TidBITS#363/27-Jan-97
=====================

  Apple's market share is down, but what exactly does that mean? In
  this issue, we explore the seemingly random statistics about sales
  of operating systems. Also this week, Geoff Duncan examines pros,
  cons, and changes in Apple's brand-new Mac OS 7.6, we look back to
  Macworld with some reader responses, and we note new versions of
  NetPresenz and UserLand Frontier, plus a significant beta release
  of Eudora.

Topics:
    MailBITS/27-Jan-97
    Mac OS Hardware Market Flat?
    Responses to a Macworld Newbie
    Apple Ships Mac OS 7.6

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-363.html>
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MailBITS/27-Jan-97
------------------

**Eudora Light/Pro Updated** -- Qualcomm has released version
  3.0.2b7 of Eudora Light and Pro. We seldom write about beta
  releases of software, thanks to the hyperactive release habits of
  Internet software, but this beta fixes some potentially annoying
  problems, such as an extra line when typing and most notably,
  nickname file corruption, caused in at least one case by dragging
  nicknames into a closed nickname file. The downloads are 1.5 MB
  (for Eudora Pro) and 2 MB (for Eudora Light), and you can only
  install the Eudora Pro beta if you already have Eudora Pro 3.0 or
  3.0.1 installed. [ACE]

<http://www.eudora.com/mac302b.html>


**NetPresenz 4.1 Released and Discussed** -- Peter Lewis of
  Stairways Software has released version 4.1 of NetPresenz , a
  popular Web, FTP, and Gopher server. The main area of improvement
  centers on increased stability under heavy load conditions, but
  the Web server now includes enhanced CGI support, CGI
  authentication, and server-side includes for creating dynamic Web
  pages. You still can't beat NetPresenz's price at $10, and 4.1 is
  a free upgrade for users who registered after 01-Jan-96. Users who
  registered prior to that date can upgrade for $5.

<http://www.stairways.com/netpresenz/>

  Stairways also announced two new mailing lists for discussing
  NetPresenz and Anarchie. To subscribe, send email to either
  <netpresenz-on@list.stairways.com> or <anarchie-
  on@list.stairways.com>. Since the lists use same kind of on/off
  addresses we established for managing subscriptions to TidBITS, no
  commands are necessary. You can also sign up via a Web form for
  these and other lists that Stairways runs. [ACE]

<http://www.stairways.com/mailinglists/>


**Not the Final Frontier** -- Frontier, from UserLand Software,
  has been updated to version 4.2. A powerful, fast Mac scripting
  environment, Frontier 4.2 features significantly refined Web site
  management tools (including NewsPage for constantly-updating
  pages), improved macro processing, live HTML editing in Frontier's
  built-in outliner, support for making MCF site maps (see 
  TidBITS-355_), a useful suite of Finder scripts for webmasters
  and authors (delivered via Leonard Rosenthol's OSA Menu), and
  tight integration with WebSTAR 2.0. Frontier is still free; the
  curious can get a good sense of it by studying the online
  documentation. [MN]

<http://www.scripting.com/frontier/>


Mac OS Hardware Market Flat?
----------------------------
  by Matt Deatherage <mattd@gcsf.com>

  A variety of market research firms recently released current
  statistics and future predictions for the computer industry, and
  the warhorse Mac OS gets mixed-to-negative marks for the future -
  depending on who you ask and what you ask.

  While most U.S. computer makers are expected to post fairly
  healthy profits for the fourth calendar quarter of 1996, all
  analysts agree that PC sales, especially in the U.S. and Europe,
  are lower than expected. IBM and Hewlett Packard are expected to
  do fine, being large, global, diversified companies, and Compaq is
  recovering nicely from last year's bad inventory management and
  weak first half. Apple, on the other hand, posted a $120 million
  loss for the same quarter, but says the shortfall is almost
  entirely due to lack of PowerBooks to sell and lack of U.S. buyers
  for Performas.

  Regarding this news, an Oppenheimer & Co. analyst told The Wall
  Street Journal that Apple's operating system is "out of gas" and
  that people are picking Windows over the Macintosh because there
  are more Windows titles available - and further, Apple will begin
  to lose ground in the education market (with no data or reasons to
  back that assertion).

