TidBITS#500/04-Oct-99
=====================

  We celebrate the 500th issue of TidBITS with a redesign of our
  home page, including the addition of weekly polls and quizzes.
  Also this week, Adam weighs in with the first part of an article
  on how he's come to see the light of the MP3 format for music. In
  the news we cover the releases of a free update to Retrospect 4.2,
  Retrospect for Windows, Netscape Communicator 4.7, and FileMaker
  Pro Web Companion 5.0v2, plus cheaper prices on Palm handhelds.

Topics:
    MailBITS/04-Oct-99
    Five Hundred Issues and a New Home Page
    That MP3eaceful, Easy Feeling, Part 1

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-500.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1999/TidBITS#500_04-Oct-99.etx>

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

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/04-Oct-99
------------------

**Cheaper Palm VII Debuts Nationwide** -- Palm Computing has
  announced the nationwide availability of the wireless Palm VII
  device in the United States. The Palm VII, which features built-in
  wireless Internet access, has been available in the New York City
  metropolitan area since 24-May-99. In addition to expanded
  availability, the Palm VII's price has been reduced from $600 to
  $500. Palm also announced a third option for subscribing to the
  monthly Palm.net service, required for wireless access: the Volume
  Plan includes 300K of transferred data for $40 per month (the
  existing Basic Plan offers 50K for $10, while the Expanded Plan
  includes 150K for $25). The cost of data used beyond the monthly
  limits dropped to $0.20 per kilobyte. Although that sounds like a
  minuscule amount of data, the Palm VII uses a technology Palm
  calls Web Clipping which can dramatically reduce the amount of
  data transferred during each transaction. Still, early users have
  reported that it's easy to burn through several hundred kilobytes
  of data during a month's time. Palm also announced price cuts
  throughout the entire Palm organizer product line plus the Palm
  Vx, an expanded version of the slim Palm V offering 8 MB of RAM
  (versus 2 MB in the original) and a slightly faster processor.
  [JLC]

<http://www.palm.com/products/palmvii/>
<http://www.palm.net/>
<http://www.palm.com/products/palmvx/>


**Brought to You by the Letter T** -- Only two days after
  releasing the latest version of their flagship product (see
  "FileMaker Pro 5 Released to Controversy" in TidBITS-499_),
  FileMaker, Inc. released an update to the FileMaker Pro 5 Web
  Companion. The FileMaker Pro Web Companion 5.0v2 fixes problems
  where passwords containing the letter "t" would not appear
  correctly in Web Security databases and corrects a problem
  referencing custom HTML error pages. Updaters are available for
  both Mac and Windows versions of FileMaker 5, and both measure
  approximately 600K. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05576>
<http://www.filemaker.com/support/updaters.html>


**Retrospect 4.2 Update & Retrospect for Windows** -- Days after
  releasing Retrospect for Windows, Dantz Development has released a
  free downloadable upgrade for the Macintosh version of Retrospect.
  Retrospect 4.2 changes the way Retrospect Client licenses work,
  shifting from individual client licenses to application-based
  licenses that should ease administration of numerous Retrospect
  Clients. Retrospect Client packs also now contain versions for
  both the Macintosh and Windows; in the past, you had to purchase
  them separately. All previously purchased Retrospect Client codes
  work with both the current Macintosh or Windows clients (you
  should also download the Retrospect Client Updaters package from
  Dantz's Web site). Accessing networked clients is easier in
  Retrospect 4.2, which can automatically find clients within
  defined IP address ranges. Long-time Retrospect users will need to
  pay attention to a few terminology changes made to clarify basic
  Retrospect operations: StorageSets are now called "backup sets,"
  New backups are "New Media backups," and Full backups now go by
  "Recycle backups." Retrospect 4.2 will also feature new HTML Help
  and updated documentation, but neither are available yet. Finally,
  although the updater works only with the English language version
  of Retrospect 4.1, international users can now take advantage of
  the 56-bit DES encryption that Dantz previously wasn't able to
  export. The Retrospect 4.2 Updater is a 2.2 MB download, and the
  Retrospect Client Updater package weighs in at 1.9 MB.

