640K address space. On a 1 Mbyte machine, DOS 5.0 leaves as much as 630K for applications while DOS 4.01 on the same computer allows less than 584K. Virtual Memory windows in Windows 3.0 will each gain about 40K according to Microsoft product manager Mark Chesnut. Other features include a full screen editor, replacement of GW Basic with Microsoft's Quick Basic, context sensitive on-line help, and an "unformat" command which allows users to recover hard disk data in cases of an inadvertent format command. The final version also may include memory management features that permit loading memory resident software and network drivers in memory above the DOS address space. - PC Week 2 July Slimmed Down OS/2 IBM showed a five to ten percent faster version of OS/2 which takes less than 2 Mbytes of RAM at June's PC Expo. Big Blue is shipping beta versions of OS/2 1.2 to independent software vendors but has declined to comment on a possible commercial release date. - PC Week and InfoWorld 25 June Windows 3.1? Bill Gates told developers at July's OS/2 LAN Manager conferene that Windows will be upgraded in "less than a year." The new version will include True Type scalable-font technology as well as size and performance enhancements. - InfoWorld 16 July Multiuser OS/2 Citrix Systems is developing a multiuser version of OS/2 that could challenge low-end Unix systems by offering small businesses comparable capabilities for about one-tenth the price. Citrix has licensed OS/2 source code from Microsoft and hopes to offer compatibility with existing character-based OS/2 applications and eventually Presentation Manager applications. IBM has said that it intends to provide multiuser capabilities in OS/2 but has not said how or when. Citrix expects to ship late this year or early in the first quarter of 1991. - InfoWorld 2 July OS/2 NT Microsoft insiders are predicting a multiprocessing version of OS/2 completely rewritten in C by the first quarter of 1992. This operating system is tentatively known as OS/2 NT (for "New Technology"). Meanwhile, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates has acknowledged that the 32-bit OS/2 2.0 may not be ready until next summer. Mr. Gates says, the long awaited operating system will ship "certainly in the next six to 12 months. It's possible we won't make the (1990) target date." - InfoWorld 2 and 16 July Nine Times the Desktop. Inner Media is planning to ship an OS/2 Presentation Manager desktop expansion utility this month named "WideAngle." WideAngle allows user to scroll horizontally across up to nine replications of the standard Windows 3.0 display. WideAngle requires only 60K of RAM and will be priced at $129. - PC Week 9 July Much Faster Laser Printers. Adobe Systems head, John Warnock, says that within one year his firm will ship a new printer controller based on the MIPS R3000 RISC chip. The new controller and new version of PostScript will run three to seven times as fast as current Motorola 68020 models yet cost about the same. - MacWorld July HP IIP meets HP III. Hewlett-Packard plans to announce the LaserJet IIID this month. The new eight page per minute printer combines the dual-sided printing capability of the model IID with the graphics quality of the LaserJet III. The new printer will retail for a few hundred dollars less than the $3,595 price of the current LaserJet IID. Next spring, there also will be a four page per minute meld of the LaserJets IIP and III (the LaserJet IIIP, naturally). - InfoWorld 18 June and PC Week 25 June More Powerful RS/6000s. Industry research analyst Brian Jeffrey of International Technology Group predicts that IBM will effectively double the performance of its RISC workstation line next year. A family of more powerful systems as well as advanced low-cost models are planned to debut next Spring. The new models will drop the chip count from nine to five and the price to as low as $4,000 for a 20 MIP diskless workstation. - PC Week 25 June Higher PS/2 Display Resolution. Future PS/2's will support a new 1,024 by 768 display standard called XGA which should be as commonplace in two years as VGA is today. - PC Week 9 July Unspun. Apple has announced that it's Claris software subsidiary will not be spun off as a separate company after all. The change means that Claris will not develop for Windows 3.0 and Presentation Manager as aggressively as it might have done. Claris will develop software for Windows and other platforms only insofar as it helps link Macintoshes to other environments. - PC Week 2 July and InfoWorld 2 and 9 July Quicktime. Apple is formalizing a cross-platform set of multimedia standards called Quicktime and has announced plans to incorporate better sound features, real-time image data compression and television playable output into future modular Macintoshes. According to Apple vice president