TidBITS#501/11-Oct-99
=====================

  Steve Jobs has introduced a new $999 iMac and the iMac DV with
  FireWire and video editing capabilities, all with faster
  processors, revamped audio, dual USB, and transparent cases. Also
  in this issue, Matt Neuburg looks at Style Master, a tool for
  authoring Cascading Style Sheets for the Web, Adam continues
  examining how MP3 is changing his relationship to music, and we
  note new releases of Norton Utilities, Norton AntiVirus, Palm
  Desktop, and the results of our first poll.

Topics:
    MailBITS/11-Oct-99
    Jobs Splits iMac Line over Digital Video
    Precision Web Pages with Style Master
    That MP3eaceful, Easy Feeling, Part 2

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-501.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1999/TidBITS#501_11-Oct-99.etx>

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

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* READERS LIKE YOU! You can help support TidBITS via our voluntary <- NEW!
   contribution program. Our thanks this week to Luis Correia,
   Robin Armstrong, and Brad DeLong for their gracious support!
   <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>

* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com> -- How
   do you back up your APS hard disks? Try APS tape, removable,
   magneto-optical, and CD-R drives! <http://www.apstech.com/>

* WinStar Northwest Nexus. Visit us at <http://www.nwnexus.com/>.
   Internet business solutions throughout the Pacific Northwest.

* Small Dog Electronics -- 16 MB Fast Page DIMMs: $24! <------------- NEW!
  Asante 8-port 10Base-T, 2-port 10/100 Switch FS3208: $59!
  Dayna Communications 8-port 100Base-T Hub only $25!
  For Details: <http://www.smalldog.com/> -- 802/496-7171

* OUTPOST.COM KNOWS WHAT YOU WANT! Your new Internet co-pilot, <----- NEW!
   Mac OS 9, only $69.95 after rebate; supercomputing Power Mac G4
   or iBook for only $1,594; or the born-again iMac at $1,294! All
   FREE U.S. shipping! <http://www.tidbits.com/tbp/youwant.html>

* MacAcademy: NEW CATALOG AVAILABLE -- Many new training titles <---- NEW!
   in stock. Software TRAINING SOLUTIONS at your fingertips.
   Download a catalog from our Web site at:
   <http://www.macacademy.com/tidbits.html> or call 800/527-1914.

* GO WIRELESS. SkyLINE Wireless PC Card for Macs & PCs. Perfect <---- NEW!
   for POWERBOOKS. Works with Apple's AirPort. SkyLINE provides
   wireless LAN access to email, Internet & more. BEST OF SHOW
   at MW NY 99! <http://www.farallon.com/tidbits/skyline.html>

* ~ Internet Live Radio ~ TV ~ Weather ~ News ~ Sports ~ Stocks <---- NEW!
                  ********************************
                  See anything that interests you?
       Visit The MacAlive Store at <http://www.macalive.com/>

* THE INTERNET'S DISCOUNT MAC SUPERSTORE! --> 999mac.com <----------- NEW!
   All new from Aladdin!  Shrink Wrap, Private File, StuffIt
   and more. TidBITS customers special:  buy 2 Get 1 Free!
   Tons of new products! <http://www.999software.com/mac/tb4.tmpl>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/11-Oct-99
------------------

**Mac OS 9 to Be Released 23-Oct-99** -- Apple Computer has
  announced that Mac OS 9 will be available in stores in the U.S.
  and Canada beginning 23-Oct-99 for an estimated retail price of
  $99. Apple is billing Mac OS 9 as "your Internet co-pilot" and
  promoting Sherlock 2, which features an interface similar to the
  little-loved QuickTime Player and offers "channels" focussed on
  your local computer or on Internet-related activities like news,
  reference, and shopping. Mac OS 9 will also mark the return of the
  Keychain (a single utility that securely manages passwords for
  Internet sites, local servers, and even application programs),
  built-in data encryption features, basic multi-user capabilities
  that allow multiple users to share a single Macintosh more easily,
  enhanced speech recognition capabilities (though not the long-
  awaited continuous speech recognition), and Internet-based
  updating of system components. Apple has published a detailed Tech
  Note outlining many of the changes in Mac OS 9; under-the-hood
  improvements may cause compatibility problems for some font
  management utilities and programs that directly access low-level
  disk structures. Internationalized versions of Mac OS 9 should
  appear during the coming months. Users in the U.S. and Canada who
  recently purchased Mac OS 8.5 or a qualifying new Macintosh may be
  able to upgrade to Mac OS 9 for $20. [GD]

