TidBITS#418/23-Feb-98
=====================

  Many of us simply can't be separated from our Macintoshes - but
  some people routinely take Newtons places Macs only dream about!
  In this issue, physician Ron Risley details how he's made his
  Newton MessagePad an indispensable part of his personal and
  professional life. We also have news about BBEdit Lite 4.1, Iomega
  driver updates, a French TidBITS mailing list, and a new book
  about some of Apple's more whimsical products: t-shirts.

Topics:
    MailBITS/23-Feb-98
    The Clothes Make the Mac User
    Reflections on Life without Newton

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-418.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1998/TidBITS#418_23-Feb-98.etx>

Copyright 1998 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com> -- How
   do you back up your APS hard drives? Try APS tape, removable,
   and CDR drives! Weekly specials at <http://www.apstech.com/>!

* Northwest Nexus -- 1 888-NWNEXUS -- <http://www.nwnexus.com/>
   Internet business solutions throughout the Pacific Northwest.

* Small Dog Electronics -- Special Deals for TidBITS Readers! <---- NEW!
   UMAX C500/180 refurb, 32 MB RAM, Apple 15" Mon. & 1-yr on-site
   warranty: $1,159; SuperMac J700L/233 refurbs sale: only $1,599!
   For details: <http://www.smalldoggy.com/#tid> -- 802/496-7171

* Cyberian Outpost -- the Cool Place to Shop for Computer Stuff!
   XLR8 Mach Speed G3 266/177MHz w/1MB Backside Cache: $1,489.00
   Order online or call 860/927-2050 x9228
   <http://www.tidbits.com/tbp/xlr8-mach-g3.html>

* Soft Material -- Pickle's Book CD-ROM: the Entertainment Weekly
   pick of the week, a tie w/ Riven and WebTV for HomeArts's gift
   picks! 4 stars from Children's Software Revue... Check it out!
   <pickle@softmaterial.com> or <http://www.softmaterial.com/tb/>

* Microsoft Internet Explorer and Outlook Express, <--------------- NEW!
   Macintosh software written for Macintosh users
   by Macintosh users.
   <http://www.microsoft.com/ie/mac/>.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/23-Feb-98
------------------

**No TidBITS Next Week** -- TidBITS will be taking a bit of a
  breather next week, so you won't see our next issue until 09-Mar-
  98. In part, we're taking a break because we're operating with
  about half our usual staff, but the time should also allow us to
  catch up on a bunch of administrative and other behind-the-scenes
  tasks. As always, you'll be able to reach us via email at
  <editors@tidbits.com>, and we'll be adding the latest news and
  other items of interest to TidBITS Updates on our Web site. [GD]

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


**French Mailing List Available** -- Thanks to the assiduous
  efforts of the French translation team, a separate mailing list is
  now available for people who want to receive TidBITS issues via
  email in French. To subscribe, send email to <tidbits-fr-
  on@tidbits.com>; French versions of TidBITS are also available via
  the Web. We'd like to thank the all-volunteer French translation
  team - as well as the folks who work on the other TidBITS
  translations! - for the outstanding work they do, and for making
  TidBITS available to a much wider audience. [GD]

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/lang/fr/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/translations.html>


**Eyes on Iomega** -- Iomega Corporation has released version
  5.5.1 of its Iomega software, a 2.45 MB download which includes a
  disk driver system extension for Zip and Jaz drives, Iomega Guest
  (which loads the disk driver into RAM so the device can be used
  without installing the extension), plus associated utilities, help
  files, and documentation. The software supports the ZipPlus and 2
  GB Jaz drives, enables Zip and Jaz disks to be initialized as
  Extended Format (HFS Plus) volumes under Mac OS 8.1, and adds
  diagnostic options to the Iomega Tools utility. Iomega has also
  posted a brief tech info page about the "Zip Drive Click of
  Death," which gets its name from repeated clicking noises made by
  some damaged drives. The problem can damage both media and drives,
  and Iomega has reportedly begun active investigation of the issue.

