TidBITS#386/30-Jun-97
=====================

  The emperor may have no clothes, but is he indecent? Adam examines
  the United States Supreme Court's ruling on Communications Decency
  Act and the notion that "indecent" material spontaneously arrives
  on people's computer screens. We also note the newly released
  Netscape Communicator 4.01, LetterRip 2.0, and the Usenet news
  server RumorMill, plus Tonya looks at visual HTML editors,
  including Adobe PageMill, Claris Home Page, and Symantec Visual
  Page.

Topics:
    MailBITS/30-Jun-97
    Earth to Netscape: Communicator 4.01 Released
    Communications Decency Act Ruled Unconstitutional
    Spinning the Web Part 3: Basic Visual HTML Editing

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-386.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#386_30-Jun-97.etx>

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   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/30-Jun-97
------------------

**LetterRip 2.0 Available** -- Fog City Software has released
  LetterRip 2.0, their dead-simple mailing list management software.
  LetterRip 2.0 adds support for POP (eliminating the need for a
  dedicated Internet connection), message banners and footers,
  extensive Apple Event support, message processors, automatic
  subscribe and unsubscribe accounts (popularized by our <tidbits-
  on@tidbits.com> and <tidbits-off@tidbits.com> accounts), and
  multiple domains. We've found LetterRip 1.0 almost painless for
  managing several small internal lists. LetterRip 2.0 is a free
  upgrade for existing users. Otherwise, it costs $295 and includes
  12 months of support and updates. [ACE]

<http://www.fogcity.com/lr_2.0.html>


**Straight from the RumorMill** -- Fans of Peter Lewis and
  Stairways Software will be pleased to note the release of
  RumorMill 1.0, a $35 shareware Usenet news server for the Mac.
  Although RumorMill isn't intended to handle a full Usenet news
  feed (currently about 1 GB per day, and rising), it's a simple,
  inexpensive solution for hosting local newsgroups and giving local
  users snappy access to a partial news feed - even if the server is
  using a dial-up connection! RumorMill supports multiple upstream
  and downstream sites, access restriction by IP number, and remote
  administration via a separate setup application. RumorMill also
  supports NewsWatcher preferences and standard newsrc files, and
  has several advanced features that can be configured via telnet.
  For the price, RumorMill is hard to beat for local discussion
  groups, and it only wants 2 MB of RAM. [GD]

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


Earth to Netscape: Communicator 4.01 Released
---------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Netscape Communicator 4.01 is now available for the Macintosh. The
  software contains a suite of Internet tools for Web browsing,
  email, HTML publishing, receiving pushed data, and more. The Web
  browser, called "Navigator" within the suite, represents an
  upgrade from Netscape Navigator 3. A Professional Edition comes
  with additional modules for group scheduling and network
  automation. Judging from the buzzword-compliant data sheet (which
  may have been authored by Dilbert's boss), both versions are aimed
  squarely at corporate users. Communicator 4.01 also fixes the
  recent "privacy" bug that received widespread media attention.
  This bug enabled nefarious webmasters to retrieve known files from
  users' disks.

  Perhaps the most noticeable new feature in the Navigator module
  (and one more aimed at consumers) is the Bookmarks menu, which
  comes preconfigured for your convenience with categories such as
  Sports and Shopping. Each category has sub-items; for instance,
  Shopping includes The Sharper Image and Amazon Books. User
  bookmarks display at the bottom of the menu. Although new users
  may find the menu a convenience, for me it felt as though a
  shopping mall had attached itself to my browser.

  I found that I could change the new bookmarks menu by swapping in
  my old bookmarks.html file such that it replaced the
  bookmarks.html file in my user folder (located in the Netscape
  Users folder within the Preferences folder of my System Folder). I
  did some testing and found that editing the new bookmarks.html
  file also works, but I don't yet know whether either solution is
  permanent.

  According to Netscape, Communicator requires at least a 68030-
  based Macintosh with 16 MB RAM and System 7.5 or later. The
  Standard Edition download, with all Communicator components, is
  about 10 MB. [TJE]

<http://www.netscape.com/flash1/comprod/products/communicator/>


Communications Decency Act Ruled Unconstitutional
-------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  And there was joy in Mudville, for the mighty CDA had struck out.

  On 26-Jun-97, the United States Supreme Court, in a unanimous
  decision (two justices dissented in part), ruled that the
  Communications Decency Act, better known as the CDA, violated the
  First Amendment of the United States Constitution. In the words of
  the official decision, "The CDA's 'indecent transmission' and
  'patently offensive display' provisions abridge 'the freedom of
  speech' protected by the First Amendment." With that, parents,
  teachers, and librarians must decide for themselves, without the
  heavy hand of government but with the aid of filtering and
  blocking software, what is not acceptable for their wards to view
  online.