  International Data Corporation (IDC) released early estimates for
  1996 operating system shipments. The company pointed out that
  Windows 95 fell short of projected units, and that "many corporate
  users delayed migrating to the newer operating systems," meaning
  Windows 95 and Windows NT. Not that the gains weren't spectacular
  - Windows 95 was responsible for 63 percent of all worldwide OS
  units in 1996, but that was still 9.3 percent less than projected.
  Windows NT grew 303 percent, which was still 32 percent short of
  expectations. IDC's "market observations" said "Apple clones have
  yet to translate into increased market share," and "Apple must
  introduce a fully multitasking operating system which is highly
  compatible with its current Mac OS and recapture its technology
  leadership in order to improve its position. Apple's recent
  announcement of the acquisition of NeXT Software and its plans to
  incorporate NeXT technology in future operating systems does not
  fully address this need."

<http://www.idcresearch.com/HNR/pcopso.htm>

  Given all this negativity in IDC's report, how bad were Mac OS
  sales actually? Down from 6.8 percent to 6.6 percent of all units
  shipped. Compare this to OS/2, which lost nearly half its market
  share in the same period.


**Mac OS Market Share** -- Part of the problem is conflicting
  definitions. Most of the doom-and-gloom reports in the media about
  falling market share refer specifically to Apple Computer. Since
  1995, that doesn't tell the story of the Mac OS market, because
  companies other than Apple now sell Mac OS computers. But since
  that's a recent development, there's a real tendency to think that
  Macintosh market share and Mac OS market share are the same thing.
  They aren't.

  Market share, for the uninitiated, is the percentage of all new
  sales in a given category that belong to one particular company.
  To be technically correct, market share must be measured in a
  given time period, but it's usually referred to in the present
  tense as an estimate of what a company's sales are compared to its
  competitors right now. IDC's report said that 6.6 percent of all
  personal computer operating system sales in 1996 were Mac OS
  purchases, down from 6.8 percent in 1995. It's interesting to note
  that this figure does not include upgrades, only new licenses to
  new computer owners - so it's a way of measuring the market share
  of the hardware capable of running Mac OS.

  Two-tenths of a percent decline isn't very much - by IDC's
  numbers, we're talking about a drop of about 150,000 units on
  yearly volume of five million. In 1995, IDC says there were 4.5
  million Mac OS licenses sold, so how can five million be a
  decline? The operating system market is growing, that's how! Mac
  OS sales grew too, but not as fast as the other market segments
  did. To stay at 6.6 percent of sales, Mac OS shipments should have
  reached 5.15 million. They didn't, hence the drop in market share
  concurrent with a growth in overall sales.

  As long as IDC's statistical certainty is greater than 0.2 percent
  (and it probably is, although it's not a given), Mac OS sales were
  statistically flat in 1996. Yet press reports, and Apple Computer
  itself, continually refer to declining sales, not flat or slower-
  growth sales.


**Send In the Clones** -- Mac OS clone makers account for some of
  the gains, and most likely for some of the lost sales Apple
  experienced. A NEWS.COM story looked at the big four clone makers
  - Daystar Digital, Motorola, Power Computing, and UMAX - to find
  out what makes each of them tick. As part of the report, NEWS.COM
  says that IDC's competitor, Dataquest, estimates that Mac OS
  clones comprised 8.5 percent of U.S. Macintosh market share during
  the third quarter of 1996.

<http://www.news.com/SpecialFeatures/0,5,6931,00.html>

  Dataquest's number isn't valid for the entire year, obviously, but
  it makes things more interesting. If Apple's U.S. market share in
  the fourth quarter was about 7.3 percent, as has been estimated by
  one source, then adding other Mac OS sales to the mix raises
  overall Mac OS market share to 7.9 percent. That's still far short
  of the 13.2 percent Apple had a year earlier, but few people can
  be blamed, in the current press climate, for being skittish about
  buying a Mac. The total market share is probably higher than 7.9
  percent - I cheated and applied third-quarter clone numbers to
  fourth-quarter Apple numbers. Clone numbers were likely to be
  higher in the last quarter due to the arrival of machines from
  Motorola (and APS), which do not seem to have cannibalized other
  Mac OS purchases.