<http://www.apple.com/macos/>
<http://www.apple.com/sherlock/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05433>
<http://developer.apple.com/technotes/tn/tn1176.html>
<http://www.apple.com/macos/uptodate/>


**Palm Desktop 2.5 Expands HotSync & USB Support** -- Although not
  officially announced, the latest version of Palm Computing's Palm
  Desktop for Macintosh is now available for download. (See "Palm
  Desktop Marks Return of Familiar Organizer" in TidBITS-469_.)
  Version 2.5 adds greater control over switching between multiple
  users synchronizing their Palm organizers on the same Mac and
  makes it easier to access the HotSync Manager settings. The update
  also supports USB connections using Palm's new PalmConnect USB
  Kit, a $40 serial adapter for users of USB-equipped computers.
  Other improvements include the ability to disable onscreen alarms
  (though the alarm dialog boxes are still modal if you choose to
  leave the feature activated), and an iMessenger email conduit for
  owners of the wireless Palm VII. Palm Desktop for Macintosh 2.5 is
  a free 6.8 MB download. [JLC]

<http://www.palmpilot.com/custsupp/macintosh/palmdtmac.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05300>
<http://palmorder.modusmedia.com/P5/P5-3C90201U.htm>
<http://www.palm.com/products/palmvii/>


**Symantec Ships NAV 6.0 and NUM 5.0** -- Symantec is now shipping
  updates to its well-known anti-virus and software disk utilities,
  the $70 Norton AntiVirus for Macintosh 6.0 (which replaces the
  now-unsupported Symantec AntiVirus for Macintosh) and the $100
  Norton Utilities for Macintosh 5.0. Both programs now integrate
  with each other, feature Symantec's LiveUpdate technology for
  downloading both program updates from the Internet and new virus
  definitions (free for one year, $4 per year after that), and
  support USB and FireWire devices. Improvements in Norton AntiVirus
  6.0 also include faster scanning, enhanced and persistent
  reporting, automatic boot-block repair, and a Norton Utilities-
  like interface. (Be sure to read the Norton AntiVirus release
  notes for some known issues with common utilities like Aladdin's
  True Finder Integration and Netopia's Timbuktu Pro.) New features
  in Norton Utilities include the capability to run Norton Disk
  Doctor from the hard disk in almost all cases, an Undo feature
  that restores any changes made by Norton Disk Doctor, optimization
  of B-tree disk structures within Speed Disk, and an "All file
  types" option in UnErase.

<http://www.symantec.com/nav/nav_mac/>
<http://www.symantec.com/nu/nu_mac/>

  Both Norton AntiVirus and Norton Utilities require a PowerPC-based
  Mac with Mac OS 8.0 or later and 24 MB of RAM. Thirty-day trial
  versions of both programs are available. Upgrades to Norton
  AntiVirus cost $30 for owners of Norton AntiVirus, Norton
  Utilities, or competitive anti-virus products. Upgrades to Norton
  Utilities cost $50 for current users and users of competitive
  utilities. [ACE]

<http://shop.symantec.com/trialware/>


**Maxum Updates NetCloak, Rumpus, & PageSentry** -- Maxum
  Development has released updates to three of its Internet server
  tools, NetCloak, Rumpus, and PageSentry. NetCloak is the longest-
  standing tool for processing Web forms and creating dynamic
  functionality on Mac OS Web servers; version 3.0.2 improves
  NetCloak's processing of incoming mail and handling of
  international data. Version 1.3.3 of Maxum's well-regarded FTP
  server Rumpus gains the capability to move files between
  directories and corrects a rare problem launching on particular
  systems. PageSentry is a standalone program designed to monitor
  Internet servers and take specific actions - like sending an email
  message, calling a pager, running a script - in case they stop
  responding. PageSentry 2.5.2 rolls in a number of bug fixes and
  includes audible warnings when servers fail to respond. All these
  updates are free to registered users and include a revised
  validation mechanism which should make future upgrades easier.
  [GD]

