TidBITS#384/16-Jun-97
=====================

  Just when you think you know someone, they do something
  unexpected. In this issue, Adam writes about buying a PC, fighting
  Windows 95, and integrating them into his Mac network in order to
  work on his new book. Also, Tonya begins a multi-part feature
  about Web publishing software: this week, she surveys the field
  and takes a close look at PageSpinner. We also note the shipping
  of Virtual PC and a new version of WebCollage.

Topics:
    MailBITS/16-Jun-97
    Crossing the Platform Bar
    Spinning the Web Part I: Trade-offs and PageSpinner

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-384.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#384_16-Jun-97.etx>

Copyright 1997 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
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MailBITS/16-Jun-97
------------------

**Virtual PC News** -- This week, Connectix plans to ship Virtual
  PC, its Pentium emulation software (see TidBITS-374_). Early
  reports have been positive, and it seems that - at least for those
  who have the necessary hardware - Virtual PC has become a real
  alternative, not only for running the included Windows 95, but
  also any other Pentium-compatible operating system.

  According to Connectix, the lower-end version, called Virtual PC
  Windows 3.11/MS-DOS Version, works on any PowerPC-based Mac
  running at 100 MHz or faster, with a recommended 24 MB RAM and 200
  MB disk space. Those interested in Virtual PC Windows 95 Version
  need a Power PC-based Mac with at least a 180 MHz Power PC 603e
  chip, or any 604 or 604e, plus a recommended 32 MB RAM and 300 MB
  disk space. Both versions require Mac OS 7.5.5 or later. Connectix
  also notes that a big Level 2 cache helps performance. Retail
  pricing is expected to come in around $159, and there is a $25
  rebate for SoftWindows users. Connectix -- 800/950-5880 --
  415/571-5100 -- 415/571-5195 (fax) -- <info@connectix.com> [TJE]

<http://www.connectix.com/html/connectix_virtualpc.html>


**WebCollage** -- Last week - and before we'd reported on version
  1.0 - StarNine released WebCollage 1.01, a new version that
  supports 68K Macs and corrects several bugs. The software enables
  webmasters to place "dynamic graphics" on Web pages. A dynamic
  graphic is an ordinary GIF or JPEG that includes one or more
  updating elements such as data from a Web page or the result from
  searching a database. Using a user-defined schedule, WebCollage
  updates images and uploads them to a Web server. For instance,
  StarNine has worked with Nasdaq to make a graphic template for
  creating dynamic graphics that display updating stock prices.
  WebCollage comes with extensive scripting support and is
  especially worth a look if placing CGIs on your Web server is
  difficult. Currently priced at $199, WebCollage minimally requires
  a 68020-based Mac, System 7.1, 2.5 MB RAM, and QuickTime. A 30-day
  evaluation copy is available as a 2.6 MB download from the
  StarNine Web site. StarNine Technologies -- 800/525 - 2580 --
  510/649-4949 -- 510/548-0393 (fax) -- <info@starnine.com> [TJE]

<http://www.starnine.com/webcollage/webcollage.html>


Crossing the Platform Bar
-------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  My latest book, The Official AT&T WorldNet Web Discovery Guide
  (Osborne/McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0-07-882336-6, $24.99), should hit the
  shelves any day now. Despite the corporate-sounding title, it
  proved to be an interesting project. It felt like a second-
  generation Internet book for me, because a quarter of the book was
  devoted to helping readers learn how to search the Internet, and
  in another quarter of the book, I tried to show how I use the
  Internet in my everyday (non-computer) life. (Frankly, that
  portion of the book is heavily autobiographical.) Those two topics
  - searching and everyday usage - strike me as where the Internet
  is evolving in useful ways, as opposed to the over-hyped
  technologies being shoved down our throats.

<http://www.osborne.com/int/attdisc.htm>

  Another interesting aspect of the project proved purely technical.
  This is an Internet book, not a Mac or a PC book, and the AT&T
  WorldNet CD-ROM that comes with the book contains Macintosh and
  Windows software. But (and this is a big but) AT&T WorldNet wanted
  the general Web screenshots to have the window dressing of
  Internet Explorer for Windows 95. Their book, their call, and I
  sat down to figure out the best solution to this problem.


