TidBITS#463/18-Jan-99
=====================

  Macworld Expo news continues this week, with all the information
  we couldn't fit in last week. (Baby.) We all pitch in for our
  regular Macworld Superlatives article, and Jeff Carlson looks at
  the various Palm-related products on display at the show. (Baby.)
  In the news, Apple announced at $152 million dollar profit, Fog
  City released LetterRip Pro 3.0.4, and oh, did we mention that
  Adam and Tonya had a baby, Tristan Mackay Engst?

Topics:
    MailBITS/18-Jan-99
    Macworld Expo SF '99 Superlatives
    Palm Shows More in Hand at Expo
    Please Welcome Tristan Mackay Engst

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MailBITS/18-Jan-99
------------------

**Apple Records $152 Million Profit** -- Apple announced a net
  profit of $152 million on $1.7 billion in revenue for its first
  fiscal quarter of 1999, marking Apple's fifth consecutive
  profitable quarter. Although the results include a one-time $29
  million gain from selling holdings in ARM Ltd., Apple also sold
  519,000 iMacs during the quarter, contributing to a 49 percent
  increase in unit shipments compared to the same quarter a year
  ago. Apple also wrapped up the quarter with a scant two days of
  inventory worth about $25 million, indicating the company
  continues to hone its newfound manufacturing and distribution
  efficiency. [GD]

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/1999/jan/13earnings.html>
<http://www.arm.com/>


**LetterRip Pro 3.0.4 Update** -- Fog City Software has released
  LetterRip Pro 3.0.4, an update to their Internet mailing list
  server. Version 3.0.4 corrects two minor issues that incorrectly
  wrapped long message headers and failed to encode dates in non-
  English MIME digests. The update is free to LetterRip Pro 3
  owners, who can download either the full LetterRip 3.0.4 installer
  or just the server and administration programs. Fog City offers
  free or discounted upgrades for owners of LetterRip 1.x and 2.x,
  otherwise, you can purchase LetterRip Pro 3.0.4 from Fog City for
  $395. [GD]

<http://www.fogcity.com/lr_download.html>


Macworld Expo SF '99 Superlatives
---------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>

  Attending years' worth of Macworld Expos, we've learned the simple
  mantra repeated throughout the show: "What have you seen that's
  cool?" Here are some of the products, events, and oddities that
  deserve mention.

**Biggest Buzz Generator** -- Connectix Virtual Game Station.
  Built by the company that brought us Virtual PC, this latest
  emulator allows Sony PlayStation games to run on the Mac. Games
  figured heavily in Steve Jobs' keynote address and had a large
  area to themselves on the Expo floor, so the announcement caused a
  palpable stir. The word was to buy a copy on the spot if you
  wanted it, in part because Connectix didn't have retail units
  together yet, but also because of persistent rumors Sony was
  contemplating legal action to stop distribution of the product. I
  wouldn't worry much about a lawsuit - if any company does their
  legal homework regarding emulators, it's Connectix. Nonetheless,
  Virtual Game Station sold out at the Expo, even though Connectix
  tried to have more copies on hand than they thought they could
  possibly sell during show hours. [MAN]

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


**Nichiest Niche Product** -- iMacButton. It appears that on the
  first few thousand iMacs you can't restart in case of a freeze or
  crash using the traditional "three-finger salute" of Control-
  Command-Power. Instead, you must push a recessed button which can
  be reached only with a paper clip or a pin. To save you the
  trouble, this $10 item _is_ a pin embedded in a plastic button,
  like a thumbtack with a spring in it. You just insert the pin into
  the hole and leave the button on your iMac; now you (or your cat)
  can restart your iMac at will. [MAN]

