TidBITS#486/21-Jun-99
=====================

  Dealing with a dead disk? Data recovery expert John Christopher
  reviews Alsoft's DiskWarrior, which offers unique recovery
  techniques. Also, Matt Neuburg reviews RichLink, an authoring
  environment and browser plug-in for creating pop-up hypertext
  links on Web pages. In the news, Netscape releases Communicator
  4.61, and Apple releases the ATI Video Software Update 1.0.
  Finally, TidBITS is on vacation next week; we return 05-Jul-99.

Topics:
    MailBITS/21-Jun-99
    Fighting Corruption with Alsoft's DiskWarrior
    RichLink Reaches for Hypertext Riches

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-486.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1999/TidBITS#486_21-Jun-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:
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   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/21-Jun-99
------------------

**No TidBITS Next Week** -- We try to take a couple weeks off
  every year, especially as summer approaches in the U.S. So, the
  next issue of TidBITS will appear on 05-Jul-99. However, we'll
  continue to post TidBITS Updates to our Web site during this time
  and TidBITS Talk will continue unabated. [JLC]

<http://www.tidbits.com/macnews.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/search/talk.html>


**ATI Video Update Fixes Crashes** -- Apple has released ATI Video
  Software Update 1.0, which corrects a few crashing problems with
  recent Power Macintosh, PowerBook, and iMac models containing ATI
  RAGE graphics accelerators. The update fixes a system freeze
  problem on Macs with processor speeds higher than 400 MHz using
  screen resolutions of 1280 by 1024 pixels, and also when using a
  high resolution monitor set to display millions of colors. Some
  applications that crashed when scrolling will operate normally
  after applying the update. ATI Video Software Update 1.0 is a 1.2
  MB download. [JLC]

<http://asu.info.apple.com/swupdates.nsf/artnum/n11475>


**Communicator 4.61 Adds Stronger Encryption** -- Netscape
  Communications has posted version 4.61 of Netscape Communicator,
  adding 56-bit DES ciphers for the U.S. and export versions, an
  updated AOL Instant Messenger 2.0, and various bug fixes. Contrary
  to the release notes, this version contains RealNetworks'
  RealPlayer 5.0, not RealPlayer G2; also missing is Apple's
  QuickTime browser plug-in. A version supporting 128-bit encryption
  is also available for U.S. and Canadian citizens. (See "Netscape
  Communicator 4.6 Available" in TidBITS-481_.) According to
  Netscape, some printing problems introduced in version 4.6 are not
  resolved in the current release, as they require an architectural
  change in the program's printing model. Netscape 4.61 requires Mac
  OS 7.6.1 or later and a PowerPC-based system. [JLC]

<http://home.netscape.com/download/>
<http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/4.6/relnotes/mac-4.6.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05393>


Fighting Corruption with Alsoft's DiskWarrior
---------------------------------------------
  by John Christopher <datasavior@excite.com>

  If you're going to get excited about a software application, it
  probably won't be about a disk utility program. There are simply
  too many cool games, graphics applications, and action-packed
  accounting programs to tickle your fancy, compared to a small
  selection of products whose main function is to check the
  integrity your hard disk - and, after all, you didn't buy a
  computer just to spend time maintaining it. Nonetheless, disk
  utilities help ensure your Macintosh runs as it is intended, which
  in turn enables you to spend more time playing cool games,
  creating eye-popping graphics, and even balancing your checkbook.

  When Alsoft introduced DiskWarrior several months ago (see
  "Alsoft's DiskWarrior Combats Directory Damage" in TidBITS-457_),
  I was curious why someone would develop another disk utility
  program. Symantec had updated Norton Utilities to version 4,
  MicroMat stayed in the fray by adding directory fix-it routines to
  its TechTool Pro product, and even Apple had pumped up the
  simplistic Disk First Aid into a more robust tool available for
  free with the Mac OS.

<http://www.alsoft.com/DiskWarrior/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05190>
<http://www.symantec.com/nu/fs_num4.html>
<http://www.micromat.com/micromat/TTP2/ttp2.html>

  After spending a few months with DiskWarrior, I now understand the
  product and believe in it. So here's the story.