  Motorola is known to have shipped at least 40,000 StarMax clones
  in its first eight weeks of production, and a Motorola marketing
  executive told NEWS.COM that the company "suspects" a quarter of
  the buyers are first-time Mac OS purchasers. Motorola is staying
  out of the retail market so far because they initially got a late
  start, but now they don't have the facilities to handle the volume
  of sales they expect a retail unit would generate.

  UMAX, on the other hand, shipped 100,000 units in the last six
  months of 1996 - numbers for Power Computing aren't available but
  could, according to a previous Tim Bajarin estimate, top 500,000
  units in 1996. DayStar Digital's numbers are smaller, in the
  3,000-unit area, because they make high-end systems with fat
  profit margins - the four-processor 200 MHz 604e box is for a
  specialized market, especially at $10,000 apiece.

  [Note: Apple just released some additional information on clone
  sales, giving Power Computing credit for more than 100,000 sales
  during its first year. -Adam]

<http://www.devworld.apple.com/devnews/devnews012797.html>

  Both UMAX and Motorola believe they can achieve 10 percent of the
  Mac OS market by the year 2000. This is good news for Apple if and
  only if they achieve this by expanding the Mac OS market. UMAX in
  particular is committed to this - with a parent company located in
  Taiwan, UMAX believes that Asian markets are right for Mac OS
  technology, and they're in on the ground floor. The company told
  NEWS.COM they expect to increase Mac OS sales in Taiwan by 300
  percent, and by even more in areas like Southeast Asia and parts
  of China. That's exactly what Apple needs to hear, and if all
  clone makers pull off similar market expansions, it will have been
  worth weathering the early years of cloning when clone sales are
  eating away at Apple's own market share.


**What Does It Mean?** What no market research firm has yet
  released are continuing studies where Mac OS market share is
  tracked, on a hardware level, separately from Macintosh (Apple
  Computer's) market share. When OS sales are used as a benchmark,
  IDC's numbers show nearly no change in market share from 1995 to
  1996, despite the absolute beating Apple took in the press and in
  consumer confidence, month after month. That's a reasonably worthy
  achievement. IDC phrases it as "Mac OS clones have yet to increase
  market share," but given that everyone believed Mac OS market
  share was falling, it's not bad at all.

  It's also a good idea to remember that the non-Mac OS market is
  not unified. According to the eighth Computer Industry Almanac,
  there are about 25 million Macintosh machines out there as of Q3
  1996 (Apple says 26 million), about 180 million DOS users, 130
  million Windows 3.x users and 53 million users of Windows 95/NT.
  Each of these operating systems has a slightly different
  programmer interface - code written for Windows 3.x will run in a
  kind of emulation under Windows NT, but the reverse isn't true. If
  Apple's plans (depending on who you ask) to release Rhapsody for
  non-PowerPC hardware pan out, developers could find themselves
  with an easy way to write a Mac OS program and have it available
  on all these newer Windows machines as well. That would
  undoubtedly bring more developers to the Mac OS platform, and more
  software for Mac OS means more sales, according to IDC's theories.

  Clearly Apple has to get their act in gear - without a good Mac OS
  to license, clone sales will eventually fall by the wayside no
  matter how aggressive the offerings are. Individual Mac OS clone
  makers are too small to show on the market research radar scope,
  so stories tend to focus on Apple - whose losses for the fourth
  quarter resulted from a combination of tepid marketing, less shelf
  space, overall lower-than-expected PC sales, and a crisis in
  consumer confidence. Yet the clone makers are here, and are doing
  well (Power Computing turned a profit in its first full quarter),
  and it shows in the sales numbers, although you sometimes must dig
  a little to find the not-bad news.

  [This article is reprinted and updated with permission from MDJ, a
  daily Macintosh publication covering news, products, and events in
  the Macintosh world. If you can't get enough insightful Mac news,
  sign up for a trial subscription to MDJ. For TidBITS readers who
  want to subscribe, there's a special limited-time rate of $11.95
  per month (20 percent off). For more information, visit the MDJ
  Web site.]

