TidBITS#525/03-Apr-00
=====================

  Guilty! A federal judge has found Microsoft seriously violated
  U.S. anti-trust laws, right on the heels of the company's release
  of its latest Macintosh Internet software. Also this week, Matt
  Neuburg looks at the powerful macro utility OneClick 2.0, which
  let you customize and automate your Mac. In the news, we note new
  sponsor digital.forest, examine results from last week's Web
  browser poll, and apologize for tricking so many of you on April
  Fool's Day.

Topics:
    MailBITS/03-Apr-00
    Poll Results: Browser Brouhaha
    TidBITS Talk Hot Topics: Internet Explorer 5.0
    Freedom of the Button Press - OneClick 2.0

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-525.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2000/TidBITS#525_03-Apr-00.etx>

Copyright 2000 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
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   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* READERS LIKE YOU! You can help support TidBITS via our voluntary <- NEW!
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MailBITS/03-Apr-00
------------------

**April Fools Gotchas** -- The mail has been thick over the
  weekend in response to our traditional April Fools issue
  (TidBITS-524_), and all we can say is, "No mas!" That, and we'd
  like to apologize to all the people who were suckered by the
  articles in that issue, especially the one reporting on the
  internal Microsoft memo that outlined a plan to sell the company's
  Macintosh business unit to Apple as a concession to the Justice
  Department (special thanks to Omar Shahine, the Microsoft Outlook
  Express program manager, for providing the quotes that lent that
  extra touch of verisimilitude to the article). Fewer people fell
  for our discussion of the proposed MRML standard (Mind Reading
  Markup Language), but Geoff Duncan's tongue-in-cheek suggestion
  for how software companies could encourage more users to upgrade -
  documents that wear out as you use them - has unfortunately been
  well-received by some larger Macintosh software developers who
  shall remain nameless. [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-524.html>
<http://www.oxy.edu/~ashes/mrml.html>


**Microsoft Violated Anti-Trust Laws** -- U.S. District Court
  Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson has ruled that Microsoft Corporation
  violated the Sherman Anti-Trust Act by using its position in the
  Web browser market to "the detriment of competitors." The judge
  also found that Microsoft could be liable under state anti-
  competition laws. Judge Jackson must now schedule hearings later
  this year to consider remedies for Microsoft's actions, which
  could include structural changes to the company, business
  restrictions, or an actual breakup of the company. The only major
  point on which Judge Jackson disagreed with the government's case
  was that Microsoft's marketing arrangements with other companies
  did not ultimately exclude Netscape's browser software from the
  worldwide browser market. Microsoft has repeatedly said it would
  appeal any ruling against it; experts estimate the case could
  easily drag out to the year 2002. Microsoft stock was down nearly
  15 percent in anticipation of Judge Jackson's announcement,
  dragging the NASDAQ index down 7.63 percent in its largest single-
  day point decline in history. [GD]

<http://usvms.gpo.gov/ms-conclusions.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1152>


**digital.forest Sponsoring TidBITS** -- We're happy to welcome
  our latest long-term sponsor, the Macintosh-savvy Internet hosting
  company digital.forest. Located in the Seattle area,
  digital.forest has been in business since 1994 providing Mac-based
  Web hosting, FileMaker Pro database hosting, and server co-
  location services to companies around the world. We've known the
  folks at digital.forest for years, and when it came time to move
  our servers from their home at POPCO, digital.forest was our first
  choice because we wanted to work with people that used and
  understood Macs rather than just Unix or Windows. Plus,
  digital.forest's data center is a tour de force - an ever-
  increasing number of Macs of all sorts securely housed on
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  tape changers performing daily backups via Retrospect, and the
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  Internet connections, constant network monitoring (with automatic
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  tech support, and more. If you're tired of monitoring your own
  servers or just need a high bandwidth place to park a Web-enabled
  FileMaker Pro database, I'd encourage you to check out
  digital.forest's services. [ACE]

<http://www.forest.net/>


**Poll Preview: System Shiftin'** -- Many people expect Apple to
  release a minor update to Mac OS 9.0 in the near future, which
  provides all the excuse we need to ask a simple question basic to
  all Macintosh owners: What version of the Mac OS do you use on
  your primary Macintosh? If you're among the folks not running the
  Mac OS on your main Mac, you'll have to sit this one out, and if
  you have several Macs that you consider "primary" (a desktop Mac
  and a PowerBook, for instance) you'll need to choose one as more
  "primary" than the others. So come one, come all, and tell us
  which version of the Mac OS you're using by voting on our home
  page. [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/>