<http://www.dantz.com/index.php3?SCREEN=retro_42_mac_upgrade>
<http://www.dantz.com/index.php3?SCREEN=client_50_updates>

  Dantz has also released the first full version of Retrospect for
  Windows (previously, Retrospect Clients for Windows were
  available, so you could use a Mac to backup Windows machines).
  Retrospect 5.0 for Windows comes in three versions: Retrospect
  Desktop Backup, Retrospect Workgroup Backup, and Retrospect Server
  Backup. The $150 Desktop version runs on Windows 95/98 and NT
  Workstation and backs up a single PC to all removable cartridge
  drives and most CD-R, CD-RW, and tape drives. The $300 Workgroup
  version also runs on NT Server and includes 20 Retrospect Client
  licenses to back up either networked Windows or Macintosh clients.
  The $500 Server version includes 100 Retrospect Client licenses
  and can back up client machines over multiple IP subnets. You can
  download a 30-day 7.8 MB demo of Retrospect for Windows.

  The release marks Dantz Development's first major move out of the
  Macintosh market, where Dantz has about 95 percent of the market
  share. Ironically, according to Craig Isaacs of Dantz, the move
  was prompted by long-standing requests from Macintosh fans in
  Windows environments who were frustrated at the lack of decent
  Windows backup software. [ACE]

<http://www.dantz.com/index.php3?SCREEN=intro_retro_5_win>
<http://www.dantz.com/index.php3?SCREEN=download_demo>


**Netscape Communicator 4.7 Released** -- Despite focusing most of
  their efforts on Netscape Communicator 5.0, Netscape
  Communications has released Netscape Communicator 4.7. Changes are
  generally minor, with one useful but undocumented new feature: if
  you Command-Option-click a link, Communicator uses Internet Config
  settings to send the link to the appropriate application (such as
  FTP links to Anarchie, or mailto links to Eudora). Other changes
  include several security fixes, 56-bit DES encryption for both
  U.S. and international versions, and a Netscape Radio service that
  lets you listen to Internet radio stations. Communicator 4.7
  requires a Power PC-based Macintosh running System 7.6.1 or later,
  and the full download is 12.9 MB. [ACE]

<http://www.mozilla.org/>
<http://home.netscape.com/download/index.html?cp=djudepart>


Five Hundred Issues and a New Home Page
---------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  I'm shocked that we've published 500 consecutive issues of
  TidBITS. Back when we started, I would never have predicted that
  TidBITS would have enjoyed such longevity. It's a testament to the
  Macintosh, Apple, and the Internet that we can still find
  sufficiently interesting topics to cover. Plus, the support you
  have all provided over the years and the positive response from
  hundreds of individuals to our TidBITS Contributions program has
  kept us enthused about continuing. This week, we're pleased to
  unveil a redesign of our home page aimed at exposing more of our
  content and adding a few cool new features like a weekly poll.
  Visit the new home page and follow along to learn what we did and
  why.

<http://www.tidbits.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>


**Looking Back** -- Although we haven't kept old versions of our
  Web site around after redesigns (even we're not that retentive),
  I decided to go back and read about our previous redesigns. In
  September of 1996, I wrote about our first redesign in "Rethinking
  a Web" and "Rethinking More of a Web" in TidBITS-344_ and
  TidBITS-345_. That effort was also the first time we put conscious
  thought into how we wanted the site to work. Some of those initial
  design ideas remain to this day, although modified and updated for
  modern HTML capabilities like tables.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00884>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00873>