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


**Most Nostalgic Demo** -- Gemulator Pro, from Emulators Inc. If
  you have an Intel-based machine, this program (together with a
  bank of ROMs you install) lets you emulate any of several Atari
  machines as well as a Mac Plus, a Mac SE, a Mac II, or a number of
  other 68K-based Macs. You switch between emulated machines without
  restarting or even quitting the program. One moment we were
  playing Centipede, the next moment we were running Word 4 on a Mac
  Plus - all inside a PC running Windows NT. I wasn't sure whether
  to laugh or cry. Don't joke about running Gemulator Pro using
  Virtual PC: they've heard that one already. [MAN]

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


**Most Unexpected Technology Focus** -- Not too long ago, talking
  about 3D acceleration chips suggested you were a high-end
  multimedia creator or a hard-core gamer. Now that the ATI's Rage
  128 graphics accelerator has been rolled into each new Power
  Macintosh G3, Macworld attendees suddenly seemed to crave hardware
  they never knew they've never needed. It would be easy to chalk
  this up to mere marketing, but the benefits of built-in
  acceleration - from 3D display in games to faster 2D graphics
  redrawing - have made the Rage chip the hardware to have, beating
  the performance of the popular Voodoo2 graphics controller for
  PCs. [JLC]

<http://www.atitech.com/>
<http://www.3dfx.com/products/voodoo2.html>


**Best Tchotchke (and Longest-Running Vaporware)** -- Castlewood's
  Orb. The Orb is a removable hard drive that holds 2.2 GB on small,
  slim, inexpensive single-platter cartridges. Castlewood was at
  last year's Expo with a non-working model. This year the company
  (made up of ex-SyQuest execs and other hard drive industry
  veterans) was back with a more elaborate non-working model plus an
  elaborate booth, an elaborate presentation, and some elaborate
  promises. I exaggerate, though; the truth is, I'm starting to
  believe the Orb will ship soon, and when it does I might even want
  one. Meanwhile, they were handing out fake cartridges that play a
  little fanfare when you press a button - imprinted with a stern
  warning not to insert them into an Orb drive. With SyQuest kaput
  and Iomega gorging on its remains, more competition in the
  removable storage market is a good thing. [MAN]

<http://www.castlewood.com/castlewood/web/index.htm>
<http://www.businesswire.com/iomega/bw.011399/952594.htm>


**Most Creative Ergonomics** -- A game's graphics may be the best
  you've seen, but you're still watching them from a typical office
  chair. To add a level of immersion, try the Intensor chair. With
  five built-in speakers, you'll not only hear the game's sounds
  surrounding you, but also feel the vibrations caused by the
  chair's subwoofers. If you usually play console devices (such as
  Nintendo or Sony gaming machines) that connect to a television,
  you can remove the chair leg assembly to rock and swivel in the
  chair on the floor. Another surprise is a headphone jack, so you
  can blast aliens in private without activating the external
  speakers (and still get some of the chair's vibrational feedback).
  [JLC]

<http://www.intensor.com/lite/>


**Best Beta** -- This is a tie between Stagecast Software's
  Stagecast Creator and Power On's Action Menus. Stagecast is the
  successor to Cocoa, a children's sprite-world creation kit
  developed at Apple by David Smith and Allen Cypher using Sk8, and
  later Prograph. With another former Apple notable Larry Tesler,
  they've formed a corporation to port it once more, this time to
  cross-platform Java, expanding and refining it in the process.
  I've played with the beta and it's delightful, Java
  notwithstanding; I anxiously await the final release and hope for
  its commercial success. Action Menus is Power On's Mac OS 8.5-
  compatible replacement for Now Menus; judging from the demo, the
  latter would be no match for Power On's upcoming version even if
  Now Software were still selling it. I need this so badly I break
  out in a sweat thinking of it. [MAN]

<http://www.stagecast.com/>
<http://www.actionutilities.com/>


**Best Slogan** -- The people manning Alien Skin Software's booth
  usually get attention for the brightly dyed hair colors that match
  the varied effects produced by their suite of Photoshop plug-ins.
  But this year, the company's slogan stood out higher than their
  multicolored split ends: "Saturate the Industry with Freaks".
  [JLC]

