TidBITS#494/23-Aug-99
=====================

  Want to download commercial software for free, legally? In this
  issue, Matt Neuburg explores the curious case of obsolete and
  unsupported software, some of which (like the popular outliners
  MORE and Acta) you can have once again! Also this week, Adam
  relates his learning experience of trying to buy replacement cell
  phone and camcorder batteries from clueless Web sites. In the
  news, we cover the releases of Anarchie 3.6, GoClick 3.0.1, and
  eMerge 1.6.1.

Topics:
    MailBITS/23-Aug-99
    Long Day's Journey into Night of the Living Dead Software
    Finding the Power Online: Buying Batteries

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-494.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1999/TidBITS#494_23-Aug-99.etx>

Copyright 1999 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/23-Aug-99
------------------

**Stairways Releases Anarchie 3.6** -- Stairways Shareware has
  released Anarchie 3.6, dropping "Pro" from the name and improving
  performance by up to 30 percent over version 3.5. (See "Anarchie
  (Pro) Continues to Rule" in TidBITS-448_ for a review of Anarchie
  Pro 3.0 and "Anarchie Pro 3.5 Adds Mac OS 8.5 Features" in
  TidBITS-458_.) Anarchie 3.6's improved performance comes from a
  totally new transfer engine rewritten to the forthcoming Carbon
  API (see "Mac OS X or Mac OS Next?" in TidBITS-483_). New features
  include the capability to test Sherlock plug-ins, support for
  downloading from password-protected Web sites, and the capability
  to resume more failed FTP and Web transfers. At minimum, Anarchie
  requires System 7 and MacTCP 1.1, with System 7.5.5 and Open
  Transport 1.2 or later recommended. Stairways recommends all
  Anarchie Pro 3.0 and 3.5 users upgrade; the upgrade is free and
  Anarchie 3.6 uses the same serial numbers as 3.0 and 3.5. For new
  purchasers, Anarchie 3.6 is $35 shareware and is a 1.4 MB
  download. [ACE]

<http://www.stairways.com/anarchie/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05110>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05198>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05415>
<ftp://ftp.download.com/pub/mac/internet/Anarchie.sit.hqx>


**GoClick Simplifies Making Web Pages** -- Terry Morse Software
  has released GoClick, a new product that takes Myrmidon's "print
  any document to make it a Web page" capability (see various
  articles about Myrmidon in TidBITS) and extends it with support
  for Cascading Style Sheets, Adobe GoLive's GRID format and
  floating boxes, and preservation of overlapping text and graphics.
  In addition, GoClick offers custom page sizes, custom format
  control down to the HTML tag level, and the capability to create
  Web pages that look like Adobe Acrobat documents but don't require
  a plug-in or helper application. GoClick runs on any Mac with
  System 7.5 or later and is compatible with any application that
  has a Print command. A free 30-day demo is available as a 1.2 MB
  download. GoClick costs $159, with discounted prices available to
  educational users ($79), registered users of Myrmidon ($49), and
  Adobe GoLive users ($79). [ACE]

<http://www.terrymorse.com/products/goclick/gcinfo.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbtxt=Myrmidon>


**eMerge 1.6.1 Expands Direct Email Options** -- Galleon Software
  has released an update to eMerge, adding new filtering and error-
  checking features to its software for sending bulk personalized
  email messages (see "Legitimate Bulk Email eMerges" in
  TidBITS-465_). eMerge 1.6.1 now offers improved control
  over importing and exporting address lists, more options
  for managing lists (such as checking for correct email address
  syntax), and improves several drag & drop operations. The update
  is free to registered users, and is available as an 1.2 MB
  download. New users can purchase a full version of eMerge 1.6.1
  online for $100. [JLC]

<http://www.galleon.com/emerge/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05254>


Long Day's Journey into Night of the Living Dead Software
---------------------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  Where does old software go when it dies? In one respect, nowhere,
  because it doesn't die. Unlike a motorcycle, it has no parts to
  wear or rust. Unlike a book, the pages don't yellow, fade, or
  tear. Unless the laws of physics change, software just keeps
  working - forever.

  Unfortunately, with software, the laws of physics _can_ change.
  First, there's the physical computer on which it runs; you might
  buy a different computer. Second, there's the operating system;
  you might install a different version. Either way, you've changed
  the laws of physics in your software's universe.