  October of 1997 brought another significant redesign, and in "Four
  Hundred Issues and a Dynamic Web Site" in TidBITS-400_, we
  unveiled major changes to our entire site, including a new
  graphical logo, the GetBITS CGI that enabled us to provide
  permanent URLs to individual articles in our database, and a
  persistent left-side navigation bar. Our home page has retained
  that basic look for two years now, an eternity on the Web.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04179>

  We weren't sitting still during those two years, which brought the
  release of TidBITS Talk and its Web-based archive that I
  apparently suckered Geoff into creating (see "TidBITS Talk & the
  TidBITS Talk Archive" in TidBITS-440_) along with a database
  overhaul that enabled articles to know about related articles and
  TidBITS Talk threads (see "Adding Context to TidBITS Searches" in
  TidBITS-477_).

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05012>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05363>

  Seems like a lot of Web work for an email publication, no? It's
  true that most people still read TidBITS in email, but we've
  always been open to alternate methods of distribution. It's not
  our business to dictate how you should read TidBITS, which is why
  we publish TidBITS via email, the Web, FTP, and an active channel
  using Microsoft's now-ignored Channel Definition Format. For those
  of you using Palm handheld devices, David Charlesworth
  <davec@additional.com> has recently begun converting issues of
  TidBITS into the Palm DOC format, which you can read with the free
  AportisDoc Reader. David also has a page designed for users of
  AvantGo's HTML display service for the Palm devices - if you're
  interested in reading TidBITS instead of that 1982 issue of TIME
  Magazine at the doctor's office, check out David's welcome
  conversions.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05051>
<http://www.additional.com/community/palm/>
<http://www.aportis.com/>
<http://www.avantgo.com/>


**Expose Yourself to Content** -- Our primary design goal with
  this year's redesign was to increase the amount of timely content
  on our home page by leveraging the Web in ways that make sense for
  a publication. The Web works well for browsing and searching
  through archives, collecting bits of information into sets, and
  for dynamic data. On our new home page, we focus on these uses in
  several ways.

  The new page design devotes a fair amount of space to the most
  important piece of work we do - the current issue of TidBITS. The
  new approach reorganizes information relating to each issue,
  starting at the top with the issue title, which links to the full
  issue in HTML format for those who wish to read our traditional
  "just the text" view of the issue on the Web. Below the issue
  title come the MailBITS and Articles headlines. You can scan them
  quickly and follow their links to the individual articles in our
  article database. We wanted to make it easy for people to read
  just the articles that interest them without paging through the
  rest of the issue. And if you prefer reading text to scanning
  headlines, the abstract of the issue appears next, describing
  what's inside in a more verbose fashion.

  Throughout the week after an issue comes out, we publish short
  news bits that we've been calling "TidBITS Updates" on our Web
  site. We did this initially to bring some changing content to our
  home page to encourage people to visit more frequently. It's
  proven even more valuable to us as an encouragement to cover the
  most important events and product releases as they occur, rather
  than putting everything off until just before the full issue comes
  out. The new page design includes these updates on the top of the
  right-hand column in a section titled "Breaking News." Each news
  headline links to the appropriate section of another Web page that
  contains the full text of active new reports.

  New to the home page is the bottom half of the right-hand column,
  titled "Dig Deeper in TidBITS Talk." TidBITS Talk is our moderated
  discussion list that raises additional details about topics raised
  in TidBITS. TidBITS Talk has proven itself one of the most useful
  Macintosh mailing lists, thanks to the knowledge, experience, and
  insight of the TidBITS Talk members, combined with the work we put
  in keeping discussions on topic and editing messages for relevant
  content. By displaying some active TidBITS Talk threads from our
  Web archive on our new home page, we hope that people who don't
  want to subscribe to yet another mailing list can still benefit
  from TidBITS Talk or jump into discussions that immediately
  interest them.