**PC Compatibility Card** -- My first attempt was an Apple PC
  Compatibility Card. They're a bit pricey and I didn't know anyone
  using one, so I was pleased when a friend from Apple offered to
  lend me one that he thought was a final prototype unit. I
  struggled through the installation sans full documentation and
  disks (luckily, all the software was downloadable from Apple's FTP
  site), and after one major stupid move, made it work. My stupid
  move involved the PC Setup control panel complaining that it
  didn't have enough memory to load properly. Thinking myself more
  clever than the average bear, I used Conflict Catcher to re-order
  PC Setup ahead of my other extensions and control panels. Dumb,
  very dumb. Since PC Setup then loaded before CD-ROM and Ethernet
  extensions, the PC Compatibility Card couldn't see the CD-ROM or
  the network. It took me some days to figure that one out.

  Overall, I was impressed with the PC Compatibility Card. Speed
  seemed good (speed was the main reason I hadn't seriously
  considered SoftWindows, and this predates Virtual PC), and I loved
  the fact that it uses Mac files as PC hard drives. Want to boot
  from your E: drive, or maybe your L: drive instead of the standard
  C: drive? Just swap the files in the PC Setup control panel. Try
  that on a PC! I even got the network working (although Apple's DOS
  software is confusing - not up to Apple standards in terms of
  interface and documentation, even under DOS).

  There was only one problem. Windows crashed constantly, especially
  when I copied files. I tried everything I could think of, but my
  deadline loomed, so I reluctantly removed the card. I could assume
  only that I had a slightly defective or unfinished card, and I
  didn't have time to buy and test another card in the event that
  Windows crashes continued.


**The Pentium 150** -- So, I decided that the safest move was to
  buy a PC clone. A store near here called Computer Stop builds
  machines from components for reasonable prices, and my Internet
  provider uses them for Linux boxes. From the Computer Stop, I
  ordered a Pentium 150 with 32 MB of RAM and a 2 GB disk. It cost
  about $2,300, which was a little less than a comparable Mac
  system, but not much less. I specifically got a 150 MHz Pentium,
  so I could claim (to people who didn't know that I was comparing
  apples and oranges) that this PC was theoretically equivalent to
  my Power Mac 8500 running at 150 MHz.

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

  After I brought it home and stuffed it into a tiny desk in the
  corner (I'm not worried about the ergonomics, as you'll see in a
  moment), I managed to get the PC up and running, as well as onto
  my Ethernet network and the Internet. For the most part connecting
  it was easy, mainly because I'm good at configuring Macs for the
  Internet, so I know what all the numbers mean. Irritatingly
  enough, it seems that Windows 95 requires that you restart the PC
  if you change even the smallest network or video setting.

  The first order of business after putting the PC on the Internet
  was to purchase and install Farallon's Timbuktu Pro. I wasn't
  about to jump back and forth between my Mac and this PC, and it's
  easy to buy Timbuktu Pro online with a minimum of fuss. That
  enabled me to run the PC in a window on my second monitor and use
  my primary monitor for writing chapters in Nisus Writer. (I later
  converted these chapters to Word 6 via DataViz's crash-prone but
  effective MacLink Plus translators, since Osborne had specific
  requirements that necessitated Word 6.) Luckily, I was using a
  Kensington TurboMouse trackball (the older two-button version, not
  the current four-button unit), so I could set the second button to
  emulate the PC's right mouse button. Otherwise I would have had to
  use the Command key to trigger the second mouse button, which is
  awkward.

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

  Once I'd slaved the PC to my Macintosh, I wanted to integrate it
  into my backup scheme. Crashes weren't infrequent on this PC,
  considering how little I used it, and (no matter what) I wanted
  good backups of my screenshots. Even more confusing, this PC
  always tries to run ScanDisk after a crash, and it makes me crazy
  to answer ScanDisk's questions about lost fragments that might or
  might not be part of files. If I'd been using the PC Compatibility
  Card, I would have saved all the screenshots to a folder on the
  Mac that I could have defined as something like the K: drive.
  Luckily, Dantz Development has a Windows 95 version of Retrospect
  Remote (now called Retrospect Client). A Macintosh-based
  Retrospect backup server can back up the PC, and the PC version
  looks and works almost the same as the Mac version.