**Outlook Express 5.0.2 Correction** -- Last week we briefly noted
  the changes in Outlook Express 5.0.2 along with the review of
  Internet Explorer 5.0. Unfortunately, our information came from
  pages on Microsoft's Web site that, it turns out, were just plain
  wrong with regard to the progress window. The real deal is that,
  along with numerous bug fixes, performance enhancements and
  stability improvements, Outlook Express 5.0.2 now supports SMTP
  AUTH, a method of authenticating yourself to your SMTP server when
  sending mail. SMTP AUTH is useful because the SMTP server can
  reject attempts to send it mail from anyone who isn't
  authenticated, and that in turn prevents spammers from using the
  SMTP server. Our apologies for any confusion. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05872>


Poll Results: Browser Brouhaha
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Our polls, like many others on the Web and in the real world, are
  unscientific because we don't identify the population of people we
  want survey, randomly survey a sufficiently large subset of that
  population, or use a polling method that's designed to eliminate
  bias. With last week's poll, however, we had an unusual chance to
  compare what people said when responding to the poll to how they
  acted. We asked a simple question: "Which Macintosh Web browsers
  do you use on a regular basis?"

<http://db.tidbits.com/poll/AboutPolls.html#whyNotScientific>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=31>

  Here's how the results broke down for the four browser versions in
  common use. Note that the poll enabled people to submit multiple
  responses if they regularly use more than one browser, so this
  table shows the percent of people who voted for each answer, not
  the percentage of votes for each answer.

> Netscape 4.x:              67 percent (955 responses)
> Internet Explorer 5.0:     28 percent (400 responses)
> Internet Explorer 4.x:     25 percent (357 responses)
> iCab:                      21 percent (304 responses)

  Our poll received 2,196 responses from 1,419 people, which could
  mean roughly half the respondents indicated they use more than one
  browser. However, it could also mean 1,200-odd people only use one
  browser, while 200 or so use four or more. There's no way to know.

  Let's compare those results with the actual browsers used to view
  the main TidBITS Web site last week - even though this is spurious
  from a statistical point of view. I ran our log file through
  Active Concepts' FunnelWeb log analysis program, which is one of
  the few Macintosh log analysis programs that let me easily
  separate out hits attributable to Macintosh Web browsers and
  provided the results by visitor, rather than page views or overall
  file hits.

<http://www.activeconcepts.com/>

  According to FunnelWeb, we had 11,203 visitors to our main Web
  site last week whom we could positively identify as using a
  Macintosh Web browser. The percentages break down as follows:

> Netscape 4.x:            41 percent (4,639 visitors)
> Internet Explorer 5.0:   26 percent (2,950 visitors)
> Internet Explorer 4.x:   22 percent (2,500 visitors)
> iCab:                     2 percent (  238 visitors)

  At first glance, although the numbers for Internet Explorer match
  fairly closely between the poll and the log, it would seem that
  more people claimed they use Netscape and iCab than actually used
  those browsers when they visited our site. This is borne out in
  terms of the percentage of requests made on our Web site last week
  by Macintosh browsers: 53 percent came from versions of Internet
  Explorer, whereas Netscape accounted for only 39 percent.

  These results imply iCab was more likely reported as an additional
  response rather than as a solitary answer to our poll - which is
  hardly surprising, given iCab's pre-release status. It's
  surprising that the numbers could also imply the same is true for
  Netscape, although to a much lesser degree. Poll respondents were
  fairly likely to say they used a Netscape browser regularly, but
  site visitors were less likely to be using a Netscape browser.

  Another possibility is the "PBS answer" - when people are asked to
  report on their television viewing habits, they often claim to
  watch educational shows on PBS instead of network sitcoms. Simply
  put, it's reasonable to assume at least some people treated the
  poll as a chance to vote against Microsoft in a popularity contest
  - particularly with the release of Internet Explorer 5 and the
  pending anti-trust announcements.

  No matter what the reason for these discrepancies, it's
  fascinating to have a chance to see how the results of a poll
  compare to numbers we can actually measure, even indirectly.


TidBITS Talk Hot Topics: Internet Explorer 5.0
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Last week's article on Internet Explorer spawned numerous
  discussions in TidBITS Talk that explored different aspects of the
  new release and the future of the Web browser market in general.