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


Responses to a Macworld Newbie
------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  Tuesday was a good email day. After running "Impressions of a
  Macworld Newbie" article in TidBITS-362_ (my first TidBITS
  article), I received a steady stream of comments and words of
  welcome from readers around the world.

  In particular, several people commented on my advice that new
  attendees refrain from picking up every freebie in sight, and
  others reacted to my mention of Steve Jobs's "Reality Distortion
  Field."


**Suzanne Courteau** <suzanne_courteau@macworld.com> writes:
  First, I left my press bag at my office. In my jacket pocket I
  carried pens and business cards. When I ran across a truly fab
  product, it was easy enough to write a note on a business card
  asking the product manager or PR manager to send it to me at my
  office. I got all my information delivered to me and suffered
  absolutely no back or feet problems.


**Adam L. Pollock** <alp@umich.edu> takes a decidedly cumbersome
  approach:
  As far as picking up every pen, CD, disk, etc., this was certainly
  my goal. I was also hunting for t-shirts - at the end of the show
  I ran around asking for freebies and trades and amassed about
  twelve!


**Jack C. Kobzeff** <jack.c.kobzeff@jpl.nasa.gov> observes:
  I felt that Jobs's Reality Distortion Field was only running at
  half strength this time. I saw him in the early Mac days and as
  NeXT was getting started, and back then he could sell snow to
  Eskimos. He was incredible during the NeXT presentations, getting
  suit-and-tie executives excited about a box with no applications
  and no floppy disk. This time, I'm not sure if he's just older,
  too rich, or doesn't quite have his heart into the Apple deal, but
  he didn't have quite the same level of RDF. It was there; just
  weaker.


Apple Ships Mac OS 7.6
----------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Today, Apple shipped Mac OS 7.6, an all-encompassing system
  software release that includes a few new features, a significant
  set of changes under the hood, and a collection of Apple
  technologies that were previously available for free. Mac OS 7.6
  is not free and is not available for downloading. At over 120 MB
  for the CD-ROM version, that's probably good.

<http://www.macos.apple.com/macos/releases.html>

  Mac OS 7.6 provides a much-needed baseline for system software.
  Prior to 7.6, installing the latest version of the Mac OS could be
  an arduous task, involving two or three system software
  installations, plus installations for technologies like OpenDoc
  and Open Transport. Mac OS 7.6 eliminates many of these steps and
  helps minimize confusion over various flavors of System 7.5.
  Furthermore, Apple actually did what it promised: shipped an
  update to the Mac OS in January of 1997.

  On the down side, enthusiasm for Mac OS 7.6 has been
  underwhelming, largely due to the lack of new gee-whiz features
  Apple has been promising for years. Mac OS 7.6 does not include a
  multi-threaded, PowerPC-native Finder, a fast, full-text search
  engine, active assistance, the fabled Appearance Manager (which
  provides highly-customizable desktop themes), or integrated Java
  support. All these features are now candidates for Tempo, the next
  update, which Apple has scheduled for July of 1997.


**Installing Mac OS 7.6** -- One of Mac OS 7.6's new features is
  Install Mac OS, an umbrella installer for both the core operating
  system and add-ons like OpenDoc, Cyberdog, and QuickDraw GX.
  Install Mac OS has been heralded as a new installer, but it's
  really a shell program that controls installers for individual
  components. Thankfully, Install Mac OS notifies users to update
  their hard disk drivers when installing software (a common problem
  Apple previously covered in ReadMe files, which people usually
  only examine after they've had trouble), and runs Disk First Aid
  before attempting to install any system software. Install Mac OS
  also enables users to create a brand new System Folder or to
  update an existing system, a previously hidden function.

  However, Install Mac OS can also be confusing. When you've told it
  what you want to install, it proceeds to launch old-style
  installers for components, which again ask what you want to do.
  So, if you choose to install Mac OS 7.6, OpenDoc, and QuickDraw
  3D, you're first presented with the Mac OS 7.6 installer, then the
  OpenDoc installer, and finally the QuickDraw 3D installer. By the
  time you reach the second installer, you may have forgotten how
  you got there or what's coming next.