  In both cases, "different" will probably mean "newer." Software
  comes clearly marked with limitations to backward compatibility
  ("requires System 7.1 or better and at least a 68020 processor"),
  but there are pitfalls with forward compatibility as well. Newer
  machines and systems are supposed to solve this problem by
  maintaining their own backward compatibility, but as evolution
  progresses, universal backward compatibility is an impossibly tall
  order; some old software is bound to break.

  The trouble is that all software makes assumptions about its
  environment, some of them virtually subconscious. Those
  assumptions may not remain true forever. You can now have a hard
  disk bigger than was once ever dreamed possible; on such a disk,
  old software may report that it can't save files. The workaround:
  partition the disk. But sometimes there's no workaround. Several
  years ago, a few people began to report that UserLand Frontier
  wouldn't work on the new Power Mac 9600 they'd just bought. It
  turned out that Frontier, as it starts up, does some timing
  adjustments so that it knows how quickly to zoom windows. To make
  these adjustments, it measures the computer's speed by counting
  while watching the clock. This counting was being done in a two-
  byte integer; but a Power Mac 9600 was so fast that this wasn't
  enough bytes! The authors of Frontier hadn't imagined a computer
  would ever be fast enough to make two bytes insufficient.

  In the case of Frontier, the problem was solved immediately,
  because the program was actively supported. But if no developers
  are there to revise it, software can choke on the changes in its
  universe. It's like a silent movie star who can't make the
  transition to talkies.


**Nothing to Fear but Fear Itself** -- At this point, let me
  complicate the matter by drawing some important distinctions.

  I receive many messages from people who worry that their old
  software will die; after all, things in the real world do stop
  working, so people expect their software will too. My first advice
  is always to stop worrying. Has the software stopped working? No.
  Are you thinking of doing something to your computer that might
  make it stop working? No. So don't worry.

  Also, people see by the advance in version numbers that lots of
  software _is_ actively supported (Word 4, Word 5.1, Word 6, Word
  98), whereas their old software just sits there (SuperPaint 3.5,
  SuperPaint 3.5, SuperPaint 3.5), so it starts to feel dead even
  though it's working fine. Such reasoning is backwards; the
  constant advance of software versions is often bad! I wrote about
  this years ago, in "The New Technologies Treadmill" in
  TidBITS-207_. A new version of a program isn't better
  because it has more features, but because it adds features
  that you need. That's why many users are still happily
  using Word 5.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=02293>

  Another problem on which I often get letters is the acquisition of
  software. Software that works does users no good if they can't
  obtain it at all, because the company no longer exists or refuses
  to sell you a copy. This is a serious problem, one with which I'm
  intimately acquainted, since programs I recommend in TidBITS have
  a bad habit of devolving into this kind of unavailability.
  WebArranger, MORE, IN Control, and Spreadsheet 2000 are examples.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=01149>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=02381>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=01826>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=02180>

  Such situations have curious legal, moral, and practical
  ramifications. I detest software piracy, but if a company stops
  selling its software, then users are put in a very strange
  position. When I recommend IN Control, IN Control is no longer
  sold, and I've got a copy, it's natural for me to wonder who would
  be hurt (and who could legitimately stop me) if I just quietly
  permitted my copy to multiply.

  Whatever the legalities, the practical reality is that software is
  a very special kind of entity. A photocopy clearly isn't the
  original book, and a tape clearly isn't the original vinyl LP;
  even a duplicated CD lacks certain physical marks of the original,
  and even if it didn't, it's a duplicate. But software is made to
  be copied; that's how you get it onto your computer in the first
  place! The result is not a copy; it's the software! In this
  respect, software is more like a mathematical formula than a
  real-world entity. Also, software is a means to an end; the
  documents it creates are the important thing. What if I need a
  co-worker to be able to share my documents, created with a certain
  piece of defunct software? He'd buy a copy if he could, but he
  can't; so why can't I give him one?


**Solutions Old and New** -- What can be done about old software?
  Here are some possibilities.

* Get Real. If your software lacks some feature and is no longer
  supported, you need to face reality; the software has no authors,
  so this feature is not going to be added. Repeat after me:
  "SuperPaint will never make a GIF!" On the other hand, you're not
  paying $100 a year to maintain your copy of SuperPaint; surely
  that's not something to feel bad about.