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


**Best Party** -- We aspire to report on all aspects of the Expo,
  including the parties. Usually there's a clear winner, but this
  year's evening scene was a toss-up. The Mac the Knife party, held
  at a bar called The Stud, was the most party-like, though it
  failed in the TidBITS party test by being overly crowded,
  incredibly loud, and somewhat smoky despite California's anti-
  smoking law. MetaCreations deserves praise for holding the Kai's
  Power Tools 5 launch at San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art;
  honestly, I wasn't as interested in seeing design doyen Kai
  Krause, but I did get to see the first floor of SFMOMA for the
  first time, which was worth the trip. Apple's party was huge,
  spanning a large section of Moscone Center with lots of people,
  vast amounts of decent food, and multiple live bands. However, I
  think Dantz takes the best party award: it was crowded and loud,
  but at acceptable levels, featured great food, and a good
  downstairs area to talk with the people we only see each year at
  events like this. Even better were the one-off black and white
  posters Dantz made of famous people drinking, each emblazoned with
  the party's motto: Drink Different. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04694>
<http://www.metacreations.com/>
<http://www.dantz.com/>


Palm Shows More in Hand at Expo
-------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  For those who wondering why the Palm Computing booth at Macworld
  Expo was consistently mobbed, here's a quick overview of the
  PalmPilot and the Macintosh platform. (You can also read previous
  PalmPilot-related articles at the URL below.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1030>

  Palm Computing's handheld organizers, the PalmPilot and the Palm
  III, enable you to carry important data in a pen-based device that
  fits in your pocket. You can synchronize that information with
  your personal computer with the touch of a button, so you can work
  with it on your desktop machine as well as the Palm device.
  However, as the popularity of the PalmPilot soared, Palm
  concentrated on its largest market, Windows-based PCs, leaving the
  Macintosh Pilot Desktop program stuck at version 1.0 (which also
  happens to be an ugly Windows port). Now, Palm has begun releasing
  public betas of its new Macintosh desktop software, built upon the
  former Claris Organizer, which also opens the program's
  architecture to interact with third-party synchronization modules.
  At long last, Mac users with Palm handhelds will be able to use
  features Windows users have enjoyed for over two years - plus some
  Mac-only tools. Re-entering the Macintosh market with a program
  that promises to rectify past wrongs elevated Palm Computing's
  stature in the eyes of Expo attendees.

  Of course, Palm Computing was also giving away free Palm III
  organizers every half hour - plus copies of my book, the Palm III
  & PalmPilot Visual QuickStart Guide, though deep down I suspect
  the Palm IIIs were the main draw.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201353903/tidbitselectro00A/>


**Building a Better Beta** -- Although we usually don't report on
  beta releases in TidBITS, I'm making an exception with the new
  Palm Desktop for two reasons: the demand for this long-delayed
  software has been overwhelming (the first release unexpectedly
  wiped out Palm's servers due to high traffic), and several
  products shown at Macworld Expo promise to expand how Mac owners
  use their Palm handhelds.

  Currently, you can download the second beta release of Palm
  Desktop 2.1 from Palm Computing's servers - it's 8.9 MB. In
  addition to providing the advanced PIM features of Claris
  Organizer, Palm Desktop contains a new open conduit architecture
  that enables developers to write modules which interact with the
  handheld's data. The recent build (number 34) fixes many bugs, so
  anyone using the first beta version should update, keeping in mind
  this is still pre-release software with known problems. Users are
  reporting odd handling of repeated events in the Date Book and
  records being duplicated in the other built-in Palm applications,
  for example.

<http://www.palm.com/macintosh/>

  Although it's nice to have my addresses and calendar information
  in Claris Organizer, the open conduit architecture will provide
  the most excitement.