<http://www.maxum.com/NetCloak/>
<http://www.maxum.com/Rumpus/>
<http://www.maxum.com/PageSentry/>


**Poll Results: StuffIt Expander 5 Wins** -- In the first poll
  after introducing our new poll and quiz capabilities, we asked
  what utility you used to decode files from the Internet. We were
  curious to what extent StuffIt Expander 5.x, which is necessary to
  expand the new StuffIt 5.0 file format, had replaced previous
  versions. We also wanted to see if MindVision's upstart
  MindExpander had acquired a significant share of the market since
  its recent official release. Results from the more than 1,700
  responses surprised us slightly - we hadn't expected StuffIt
  Expander 5.x to rack up more than 75 percent of the vote. StuffIt
  Expander 4.x pulled 14 percent, and MindExpander managed 4
  percent. Only a few people use StuffIt Expander 3.0, Compact Pro,
  or other utilities. Again, these results aren't scientific but
  still prove fascinating. [ACE]


**Quiz Preview: Apple's International Market** -- It's sometimes
  difficult for those of us in the United States to expand our
  horizons beyond this country. So, in our first quiz, test your
  knowledge of the Macintosh market and tell us what percentage of
  Apple's sales you think come from outside of the U.S. We suspect
  plenty of readers will be surprised by the answer. [ACE]

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


Jobs Splits iMac Line over Digital Video
----------------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Steve Jobs introduced two new iMac computers at an invitation-only
  event in Cupertino last week. The new iMac models lower the
  initial price point for buying a Macintosh, add some new and
  welcome capabilities, sport fully transparent cases, and improve
  the iMac's "cool factor" relative to competition from inexpensive
  PCs.

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


**Basic iMac** -- The new low-end iMac sports a list price of
  $999, making it (barely) the iMac's first foray into the
  sub-$1,000 market. The new system also features a 350 MHz G3
  processor with 512K of backside cache, a 100 MHz system bus, a
  standard 64 MB of RAM, a 6 GB hard disk, and an ATI RAGE 128 VR
  2D/3D graphics controller with 8 MB of VRAM. The iMac retains the
  15-inch shadow-mask display from earlier models - along with a 56
  Kbps modem and 10/100 Base-T Ethernet - but adds a redesigned
  transparent blueberry case which exposes internal components to
  full view. One internal component you won't see, however, is a
  fan: the new iMacs are cooled by convection, making the computers
  considerably quieter than earlier models. Like the recently
  introduced iBook, the new iMacs support optional AirPort cards for
  wireless networking. The CD-ROM drive has also changed to a slot-
  loading mechanism like a car stereo, so there are no more awkward
  CD trays to bump or damage. (There's also no eject button; to
  eject a CD at startup, hold down the mouse button.)

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

  A slot-loading CD-ROM isn't the only thing iMacs are borrowing
  from automotive systems: the new iMacs also feature a
  Harman/Kardon Odyssey stereo sound system, offering greater audio
  fidelity and bass response. Harmon/Kardon will also sell a 6-inch
  iMac-colored subwoofer called the iSub. The iSub is a USB device:
  the new iMac supports USB audio, so the audio data remains fully
  digital until it gets to the speakers, providing greater
  flexibility and less loss of fidelity due to interference or poor
  audio connections. The new iMacs have dual-channel USB, like
  Apple's Power Macintosh G4 systems, so audio running over USB can
  be on a separate bus from data coming from other USB peripherals
  like storage devices or scanners - otherwise, audio might stutter
  or pause when other peripherals are in use.

<http://www.apple.com/imac/graphics.html>

  For the terminally trivia-minded, the iMac (Slot Loading) is not
  Apple's first computer priced under $1,000. That honor goes to the
  oft-scorned Mac Classic, which nine years ago was available in a
  bare-bones configuration for $999.