Don Casey, the planned technology will reduce the memory size required for an image by up to 90 percent. Apple also plans to selectively license the technology for inclusion in future operating systems. - InfoWorld 25 June Legal Clones of Mac ROM Chips. Asian developers have finally succeeded in reverse engineering legitimate clones for Macintosh ROMs. Rumor has it that Apple may participate in a licensing agreement to mass market Mac Plus level computers of Far Eastern manufacture. - PC Week 9 July Better Amiga to Macintosh Compatibility. ReadySoft has announced A-MAX II and A-MAX II Plus for the Amiga. The A-MAX II is a software update of the existing A-MAX. The new software supports MAC digitized sound, MAC formatted partitions on Amiga hard drives, and access to MAC SCSI peripherals (scanners, hard drives, and printers) through an Amiga SCSI port. A-MAX II Plus uses the new software and also offers new hardware. The board contains two MAC compatible serial ports and an AppleTalk-compatible port. With the A-MAX II Plus, compatibility with MAC modems and printers is improved, and the Amiga can run MIDI and networking software permitting Amigas to join LANs along with (or in place of) Macintoshes. Prices have not been announced (A-MAX has a list price of $200). The A-MAX II should be available in a few weeks, and the II Plus before Christmas. - found in my electronic mailbox Apple II Tidbits. Apple has scheduled a press conference for this month, probably to announce HyperCard IIgs which was shown, more or less publicly, at the KansasFest developers conference. Apple insiders have been using an HFS (Macintosh file format) FST (File System Translator) on the IIgs for more than a year. Now that it's starting to be shown to a few outsiders, maybe it will included with the anticipated new operating System 6.0. The Apple IIgs will disappear from German price lists in September, and there's a report that European sales personnel were unofficially referring to the Macintosh IIgs even before John Sculley's address at April's AppleVision. - found in my electronic mailbox Secretive Spinoff. Former Apple superstar programmers Bill Atkinson, Andy Hertzfeld, and Marc Porat aren't saying what their new spinoff firm, General Magic Inc., plans to make except that it will bear the trademark "Personal Intelligent Communicator." Apple, is General Magic's largest shareholder, and retains a license to make and market the resulting technologies. Apple spun off General Magic because whatever the Personal Intelligent Communicator is, it doesn't fit Apple's mainstream business. - Wall Street Journal 12 July and InfoWorld 16 July Luggable CRT Quality Color. Dolch Computer Systems has announced 20 pound 80386 and i486 computers with 10-inch active matrix color displays. Due for delivery this fall, the 25 MHz 80386 model will retail for $7,995 and the 25 MHz i486 model will be $12,995. The active matrix color display alone has a price tag of $3,995. - PC Week 18 June Batteries Not Included. Airis Computer's $1,899 Model VH-286 6.5 pound laptop which will begin shipping in September is most noticeable for its ability to run more than 12 hours on 10 standard alkaline C-cells as well as six to eight hours off a rechargeable Nicad battery pack. The VH-286 price includes 2 Mbytes of RAM, a 20 Mbyte hard drive with 256K hardware disk cache, a 2,400 baud internal modem, and 11 inch diagonal VGA display. Traveling Software's Laplink is bundled with the VH-286, and a 1.44 Mbyte 3.5 inch floppy is available only as an optional external unit. Later this fall, AST will offer a seven pound 386SX laptop in a 9 by 12 inch form factor that also runs on alkaline batteries. The AST machine will incorporate a 1.44 Mbyte floppy, a 40 Mbyte hard drive, 2 Mbytes of RAM and a VGA display along with an attachable trackball pointing device. - PC Week 25 June and InfoWorld 2 July Shirtpocket Computer. Intel is designing an 80386-based hand held computer that measures only 2 by 3 by 1 inch. The pocket computer scheduled for release next year will support VGA. - PC Week 9 July Handwriting on the Computer. IBM researchers have developed handwriting recognition techniques that recognize discretely written characters which are touching or even overlapping. The technique does not yet recognize cursive script. Grid and Sony already have machines with handwritten input, and Go and Aegis plan to introduce models this fall. Rumor has it that, this fall, Apple will offer a stylus input option as well. The handwriting recognition software will be shipped by Communication Intelligence Corporation. Perhaps Apple's handwriting reader will be bundled with the new Mac laptop being made by Toshiba? - InfoWorld 25 June and 2 July Character Recognition Utility. Ocron has begun marketing its optical character recognition (OCR) engine to both software and