<http://www.iomega.com/support/software/mac.html>
<http://www.iomega.com/support/techs/zip/2135.html>
<http://news.com/News/Item/0,4,19062,00.html>

  In other news, a settlement has been reached in a class-action
  lawsuit over the quality of Iomega's tech support and for charging
  customers excessively for long phone wait times; the settlement
  would require Iomega to improve its technical support and support
  options significantly. Iomega is still preparing to defend against
  a different class-action lawsuit charging that company executives
  violated federal securities laws. [JLC]

<http://news.com/News/Item/0,4,19215,00.html>
<http://www.iomega.com/company/news/class13.html>


**BBEdit Lite 4.1 Gains Weight** -- Bare Bones Software's freeware
  text editor BBEdit Lite isn't as light as you might expect. BBEdit
  Lite 4.1 was released this week, featuring a number of low-level
  improvements that make this powerful application a close cousin to
  the feature-laden commercial BBEdit 4.5. Now derived from the same
  code and resource bases as the commercial release, BBEdit Lite
  improves overall performance and reliability, provides Balloon
  Help for most interface elements, supports search strings up to
  512 characters, and stores Grep search patterns in a separate file
  to be stored or shared with other versions of BBEdit. BBEdit Lite
  4.1 also automatically opens at startup files stored in a new
  "BBEdit Startup Items" folder. Although professional programmers
  and HTML coders will probably opt for the full BBEdit 4.5 package,
  the Lite version provides all the functionality that many people
  need from a text editor. BBEdit Lite is a 772K (MacBinary) or 1 MB
  (BinHex) download. [JLC]

<http://web.barebones.com/products/bbedit/bbedit.html>
<http://web.barebones.com/free/free.html>
<ftp://ftp.barebones.com/pub/freeware/>


**Personal Web Sharing** -- Though it's been somewhat overlooked
  in recent hoopla regarding Apple and Claris, Apple recently
  released Personal Web Sharing 1.5, an update to the small-
  footprint Web server that ships as part of Mac OS 8. Personal Web
  Sharing 1.5 adds support for aliases, HTTP file uploading,
  automatic binhexing of downloaded files, and a Personal Web
  Sharing control strip module. The release also adds some features
  to the Web Sharing control panel, including the ability to set the
  server's port number, keep an activity log, and directly configure
  CGIs and (importantly) MIME types. These new features are aimed
  more at savvy Web users than casual Internet users, but I've found
  Apple's Personal Web Sharing to be a surprisingly robust and
  reliable little server, and the new capabilities are welcome
  additions. Personal Web Sharing requires Mac OS 8; the download is
  1.5 MB. [GD]

<ftp://ftp.info.apple.com/Apple_Support_Area/Apple_SW_Updates/US/
Macintosh/Networking-Communications/Personal_Web_Sharing/>


The Clothes Make the Mac User
-----------------------------
  by John Sinteur <sinteur@lunatech.com>

  When I went to my first World Wide Developer Conference, I was
  advised to leave a lot of extra room in my suitcase for t-shirts.
  Having been an intern at Apple in the Netherlands a few years
  earlier, I didn't laugh at that advice, but I still came home with
  one more suitcase than anticipated. Since then, my collection has
  grown considerably, and my current co-workers know that behind
  every shirt I wear, there's a story. Apparently, I'm not the only
  one collecting shirts with the Apple logo, because Gordon Thygeson
  <gordon@appletshirts.com> managed to publish more than a thousand
  pictures of them in his new book Apple T-shirts, now available via
  the Web for $39.95.