**What They Said** -- I'm no legal scholar, but from reading the
  full text of the decision (posted eight minutes after release by
  online advocates using a PowerBook and a Ricochet wireless modem),
  it seems that the Supreme Court had a number of problems with the
  CDA.

<http://www.ciec.org/SC_appeal/decision.shtml>

* The court found the CDA overly vague, and felt that vagueness
  would have an "obvious chilling effect on free speech." In
  essence, if the government makes something illegal, citizens
  should be able to discern what actions have become illegal.

* The court felt that the CDA failed to define the terms
  "indecency" and "patently offensive" adequately. Without a strong
  legal definition, it's difficult not just for normal people, but
  also for lawyers to determine whether some speech qualifies as
  indecent, patently offensive, or neither. Personally, I have
  trouble with situations like this, because it seems to me that
  "decency" is a concept that differs radically between people,
  cultures, and eras.

* The court criticized the CDA for failing to account for the
  possibility that "offensive" material could have any socially
  redeeming value. The world is not all sweetness and light, and
  sometimes exposure to offensive material is worthwhile.

* Finally, the court felt that the overall vagueness of the CDA
  was exacerbated by the attachment of criminal penalties to a
  content-based ban on speech.


**What Now?** Proponents of the CDA have vowed to continue
  fighting for a provision for controlling, well, the kind of speech
  they don't like (it seems the most accurate description). Some
  groups plan to lobby the U.S. Congress for a new statute, and CDA
  co-author Senator Dan Coats may introduce a new, more-focused
  bill. That possibility was given some encouragement by the
  concurring opinion written by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor (and
  joined by Chief Justice William Rehnquist). In that opinion,
  Justice O'Connor postulates that the creation of "adult zones" on
  the Internet would be constitutional. However, she also noted that
  "user based zoning is in its infancy," and "we must evaluate the
  constitutionality of the CDA as it applies to the Internet as it
  exists today."

<http://www.ciec.org/SC_appeal/concurrence.shtml>

  Other possible legislation would require Internet service
  providers to offer filtering or blocking software. President Bill
  Clinton said the administration would study the Supreme Court
  decision, and noted, "If we are to make the Internet a powerful
  resource for learning, we must give parents and teachers the tools
  they need to make the Internet safe for children." Proponents of
  the CDA urged the administration to appeal the ruling.

  It is worth noting that existing laws about the distribution of
  child pornography and "obscene" (a more rigidly defined term than
  "indecent") materials have applied in the past, and continue to
  apply to the Internet.


**Some Thoughts** -- I've been confused by the administration's
  defense of the CDA, not because I find any of the administration's
  arguments in the least bit compelling, but because it seemed so
  ludicrous that such a law could passed to begin with (okay, so it
  was part of the overall Telecommunications Reform Act of 1996),
  and all the more so that the administration pursued it after the
  initial defeat in a lower court (see TidBITS-315_ and
  TidBITS-333_). Perhaps I'm biased toward the concept of
  individual responsibility, but the rhetoric surrounding this
  debate astonishes me.

  For instance, President Clinton said, "With the right technology
  and rating systems, we can help ensure that our children don't end
  up in the red light district of cyberspace." Sorry, but you don't
  "end up" looking at dirty pictures on the Internet - if you are
  looking at them, you intentionally followed a link to view them.
  The same goes for Usenet newsgroups, IRC channels, and most
  anything else. More to the point, the reference to the red light
  district is misleading, because it implies physical danger. That
  might be true in a real red light district, but anyone who
  accidentally wanders into a sexually explicit Web site, newsgroup,
  or chat room can leave instantly, without possibility of harm.


**Additional Legal Resources** -- My opinions above are just that,
  personal opinions, and hold no more weight in court than would a
  box of ping pong balls. For real legal opinions, I refer you to
  the archives of the Cyberspace Law mailing list, where the topics
  of free speech and CDA have been discussed at length.

<http://www.ssrn.com/cyberlaw/>

  For those seriously interested in legal discussion, complete with
  copious footnotes (which, I understand, are a necessary part of
  the legal literary genre), I recommend a book called Law and the
  Information Superhighway. Written by Professor Henry H. Perritt,
  Jr. of the Villanova University School of Law, and published by
  Wiley Law Publications, the book is an exhaustive reference and
  textbook. It's not cheap at $150, nor is it a light read, but when
  a legal issue surrounding the Internet comes up, I turn to it for
  some basics. Check the page below for a review of the book.