**Palm Gets Closer to Tricorder Functionality** -- Since the
  introduction of the original Pilots, people have drawn parallels
  between Palm devices and Star Trek's tricorder, a handheld device
  capable of analyzing nearly anything a script requires. Imagiworks
  demonstrated imagiLab, a data-gathering unit that clips onto the
  bottom of PalmPilots and Palm III devices and enables collection
  and analysis of data in the field. The Imagiworks booth featured a
  recycling waterfall where attendees could take water temperature
  samples. After synchronizing the Palm III, the acquired data is
  merged into an AppleWorks spreadsheet, where it can be easily
  graphed, analyzed, or exported.

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


**Expense and Mail** -- The original Pilot Desktop 1.0 supports
  the four main built-in Palm applications (Date Book, Address Book,
  To Do List, and Memo Pad), but doesn't support Expense and Mail,
  both of which have been available in the Windows Palm Desktop for
  some time.

  Shana Corporation demonstrated Informed Palm Expense Creator, a
  conduit and desktop application that grabs expense data from the
  PalmPilot and flow it into one of several pre-built expense report
  templates. The Basic version is free, while the Advanced version
  includes features like form customization and summary reporting.
  An 11.4 MB installer on the Shana Web site installs both versions;
  you can activate the Advanced version by ordering it for $24.95.

<http://www.shana.com/product/palm/>

  Actual Software also demonstrated its $30 MultiMail Mac Conduit
  Pack, which can synchronize email between Eudora (both Pro and
  Light versions) and Actual Software's Palm email program MultiMail
  Pro or the Palm OS's Mail program.

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


**Go, Type** -- LandWare was getting plenty of attention for their
  well designed GoType keyboard. I bought one before attending the
  Expo and used it and my PalmPilot as a much lighter alternative my
  PowerBook. The $80 GoType requires no batteries and features a
  serial connection to dock your PalmPilot or Palm III, setting you
  up with a miniature laptop. It also includes programmable function
  keys for accessing the built-in Palm applications, and special
  ShortCut and Done keys for easier navigation in the Palm OS. The
  only thing missing is some way to tab between fields and records
  without using the stylus.

<http://www.landware.com/products/gotype/gotypeps.html>


**Glimpse of the Future** -- My last Palm-related highlight at the
  Expo was meeting Palm Computing's Macintosh product manager, Doug
  Wirnowski, who let me play with a prototype of the upcoming Palm
  VII organizer. (See "Mac Palm Desktop Beta Arrives with Palm VII
  News" in TidBITS-458_.) The new unit, now in field trials and
  expected to ship sometime during the third quarter of 1999, is
  notable for its built-in access to the upcoming Palm.net wireless
  subscriber service. Housed in a clear plastic shell, the prototype
  is roughly the same size and design of the Palm III, although the
  top extends out about an inch to accommodate the wireless
  technology. An antenna rests along the right side of the machine
  and swivels from a joint at the top; when raised, the Applications
  screen automatically displays the programs belonging to the
  Palm.net group.

<http://www.palm.com/pr/palmvii.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05202>

  Instead of accessing the Internet via a Web browser, the Palm VII
  features a technology that Palm calls "Web clipping". To try this
  out, I accessed a small application tied into MapQuest's driving
  directions service, entering my home and office addresses. The
  Palm VII connected to Palm.net, downloaded the results, then
  disconnected. The only problem I had was achieving a reliable
  connection - not surprising from the middle of the Expo floor,
  underground at the Moscone Center. With the exception of the
  wireless features, the Palm VII shares the same specs as the Palm
  III, including the same screen, processor, and 2 MB memory
  capacity.

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


Please Welcome Tristan Mackay Engst
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  A friend of ours at Apple once commented that what he liked the
  most about TidBITS was that it is so personal. In part, that's
  because we've grown up over the years. TidBITS started in 1990,
  when Tonya and I were both 22, and those who have been reading us
  each week since then have seen us get married, move to Seattle,
  get an Internet connection, write a few successful books, move to
  a new home, and cope with a burglary. We've met friends -
  sometimes close friends - through TidBITS, and last year we spent
  half of our month-long vacation in Australia visiting friends from
  Perth who we've met over the Internet.