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


**History of Apple** -- If there's one thing the book makes clear,
  it's that writing the history of Apple is impossible without
  mentioning t-shirts - or, rather, a lot of them. (For a good
  companion book, check out the Mac Bathroom Reader, by Owen W.
  Linzmayer.) Browsing through Apple T-shirts, you see a lot of
  long-forgotten codenames, discontinued products, and an occasional
  sting to an individual, probably long gone. More recent t-shirts
  are there as well, of course - the recent bad press about Apple
  doesn't seem to have had an influence on the creativity of the
  folks who wear project t-shirts as badges of honor.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0782115314/tidbitselectro00A/>


**Why the T-shirts?** -- The author mentions a number of reasons
  for the popularity and proliferation of t-shirts, ranging from
  "bumper stickers you can wear all day" to pride over an
  achievement, and the fact that at Apple, t-shirts are a form of
  identification: they tell co-workers what project you are working
  on, or what you've worked on in the past. If you can look past the
  "Dilbertese," as the author says, the following business plan
  statement sounds remarkably like a t-shirt development plan:
  "Agree and execute on a communication plan for the division aimed
  at building a team identity, rewarding/reinforcing critical
  behaviors/accomplishments, and building team spirit and passion."

  Even if you don't much care about Apple's corporate mentality or
  history, this is an excellent book. Although the book could use
  more anecdotes about some shirts, it's a great addition to my
  collection. My favorite shirt? The one I'm most proud of features
  four stumps, but my favorite is featured on the inside flap: Bill
  Gates, looking like a chicken, laying eggs and wearing lipstick.
  You'll find the reasons for my choices in the book.

  [John Sinteur is a Dutch developer specializing in advanced
  multimedia and online commerce, with more Apple in his blood than
  he cares to admit.]


Reflections on Life without Newton
----------------------------------
  by Ron Risley <rrisley@pobox.com>

  [Ron, a resident physician, uses a Newton to stay on top of the
  innumerable details that swarm through his life. We asked him to
  relate how he uses his PDA in the real world, and to share
  specifics on how he's customized his Newton MessagePad. Although
  Ron wrote this piece before the most recent rumors of the Newton's
  demise (see "Newton Rumored Dead and Gone" in TidBITS-417_), it
  nonetheless illustrates how powerful and unique the MessagePad can
  be. For a review of the MessagePad 2000, see TidBITS-379_.]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04719>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=02170>

  It seemed like a good idea - start 1998 by upgrading my Newton
  MessagePad 2000 with the features of the recently released MP
  2100. I made several backups of the data in my Newton, including
  copies of the names, addresses, appointments, reminders, pearls of
  clinical wisdom, and other notes I'd scribbled into my Newton over
  the past four years that I could print if worst came to worst. I
  packed the machine in the Apple-provided box, dropped it off at
  our shipping department, and re-entered a paper-based world.

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

  I was shockingly unprepared for life without my Newton. I found
  that I was devoting significant amounts of energy toward
  organizing my day, accessing information, preparing myself for the
  unexpected, tracking stray bits of information, and documenting my
  activities. Why was all this extra effort required? Wasn't the
  Newton, after all, only an unusually sophisticated daily planner?
  Didn't I still have my PowerBook for computing tasks, and ample
  paper and pens? I began to ponder the ways in which the Newton had
  enabled me to go beyond what could be accomplished with older
  technology.


**A Wealth of Information** -- The most obvious way in which the
  Newton beats paper-based solutions is in the sheer quantity of
  information it can store. I am a resident physician pursuing board
  certification in two specialties. One, family practice, is
  extremely broad-based and demands fingertip access to a vast store
  of knowledge which must be updated frequently. My other specialty,
  psychiatry, is a rapidly evolving field where new pharmaceuticals
  and treatment strategies emerge almost daily. My MessagePad
  (souped up with 16 MB of flash storage, in addition to 4 MB
  internal) contains the LexiComp Drug Handbook, Griffith's Five
  Minute Clinical Consult, the complete DSM-IV (the Diagnostic and
  Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association), other
  textbook-sized references (many of which are available from K2
  Consultants), plus progress notes and links to each patient's
  complete history and physical. My Web site lists many of the
  important medical references and tools available for the Newton,
  as well as detailing how the Newton integrates with my day-to-day
  practice.

<http://www.skyscape.com/k2/>
<http://www.pobox.com/~rrisley/newton/>

  Carrying all the references I use in paper format would require a
  small wheelbarrow. Sure, they'd fit on a laptop machine, but to
  use a laptop effectively I'd need a place to set it down
  (remarkably difficult to find in a busy tertiary care facility),
  then I'd have to start it up (too time-consuming in a managed-
  care, seven-minute-per-patient-visit world), then put it away when
  I was done (mean time between thefts is short in some places where
  I work).