<http://www.dantz.com/dantz_products/clients_4_windows.html>

  The PC was in daily use for a few weeks but only for a short while
  each day, so I wanted Retrospect to back it up whenever it was on.
  I added the PC to my Backup Server script, which we normally use
  only for our PowerBooks that appear on the network briefly, and
  that strategy worked well. The only drawback (other than the fact
  that Windows 95 seems to change all sorts of files for no reason
  at all) was that Retrospect on the Mac can't handle filenames
  longer than 31 characters, whereas Windows 95 can have longer
  filenames. Retrospect 3.0 renames the files and tells you that
  it's done so, which is nice, but quickly fills up the log file.
  This is fixed in the forthcoming Retrospect 4.0.


**All Was Not Well** -- Then came my first nightmare problem. The
  PC started freezing shortly after boot. Sometimes it even rebooted
  itself! I did everything I thought might help: I re-seated SIMMs,
  shut off startup programs, reinstalled Windows 95... and I
  couldn't trace the problem. Finally, a hunch told me it was
  related to the network, and indeed, the machine never crashed when
  it wasn't connected to the network. I tried moving the 3Com PCI
  Ethernet card to a different slot - bad idea. Windows 95 wanted to
  reinstall the drivers for the card at that point, and I couldn't
  find a disk with them, or rather, with the one file I didn't have.
  Eventually, I managed to download the complete driver set from
  3Com's Web site via my Mac and get it to the PC, but overall, I
  was frustrated and unimpressed. Talk about plug and pray!

  A switch in my head finally clicked, and I turned off Retrospect
  Remote. No crashes. Something had changed on the PC such that
  whenever my Backup Server script tried to back up the PC, the PC
  crashed. I uninstalled Retrospect Remote (it does that cleanly),
  then reinstalled it, and everything worked again.


**Transferring Files** -- If you've been paying attention, you'll
  remember I had my manuscript files on the Mac in (eventually) Word
  6 format, while most of my screenshots were TIFF files on the PC.
  (I had a number of Mac screenshots as well, which I took with
  Snapz Pro and converted to TIFFs with the free clip2gif - see
  TidBITS-372_.) How then to get them to my editor who has a PC and
  uses cc:Mail, which deals with attachments haphazardly?

<http://www.ambrosiasw.com/Products/SnapzPro.html>
<http://iawww.epfl.ch/Staff/Yves.Piguet/clip2gif-home/>

  I had almost no trouble sending Word 6 files to her via email
  (using uuencoding in Eudora Pro) and ironically, she commented
  that she had less trouble receiving files from me than most
  people. (Amusing, given I was using the Macintosh versions of
  Eudora Pro and Word 6, after converting the files from Nisus
  Writer.) Despite this luck, nothing I did from either the Mac or
  the PC would get a TIFF file through cc:Mail intact. So, I set up
  a password-protected folder on an internal email and FTP server,
  and sent my editor the full URL, with the username and password
  built in. She couldn't use an FTP client because of a corporate
  firewall, but luckily Netscape Navigator was able to download the
  Zip files containing my screenshots.

  When I had to move screenshots between the Mac and the PC, I used
  the Exchange feature in Timbuktu Pro. Unfortunately, drag & drop
  doesn't work between the Mac and the PC (at least between the
  versions I used), and Timbuktu Pro under Windows 95 doesn't
  support long filenames! I had named all my Mac screenshots with
  nine character filenames, so Timbuktu Pro deleted a character when
  I copied them to the PC. That drove me nuts.


**Impressions** -- After working with the PC and Windows 95 for a
  few months (mostly using Internet Explorer and Internet Mail and
  Internet News, since those are the programs AT&T WorldNet now
  recommends for its users), I have to say that Windows 95 is
  usable. It's not good, and I'm amazed by the interface atrocities
  it contains. But it is usable.