  Many people wrote in with their experiences with Internet Explorer
  5.0, expressing different opinions about the new look of the
  interface and commenting on the changes they liked or disliked.
  Although long, this discussion highlights aspects of Internet
  Explorer that we weren't able to cover in the review and garnered
  responses from Microsoft employees.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=982>

  Another hot topic, given the emphasis Microsoft placed on its
  Tasman rendering engine, were pages that Internet Explorer 5.0
  failed to render properly. Some were quick to accuse Microsoft,
  but in at least several cases, it turned out that the pages
  suffered from mangled HTML. That discussion in turn encourage some
  members of TidBITS Talk to take a clean-up pass on their own
  pages, something we should all do on occasion.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=983>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=993>

  Finally, it became clear that although Internet Explorer 5.0
  supports XML, it is not a complete XML 1.0 browser, which can lead
  to problems working with XML documents. Still, the fact that XML
  is supported at all is a step forward for many users.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=985>

  A number of other smaller discussions covered topics like text
  size issues, window management, Internet Explorer's approach to
  text clippings, and the current status of the Mozilla open source
  project. If you're interested in the world of Web browsers, take a
  look at these TidBITS Talk hot topics.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=active>


Freedom of the Button Press - OneClick 2.0
------------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  In the struggle to return control of the computer to the user,
  macro utilities are indispensable. Such a utility acts as a
  ghostly simulacrum of a live user, choosing from menus, typing
  keys, and clicking the mouse; an assemblage of such actions can
  essentially script the unscriptable, driving any application to
  customize or automate frequent or repetitive tasks. From my
  earliest days with the Macintosh, QuicKeys was my constant
  companion; I've also looked at KeyQuencer. But if I had to use
  just one macro utility, forsaking all others, my choice, despite
  its faults, would be OneClick, from WestCode Software.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1044>
<http://www.westcodesoft.com/>


**Refined Palettes** -- OneClick creates floating windows
  (palettes), each of which can be either global or associated with
  a specific application. A palette contains buttons; every button
  has a script, a sequence of actions which you create and edit as
  text in an easy programming language appropriately named
  EasyScript. A script can contain various subroutines, called
  handlers. Handlers are the code that actually gets triggered, and
  in forming a mental picture of OneClick, it helps to know how this
  occurs. (Bear in mind that an application-specific palette cannot
  be visible, nor can its scripts run, unless the application is
  frontmost.) Here are the triggers:

* You click and release the button. This triggers the button's
  MouseUp handler.

* You click the button and hold down. This triggers the button's
  MouseDown handler. Such a handler can construct a menu and make it
  pop up from the button, and then proceed in response to the user's
  menu choice. Since pop-up menus require that the mouse button be
  down, this would make no sense in a MouseUp handler. If a button
  has both a MouseDown handler and a MouseUp handler, the latter
  will never be automatically triggered; they are mutually
  exclusive.

* You type the button's keyboard shortcut. This triggers the
  button's MouseDown handler if there is one, otherwise its MouseUp
  handler. A palette does not have to be visible for its keyboard
  shortcut to work, and buttons on palettes belonging to different
  applications can use the same keyboard shortcut. Thus, OneClick
  actions can be triggered purely from the keyboard, as with
  QuicKeys; this should satisfy those who, like several members of
  the TidBITS staff, dislike most palettes.

* You drop something on the button. This triggers the button's
  DragAndDrop handler. You can drag text (from an application that
  can initiate true text drag & drop), or Finder items; the script
  receives the text or the pathnames, respectively, and can respond
  as desired.

* Something causes the button to be redrawn - for example, the
  palette becomes visible, or the button changes its appearance
  through being pressed by the user or commanded by a script. This
  triggers the button's DrawButton handler.

* The palette's associated application (or, for a global palette,
  the computer) starts up. This triggers the button's Startup
  handler. For example, if a badly behaved application requires a
  click from the user to dismiss its opening splash screen, OneClick
  can perform the click.

* A certain time period elapses, or a system event occurs. This
  triggers the button's Scheduled handler. You configure what time
  period(s) or event(s) will act as triggers, which you typically do
  in the Startup handler. Common events to which OneClick can
  respond are: an application starts up or quits, a new window comes
  to the front, or a OneClick palette is shown or hidden. Suppose
  you wanted a certain palette to appear in response to the mouse
  moving over a "hot spot" such as the lower left corner of the
  monitor. You could configure a Scheduled handler to be called
  every second, polling the mouse's position and showing the palette
  if the mouse is at the hot spot.

* Another handler calls the one in question by name. The calling
  handler need not be in the same button, nor even in the same
  palette. In fact, a handler can be called from an AppleScript
  running _anywhere_; thus, HyperCard or QuicKeys or even Microsoft
  Word could trigger a OneClick script.