<http://www.info.apple.com/info.apple.com/applespec/applespec.taf?RID=14>


**iMac DV** -- Jobs also announced the iMac DV, which is a souped-
  up version of the slot-loading iMac aimed at digital video
  aficionados. The iMac DVs start at $1,299 and feature 400 MHz G3
  processors, a slot-loading DVD-ROM drive, a 10 GB hard disk, two
  400 Mbps FireWire ports for connecting to external devices like DV
  video cameras, a VGA video output for video mirroring on an
  external monitor, and the full selection of the fruit-colored
  cases that have become emblematic of the iMac line. At the high
  end of the iMac line is the iMac DV Special Edition, featuring 128
  MB RAM standard, a 13 GB hard disk, a graphite colored case
  matching Apple's new Power Mac G4 line, and a $1,499 price tag.

  All the iMac DV systems come with iMovie, new consumer-oriented
  video editing software derived from Apple's professional-level
  Final Cut Pro. iMovie will be available only with the iMac DV
  systems. iMovie permits full control of FireWire-capable video
  cameras and easy drag & drop authoring of video clips with music
  and titles, all with a brushed metal interface unfortunately
  reminiscent of the QuickTime 4 Player.

<http://www.apple.com/imovie/>
<http://www.apple.com/finalcutpro/>

  Apple apparently hopes the iMac DV will reveal a market for
  consumer video editing it has been trying to find for more than
  three years, beginning with Performa 6400 video editing systems.
  Although over eight million DV camcorders have shipped, high
  bandwidth network access is becoming more widespread, and iMovie
  is decidedly easier to use than the Avid VideoShop package in
  earlier offerings, in my experience consumers want to edit video
  about as much as they want to mark up HTML pages using SimpleText.
  It's unclear whether video editing technology has come down far
  enough in price and complexity for a consumer system to be a
  broadly successful product.


**The Name Game** -- Apple has improved iMac naming conventions by
  christening the new DV series, giving us a way to distinguish DV
  systems from other iMacs, previously differentiated by clock
  speed, color, and confusing "Rev" lettering. (See "Macintosh Model
  Implosion" What's in a Name" in TidBITS-485_.) Unfortunately,
  Apple uses the term "Slot Loading" to describe both the new low-
  end iMac and the DV systems in its technical documentation,
  creating new terminology confusion. Since Apple seems to be
  releasing revised iMac models every few months, it would help
  folks in sales, technical support, and software development if
  Apple were to introduce a naming scheme which could uniquely
  identify major revisions of the iMac line.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05436>
<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n58474>


**Still Improving** -- Although the iMac DV might not be for
  everybody, there's little denying the $999 souped-up iMac
  represents a significant enhancement that appeals to the same sort
  of folks who have made the iMac such a runaway success: consumers,
  students, schools, and businesses. While the rest of the computer
  industry still seems to be trying to convince itself the iMac's
  success isn't a fluke, Apple continues to prove it can deliver a
  great value with style. And that's fine with me.


Precision Web Pages with Style Master
-------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  In the early days of the Web, a common complaint was HTML's
  insufficient control over how a browser would display the layout
  and appearance of a document. Tricks with tables and font tags
  helped, but the real solution, which has been emerging gradually
  for several years, is Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Style sheets
  let you specify such things as the size of text, the spacing and
  margins of paragraphs, and the positioning of graphics.
  Unfortunately, style sheets are complicated to use: the options
  for different elements can be hard to remember, and worse,
  different Web browsers support different standards and sometimes
  support them incorrectly. You can consult a book, code by hand,
  and test painstakingly; or you can let Style Master make your life
  easy. Style Master 1.5.1 comes from Western Civilisation; like
  their Palimpsest (which I reviewed in TidBITS-364_) demonstrates
  clean, original interface design.

<http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS1/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00752>

  Each main window represents a style sheet; you can have multiple
  style sheets open. You edit style information through dialogs and
  floating windows where your options are obvious; the results are
  translated into style sheet syntax and displayed in the main
  window. The real magic starts when you ask to preview your styles:
  Style Master displays, in all your open browsers simultaneously, a
  particular style component (using sample text), or, even better,
  an entire HTML document of your own, to which it has applied the
  entire style sheet! Your original HTML is untouched, and Style
  Master makes a new temporary copy on every preview, so it's easy
  to tweak and test both your styles and your HTML document. When
  you're done, Style Master can either add the style sheet link to
  your original document, ready to serve along with the style sheet
  itself, or it can embed the style sheet into the document.