  Apple has changed individual installer applications too, most
  notably the Mac OS 7.6 custom install, which now groups components
  in functional categories (such as Mobility, Multimedia, and
  Assistance) in addition to categories like Control Panels and
  Extensions. Unfortunately, this means that individual items (such
  as PC Exchange) appear in more than one section, and selecting an
  item in one category doesn't select it the others, creating
  confusion as to whether something will be installed.


**What's Included** -- In addition to the core system software,
  Mac OS 7.6 ships with QuickTime 2.5, OpenDoc 1.1.2, Cyberdog
  1.2.1, QuickDraw 3D 1.0.6, QuickDraw GX 1.1.5, MacLink Plus 8.1
  (from DataViz), Open Transport 1.1.1, Open Transport/PPP 1.0,
  Remote Access Client 2.1, and version 1.2 of the Apple Internet
  Connection Kit.

  You may note Mac OS 7.6 isn't shipping with QuickDraw 3D 1.5 and
  Open Transport 1.1.2. Why not? The simple answer is scheduling:
  coordinating over 100 MB of material from (literally) dozens of
  different product groups within Apple is no simple thing. Apple
  probably set absolute deadlines for product units in order to make
  Mac OS 7.6 ship on time. This is in keeping with Apple's
  incremental update policy, where individual technologies - like
  Cyberdog, Open Transport, and QuickTime - will be upgraded
  separately between major releases of the Mac OS for users who need
  the latest versions as soon as possible.

  However, this situation can create hassles for users who try to
  keep up with Apple technologies. If you've already installed Open
  Transport 1.1.2, the Mac OS 7.6 installer will complain
  (repeatedly) that you're replacing a newer version of Open
  Transport. If you want to use Open Transport 1.1.2, you must
  reinstall it after installing Mac OS 7.6. Classic networking isn't
  supported under Mac OS 7.6, so you must use Open Transport. Though
  these problems primarily affect users knowledgeable enough to
  understand the situation - power users, programmers, and Mac
  loyalists - it isn't making Apple many friends.


**What's New** -- Aside from the new installer, Mac OS 7.6
  includes Extensions Manager 4.0, a significant improvement over
  earlier versions. In addition to enabling users to manage system
  extensions and extension sets, Extensions Manager 4.0 also
  features an updated interface (with sorting capabilities) plus the
  ability to view extensions as a flat set, by folder, or by
  package. The latter is particularly useful, since it enables users
  to identify and turn on or off all related parts of a complex set,
  like Now Utilities or OpenDoc. Software vendors may need to update
  their system extensions to identify what package they belong to,
  but a surprising number of system components already have this
  information. Extensions Manager 4.0 doesn't track down extension
  conflicts like Casady & Greene's Conflict Catcher, but it can
  export a detailed text file listing your extension configuration.

  Mac OS 7.6 also includes a few new convenience items, such as
  Desktop Printing 2.0.2, which lets you move desktop printers off
  the desktop into folders. You can also switch between desktop
  printers using a new control strip module and within the Print
  dialog box (although I'm not sure if the latter requires
  LaserWriter 8.4). Also, tucked away in the Speech Control Panel is
  a feature called Talking Alerts, which enables text-to-speech
  software to read the text of onscreen alerts after a user-defined
  period of time - a potentially handy feature for the visually
  impaired or for people who need to have their Macs shout to them
  from across the room. Unfortunately, Talking Alerts only functions
  on modal alert messages.

  Also, the classic FKEY (PictWhap) that enabled you to take
  snapshots of your Macintosh screen has been updated. Command-
  Shift-4 no longer sends a screen capture to a printer: now, the
  key combination lets you select a portion of your screen to be
  saved as a file; further, if Caps Lock is down, the cursor changes
  to a bull's-eye and you can take a screen shot of just about any
  window you can click. Pressing Command-Shift-3 still causes your
  Mac to take a picture of your entire screen, but (with either key
  combination) pressing Control puts the picture into the clipboard
  instead of in a file on the top level of your startup drive. These
  features don't compete with screen shot utilities like Nobu Toge's
  venerable shareware Flash-It, but they'll be a boon to tech
  writers everywhere.

<ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/gst/grf/flash-it-302.hqx>

  There are also a number of low-level changes in Mac OS 7.6.
  PowerPC and 68040 Macs can now support volume sizes up to two
  terabytes, many earlier updates and system extensions have been
  rolled into the system file, Apple events can now carry more than
  64K of data, and improvements throughout the system significantly
  enhance stability. Two memory management changes are noteworthy:
  first, 24-bit machines (the Mac II, IIx, SE/30, and IIcx) that
  previously used Connectix's MODE32 aren't supported under Mac OS
  7.6. Similarly, machines with a 68000 or 68020 processor are no
  longer supported, including the Plus, SE, Classic, Portable, LC,
  and PowerBook 100. Also, PowerPC-based Macs can only run the
  Modern Memory Manager under Mac OS 7.6: support for the old 68K
  Memory Manager is no longer available.

  Users will also notice that references to Macintosh are being
  changed to Mac OS, and the familiar About this Macintosh item in
  the Finder now reads About this Computer. Similarly, the much-
  loved Welcome to Macintosh display that appears when a machine
  first starts up has been suppressed in favor of a more modern (and
  more generic) Mac OS logo.


**What's Missing** -- Mac OS 7.6 does not include Mac OS Runtime
  for Java (MRJ), something Apple promised when it announced its
  biannual update plan. Apple just completed MRJ 1.0 for PowerPC; a
  version for 68K-based machines is promised shortly.

<http://www.applejava.apple.com/>

  Mac OS 7.6 no longer supports PowerTalk, Apple's pioneering but
  now-defunct email and workgroup software. If you need PowerTalk's
  capabilities, you have little choice but to stick to your current
  system software. Programmers and power users should also note that
  Mac OS 7.6 requires MacsBug 6.5.4, which is not yet publicly
  available.

  The most significant missing element of Mac OS 7.6 is support for
  CFM-68K. The CFM-68K extension is required on 68K Macs in order to
  run a smattering of current applications including: OpenDoc,
  Cyberdog, LaserWriter 8.4, Apple Media Tool, AOL 3.0, and Internet
  Explorer 3.0. Apple recently discovered a serious bug in CFM-68K,
  and recommends that owners of 68K Macs disable it (see
  TidBITS-356_.). Mac OS 7.6 removes even the option of running
  CFM-68K for risk takers who want to run CFM-68K-dependent
  software. Fortunately, there are workarounds for developers to
  test CFM-68K under Mac OS 7.6, and a patch may be available soon
  (two potential fixes are currently being tested by Apple).


**Availability** -- You can purchase Mac OS 7.6 directly from
  Claris, and it should be available in traditional channels
  (including mail-order and online vendors) shortly. From Claris,
  Mac OS 7.6 costs $99 on CD-ROM, and $129 on floppy disks. If you
  can prove you purchased a version of System 7.5 (either on its own
  or with a computer), you can upgrade for $69, or $99 on floppy. If
  you recently bought a Mac that didn't ship with 7.6, you may
  qualify for a $24 upgrade through Apple's Mac OS Up-To-Date
  program (details at the URL below). None of these prices includes
  shipping, handling, and tax: a typical $69 CD-ROM upgrade from
  Claris will total more than $80.

<http://www.macos.apple.com/macos/releases/fulfillment.html>

  At this time, we have no information about the availability of
  localized versions of Mac OS 7.6.


**Should You Buy Mac OS 7.6?** Mac OS 7.6 would be more appealing
  at a lower price - Apple would do well to re-examine discounted
  upgrade pricing (or possibly subscription-based pricing aimed at
  non-corporate users). If you own a Power Macintosh and like to
  keep up with cutting-edge applications, Mac OS 7.6 could be
  beneficial. If you're happy with your current setup or own a 68K
  Mac, Mac OS 7.6 is much less compelling, and you may wish to wait
  for Tempo to ship in July. If you manage a lab or set of Macs,
  however, System 7.6's all-encompassing installer should prove to
  be a real time-saver.


$$

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