  The contents of the right-hand column on the new page shift to
  accommodate different numbers of breaking news headlines and
  TidBITS Talk "threadlines." That column has eight slots, up to
  five of which can be filled by breaking news items. If there are
  fewer news headlines, you'll see more TidBITS Talk threadlines.
  And if there are more than five news headlines or more active
  TidBITS Talk threadlines than will fit in the remaining slots,
  you'll see "more..." links that display all current items.


**Polls and Quizzes** -- Beneath our main content area, you can
  see the main addition to our home page - a weekly poll or quiz.
  Polls and quizzes are another example of appropriate use of the
  Web - managing them via email is at best messy. We decided to
  build poll functionality initially because it can be fun and
  because we occasionally wanted a way to poll our readership about
  some hot topic. (TidBITS Talk works well for lengthier opinions
  and discussions but isn't appropriate for simple opinion surveys.)
  Once we'd worked out the basics of a poll, we realized that the
  only difference between a poll question and a quiz question is
  that a quiz has a correct answer. Building in that addition was
  easy, and it lets us provide quizzes you can use to test your
  Macintosh or Internet knowledge.

  Asking a poll or quiz question is the easy part. More interesting
  is the results page you see when you respond to the poll or quiz.
  The results page restates the question, provides a graph of the
  responses with both graphical bars, numeric percentages, and raw
  numbers for each answer, and provides links to TidBITS articles
  and TidBITS Talk threads that tell you more about the topic in
  question. We'll also have links to previous poll and quiz results.

  I can barely wait to see the responses to some of the polls we
  have planned, and we're working on a wide range of quiz questions
  appropriate for Mac beginners all the way up to those who consider
  themselves Macintosh alpha geeks. We plan to announce each new
  question in TidBITS and report on the results of the previous
  week's question, but the only way to participate will be on our
  home page.


**Text Banners** -- Although we've never included graphical ad
  banners on our home page (we did have them within NetBITS issues),
  we've long had what we informally call "the purple box" at the top
  of the home page, below the main logo. We use the purple box to
  alert visitors to interesting projects, events, or books by staff
  members, including things like our voluntary contribution program
  and SETI@home team. Our main frustration with the purple box has
  been that it's difficult to update, and as a result, we don't
  change it as often as we'd like.

  We've come up with a slightly new use for the purple box that fits
  in with the difference between our sponsorship program and
  straight Web-based advertising. With the sponsorship program,
  we're careful about just who we work with because a sponsorship is
  associative - our reputation rubs off somewhat on our sponsors,
  and theirs on us. The new design for the purple box helps clarify
  that relationship by displaying a small icon from the sponsor next
  to their sponsorship text from the most recent issue. Since we
  encourage sponsors to offer special deals to TidBITS readers, we
  hope this redesign will also increase the utility of the
  sponsorship text for readers without the overhead (and annoyance)
  of traditional advertising banners.


**Looking Forward** -- As is often the case with a large project,
  we came up with additional ideas and possibilities for the
  redesign that we ended up setting aside for lack of time. Since
  we're always looking for ways to improve TidBITS, that means we
  have more ideas to implement in the future. As always, if you have
  comments or suggestions, send them along. Who knows what we might
  end up with when TidBITS-600_ appears in another two years?


That MP3eaceful, Easy Feeling, Part 1
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  As much as I try to stay abreast of the software world, publishing
  TidBITS can prevent me from sitting down with a new program or
  exploring a new technology. As a result, I almost missed the
  massive change that's happening with music thanks to MP3. Almost a
  year ago in TidBITS-455_, Kevin Savetz wrote an excellent
  introduction to MP3 in "Move Over MTV, Now There's MP3," but only
  in the last few weeks have I internalized how deep the changes go.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05174>


**Quick Recap** -- MP3 stands for MPEG 1 layer 3 and is a highly
  compressed file format for storing audio that can be replayed
  without significant loss of quality. The term "near CD-quality" is
  often bandied about, but the important fact is that non-
  audiophiles probably won't hear the difference between music on an
  original CD and the MP3 version. People who have excellent hearing
  or are trained in music probably will notice the difference, but
  MP3 isn't an incremental change from the top of the audiophile
  food chain, it's a grass roots revolution begun outside the music
  industry. That said, I gather audiophiles are pondering the
  implications of MP3 as well, since bringing music into a computer
  makes possible all sorts of manipulations and auditory tweaks that
  were previously impossible.