  Health care may represent an extreme situation, but many modern
  jobs require more information than can comfortably fit in a single
  brain. (When I was a telecommunications engineer I would have
  killed to keep a few textbook-sized semiconductor data books in my
  pocket.) The Newton lets me keep a fair-sized library of reference
  materials at my fingertips and reach the resources of the Internet
  if I need more - I don't have to locate a library or an available
  computer terminal to find the information I need. Putting the
  materials into the MessagePad is as easy as transferring them from
  a desktop computer to the Newton, or directly from the Internet to
  the Newton.


**The Opportunity to Forget** -- In my work, I am barraged with
  pager messages; voice mail; data and instructions from nurses,
  patients, and coworkers; plus random thoughts that pop into my
  head and demand attention. The usual approach to dealing with
  these interruptions is to keep a paper to-do list (known in the
  medical trade as a "scut list"). That's helpful, but can quickly
  grow cumbersome. On a typical day, I can have fifty or more
  pending tasks on my scut list. Unless you add only the most vital
  items to your list, critical items become lost in a sea of less
  immediately relevant tasks. If you don't write down "unimportant"
  items, however, they might not get attention until they _become_
  important, and then you live in crisis management mode.

  Out of the box, the Newton gives you a better way to manage tasks.
  You can keep a list of to-do items which can be prioritized (from
  one to four) and sorted within priorities. Adding some inexpensive
  third-party software can take you even further. I use DateMan from
  Stand Alone, Inc. A competing product, MoreInfo by SilverWARE,
  also gets rave reviews from users. Both products have time-limited
  demo versions available online.

<http://www.standalone.com/products/dateman.html>
<http://www.silverware.com/MoreInfo.shtml>

  DateMan lets me assign 15 levels of priorities to my tasks. In
  addition, I can file each task in a folder, and then create
  filters to display pending tasks from any combination of folders.
  Though my scut list might be huge, it always appears more
  manageable because I only see relevant items. For example, at home
  I can exclude all items that can only be taken care of at work. If
  I'm in a given department at work (say, Radiology), I can focus my
  list on items I need to accomplish while there, then broaden it to
  include all work-related items so I can decide which floor or
  department to visit next. DateMan hides items that have been
  completed, allows me to re-prioritize items on the fly, add scut
  items quickly (even when I'm in the middle of something else),
  assign alarms to items, add items that will show up at a future
  date, and even create items that will reappear at pre-set
  intervals.

  This frees me to forget about things until they need attention. If
  I'm in the middle of interviewing a patient and a piece of
  information comes flying at me from another direction ("Doctor,
  the lab just called and said Mr. X's sodium is 129..."), I don't
  have to drop what I'm doing or worry I might forget that important
  fact later. I just grab my Newton (_always_ in my fanny pack), add
  the item to my scut list with an appropriate priority and
  category, and move on. The Newton's accessibility and reliability
  (I haven't lost a single bit of information in four years of heavy
  Newton use!) reduce my stress level and allow me to focus fully on
  the task at hand.


**Keeping on Schedule** -- Along with a scut list, DateMan also
  maintains a phenomenal calendar. I can schedule meetings and
  appointments with ease, and keep track of a schedule that involves
  two departments, three hospitals, three clinics, and the
  occasional social event. DateMan has a dazzling array of display
  options which I found frivolous at first. With use, though, I have
  come to love the capability to customize DateMan to suit my
  particular needs (which can vary considerably as I rotate through
  various jobs).


**Scraps** -- I have already talked about storing textbook-sized
  references, but Newton is even more impressive at the other end of
  the scale. Life is full of small tidbits of information.