**Enter the Warrior** -- Without diving into HFS, HFS Plus,
  allocation blocks, or other low-level disk terminology, I like to
  describe the Mac OS file system's basic function as being similar
  to the table of contents in a book. Just as a table of contents
  indicates where each chapter and page are located, the Mac's
  directory structures track the locations of your files. These
  structures are divided into several pieces which record how many
  blocks are in use, the number of fragments a file has been split
  into, as well as where each fragment is stored. These structures
  have intriguing names like the Master Directory Block, the extents
  directory, and the ever-popular popular catalog b-tree. (See Geoff
  Duncan's "All About Macintosh Extended Format (HFS Plus)" in
  TidBITS-414_ for more details on how Macintosh disks are organized
  and how HFS Plus volumes work.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04668>

  Most disk utilities operate in a similar fashion, scanning your
  hard disk, examining the various directory structures, and making
  their best guess at what needs to be fixed. When these utilities
  attempt to repair a problem, they write permanent changes to the
  disk's directory. Most of the time, these programs fix whatever
  problem they identify, but sometimes errors occur, the programs
  mis-identify a problem, or fix a problem in such a way that it
  creates others. In a worst case scenario, repair efforts might
  make the disk inaccessible, or fix the directory to the point
  where it's empty and all your data is seemingly gone!


**Come Out and Play** -- DiskWarrior takes a different approach
  than other commercial disk utilities. Rather than being a
  potpourri of specialized programs and features, DiskWarrior offers
  only two basic functions: recovering data and optimizing directory
  structures to improve performance. DiskWarrior features the most
  simplistic interface of any disk utility on the market - in fact,
  it recently took home multiple honors from the Apple Software
  Design Awards, including one for its user experience.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05402>

  Instead of crawling through the data on your hard disk in an
  attempt to identify and correct problems, DiskWarrior tries to
  build a completely new directory for your disk, using every last
  iota of information it can discover about your disk, its files,
  and how they're organized. This holistic approach to rebuilding a
  drive's directories can yield significantly different results than
  a utility which merely attempts to correct directory damage, one
  item at a time, as it moves through your disk's directory
  structures. If you like the results of DiskWarrior's reconstructed
  directory, DiskWarrior can use it to replace the damaged directory
  on your disk; you can also use DiskWarrior for preventative
  maintenance, both optimizing your directory and identifying small
  problems before they blossom into full-fledged disasters.

  When you launch DiskWarrior, a single window displays a pop-up
  menu, enabling you to choose which drive or volume to rebuild. The
  window also displays information on the drive's file system, bus
  location, and status. That's about it.

  After selecting a disk to rebuild, DiskWarrior starts a ten-step
  process of creating a new directory, reviewing your disk's
  directory structure, and optimizing the catalog. This is an
  extremely fast process: the program took roughly three minutes to
  scan a severely damaged 4 GB hard disk on a PowerPC 603e-based
  StarMax Macintosh clone I used for testing. Once the scanning is
  complete, DiskWarrior displays a report of any problems it
  discovered. At this stage, DiskWarrior has already built a new
  directory, but hasn't made any changes to your hard disk. If you
  plan to use DiskWarrior in conjunction with another drive utility,
  it's important to use DiskWarrior first, since you can get to this
  point and reap most of its potential benefits without altering
  anything on your disk.

  Wait - how can DiskWarrior help you without making changes?
  DiskWarrior's best feature is its Preview, which lets you see and
  interact with the contents of your drive before writing directory
  changes to the disk. DiskWarrior accomplishes this feat by
  mounting a kind of virtual disk on the desktop, which is locked to
  prevent writing. Not only are you able to see the contents of your
  drive, but you can also test the functionality of the new
  directory by launching programs and opening files. Most
  importantly, you can rescue your data by copying it to another
  storage device. In some cases you may not need to go any further
  with DiskWarrior: simply copy off those one or two critical files
  you can't live without, then attempt to reformat the disk.

  Just before submitting this review, one of our backup servers
  crashed - it's a Power Mac G3 running Mac OS 8.5.1 with a 24 GB
  disk array, using four 6 GB drives with Conley's SoftRaid driver
  software. The server didn't contain critical data when it went
  down, so just for the heck of it we tried running the latest
  versions of Norton Utilities and Apple's Disk First Aid on it.
  Norton Utilities' Disk Doctor didn't recognize the array; it
  merely saw each drive individually on the SCSI bus. Disk First Aid
  was able to work with the array but could not fix the severe
  catalog damage.

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

  Then we tried DiskWarrior. The program recognized that the drives
  were striped together in an array. After pressing the Rebuild
  button and waiting a few minutes, we previewed our new directory -
  all our files were back. The whole process took about fifteen
  minutes and DiskWarrior performed flawlessly, doing what the other
  programs could not.