  We've seen significantly more MP3 software since Kevin's article,
  with support for MP3 appearing in QuickTime 4.0, plus a number of
  free (SoundApp, GrayAmp, and QuickMP3) and commercial (SoundJam
  MP, Macast, Audion, and the beta MVP) applications that offer more
  full-featured interfaces than the QuickTime Player.

<http://www-cs-students.stanford.edu/~franke/SoundApp/>
<http://www.digithought.net/software/grayamp/>
<http://www.zipworld.com.au/~tonio/quickmp3.html>
<http://www.soundjam.com/>
<http://www.macast.com/>
<http://www.panic.com/ppack/audion/>
<http://www.mvpsite.com/>

  Thanks to MP3, the Internet has become a more viable publishing
  medium for independent musicians, who often release recordings in
  the tightly compressed and royalty-free MP3 format, either
  enticing you to buy the full CD or to pay a small fee for a
  particular track. MP3 is also now being used by a variety of sites
  like SHOUTcast and The Green Witch for streaming radio broadcasts
  that most of the commercial MP3 players can play back. A program
  called Ampcast helps you find these MP3-based radio broadcasts,
  and if you want to play disk jockey, check out BayTex Fiesta and
  MegaSeg, both of which let you mix and fade between MP3 songs.

<http://www.shoutcast.com/>
<http://www.greenwitch.com/>
<http://www.vfxweb.com/rsx/ampcaster.html>
<http://business.fortunecity.com/bronfman/204/BTF/>
<http://www.megaseg.com/home.html>

  MP3 has started to leak out into the physical world as well, and
  we're seeing numerous featherweight MP3 players like the Diamond
  Rio 500, the I-Jam, and the jazPiper. These devices rely on small
  memory cards that store MP3 files downloaded from a Mac or a PC.

<http://www.rioport.com/RioHardware/>
<http://www.ijamworld.com/>
<http://www.mcpiper.com/jppmain.htm>


**Being Really Digital** -- Nicholas Negroponte of the MIT Media
  Lab often writes about the importance of digital over analog, and
  MP3 provides an interesting take on the difference. After all,
  music distributed on CDs _is_ digital, and much is often made of
  the superior sound quality of CDs, supposedly because they're
  digital. In fact, the reason CDs provide excellent sound quality
  is that they provide more _bandwidth_ than many analog methods of
  playing recorded sound, such as cassette tapes, and the quality of
  the CD-based audio doesn't deteriorate over time and with each
  use. Sound quality is unrelated to the digital/analog divide.

  Although they use a digital storage format, CDs feel like members
  of the analog world. You buy CDs in stores, and they come in
  cardboard and plastic packages. You can damage CDs, and you must
  constantly swap them in and out of your CD player. Simply put, CDs
  are physical objects that you use much like analog audio cassettes
  and vinyl records.

  I can hear the muffled protests in the ether already, because you
  can put CDs into your Mac, download title and artist information
  from the Internet, and work with their contents as though each
  track were a file. That's true, but most people don't because of
  the sheer size of those files - often 30 to 50 MB each. Someday we
  won't think twice about working with files that size, but for most
  purposes now, a 40 MB file is too large to store conveniently on
  your hard disk, copy over a network, or download from the Web. A
  full CD might hold between 450 MB and 740 MB of audio data, which
  means I could store approximately 2 of them on the 1.2 GB hard
  disk in my Power Mac 8500. There's no reason to bother working
  with these massive CDs on the Mac - my $250 bookshelf stereo holds
  6 CDs at once.