<http://jilt.law.strath.ac.uk/elj/jilt/BookRev/3waelde/default.htm>


Spinning the Web Part 3: Basic Visual HTML Editing
--------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  The first two parts of this series looked at text-based HTML
  editors, programs that offer a great deal of control over the
  final product. Such editors force you to deal with HTML tags, a
  process that bores some, intimidates others, and generally falls
  outside the Macintosh tradition - most Mac users who monkey with
  HTML tags take about ten minutes to ask for a program that handles
  HTML behind the scenes. The first of this type of program was
  Adobe PageMill (most recently reviewed in TidBITS-356_), and
  PageMill has currently has two direct competitors: Home Page 2.0
  from Claris, and Visual Page 1.0 from Symantec. This article
  contrasts these three programs, and notes a few free alternatives.

<http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/>
<http://www.claris.com/products/claris/clarispage/>
<http://www.symantec.com/vpagemac/>

  All of these programs function like low-end word processors: they
  lack sophisticated text editing options, and you can't drag & drop
  objects freely on the page as you could in a desktop publishing
  program (or a high-end HTML editor like Golive CyberStudio Pro or
  NetObjects Fusion). Further, they take a page-oriented perspective
  that frustrates people creating large sites. Each program has an
  Edit view that attempts to offer a WYSIWYG display (though perhaps
  WYSIWYS - "what you see is what you see" - would be a more
  appropriate term), plus an HTML view for working with HTML tags
  and a Preview that tries to approximate how a browser will display
  the page, with operational internal links. Annoyingly, the
  programs' HTML views can't access the styling commands available
  in the Edit views, so everything must be hand tagged in the HTML
  views.

  All three programs work well for experimenting with layouts and
  creating some Web pages. However, in many real-life instances
  these programs are awkward to work with in some important way that
  ultimately means that - in a perfect world - their HTML needs
  final tweaking in a text environment. Still, not all pages need
  perfect HTML to serve their purposes or their creators' time
  constraints. Recent experiences in helping new computer users have
  reminded me that creating a Web page using graphical software
  would be a worthy accomplishment for some, one not to be marred by
  tagging issues.

  You won't go seriously wrong with PageMill, Home Page, or Visual
  Page, but differences do exist.


**Tut, Tut, It Looks Like Text** -- For serious composition, these
  three programs are uniformly mediocre and lack sophisticated
  options available in a modern word processor. Even so, they all
  have a basic Find and Replace option and support basic Macintosh
  editing conventions, though Visual Page and PageMill both fail to
  insert an extra space if you drag & drop text between two words.
  PageMill and Home Page both also have spelling checkers, though
  PageMill's is nothing to write home about. Home Page uses the
  standard Claris spelling engine and dictionaries and has a more
  mature look and feel. Home Page also takes honors as the only
  program where you can change the default font and size - an
  important feature for folks who cannot compose in the annoyingly
  tiny Times 12 point default font that all three programs share.
  For all these reasons, Home Page gets the nod as a writing tool.
  Still, this category of software works best for poster- or
  brochure-like pages.

  For placing large documents on the Web, you'd be better off using
  an HTML converter such as Myrmidon 1.2 by Terry Morse Software,
  which deserves more space than I'm giving it here; RTFtoHTML 3.6
  ($29 shareware from Chris Hector); Microsoft's Internet Assistant
  2.0 for Word 6.0.1; or Astrobyte's BeyondPress 3.0, a QuarkXPress
  XTension with zillions of hot features, including support for
  cascading style sheets (Extensis sells a light version called
  CyberPress).

<http://www.terrymorse.com/>
<http://www.sunpack.com/RTF/>
<http://www.microsoft.com/word/internet/ia/>
<http://www.astrobyte.com/>
<http://www.extensis.com/products/CyberPress/>

  Or, you'd be better off using a word processor such as Nisus
  Writer 5.0.4 that comes with decent HTML conversion options
  (I'm not impressed with WordPerfect's HTML features). Another
  possibility would be Akimbo's Globetrotter (reviewed in
  TidBITS-374_).

<http://www.nisus-soft.com/nisus_writer.html>
<http://www.akimbo.com/>


**Tables and Frames** -- Tables and frames are particularly
  tedious to build from scratch in HTML, so Web publishers are
  likely to turn to these programs for help with them. In the frames
  arena, Home Page isn't as good a choice, because it cannot display
  pages within a frameset. PageMill and Visual Page both offer this
  feature.

  When it comes to tables, all three programs use toolbars and
  palettes for applying table formats, so you need not repeatedly
  open and close dialog boxes as you set up a table. Even so, Home
  Page takes low ratings in this area, primarily because you must
  apply cell and text formats one cell at a time, making mass
  formatting tedious.