**Optimize from the Inside Out** -- Most disk utilities include an
  application to defragment your hard disk and eke out performance
  improvements. These programs work by locating the various file
  fragments scattered around your hard disk and reassembling them
  into a group of contiguous blocks. This helps speed up access to
  files and programs.

  Here again DiskWarrior takes another path. Instead of
  defragmenting the files on your disk it concentrates on optimizing
  the disk's directory. Other optimization programs defragment the
  catalog b-tree and extents files, but DiskWarrior makes
  improvements by changing the tree structure itself. On a healthy
  hard disk, you simply have DiskWarrior rebuild the disk's
  directory structure, just as you would if you were attempting to
  recover missing data. Speed addicts that crave even an smidgen of
  improvement may get enough of a hit from DiskWarrior to make the
  program worthwhile.


**Just Directory Assistance** -- DiskWarrior assumes any problems
  you have with a drive will manifest themselves as errors in the
  drive's directory structures - and for the most part, this is a
  good assumption. Software crashes, power outages, and forced
  restarts are all-too-common events in the lives of most computer
  users, and they in turn are all-too-common causes of directory
  damage.

  By focusing solely on directories, however, DiskWarrior doesn't
  pay much attention to the rest of your disk. If your disk were a
  book, DiskWarrior checks, confirms, and creates an elegant new
  table of contents, but it can't paw through every page character
  by character looking for a particular sentence. Given the life
  spans and reliability of today's storage devices, DiskWarrior's
  approach is fine in many cases. However, if the data region of
  your disk is damaged - perhaps due to failing media, a misaligned
  mechanism, deficient components, or physical damage from a fall or
  other impact - DiskWarrior won't be able to identify and repair a
  problem. Physical damage is more prevalent in removable media like
  Zip cartridges, but it can happen with any storage device.
  Searching the contents of a drive for fragments of a document is
  arduous work, but it's sometimes easier than re-writing a thesis
  or re-acquiring key data. Other disk utility packages offer these
  types of low-level tools, and many hard disk formatters and disk
  optimization programs can perform surface scans of disks, looking
  for signs of physical damage. And remember, despite the reassuring
  claims of manufacturers, the failure rate of all storage devices
  is 100 percent: it's just a question of how soon the failure will
  occur.


**The Final Fix** -- DiskWarrior is an excellent utility if you
  experience frequent crashes, or maintain Macs for users who have
  problems with software errors or data loss. DiskWarrior's greatest
  assets are its preview function, the speed of the rebuild feature,
  and the simplicity of its interface. DiskWarrior is a very capable
  program that can recover drives where other utilities fail, and
  deserves a place in your utility arsenal.

  DiskWarrior is available electronically from Alsoft for $70, and
  on CD-ROM from a variety of resellers. The DiskWarrior CD-ROM
  features system folders with Mac OS 7.6.1, 8.1, and 8.5.1, and
  some nifty prestidigitation from the folks at Alsoft enables you
  to use this CD-ROM as a startup disk on any system that supports
  booting from a CD-ROM drive (this ranges from at least the SE/30
  all the way to the most recent iMacs and blue and white Power
  Macintosh G3s). DiskWarrior requires a system with a 68020
  processor or better (including all PowerPC-based systems) and
  System 7.1; DiskWarrior needs Mac OS 8.1 or higher to rebuild HFS
  Plus disks.


RichLink Reaches for Hypertext Riches
-------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  One of the Information Age's most powerful concepts is hypertext.
  Originally described by Ted Nelson, hypertext can take various
  forms, but the basic idea is that a word or phrase in one document
  can be a portal into another. Being obsessed with information
  retrieval, I've long been fascinated by hypertext, and some of my
  TidBITS reviews have described hypertextual applications.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00752>
<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/tidbits-095.html>

  Thanks to browsers and the World Wide Web, hypertext has become a
  familiar concept. Unfortunately, a Web browser's implementation of
  hypertext has certain drawbacks:

* There is no easy way to link a single phrase to several
  different texts, amongst which the user can choose. A browser's
  hyperlinking is one-to-one, not one-to-many.

* Sometimes you just want the user to be able to peep at a brief
  comment, without leaving the current document - something on the
  model of a footnote in a book. A browser isn't very apt for this
  sort of thing; you can manage it with frames or a few browser-
  specific techniques, but not easily.

  Sentius Corporation has a solution to both problems. The solution
  consists of two parts: an application, called RichLink Author, and
  a browser plug-in, called RichLink View.