* Don't Upgrade. If your software works, but you're afraid it
  might die if you upgrade your computer, then don't mess with that
  computer! If you want the latest bells and whistles, get them, but
  don't throw the old computer away. At first blush, it seems crazy
  to keep that old Macintosh SE lying around merely to run a single
  piece of software. But at second blush, it seems like a great
  idea! The SE is worthless on the open market, and was probably
  just going to be recycled into pothole filler (no, really - see
  the page linked below!). Similarly, before upgrading your version
  of the Mac OS, ask yourself: am I likely to buy another computer
  soon anyway? If so, leave your 6100 running System 7.5; you'll be
  enjoying Mac OS 8.6 when your iBook arrives. Or, your computer may
  let you switch versions of the operating system at will, between
  the latest version and whatever your software needs. (But newer
  computers won't run older versions of the Mac OS.)

<http://ameriplas.org/apcorg/newsroom/articles/computerrecycle.html>

* Emulate. This means, use software to make your computer pretend
  that it has a different processor and hardware than it actually
  does. With today's insanely fast computers, this is becoming
  practical. You may already be doing it: that's why 68K software
  runs on your PowerPC-based Macintosh. A program for emulating an
  older Mac on a newer Mac is a perfectly reasonable possibility; I
  don't know of many such emulators, but there's a superb site that
  tracks emulators, and I suspect that this solution will increase
  in popularity.

<http://emulation.net/macintosh/>

* Migrate. You may be willing to abandon old software if there's
  newer software that does the same job and can acceptably read the
  data created by the old software. The key word is "acceptably" -
  compromises may be necessary, and the process is not for the
  faint-hearted. I upgraded from an Apple II to a Mac without losing
  any data, but that was just text, and even so it took me years and
  many macros to recreate my formatting. When someone wrote me
  complaining that his life was invested in thousands of MacDraw
  files, I had no simple answer, except: experiment and weigh
  options. Can any software, such as AppleWorks or MacLink Plus,
  open these files or transform them to another format? Are you
  willing to accept the limitation of being able to see your images
  but not to edit them? If not, don't migrate (and don't upgrade).

<http://www.dataviz.com/Products/MLP/MLP_Home.html>

* Liberate. Let My Software Go! This option is directed mostly at
  the software's creators, not the public at large. I don't want
  people to steal your software; I don't want them to have to. If
  you own rights to software that you're not selling, since you know
  you won't make any money from it now, and since its
  inaccessibility just impoverishes and annoys a public who, after
  all, _would_ pay you if only you'd consent to take their money,
  why not post it on the Web where we can download it? The hero of
  the hour in this respect is Dave Winer, who has at last liberated
  his MORE 3.1 outliner from Symantec. Not to be outdone, David
  Dunham has freed Acta, another popular outliner. The folks at
  Nisus, too, have been giving away an old but perfectly viable
  version of their flagship Nisus Writer word processor. Doubtless
  there are others, like Corel's recent move of releasing
  WordPerfect 3.5 for free, but these are particular favorites of
  mine.

<http://www.outliners.com/more31.html>
<http://a-sharp.com/acta/>
<http://www.nisus-soft.com/news/pr/980925.asp>
<http://www.corel.com/products/macintosh/wpmac35/pack_freedownload.htm>

  Still, this doesn't solve the problem of software ceasing to work;
  for that, we'd need the actual source code, plus a gang of
  volunteer experts willing to tinker with it. Nearly a year ago,
  Adam proposed the Electronic Phoenix Project to do just that. If
  dead or dying software troubles you, reread his piece. Although
  there was an initial flurry of interest and activity, the fact is
  that coordinating an open source effort is real work, which has
  yet to be done. Still, the Phoenix-Talk mailing list remains
  active on Adam's servers; if the recent releases of old binaries
  excite you enough to push for source code, the Electronic Phoenix
  Project can still fly.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05141>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05153>


**Forward into the Past** -- With personal computers, it's easy to
  become fixated on the future, the coming thing, tomorrow's stock
  IPO. We rarely pause to look back; but if we do, we see a
  disturbing graveyard of perfectly good software that no longer
  works quite right or can no longer be legally obtained. In certain
  cases, such as outliners, a whole _class_ of software can threaten
  to go moribund. What's supposed to happen in situations like this?
  Should those users who relied on the software suffer because the
  programs weren't sufficiently popular to warrant continued
  development? Should someone else have to reinvent the same
  software from scratch? If so, how can software ever progress? Can
  it be that, with the exception of the few companies that stay in
  business, software is doomed to a fleeting, cyclical, dead-end
  existence? That would be a supreme irony for an entity whose
  nature is almost mathematically pure, with no moving parts,
  nothing to wear out, nothing, in theory, to prevent it working
  perfectly forever.