  Clearly there is great power and flexibility in this capacity of
  button scripts to be triggered in so many different ways. And
  OneClick's buttons are also customizable: they can contain text or
  icons, they can be drawn in various ways, in any size or color,
  and so forth. Thus, a OneClick palette can be made to look just
  right for its application. Nonetheless, it isn't its system of
  buttons and palettes which makes OneClick the place I'd prefer to
  be when writing a macro script - it's the nature of the scripts
  themselves.


**It's the Scriptability, Stupid** -- OneClick scripts are text,
  written in a real programming language with real programming
  features such as variables, looping and branching constructs,
  arithmetic calculation and string manipulation, and even a
  pleasant object-based syntax. And OneClick provides oodles of
  built-in functions for letting this language do powerful things.

  Naturally, you can perform all the ghostly user-like actions you'd
  expect from a macro utility. You can click the mouse at given
  coordinates, possibly with modifier keys or dragging. You can
  type. You can examine menu items, and choose one. You can inspect
  a button's state, and push it. You can select, scroll, resize,
  reposition, zoom, or collapse a window; you can even read its
  text.

  You can perform various system- and Finder-level activities. You
  can manipulate the clipboard; show, hide, and reorder running
  processes; obtain screen resolutions, sizes, and positions;
  create, copy, open, and delete files and folders; read or change a
  file's text or Finder information; and mount or obtain information
  about a volume.

  You can interact with the user. You can put up a dialog, give it
  customized buttons, let the user type some text into it, let the
  user choose an item from a list, and show the standard File Open
  or Save dialog or even the Color Picker dialog. You can supply
  help text that will appear when the user holds Shift-Option with
  the mouse over a button. You can change the cursor. You can play
  sounds, or have the Speech Manager speak some text. You can poll
  the mouse button or the keyboard; so, by learning what modifiers
  the user is holding, you can give a button multiple
  functionalities. You can allow a button to receive something using
  drag & drop; you can also permit text to be dragged _from_ a
  button. You can cause various sorts of pop-up menu to appear for
  the user to choose from: a menu that you construct from scratch, a
  hierarchical menu of files and folders on disk, a menu showing all
  the characters of any font, or even an entire palette behaving
  like a pop-up menu.

  You can run an AppleScript script, thus scripting the scriptable
  as well as the unscriptable. This can be a compiled script file
  created in Apple's Script Editor, but in most cases it can simply
  appear inline within a button script.

  Finally, everything about OneClick's own buttons and palettes can
  be controlled from scripts. You can change a button's text or
  appearance, make a button display a thermometer or pie-chart as
  feedback, dictate conditions under which the user can reposition a
  button or palette by dragging, even create a palette and populate
  it with buttons "on the fly." Thus, palettes themselves become
  powerful interface tools, where the buttons combine to form some
  complex live functionality, such as a calendar.

  With such power and flexibility, it's little wonder that OneClick
  is put to a great variety of ingenious uses - some sense of which
  may be gleaned from WestCode's page of user-contributed palettes.
  In fact, WestCode sells a number of its own palettes extracted
  from the full OneClick distribution separately, along with a
  runtime version of the OneClick engine.

<http://www.westcodesoft.com/FTP-Buttons.html>

  Compared to this, my own use of OneClick is rather tame, mostly
  because I'm conservative about using buttons scripted by others.
  Still, a survey of my own habits yields a taste of OneClick's
  possibilities. On my computer are palettes, buttons, and keyboard
  shortcuts that do the following.

* Show the font, size, and styles of the currently selected text
  in Nisus Writer (because otherwise you have to peep into half a
  dozen different menus to learn this information).

* Position and size the frontmost Acrobat Reader window nicely,
  and to zoom it to Fit Width.

* Fix capitalization and remove extra spaces in clipboard text (to
  make up for ViaVoice's mistakes).

* Connect to or disconnect from the Internet, by driving the
  Remote Access control panel.

* Implement multiple simultaneous clipboards.

* Toggle the collapsed setting of the frontmost window or of all
  other windows.

* Interfere with the Help key, which I often strike accidentally.

* Supply PageUp, PageDown, Home, End, Forward Delete, and Help
  keys, which are missing from my PowerBook.

* Hide the frontmost application or all others, or bring the
  Finder to the front.

* Use the pathname on the clipboard to open a file or folder.

* Speak the selected text.

* Toggle the visibility of the Application Switcher.

* Choose among my various TCP/IP configurations.

  Plus, I use some buttons supplied by WestCode to manage text
  clippings, change speaker volume, open various system folders,
  manipulate windows and processes, and navigate the Finder
  hierarchy. Much of the above are functionalities I was previously
  achieving in some other way; OneClick all by itself makes many
  other extensions and utilities superfluous.