  The Newton offers an alternative to keeping track of innumerable
  cards, memos, notes, and scraps of paper. When I sort a huge stack
  of paper from my clinic mailbox, I look at each item once. Some I
  dispose of immediately. Some have small bits of information:
  meeting dates or policy changes. Those I enter into my Newton on
  the spot, and recycle the memos then and there. Some longer but
  still useful pieces - such as lists of departmental personnel and
  phone numbers, microbe sensitivity data, and reporting procedures
  - go home to be scanned and converted to text. Then I can use
  David Fedor's PaperBack or Apple's Newton Press to create a Newton
  book containing the information.

<http://www.pobox.com/~fedor/>
<http://newton.info.apple.com/product_info/SW/newtonpress.html>

  Equally important are the scraps of information that stream past
  during a typical day: mentioned by friends, discussed at a
  meeting, heard on the radio, printed in the newspaper, or
  encountered on the Web. Other important items - such as serial
  numbers, credit card numbers, birthday reminders, passwords, and
  shopping lists - fly by all day long. If you meticulously keep a
  paper notebook, you might capture much of this information. It
  would be sorted chronologically, however, with no simple way to
  categorize it or search it for a specific item. It would become
  bulkier and heavier with continued use, encouraging purging the
  old material and selectivity when saving the new. The Newton grows
  neither heavier nor larger with continuing scrap-gathering.

  With the built-in Notepad, you can save your scraps (as notes,
  outlines, checklists, or audio recordings) in one of up to 12
  folders. Add Super NotePad and More Folders (both Stand Alone
  Software products) and you can have an unlimited number of
  hierarchical folders. You can file the same note in multiple
  folders, and you can assign an unlimited number of tags to each
  note. You can then define filters that show only the notes filed
  in specific folders with (or without) specific tags.

<http://www.standalone.com/products/sprnotes.html>
<http://www.standalone.com/products/morefolders.html>

  There is also information you might be reluctant to keep in a
  notebook. Imagine the horror of having an intimate diary stolen.
  First, the information lost might be difficult or impossible to
  replace. Second, potentially sensitive information would be in the
  hands of strangers (or worse). Fortunately, the Newton can back up
  to any Windows or Macintosh computer. It also provides a level of
  security by requiring that a password be entered at user-specified
  intervals to keep it operating. Super NotePad expands this
  security by allowing individual notes to be encrypted and entire
  folders to be locked. No security is unbeatable and I wouldn't
  trust my Newton with state secrets, but it is far more secure than
  existing paper-based systems for storing credit card numbers,
  patient records, and my plans for world domination.

  Of course, no matter how sophisticated your filing system is, some
  information will slip through the cracks. Even so, by lowering the
  trouble threshold for saving information and increasing the
  chances you'll be able to find it later, the Newton goes a long
  way toward bringing order to a chaotic world.


**Link It All Together** -- Another of the powerful features of
  DateMan (and MoreInfo) is the capability to link disparate kinds
  of information together. I keep the names of my clinic patients in
  the Newton Names application. DateMan then lets me link a name to
  a clinic note each time a patient visits, appointment entries for
  future visits, scut list items, and lists of current prescriptions
  in case the pharmacy calls for a renewal authorization.

  Such links can be valuable in other ways. Say I'm shopping and
  spot a gadget that would be a perfect gift for my father's next
  birthday. Alas, it's January, and Dad's birthday is in late
  October. If I buy it now, it might become lost or obsolete, or he
  might buy one for himself before I can give it to him. Instead, I
  create a note where I describe the item, perhaps including the
  price and features. I link that to Dad's name card and to the
  store's. I can create a scut list item that won't appear until
  late September reminding me to buy the item and link that reminder
  to the item's description as well as the store's address card.

  It's remarkably easy to create all these links. On the other hand,
  I am remarkably lazy. Fortunately, a Newton program called
  GestureLaunch allows you to create scripts (in the Newton's
  programming language, NewtonScript) that automate many of these
  tasks. It's part of the NewtCase package from Innovative Computer
  Systems. Even if you don't like to program, you can select from a
  pool of scripts at the GestureLaunch Depot site or download
  scripts I've written directly from my site.