<http://www.tidbits.com/adam/australia-98.html>


**Tristan Mackay Engst Arrives** -- What I'm leading up to is a
  piece of completely personal news. Tonya and I would like to share
  with you the birth of our first child, Tristan Mackay Engst
  <tristan@tidbits.com>. He was born on Saturday, 09-Jan-99, at the
  Puget Sound Birth Center in Kirkland, Washington. He weighed 5
  pounds 15.5 ounces and was about 18 inches long. And of course,
  from our totally unbiased viewpoint, he's a major cutie. You can
  see some of his early links to the Macintosh world in the pictures
  on the Web page below.

<http://www.tidbits.com/tristan/mac/hello.html>

  Tristan's birth was inextricably linked with the recent Macworld
  Expo in San Francisco. When I left for the show, Tonya was 37
  weeks pregnant with a due date of 28-Jan-99. I took the cell phone
  with me so Tonya could call at any time, figuring that the chances
  of needing to fly back to Seattle early were fairly low. Tonya's
  pregnancy had been quite easy and average, thanks in large part to
  her devotion to eating well and exercising throughout, plus a
  healthy dose of luck and genetics.

  The first few days of the Expo went fine, and I had fun telling
  everyone who asked about Tonya that she was "home, 37 weeks
  pregnant." Then, early Friday morning, on the last day of the
  show, Tonya woke me up with a call. I was a bit groggy from being
  at the Mac the Knife party and chatting with friends until 2:30
  AM, but managed to internalize the possibility that I might be
  going to the airport that evening instead of to my sister's for
  the weekend. Tonya called again that afternoon, and by 9:00 PM
  (after a brief moment of incredulity with the airline guy who
  seemed uncertain that I'd want to pay the $35 change fee even
  after I'd told him my wife was in labor), I was home. Tonya was
  indeed in labor, and although her contractions prevented either of
  us from sleeping that night, the extra time proved useful for
  packing to go to the birth center and cleaning the house up a bit.

  By 7:00 AM, it was time to go to the birth center, and when we
  arrived an hour later, Tonya was 8 centimeters dilated (out of 10
  centimeters, if you're unfamiliar with pregnancy numerology). We
  popped into the hot tub - the midwives at this birth center don't
  use drugs or most other methods of medical intervention, which
  fortunately weren't necessary in this, a normal birth - and with
  the aid of me, a midwife, and a doula (a woman who knows a lot
  about labor and is there purely to help the laboring woman in any
  way necessary), Tonya gave birth less than four hours later. We're
  not the gushy sorts, and although the birth itself may not be the
  defining point of our lives, it was pretty neat. We did have a
  sense of an announcer intoning, "This has been a Biology Moment."

  If you're interested in birth centers, midwifery, or want to see
  pictures of the room we were in (Room 2), check out the Web site
  below. We highly recommend the birth center experience.

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


**Learning to Cope** -- We'd done a vast amount of research into
  various aspects of pregnancy and giving birth, especially since
  the midwives' approach was to provide us with the latest obstetric
  research whenever we had a decision to make. Still, when Tristan
  came almost three weeks early, we were a bit unprepared. We're
  planners, and we'd been counting on a few more weeks to finish
  shopping, have the baby shower (Tristan got to attend, as it
  turned out), rearrange the bedroom for the crib, get Geoff and
  Jeff handling TidBITS, and put other projects on hold for a while.
  Instead, we've been trying to stay afloat, ignoring everything
  that's unnecessary, and sleeping whenever possible. Even still, it
  wouldn't have been possible without Geoff and Jeff taking over
  TidBITS and the lifesaving efforts of several sets of friends who
  brought us items of clothing and other necessary baby
  paraphernalia.