  For instance, clicking the Start menu (which looks like all the
  other buttons on the Taskbar, despite being a menu) to get to the
  Shutdown command is so backwards it isn't funny. Restarting the
  entire computer to make a small networking or video change is a
  pain in the posterior. You can minimize a window to an icon on the
  Taskbar or maximize it to take up the entire screen, but you can't
  zoom the window to the "appropriate" size, as you can in most Mac
  applications. Perhaps it's just my Mac habits, but I found moving
  and copying files confusing, because you use the left mouse button
  to move files and the right to copy them. At some point I needed
  to print all the screenshots in a chapter, so I selected them,
  right-clicked to bring up a pop-up menu, and chose Print. I
  figured they'd print in filename order, or in chronological order
  (which was the same as filename order). Instead, they printed in
  random order. I asked some Windows gurus about this, and the best
  suggestion was that Norton Utilities has a directory-sorting
  utility that might help. I opted instead to print each screenshot
  as I took it.

  Will I use the PC on a daily basis? No, definitely not. I have not
  found anything I want to do on the PC that I can't do just as well
  or better on my Mac. The PC feels clunkier and slower, even when I
  use it directly rather than via Timbuktu Pro. If I had a lot more
  time, I'd probably try playing with Linux, Windows NT, or
  OpenStep, but it's not worth the effort for my interest level.

  That said, I'm glad I have the machine. It's best to know more of
  what you're talking about when you criticize something. Although
  I'm unlikely to become a Windows expert, I can check claims made
  by Windows users to see if they're blowing hot air. And, to be
  honest, from an economic standpoint I make much of my livelihood
  from writing about the Internet. There's little difference between
  using a Web browser on a PC or on a Mac. If I limited myself to
  writing about the Internet from the point of view of the
  Macintosh, I'd have a harder time finding publishers, especially
  since the Mac book market is being swallowed in the same self-
  fulfilling prophecy that destroyed retail Macintosh software in
  computer stores. If, as a Mac user, I can ensure the Macintosh
  gets a fair representation in cross-platform books that sell well,
  that's better than writing purely Macintosh books that few people
  read.


Spinning the Web Part I: Trade-offs and PageSpinner
---------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Watching the Web authoring field change is like watching a
  volcano-studded island. Sure, you get a few months of calm, but
  then a spurt of new product releases wreaks havoc on the
  landscape. TidBITS hasn't reviewed many Web authoring programs
  lately, and it's time to correct that lapse. In this multi-part
  series, I plan to discuss much of the Web authoring software that
  has come out recently, with a focus on products that I think are
  most notable.


**Choose Your Poison** -- In choosing software for making Web
  pages, you generally trade easy layout for precise control, and
  most products fit neatly in a range between those two ideals. When
  choosing software, it's important to match your requirements to
  that range.

  Our Web site is a great example of one that leans toward precise
  control. Because our pages stick around for so long, we avoid
  newfangled techniques that look great in modern browsers but have
  a greater potential to break in the future. A Web authoring tool
  that creates HTML behind the scenes make us nervous, because we
  can't control what it's doing. Also, in our seven-year history,
  we've undergone two major conversions of back issues: HyperCard to
  setext, and then setext to HTML. This has taught us the value of
  uniform formatting - it's easier to run macros on uniformly
  formatted documents. We also don't have bosses breathing down our
  necks, so our site can evolve slowly.

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

  In contrast, webmasters creating sites that must go up overnight
  or that will have short lives have neither time nor incentive to
  worry about perfect, uniform HTML. These people require quick,
  easy layout.

  For instance, programs like NetObjects Fusion offers easy layout -
  page layout always occurs on a grid, and you can drag page
  elements to any location. The grid converts to an HTML table
  behind the scenes. You cannot edit HTML within Fusion, and you
  would not wish to - the table tags are extremely complex.
  (Although Fusion 2.0 ships with the free BBEdit Lite, BBEdit Lite
  is for use with "external pages," which cannot be edited in
  Fusion.) However, Fusion makes it easy to prototype and assemble a
  site rapidly.