<http://www.sentius.com/Sentius/English/>


**Creating Rich Documents** -- In RichLink Author, you start with
  a styled text document, which can include inline pictures, rather
  like SimpleText. In a second pane of the document window, you
  attach comments to particular words. This document, meaning the
  text plus the comments, could be your final product; it can be
  opened and edited and read, and you could give it to someone else
  to read in their own copy of RichLink Author. But the document's
  real purpose is to be made available over the Internet through a
  Web browser.

  To do this, you use RichLink Author to generate an RLF file
  (meaning that the file's name ends in ".rlf", standing, I suppose,
  for "RichLink file"); then you make an HTML document containing an
  <EMBED> tag linking to this RLF file. A user can now view the RLF
  by opening the HTML document in a browser which has the RichLink
  View plug-in. The RLF is displayed within the browser window as a
  scrolling pane of text with some controls at the bottom, much like
  a PDF seen through Adobe's PDFViewer plug-in. And what about your
  comments? That's the interesting part. The comments are initially
  invisible. When the user passes the mouse over a word to which
  comments are attached, the cursor changes to indicate their
  presence. When the user holds down the mouse button on such a
  word, a hierarchical contextual menu pops up under the mouse. This
  menu displays the comments.

  This simple device, a hierarchical contextual pop-up menu to
  display comments attached to a particular word, is quite
  ingenious. Because it pops up, it's temporary: the user never
  leaves the current document, and the menu vanishes when the mouse
  button is released. Because it's a menu, it can contain many
  different comments simultaneously, but because it's hierarchical,
  the user only sees one comment at a time. For example, suppose a
  word has three comments: an explanation, a criticism, and a joke.
  When the user clicks on the word, the pop-up menu might just
  contain the three items Explanation, Criticism, and Joke; but each
  of these is hierarchical, so if the user holds the mouse on
  Criticism, the actual text of the critical comment pops up to the
  right.

  Multiple comments in a single category are possible; so, for
  example, holding the cursor over Criticism could show a further
  hierarchical menu with two items, Post-Structuralist and Feminist,
  each leading to a different comment. Comment text can be styled,
  and several special fonts (such as Japanese characters and
  phonetic symbols) are embedded in the plug-in. Even a single menu
  item is able to scroll, so a comment can be a fairly long
  paragraph, though to be sure things are easier if a comment is
  brief. A comment, instead of text, can be an ordinary browser
  link: you provide the URL of a Web page, an image, and so forth,
  and if the user chooses that item, the browser simply loads and
  displays it in the usual way (and so, multiple links can emanate
  from one stretch of text). A RichLink document, like a DOCMaker
  document, can consist of multiple sections; to navigate between
  them, there's a pop-up table of contents, and arrow buttons at the
  bottom of the frame.

<http://www.hsv.tis.net/~greenmtn/docm1.html>


**Dictionaries Extend Power** -- The remarkable thing about
  RichLink is that it's free - not only the RichLink View plug-in,
  but also the RichLink Author program for creating RLFs. How, then,
  does Sentius expect to make any money from this product? Through
  dictionaries. A common reason for annotating a document is to
  assist a reader who isn't quite fluent in the language. Typically,
  such a reader can make out the general sense, but there are a few
  words he or she just doesn't know. With an RLF, there's no need to
  spend any time hunting for those words in a paper dictionary; just
  click the word, and its definition appears.

  Since you can't be sure which words the reader won't know, you'd
  like to supply comments defining every word (or all but the most
  common words). Sounds like a lot of work, doesn't it? But no: the
  process of creating these definition comments is completely
  automatic. Sentius supplies the dictionaries, in a proprietary
  format; so far, they have the American Heritage dictionary for
  defining English words in English, plus bilingual dictionaries for
  defining English words in Dutch, French, German, Italian,
  Japanese, and Spanish. You just tell RichLink Author that you want
  the document annotated with comments based on one or several of
  these dictionaries, and go get a cup of coffee. When you return,
  the comments have been provided, based on the dictionaries.

  As a simple example, I've posted a Web page containing an embedded
  RLF. To view it, the plug-in must be installed before you start up
  your browser; you may also need to give your browser quite a bit
  of extra memory to prevent freezes. The page is a mock-up of an
  actual TidBITS article of mine from several years ago. The main
  idea here is that if (heaven forfend!) our French translators were
  temporarily incapacitated, we might want to post our pages with
  annotations to assist our French readers; so, word definitions in
  English and in French have been attached, automatically, with no
  effort on my part. I've also added manually one comment (to the
  phrase "a week" in the first sentence) and a couple of ordinary
  hyperlinks (to the words "University" and "Christchurch" in the
  first sentence). The whole thing took about five minutes of my
  time, though of course RichLink Author itself had to work longer
  to make the dictionary-based comments.