  PageMill is slightly better - you can apply some cell formats to
  multiple cells, but you cannot apply text-oriented formats, such
  as the strong tag. I dislike working with tables in PageMill
  because I have trouble remembering the techniques for selecting
  within a table (you might want to select the entire table, a cell,
  or text within a cell). If you use PageMill frequently, you'll
  have no problem, but occasional users may share my frustration.
  Also, PageMill's toolbar has minuscule buttons, and I have trouble
  identifying them quickly. Working with PageMill tables doesn't
  feel fluid to me.

  Visual Page does the best job with HTML tables that I've seen in
  this software category. The table feature is easy to learn and
  offers more options than Home Page or PageMill (for example, in
  PageMill you can only size cells vertically by dragging them; in
  Visual Page, you can type a measurement, and that measurement can
  apply to any selection of cells). Most importantly, Visual Page
  can format text within multiple table cells all at once, plus
  apply a full range of cell formats to multiple cells.


**Graphics & Image Maps** -- Given Adobe's emphasis on graphics,
  it's not surprising that PageMill's graphics handling features
  stand out. It's not so much that PageMill has more features, but
  it puts more care into their implementation. For example, Visual
  Page can resize graphics (either visually by way of dragging or
  numerically by way of typing measurements), but it can't resize
  them proportionally. Home Page can resize proportionally, but only
  when you drag, not when you type. PageMill can resize
  proportionally whether you type or drag, though it lacks snazzy
  options like resizing proportionally to fit inside a box. If your
  interest in graphics can be satisfied by placing images that have
  been modified in other applications, any of these programs will
  work, but if you are big on graphics, PageMill will suit you best.
  A big minus for Home Page is that it cannot display graphics
  aligned left or right of text (though they'll display that way in
  a Web browser).


**The Media Drag Bag** -- These three programs accept a grab bag
  of file formats. For instance, they all handle PICT, GIF, and JPEG
  images. In most cases, you just drag a file onto the document
  window, and the file joins the page, usually as a graphic or
  embedded object which can then be configured in a dialog box.
  Sometimes, though, the program simply creates a link to the file
  in question. For example, Visual Page treats sounds as embedded
  objects, but Home Page creates clickable links leading to the
  sound files. These programs display dragged-in objects
  differently, and the differences are particularly apparent in
  Preview mode. Adobe made sure that PDFs (Portable Document Format
  files) work well, and Symantec paid special attention to Java
  applets.

  Personally, I find Preview modes bogus, because I preview pages in
  a browser, but I can imagine scenarios where Preview mode becomes
  important - users might not have enough RAM to also launch a
  browser, or be so inexperienced that switching applications posed
  an unreasonable challenge. The table below summarizes how these
  programs display different types of dragged-in files. ("Object"
  means a generic embedded object; "link" means the program linked
  to the dragged-in file instead of incorporating it on the page.)

> File Format &     Home Page     PageMill      Visual Page
>    Mode           displays:     displays:     displays:
>    ------------------------------------------------------
> Animated GIF
>    Edit Mode      first frame   first frame   first frame
>    Preview Mode   first frame   plays         first frame
> QuickTime
>    Edit Mode      first frame   first frame   plays
>    Preview Mode   first frame   plays         plays
> AIFF
>    Edit Mode      link          object        object
>    Display Mode   link          object        object
> au/WAV
>    Edit Mode      link          link          object
>    Display Mode   link          link          object
> Java applet
>    Edit Mode      Java object   Java object   Java object
>    Display Mode   Java object   Java object   plays
> PDF
>    Edit Mode      link          first page    object
>    Preview Mode   link          first page    object
>    ------------------------------------------------------


**Killer Features** -- Each of the programs has at least one
  killer feature that differentiates it. PageMill has a color
  palette that stores any set of colors, making it easy to apply a
  consistent palette. Visual Page enables you to work with HTML and
  Edit mode showing at once. Home Page is the easiest to learn.


**Who Should Use What?** I tend to recommend PageMill to design
  professionals, particularly those who use other Adobe products.
  Now that PageMill ships with SiteMill, it may well be the best
  value of the lot, and we'll look at SiteMill later in this series.
  Visual Page wraps a lot of features into a reasonably good
  interface, and I think it's best for somewhat experienced
  Macintosh users or for serious Web publishers and those who don't
  like PageMill or are outside the Adobe milieu. Home Page feels
  more like a hobbyist or home business tool: it's the easiest to
  learn, especially if you've used other Claris software and you
  realize that Control-clicking things brings up a handy menu.