<http://www.netobjects.com/>
<http://www.barebones.com/freeware.html>

  Next come tools like Adobe PageMill. PageMill expects you to work
  in a view that works like a word processor - you can't drag stuff
  around willy-nilly as you can in Fusion. There is an HTML view for
  editing HTML directly, but you get the impression Adobe doesn't
  understand why you'd want to. The HTML from the likes of PageMill
  is usually human readable, though it tends to lack the uniformity
  required for automation.

<http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/main.html>

  Finally, the spectrum ends with HTML editors like PageSpinner,
  where you work with HTML directly and see the visual results
  secondarily in a Web browser. Such an application makes it easy to
  create uniform, precise HTML, but you may have trouble visualizing
  what you are doing, and experimenting with layouts will be time
  consuming.

<http://www.algonet.se/~optima/pagespinner.html>

  A program that spans the divide between easy layout and precise
  control is GoLive's CyberStudio Pro. CyberStudio Pro gives you an
  optional grid for drag-it-anywhere layouts, and it also provides
  quick access to the underlying HTML of any page.

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

  Of course, there are other criteria for choosing Web authoring
  software, like whether you want to learn HTML, whether you tend to
  include a lot of plug-ins, whether you require site management
  features, and so on. Whatever your requirements, the rest of this
  installment will fill you in on PageSpinner 2.0.1 from Optima
  Systems and glance at cascading style sheets, a cool HTML
  specification.


**A Great Value** -- At $25, PageSpinner represents one of the
  best shareware values I've seen. At first glance, PageSpinner is
  deceptively simple. After launching, it displays a new document,
  populated by the HTML skeleton of a Web page. A simple toolbar
  holds basic options for tagging for the likes of bold text and
  horizontal rules, and a quick tour of the menus shows commands for
  styling text, setting up a table, and so on. A new user might read
  the fairly good Apple Guide-based description of how HTML works,
  and then plunge in using these immediately obvious options. Alert
  users will quickly identify modern features like an FTP upload
  (via a link to Fetch or Anarchie, though no download or integrated
  on-server editing), forms, and frames.


**Options Galore** -- PageSpinner's preferences offer a startling
  level of flexibility. For instance, if you don't want to see a new
  document when you start up, you can instead show an Open dialog,
  show a New dialog (which has extensive page setup features), or do
  nothing. Another notable setting is whether the bold and italic
  toolbar buttons set bold and italic tags, or strong and emphasis
  tags. In PageSpinner you can set whether Return or Command-Return
  automatically inserts a paragraph tag (you can use paragraph
  end-tags also, if you like). PageSpinner also has sensible
  keyboard shortcuts for inserting line breaks and horizontal rules.

  Those who frequently work with upper-ASCII characters will love
  how PageSpinner treats these characters. One option keeps them in
  the document as they are typed on the Mac. Another converts them
  to the ISO 8859-1 character set, often used internationally. Save
  a file in either of these two formats, and the characters will
  look the same after the save. Finally, upper-ASCII characters can
  be converted to HTML entities, which, though correct, are awkward
  to read within an HTML document.

  Another option that speaks to PageSpinner's flexibility is the
  User Tags feature, which enables users to create up to 18 tags of
  their own.


**Just Kitting** -- What makes PageSpinner a great value isn't its
  basic feature set, or even its flexibility. PageSpinner is less a
  program and more an HTML Assembly Kit - much like a Young
  Scientists' Chemistry Kit, with helpful instructions and easy
  projects for creating your very own quivering goo. It also has
  advanced projects, and those require exploration to find.

  PageSpinner provides an HTML Assistant (accessed via a menu or you
  can just keep its window open), which has plenty of in-context
  help and gives working examples that you can paste into a
  document. Examples range from basic HTML (such as setting up links
  or headers) to advanced topics like JavaScript and frames. I've
  found the Assistant a great way to refresh my memory, and also a
  helpful stepping stone to learning new tags.