  The lesson we've learned is that having a baby is in many ways a
  public act. By doing so, we're contributing to society, to the
  gene pool, perhaps even to our shared culture. The child might
  grow up to be an author, plumber, sculptor, leader, carpenter, or
  teacher. He might date your daughter, deliver your own child, cure
  the common cold, or fix your sink. He's one of us now.

  The main thing we want to pass on to our son is something my
  great-aunt Irene Gutchess once told me when I was about 11. She
  asked me, like many adults do, what I wanted to be when I grew up.
  Being an honest child, I replied that I didn't know, and was
  relieved when she said that it didn't matter what I did as long as
  whatever it was made the world a better place.


**Appropriate Technology** -- Although Tonya and I are pretty
  high-tech people, what with all the Macs in the house and the
  dedicated Internet connection, we're also cognizant of when
  technology is and is not appropriate. We have no plans to
  introduce Tristan to computers before he shows interest, and we're
  especially curious to see how he views the Internet, since for us
  it's simply a fact of life that's always accessible from any
  computer in the house.

  The Internet may be a bit different for Tristan than for other
  children his age, though, since I set up an email address for him
  upon coming home, and I've subscribed him not only to all four
  family mailing lists we run, but also to a special Tristan Updates
  list we set up for relatives and friends who want to hear what's
  happening on a roughly daily basis. When he's old enough to read
  and understand these messages, they'll enable him to get a sense
  of what his extended family is like, not to mention our
  perceptions of his growth and development. I know I've become more
  curious about my own childhood as I've grown up and as Tonya and I
  started talking about having a child; I think Tristan will find
  the messages fascinating at some point in time.

  Needless to say, since we write in TidBITS about things that
  interest us, it's likely that we'll be covering more educational
  and children's software in the coming years. Until this point,
  it's been hard to evaluate, but with an in-house child tester, it
  could be a lot of fun.


**Our Request for Tristan** -- We seldom ask for anything from
  readers, but we'd like to make an exception, since we have such an
  incredible opportunity here. The combined knowledge and life
  experience of the oodles of people who read TidBITS is a
  staggering resource, and we ask that you share some of it with us
  and Tristan. We'd like if you could at some point send an email
  message to <tristan@tidbits.com> giving your thoughts about one of
  the following:

* What sort of world do you live in today? How do you view other
  people, communities, world events? What is your life like? What do
  you think of our collective future? The world I was born into in
  1967 was much different from the world in which I learned to live
  over the following 31 years. I'd like Tristan to get a sense of
  what the late 1990s were like around the globe.

* What do you believe are the most important lessons you've
  learned? What knowledge might have made a difference if you'd
  learned it earlier in your life? Perhaps it's just me, but in the
  last few years, I've spent a great deal of time thinking about how
  I live, which of my traits I like and dislike, how the world
  works, and so on. From those musings, I periodically attempt to
  distill the most important points. If you do anything similar, I
  think those thoughts could be valuable to Tristan as well.

* What do you think of Tonya and me -what sort of people are we?
  Has our work made the world a better place in some small way?
  Tristan will never truly know who we are _now_, and this might
  help him understand what we were like before he came into our
  lives. We only begin to know our parents as adults once we're
  adults ourselves, but by then our parents have been through
  another 15 to 20 years of life and changes.

  People often debate the effect of the Internet on community, but
  community is only what we make it. Tonya and I have long been
  supporters of the idea of the Internet community, and we've tried
  to contribute over the years. By sharing your knowledge and life
  experiences with Tristan, you can help him understand what makes
  up the Internet community and at the same time welcome him into
  it. Please note we may read messages sent to Tristan at this point
  in time, but we will not delete anything other than any spam that
  appears.

  Finally, on a practical note, we're pretty much overwhelmed with
  learning how to live with a small one in the house. Although we
  are reading email and enjoy hearing from people, we may not be
  able to reply until life settles down a bit (and we get more
  sleep). Thanks in advance for all your support and kind words -
  they do make a difference.



$$

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