hardware vendors as a kernel that could be built into other systems. An OCR utility within a word processing program could allow it to translate a scanned or FAX image into a file that could be edited. Perhaps Apple will adopt the Ocron kernel -- Apple's own flatbed scanner was spotted recently attached to a IIgs (resolution up to 300 dots per inch), but the IIgs software used with it is described as very buggy. Maybe InWord, primarily designed for hand-held scanners (see below), would work better? - InfoWorld 2 July and a whisper to my electronic mailbox Character Recongition Software for Apple II's. This September, WestCode Software of San Diego will ship InWords, Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software for the Apple IIe and Apple IIgs. The software developed by Alan Bird of Better Bye and Timeout fame is designed primarily for use with hand-held scanners. A price has not been announced, but a company source indicated a figure in the vicinity of $120 is probable. - posted to America OnLine 11 July Many Mbytes in a Small Package. Quantum Corporation has announced 330 Mbyte and 425 Mbyte hard drives built into a 3.5 inch disk drive form factor. The SCSI versions of the Prodrive 330 ($1,350) and Prodrive 425 ($1,595) will be sampled in August with volume production scheduled for November. Evaluation units of AT-bus versions will become available in the fourth quarter. - InfoWorld 2 July Fast Magneto-Optical Drive. Early next year, Ocean Microsystems expects to ship an optical-magneto cartridge drive which claims access speeds comparable to those of most IBM PS/2 hard drives. The Vista 130 will store 128 Mbytes per cartridge and has an average access time of 28 milliseconds and a data transfer rate of 512K per second. The drive will be priced at about $3,000 and cartridges will retail for between $120 and $130 each. - InfoWorld 16 June Massive Storage. The current Compaq Systempro supports up to eight internal and 16 external synchronized 210 Mbyte drives for a total capacity of 4.28 gigabytes. Now, Compaq senior vice president Gary Stimac says the company will extend its storage architecture to support a nearly tenfold increase in capacity. Expect the Systempro to support up to 40 gigabytes of storage by the end of this year, or early next year. - InfoWorld 9 July What Happened to Norton Utilities 5.0 When Symantec acquired Norton earlier this year, the new owners decided they didn't like the proposed packaging for the next release of Norton Utilities. Version 5.0's appearance has been briefly delayed while the box is being made prettier. Norton for the Mac may not appear at all. Apparently, Symantec plans to merge the best features of Norton's features into a new release of their SUM Macintosh utilities. - InfoWorld 2 July Integrated Desk Set. Zedcor is planning to release a $399.95 (specially reduced from $400) set of seven integrated programs for the Macintosh tentatively called "Desk." The package includes Zedcor's 32-bit color paint and draw programs as well as word processing, spreadsheet, charting, communications, database, and calendaring functions. - MacWorld July Ventura for Windows and OS/2. A Windows 3.0 version of Ventura Publisher was shown at June's PC Expo. The program has been rewritten to be a true Windows product and is expected to ship early in the third quarter. An OS/2 version will ship later in the third quarter. - InfoWorld 25 June Adobe Type Manager for Windows. Adobe intends to ship their $99 rasterizing utility, Adobe Type Manger, for Windows in September. - InfoWorld 25 June PM SAS. An OS/2 Presentation Manager version of SAS multivariate statistical applications has been sent to beta testers at over 200 sites. Users of the OS/2 product will be able to take advantage of OS/2's multitasking, dynamic data exchange, and graphic user interface. The OS/2 Extended Edition Database Manager also is supported in the program which is due for a fall debut. - InfoWorld 25 June R:base Update in the Works. Microrim has sent it's recently released R:base 3.0 back to the lab to improve its speed and reduce its RAM demand. Version 3.1 should be ready by late summer. According to product manager Scott Fallon, version 3.1 will reduce RAM demand from 520K bytes to fewer than 480K and also have faster performance and an improved user interface. The new version will retail for $795; upgrades will be free to current users of version 3.0. - PC Week and InfoWorld 25 June Not Bug Free. dBase IV version 1.1 (the "bug fix") has bugs of its own. Look for yet another version by the Ashton-Tate developers' conference in September. - InfoWorld 25 June /s Murph <Sewall%UConnVM.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.Edu> [Internet] or ...{psuvax1 or mcvax}!uconnvm.bitnet!sewall [UUCP] + Standard disclaimer applies ("The opinions expressed are my own" etc.)