Finding the Power Online: Buying Batteries
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Online commerce is growing all the time, but a recent experience
  shows just how far we have yet to go. Like good little
  technogeeks, Tonya and I own a cellular phone and a camcorder.
  However, unlike really good little technogeeks, we haven't
  replaced the perfectly functional cell phone and camcorder that
  we've had for several years now. Both work fine for the minimal
  uses we require of them, and as much as technolust does kick in
  whenever I see a friend with a tiny cell phone that can also
  receive email or a digital camcorder that puts ours to shame in a
  package a tenth the size, we've resisted buying new models for the
  sake of having the latest and greatest.

  The real problem is that the rechargeable batteries powering these
  devices have finite lifespans, somewhere between 500 and 800
  charge cycles. Over a few years, it seems that we'd hit roughly
  that number of charge cycles; the camcorder wouldn't work at all
  on battery (an increasingly serious problem with an infant in the
  house), and we had to plug the cell phone into the car adapter to
  be assured that it wouldn't cut out on us in the middle of a call.


**The Initial Charge** -- Rather than spend hours traipsing around
  the Seattle metropolitan area in search of stores that would carry
  replacement batteries, I figured that the Web would be a good
  place to shop. After all, batteries are extremely specific pieces,
  and there are thousands of possible sizes and shapes. Thus, it
  would seem to make sense for a vendor to stock as many as possible
  in a warehouse somewhere, offering a Web-based ordering system
  backed by a database as the storefront to this business.

  I started my search in the appropriate section of Yahoo, figuring
  that I could easily go down the list and compare the different
  online battery vendors. The list is populated with about 50 likely
  sounding companies, such as Batteries Direct, The Battery Guys,
  BatteryZone, and e-Battery.

<http://dir.yahoo.com/Business_and_Economy/Companies/Consumer_Electronics/
Shopping_and_Services/Accessories_and_Supplies/Batteries/>

  My criteria were simple at first. I wanted to buy replacement
  batteries for both the cell phone and the camcorder at the same
  place, and I didn't want to pay a huge amount, because if the
  batteries were too expensive, that little technolust voice would
  nag about how a new phone or digital camcorder would be _so_ much
  nicer.


**Assault & Battery** -- I started by Command-clicking each link
  on the Yahoo page to open each site in its own window. To Yahoo's
  credit, most of the sites listed still existed, and only a few had
  moved, necessitating another click. Once in a site, I first looked
  for the batteries for our Sony CM-H333 cell phone. If I found a
  battery for the Sony phone, I then switched to looking for a JVC
  BN-V7GU battery for our camcorder.

  Since I wanted to buy both batteries from the same vendor, I
  closed the window on stores that didn't have either battery and
  moved on to the next site in Yahoo's list. (Having the visited
  links colored provided useful feedback on how far through the list
  I'd gotten.) A large percentage of the battery vendors lost my
  business in this fashion, despite their standard claims that they
  carried every battery in the known universe.

  I quickly discovered that most sites feature hierarchical lists of
  products, so you could click a series of links like Batteries ->
  Camcorder -> JVC and end up with a list of batters that fit JVC
  camcorders. Sites that required you to search fared worse; some
  didn't work at all and others forced you to search for
  manufacturer, which was more convoluted than just clicking a link
  in a list or selecting from a pop-up menu. I also found search
  engines confusing because I had four gobbledygook model numbers to
  choose from, one each for the phone and the camcorder and another
  one for each of the batteries, and it was never clear which model
  number I should use.

  While working through this process for each site, I discovered
  that I needed to add another criterion to my collection. Since I
  was doing this after dinner at night, I didn't want to send email
  or call for an answer to a question, and I especially didn't want
  to have to wait until the next day, then call in my order. Online
  ordering wouldn't seem to be that big of a deal these days, but a
  number of battery vendors still lack that basic capability.

  Eventually I discovered three sites that met my criteria: Battery
  Barn, MJM Electronic, and Westco Battery. Ignoring for the moment
  that the design and graphics on these sites range from the merely
  acceptable down to the painful, I discovered that these sites
  offered wildly different prices.