<http://www.jetlink.net/~mattn/downloads/myantip.html>
<http://www.sentius.com/Sentius/English/RichLink/Software/
rlv_downloads.html>
<http://www.sentius.com/Sentius/English/RichLink/Software/Author/
author_download.html>


**All That Glitters** -- RichLink Author's interface is clever,
  but it's also so clumsy and full of unnecessary surprises that it
  manages to make an easy concept difficult. I first discovered
  RichLink at the January 1998 Macworld Expo, and I'm disappointed
  that Sentius could, after all this time, ship a shrink-wrapped
  version which has matured so little. The product feels as if it
  has been subjected to little or no usability testing.

  It is impossible to create a new document which is utterly blank;
  instead, every new document has two comment types which you must
  delete by hand to get started. As you're creating and editing
  comments, you can tab from comment to comment, but tabbing to a
  comment does not permit it to be edited (you can't type or paste);
  you must hit Return first, which is confusing and contrary to
  Macintosh conventions. There is no Save menu item; RichLink Author
  is constantly saving secretly, which makes one afraid to
  experiment.

  Dictionaries, though huge, cannot be used directly from the CD;
  you must have lots of free hard disk space. Dictionaries can be
  browsed, but no menu item permits this; you must choose Startup
  Screen from the Window menu (!) and press a button in the
  resulting dialog. To dictate that comments should come from a
  dictionary, you have to say so in two different dialogs, which is
  maddening.

  Installation is a nightmare of unexpected consequences. Without
  warning, several bitmap fonts are installed, bypassing any font
  management system (such as Suitcase or Font Reserve) you might
  use; one of these conflicts with a font you may already have
  (Mishawaka, from Eudora). RichLink's file importing depends upon
  XTND, so a Claris Translators folder, full of filters, is
  installed in your Claris folder, regardless of what filters you
  may have in your Claris folder already. It took me some hours to
  straighten out the mess.

  Documentation is not very good. The manual manages, in a mere 60
  pages, to obscure a straightforward concept behind
  incomprehensible jargon; if I hadn't known already what RichLink
  does and how to use it, I could never have guessed from this. The
  manual is available in printed form, and also as a PDF, and also
  as an RLF to be viewed in your browser. This RLF is a poor
  advertisement for RichLink itself, though, because its internal
  links between chapters don't work; apparently, the feature which
  lets you jump between sections of a document is broken.

  There is an online hands-on tutorial, which is initially
  mystifying. There's no clue as to the purpose of the tutorial
  files; they're BBEdit files, but they've been oddly disguised with
  Apple Guide's icon, so it is up to you to figure out what they
  really are, guess which one comes first, and open it in a browser.
  These documents must be juggled along with two ReadMe files which
  provide important further details and caveats, and several example
  files. It's all very confusing and frustrating.

  The tutorial is a fair hands-on guide, and does effectively start
  you using RichLink. However, it is heavily and unnecessarily
  JavaScript-dependent. Performing the first step (opening a text
  file) froze my computer, apparently because of RichLink's
  unfortunate XTND installation. When I finally found a way to
  prevent the freeze, performing the first step snatched the
  tutorial from my browser and replaced it with a different
  document, making it hard to proceed with the tutorial. There are
  some disconcerting spelling errors both in the documentation and
  in the program itself. There are outright mistakes of fact, as
  when the tutorial claims that the magnifying glass icon means
  "zoom" (it means "find").


**Disconnected Links** -- RichLink is a brilliant idea, and it's
  great that RichLink Author is free, but all these loose ends worry
  me. I don't believe that Sentius isn't eating its own dog food,
  that is, that the folks at Sentius don't actually use RichLink
  much. Perhaps, with familiarity, they've become inured to the
  problems, or possibly they lack motivation to fix them, since
  users can't pound the table and demand their money back. A good
  product should evince concern for details, should make hard things
  easier, should emanate a sense that your computer won't crash nor
  your data be corrupted. RichLink Author doesn't quite do any of
  that. But perhaps the idea itself is so powerful that users won't
  mind the implementation.

  RichLink requires a Power Macintosh running System 7.5.5 or
  higher, plus QuickTime 3.0 or higher. The manual claims that you
  need 6 MB of free RAM, but since RichLink Author prefers a
  whopping 39,506 K (38.5 MB) of RAM (and much more if you're using
  any dictionaries), this seems unrealistic. The price of the
  commercial version (with dictionaries) starts at $500.


$$

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