<http://www.newts.com/newton/nc30.html>
<http://www.newton-underground.com/glaunch/>
<http://www.pobox.com/~rrisley/newton/glmacros.html>


**Connect with the Real World** -- Newtons can beam information
  from MessagePad to MessagePad using built-in infrared capability.
  New Newtons come with a built-in Web browser and email client, and
  can connect to the Internet via a serial link, PC Card modem, or
  PC Card Ethernet adapter. Third-party solutions include browsers
  with more features, a Telnet client/VT-100 emulator, and an off-
  line Usenet news client. There are even wireless modems available,
  though wireless Net surfing remains financially out of reach for
  those of us on a resident's salary.

<http://members.bellatlantic.net/~sweyer/newton/index.htm#NewtsCape>
<http://www.scrawlsoft.com/products/pt100/info.html>
<http://www.standalone.com/products/paperboy.html>
<http://www.ricochet.net/>

  All MessagePads also come with the capability to send and receive
  faxes through PC Card or serial modems. This capability is not
  only an excellent way to communicate with the non-Newton enabled,
  it can often serve as a makeshift substitute for a printer or
  scanner.

  A trend which fills me with joy is the proliferation of Hewlett-
  Packard IrDA (infrared) compatible printers in some institutions
  where I work. The other day, a colleague asked if I knew where a
  local restaurant was. I popped the restaurant's card up from
  Newton's Names file. While he was looking for a piece of paper to
  write the address on, I spotted an HP LaserJet 5MP in the corner.
  I pointed my Newton at it, tapped Print, and by the time my friend
  found a sheet of paper, I had a printed address to hand him.

  Even with these options, sometimes you want to be self-sufficient.
  I already owned an HP DeskJet 340 portable printer to use with my
  PowerBook, so I bought the IrDA adapter for it. I wrote
  GestureLaunch scripts to set margins to correspond with the forms
  and note paper used where I work. If I know I'm going to need to
  generate a lot of paper, I just toss the 340 in my bag. It
  supports IrDA and can print a hundred or so pages on a charge, so
  I don't need cables or power adapters.

<http://www.hp.com/peripherals/printers/dj340.html>
<http://www.pobox.com/~rrisley/newton/glmacros.html#paperchanger>


**Never Be Without** -- As Newton has integrated itself more and
  more into my life, I have found it increasingly valuable for
  dealing with the unexpected. Instead of wondering what reference
  books I might need at work, I take the Newton. If I unexpectedly
  have time to stop at a grocery store on my way home from work, I
  have my shopping list with me. If I get an emergency call from a
  patient while I'm out of town, I not only have the patient's
  records, but I can consult medical reference books and fax a
  prescription to the pharmacy. I have a diagram of my house with
  dimensions so if I find myself in a home-improvement store and get
  a crazy idea, I can check if a radial arm saw really will fit in
  the bedroom. If I unexpectedly make a tax-deductible purchase with
  cash, the information won't get lost. If I get paged and am not
  sure how important it might be to answer, I can look up the number
  and find out who might be calling. If I find myself waiting in
  line or suffering through a boring meeting, I can work on some
  writing or read a book from Project Newtonberg, or some
  contemporary short fiction from InterText. Am I diligently taking
  notes or playing solitaire? Only Newton knows for sure.

<http://www.aa.net/~robwest/bookmenu.htm>
<http://www.etext.org/Zines/InterText/>
<http://www.tactile.com/solito.html>

  My upgraded MessagePad came back a few days ago. With relief, I
  emptied my bag of collected medical reference books, scraps of
  paper, makeshift daybook, paperback novel, calculator, and other
  odds and ends that only scratch the surface of what I could do
  with the Newton. Many folks (myself included) first react to the
  Newton by saying it's too big. Having just experienced life
  without it, the Newton now seems plenty small.



$$

 Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if
 full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee
 accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
 company names may be registered trademarks of their companies.

 This file is formatted as setext. For more information send email
 to <setext@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned shortly.

 For information: how to subscribe, where to find back issues,
 and more, email <info@tidbits.com>. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.
 Send comments and editorial submissions to: <editors@tidbits.com>
 Back issues available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/>
 And: <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/>
 Full text searching available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
 -------------------------------------------------------------------