  PageSpinner uses extensions (these work like plug-in modules, not
  system extensions) to add new features, and those who want to
  venture past the basic feature set will note an extension (plus
  help) for creating cascading style sheets (technically known as
  Cascading Style Sheets, Level 1, or CSS1). In its full
  implementation, CSS1 can flexibly specify fonts, sizes, position,
  blank space, colors, and more. Most measurements can be set
  specifically or generally (for instance, a font size could be 18
  point or "extra large"). CSS1 is partially supported by Microsoft
  Internet Explorer and - in theory - will be robustly supported in
  Internet Explorer 4 and Netscape Communicator 4.

<http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/TR/REC-CSS1>

  Style sheets have two compelling features. First, they work much
  like style sheets in a word processor - to change the look of
  every heading in a document, you change it once in the style
  sheet, not 50 times in the document. Style sheets can apply to a
  page section, an entire page, or even an entire site. Second, they
  separate structure from style, so pages can have simple HTML but
  still display in visually oriented glory in CSS1-savvy browsers
  (and, yes, at least in current examples and the spec, you can turn
  off style sheets in CSS1-savvy browsers, if you wish).

  Other PageSpinner extensions help with creating JavaScripts,
  inserting Java applets, and handling Netscapisms like snaking
  columns and spacer tags.

  PageSpinner unfolds further if you examine the files that come
  with it. I found directions for setting up "include" files (these
  are not server-side includes). An include file acts as a container
  for information referenced from within an HTML file. For example,
  if a group of Web pages all end with the same content, you could
  put that content in an include file. Then, on the Web pages, you'd
  simply add a pointer to the include file. Should you wish to
  change the content, you change only the include file and then
  update the entire group of pages, a much faster process than
  modifying each page by hand. Includes can also quickly update the
  time or date.

  There's also a collection of sample AppleScripts that link
  PageSpinner to other applications. For example, one script turns
  the contents of a Eudora mailbox into a sensibly organized Web
  page (this works best for smaller mailboxes). More generally,
  sample scripts show how to create Web pages from FileMaker Pro,
  HyperCard, and 4D Server. I generally shy away from scripting;
  however, when exploring PageSpinner, I easily created my first
  JavaScript and modified the AppleScript that turns Eudora
  mailboxes into Web pages. I feel as though PageSpinner helped me
  wedge open a heavy door.


**Team Player** -- As icing on the cake of PageSpinner's you-can-
  do-it attitude, PageSpinner is a team player. For example,
  PageSpinner doesn't come with a spelling checker, but you can link
  its Check Spelling command to any clipboard-based spelling
  checker. More impressively, PageSpinner comes with a hierarchical
  Web Tools menu, loaded with commands that you configure to match
  popular non-commercial utilities that ably supplement
  PageSpinner's feature set.


**But What About...?** PageSpinner has a few problems that need
  fixing: drag & drop for words isn't smart about inserting an extra
  space to accommodate a dropped-in word, the Find and Replace
  feature can't search on "whole word only," (so a search for "test"
  also finds "testing"), and there are a few references to an Alt
  key in the dialog boxes. Perhaps my main criticism of PageSpinner
  is that its documentation is scattered among numerous documents -
  there's no uniform way to access the information.

  In terms of price, PageSpinner's closest competitor is the
  shareware HTML Web Weaver Lite, from Miracle Software, which costs
  $25 ($15 educational). HTML Web Weaver Lite feels rougher than
  PageSpinner in overall use and lacks key features like tables,
  frames, and forms. You might also compare PageSpinner to the
  freeware BBEdit Lite 4.0.1 from Bare Bones Software, which - when
  supplemented with appropriate BBEdit extensions - is a serviceable
  HTML editor with a price that can't be beat.

<http://www.miracleinc.com/>
<http://www.barebones.com/freeware.html>

  Feature-wise, PageSpinner compares most directly to BBEdit 4.0.4
  and Miracle Software's commercial World Wide Web Weaver 2.1 (W4).
  Next week, we'll check out W4 in more detail (especially its cool
  auto-preview feature) and note some of BBEdit's key HTML features.
  (For a full review of BBEdit, see TidBITS-365_.)


$$

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 To search back issues with WAIS, use this URL via a Web browser:
 http://wais.sensei.com.au/macarc/tidbits/searchtidbits.html
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