  Yet though I love OneClick and wouldn't want to be without it,
  using it can be unpleasant and risky. Next topic: the downsides of
  OneClick.


**Cold Shower** -- The script editing environment, despite its
  nice online help and compile-time syntax checking, is crude.
  OneClick lacks a Find command, a built-in debugger, and
  notification of runtime errors. So OneClick becomes what I call
  "guessware": constructing, debugging, or just understanding a
  script can range from painful to well-nigh impossible. One can
  develop workaround tools and techniques, but one shouldn't have
  to, and besides, this will be hardest for the beginners who most
  need them. The trouble is compounded by hidden traps in the
  EasyScript language; for example, "for x = 1 to n" will execute
  its loop even if n is zero, and complex nested function
  evaluations often don't work - you have to evaluate all the pieces
  as separate variables first.

  If you're not prepared to crash now and then, or for things to go
  mysteriously wrong, OneClick isn't for you. At various times, such
  as when I was writing my first book, I had to stop using OneClick
  altogether, because I couldn't afford such frequent crashes and
  corrupted data. Even in just the few days writing this review, I
  crashed trying to open a script for editing, again trying to save
  a script, and again trying to import a saved button; numerous
  attempts to load a saved palette failed without notification.
  Users have reported finding scripts replaced with nonsense, or
  unaccountable automated actions suddenly taking over their
  computer; in the past few days I myself have seen weird unsummoned
  windows flash on the screen, Finder items spontaneously
  duplicated, and other unexplained phenomena. Palette corruption is
  a constant danger. Some of these problems may relate to Scheduled
  handlers: when they fire, they give no indication of what is
  happening; they can interrupt one another; and there is no way to
  learn what schedules are pending. This is one reason I am chary of
  buttons I didn't write myself.

  Even OneClick's most basic level of functionality, which
  presumably involves interfering with the user's mouse-clicks and
  generating its own to press buttons and choose menu items, is not
  completely reliable. Sometimes OneClick is just unaccountably
  slow: I've seen it take well over a second to bring a window to
  the front in Acrobat Reader; in REALbasic, buttons can be so
  unresponsive as to be useless; in DiskTop, it's far worse. In
  Eudora, activating a window through OneClick sometimes activates
  the wrong one. I've seen arithmetically calculated values
  occasionally come out the negative of what they should have been.
  Users report that typing in the script editor window sometimes
  "falls through" to the application behind.

  Nor does WestCode Software's record of commitment to the survival
  and support of its product inspire confidence. In late 1996,
  WestCode cautioned me not to review OneClick 1.03, because 1.5 was
  about to appear; the next actual upgrade turned out to be 2.0,
  three years later. The 2.0 beta development process was
  heartening, but progress was glacial, and WestCode often seemed
  more inclined to fend off the bug reports than to fix the bugs.
  Many glitches have been left in this release: there is script
  window corruption when you make a syntax error, keyboard shortcuts
  involving "a" don't work, and despite claims of Mac OS 9
  compatibility, OneClick doesn't work properly with some Appearance
  Manager or Navigation Services dialogs. Potential users must judge
  for themselves whether this sort of laxity is venial or suggestive
  of possible deeper trouble.

  The manuals are quite good, but rather out of synch with how
  OneClick actually works; for example, installation doesn't work
  the way the manual describes it, some screen shots don't match
  reality, some documented features (such as the ability of control
  strip modules to be OneClick buttons) don't actually work, and
  some important and potentially confusing features, such as the
  ability to "lock" a button (so that it can be pressed while you're
  editing a script), are completely undocumented. Also, there are
  two manuals, one for EasyScript, one for everything else, because
  WestCode wants to convey that OneClick can be useful even if you
  don't do any of your own scripting; and some 70 pages of material
  is repeated in both, which is cumbersome and confusing.


**Bottom Line** -- For me, OneClick's scriptability, power,
  flexibility, and downright usefulness outweigh all the negatives
  I've outlined; and the price is extremely competitive. I do wish
  that OneClick worked a bit more cleanly, and that I felt more
  encouraged about its future. Nonetheless, whether you want to take
  advantage of the many powerful palettes available online, want to
  clean up and rationalize your computer's interface, or want to
  tinker, customize, and automate with code of your own, OneClick is
  a superb macro program with a wonderful interface that deserves
  your serious consideration.

  OneClick typically occupies less than 500K of RAM, and is about a
  7 MB installation. OneClick costs $60 for the downloadable version
  with two PDF manuals, or $80 on CD with one printed manual; the
  printed scripting manual is $20 more. OneClick requires System 7
  and a 68020 processor or later.
 
  $$
 
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