<http://www.batterybarn.com/>
<http://www.mjmelectronic.com/>
<http://westcobattery.com/>


**A Trip to Battery Island** -- At this point, I'd seen enough
  seemingly random numbers and letters being thrown around to
  realize that something odd was going on. I looked more closely at
  the two existing batteries I wanted to replace. The cell phone
  used a 4.8 volt (V), 900 mAH (milliamp-hour) NiCad battery, and
  the camcorder had a 9.6 V, 1400 mAH NiCad battery. It was time to
  find out what all this meant. On the eBatts.com site, I found an
  discussion of battery chemistry that explained the practical
  differences between NiCad (Nickel Cadmium), NiMH (Nickel Metal
  Hydride), and Li-Ion (Lithium-Ion) battery technologies. In short,
  NiCads are often the cheapest, but they have less power per pound
  than the others, suffer from a memory effect, and present an
  environmental hazard if not recycled properly. NiMH batteries are
  more expensive, but they provide about twice as much power per
  pound than NiCads, don't have nearly as much of a memory effect,
  and don't contain the heavy metals that present environmental
  problems. Li-Ion batteries continue the trend, offering about 35
  percent more power than NiMH batteries for the same weight and
  eliminating the memory effect entirely. I assume they're more
  expensive yet, but since they weren't an option for my devices, I
  didn't check into them more.

<http://www.ebatts.com/tips.asp>

  The different battery types apparently aren't interchangeable
  unless a device is configured to accept more than one type.
  Figuring out whether or not my devices, which both came with NiCad
  batteries, could accept NiMH batteries would have required
  extensive investigation into finding and deciphering manuals, so I
  decided to accept the replacement batteries the vendors claimed
  would work.

  (As an aside, I also found the Web site for the Rechargeable
  Battery Recycling Corporation, a non-profit formed to promote the
  recycling of NiCad batteries to keep them out of landfills. Their
  Web site provides a search engine that tells you where you can
  take your dead NiCads for recycling in your area. I never knew how
  to go about this before, but I was pleased to learn what to do
  with my dead NiCad batteries.)

<http://www.rbrc.org/>

  Battery chemistry obviously caused the NiMH batteries to be more
  expensive, but that didn't seem to account for everything. Once
  again, the eBatts's Battery Tips page helped out. The voltage of
  the replacement batteries had to match the original, but
  apparently the milliamp-hour rating could be higher, at which
  point the replacement battery would offer a longer run time. Now
  the cost differences made sense, so I made up a little chart
  comparing the prices and the milliamp-hours and came up with the
  best compromise.


**Picking a Power Level** -- I ended up buying my batteries from
  Battery Barn because they offered NiMH batteries with good
  milliamp-hour ratings for the camcorder and the cell phone. MJM
  Electronic had only NiCad batteries with lower milliamp-hour
  ratings, and although their cell phone battery was $7 cheaper,
  their camcorder battery was $12 more expensive. Westco Battery had
  the best designed site and the lowest prices, but their NiCad
  camcorder battery was rated at 500 mAH less than the Battery
  Barn's NiMH battery but only cost $13 less. And although Westco's
  NiCad cell phone battery was $18 cheaper, they didn't provide a
  milliamp-hour rating, and the total $31 savings was heavily offset
  by a $10 shipping charge that both other sites waived entirely.

  I include this level of detail merely to illustrate how difficult
  it was to compare prices between vendors. In no case was I
  comparing apples to apples - the battery chemistry and capacity
  variables provided most of the confusion, with the shipping
  charges topping it all off.

  Finishing off the order on Battery Barn's Web site proved somewhat
  more difficult than one would expect, since their Web order form
  had no links to the products. It worked just like a paper form in
  a mail order catalog - you wrote down the product numbers (which
  were of course different from the original battery numbers) and
  prices and then entered them into the order form manually, adding
  in any necessary shipping and tax amounts.


**Powering Down** -- Being the inveterate problem-solver that I
  am, it struck me that the replacement battery industry could use a
  healthy dose of database, user interface, and Web help. A well-
  designed database would be the first step, since the vendors need
  to track manufacturers, product model numbers, and battery model
  numbers, along with the overlap when different retailers rebrand
  devices from other manufacturers. Then comes the user interface
  effort - consumers (remember, we're talking about consumer
  electronics here) should be able to type in any model number they
  can find. They should also be able to browse hierarchically to the
  appropriate spot. And when they find the appropriate replacement
  batteries, they should be presented with full descriptions that
  verify that the battery will work with the device in question and
  include all the information necessary to decide between batteries
  (the chemistry and capacity question). Ideally, links on those
  pages should explain all the variables so the user doesn't have to
  visit another site, as I did. And finally, all of this database
  information should be integrated with the Web order form, so
  purchasing is merely a matter of adding an item to a cart. It's
  not rocket science, though it would require hard work and
  attention to detail.

  In the end, although I was successful in purchasing my batteries
  at a reasonable cost and without spending hours driving around to
  different stores, I was struck by how far commerce on the Internet
  has come, and how far it has left to go.


$$

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