**Price?** Visual Page and Home Page have official estimated
  street prices of $99.95 and $99 respectively; PageMill's suggested
  retail price is $149, but you should be able to find it for under
  $100. If you're buying, look for the new version that includes
  SiteMill 2.0. Also, check for deals - for instance, there's a $20
  discount on Visual Page for owners of other Symantec development
  tools and owners of Home Page 1.0 can upgrade for free.

  For those who like their software free, possibilities include
  AOLpress 2.0 and the Composer module in the newly released
  Communicator 4.01 from Netscape Communications (though
  Communicator isn't free to business and government users after a
  90-day trial period). In my opinion, neither of these programs are
  in the same ballpark as their fully commercial counterparts.

<http://www.aolpress.com/press/>
<http://www.netscape.com/flash1/comprod/products/communicator/>


**AOLpress** -- On first glance, AOLpress has an impressive
  feature set: tables, frames, and forms; a customizable toolbar; a
  nifty, online workbook tutorial; and a site-oriented perspective
  that includes external link checking, multi-file find and replace,
  and multi-file spell checking. It is primarily intended for AOL
  customers, and can open and save files directly from a server
  running AOLserver or the Web hosting area on AOL. All this sounds
  great, but the software needs a serious makeover.

  There's no drag & drop from the Finder, no Balloon Help, and the
  program shuns the Mac Help menu in favor of its own. AOLpress uses
  paths in the Open and Save dialogs, and doesn't resize properly on
  a second monitor. Besides these obvious issues for Mac users, the
  program has numerous disappointments: a Form palette that
  disappears behind document windows, the multi-file Find and
  Replace cannot replace single items in multiple documents (instead
  it can only replace all), and table edges cannot be resized by
  dragging. The menus and dialog boxes are arranged so you spend
  lots of time mousing around in hierarchical menus, and dialog
  boxes lack Apply buttons that would hasten experimentation with
  different formats. The worst flaws, at least for me, are that
  AOLpress crashes frequently and runs sluggishly on my Power Mac
  7600.


**Composer** -- To be honest, I haven't spent much time in this
  newly shipping version of Composer, and - in fact - was so
  unimpressed with its predecessor, the HTML editor in Netscape
  Navigator Gold, that I ignored it until just now, when I decided
  that this article wouldn't be complete without noting it. A brief
  tour of the program reveals a more attractive, Mac-like version
  than its predecessor. I actually like the toolbar, which consists
  of two rows of colorful icons, with no button edges showing. If
  you mouse over a particular icon, it pops up inside a beveled
  square.

  Netscape has honed Composer into a simple tool for making basic
  pages. If Composer has support for forms or frames, I can't locate
  it. Table editing has improved enormously, and you can apply text
  formats to multiple cells, though you can't resize cells by
  dragging their borders. I implied earlier in this article that all
  programs noted here have HTML views; Composer does not, but it
  does supply a command for quickly viewing HTML in the text editor
  of your choice. For making basic pages with a cheap tool, I
  recommend trying Composer. Composer performed well on my 7600, but
  there may be configuration issues that I'm not yet aware of, and -
  as with any product these days - Communicator's recommended
  hardware requirements (16 MB RAM and a 68030-based Mac, plus
  System 7.5) may need to be taken with a grain of salt.


**Summing Up** -- Although I may have left out your pet peeve or
  favorite feature, I hope you have a good idea of the major
  software options available for visual HTML editing. Next week
  we'll look at Golive's CyberStudio Pro, which offers optional drag
  & drop placement of objects (like a desktop publishing program)
  and a rich collection of high-end features.


**DealBITS** -- Cyberian Outpost is selling Home Page and Visual
  Page for $84.95 each to TidBITS readers who purchase through these
  URLs. This price represents an $8 discount off Cyberian's regular
  price. Unfortunately, we were unable to get a deal for the
  SiteMill-enhanced version of PageMill before this issue went to
  press (see the MailBIT in TidBITS-385_ for more information).

<http://www.tidbits.com/products/home-page.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/products/visual-page.html>

    Adobe Systems -- 800/411-8657 -- 408/536-6000
    America Online -- 800/879-6882 -- 703/448-8700
    Claris Corporation -- 800/544-8554 -- 408/727-8227
      800/800-8954 (fax) -- <info@claris.com>
    Netscape Communications -- 800/638-7483 -- 415/937-3777
      415/528-4124 (fax) -- <info@netscape.com>
    Symantec Corporation -- 800/441-7234 -- 541/334-6054
      541/334-7474 (fax) -- <cafe@symantec.com>



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