  That's where MP3 waltzes in. You can convert a song from a CD into
  MP3 format and in the process, reduce its size by a factor of ten.
  A 30 MB original might drop down to 3 MB, and although a full CD
  might still occupy 45 to 75 MB, that's a far cry from its original
  size.


**Broadcasting the Revolution** -- Before going on, let me explain
  how Tonya and I joined the MP3 revolution. Last year, our Sony CD
  player started having tracking problems. I searched the Internet,
  found instructions for repairing CD players, and, after a bit of
  puttering, solved the problem by refocusing the lens. It worked
  wonderfully for about a week, when the problem came back. I kept
  fixing it for some time, but eventually became annoyed at taking
  the CD player apart every time it stopped working.

<http://plop.phys.cwru.edu/repairfaq/REPAIR/whole/F_cdfaq.html>

  The repair route was too expensive, so we started shopping for a
  replacement CD player and were irritated to discover that the
  higher quality players with decent feature sets and interfaces
  haven't come down much in price since we'd bought the previous
  one. We didn't want to spend a lot, so we gave up on buying a new
  player and instead replaced our old player with the bookshelf
  stereo that had been in Tonya's office, figuring that eventually
  we'd resign ourselves to the cost and buy a new one, possibly a
  100-CD jukebox unit if we could find one with a decent interface.

  This solution was acceptable, but the stereo components still had
  to be in the living room, far from the kitchen where we spend most
  of our free time. We could hear the speakers well enough in the
  kitchen, but changing the volume or changing a CD required a
  journey to another part of the house, which was impractical when
  we just needed to answer the phone, for instance. Ideally, we did
  want the speakers in the kitchen, but there was neither room for
  them nor an easy way to run the wires.

  What is in our kitchen, however, is our PowerBook G3, which is
  always available for recreational Web browsing and shared calendar
  and contact databases. The pieces had started to fall together.


**Enter SoundJam** -- After Macworld Expo, Casady & Greene sent me
  a copy of Jeff Robbin and Bill Kincaid's $40 SoundJam MP
  (currently at version 1.1) to review. Since SoundJam requires a
  PowerPC 603e-based Mac or better, I first installed it on my main
  desktop Mac, a Power Mac 8500, and tried to use it for a few days,
  but it became clear that it wasn't going to change my work life. I
  have a few hundred megabytes of free disk space, but even MP3
  files eat vast quantities of storage that I occasionally need for
  temporary work files. Playback tended to sputter when I launched a
  program or did something that required a lot of disk access. And I
  already had the six-CD bookshelf unit with good speakers in my
  office, complete with a remote control to pause the music at the
  press of a button when the phone rang. To pause SoundJam, I would
  have had to switch into the program and press the spacebar to
  pause the music every time I answered the phone. Although I could
  have automated that process using KeyQuencer, it might still have
  been difficult to do quickly, depending on what I was doing. And,
  if my Mac crashed or needed restarting, I'd have to start SoundJam
  playing again each time. It was simply too much trouble to
  integrate SoundJam into my existing desktop Mac and methods of
  working.

  As I was relating all this to Tonya while making dinner one night,
  it finally hit me: all the problems I'd faced in my office
  disappeared in the kitchen. The PowerBook G3 had a ton of free
  disk space, it wasn't used heavily for other tasks, so turning the
  music on and off wasn't a big deal, and with a decent pair of
  powered speakers I had lying around, it could take over from our
  main stereo system when we were in the kitchen.

  That night I installed SoundJam and the powered speakers and
  started to convert tracks from some of our favorite CDs. Within
  seconds after the beat of Abbey Lincoln's "Who Used to Dance" came
  through the speakers, it became clear that this was the future of
  our music listening experience.

  In the second part of this article, I'll look at SoundJam in more
  detail, plus muse about some of the ideas that stem from
  realigning my head to think of music as MP3 files.


$$

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