  There's so much help you could plotz. There's balloon help. There
  are Help windows explaining each particular aspect of style
  sheets. There are warnings if you do something that a browser
  might not support. There is dialog text describing the meaning of
  selectors as you create them. There is superb documentation (using
  HTML which itself demonstrates style sheets): a Quickstart that
  really does get you started quickly, a complete manual, a hands-on
  tutorial, and a handbook on style sheets. Western Civilisation has
  also made its Web site a major reference on style sheets, well
  worth visiting.

<http://www.westciv.com/style_master/house/index_dynamic.html>

  Although I have some quibbles with inconvenient interface
  elements, and the misspellings in the manuals pain me, I still
  like everything about this program, right down to the clever
  purchase policy. You download a 2.4 MB time-limited demo (15 days
  of use, not necessarily consecutive) that you can test and
  ultimately register either as Style Master or as Style Master Pro.
  Style Master costs $29; Style Master Pro, unlike any browser known
  to me, supports the next-generation style sheet standard, CSS2,
  and costs $39 until 20-Oct-99, $49 thereafter. Style Master
  requires a Power PC-based Macintosh, System 7.1.2 or later. A full
  installation is about 7 MB, and it uses 8.5 MB of RAM.

<http://www.westciv.com/style_master/download/download_ppc.html>
<http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/>


That MP3eaceful, Easy Feeling, Part 2
-------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  In the first part of this article I looked at some basics of MP3
  and how I started to become a convert to MP3. Part of the reason
  it took me so long to understand the beauty of MP3 is that before
  the arrival of SoundJam, the tasks of converting CD tracks (a
  process known as "ripping") and playing tracks were handled by
  separate utilities. With SoundJam, you can pop an audio CD into
  your CD-ROM drive and view a window listing the tracks on the CD,
  complete with title and artist information courtesy of the
  Internet-based CDDB, a huge database of information about CDs.
  Select some tracks, add them to the Converter window, and then
  click the Start Converting button. Tweaky options are available if
  you click the Configure button, but (not knowing what was best)
  I've stuck with the default settings and been happy with the
  results. Other programs can stand in for SoundJam here; we'll soon
  have an article comparing the quality of different MP3 encoders.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05589>
<http://www.soundjam.com/>
<http://www.cddb.com/>

  Conversion to MP3 using the default settings takes two to three
  minutes per song, depending on length, and you can keep working in
  both SoundJam and other applications during the conversion.
  SoundJam saves MP3 files to a folder named with the title of the
  CD, using track titles as file names. They're normal files and you
  can copy them from machine to machine, back them up, make aliases
  to them, and manage them as you would any other file.

  More important, SoundJam automatically adds newly converted songs
  to the Master Playlist, a list of all your MP3 files. You can edit
  the Master Playlist, but it's merely a representation of the MP3
  files on your hard disk. Deleting an item from the Master Playlist
  doesn't affect the original file. The Master Playlist optionally
  displays information about each track, including name, artist,
  album title, time, size, track number, year, date converted,
  genre, and file kind. Any column other than the first one (which
  is set to track name) can contain any of this information (the
  column headers are drop-down menus). You can add or remove columns
  by clicking the + or - buttons, and you can change the sorting
  order as you do in a Finder list view window. In practice, I've
  found most of these optional columns a waste of screen space, but
  I can see others appreciating the information. Because of
  SoundJam's unique way of defining the content of a column, you
  can't click a column header to sort by the column, as you would in
  the Finder. Instead, the first column's header is a drop-down menu
  that lets you change the sort order to any of the optional
  columns, whether or not it's visible. This means you can sort your
  Master Playlist by Genre, for instance, even if you don't want to
  display the Genre column. I understand the design trade-offs, but
  I'd prefer standard sorting techniques.

  SoundJam picks up some information about each track from the file
  itself, but it lets you modify other items, including Track Name,
  Artist, Album, Year, Track Number, and Genre. You might want do
  this if you disagree with details from the CDDB (personally, I
  want Beatles songs to sort under B, not T for "The Beatles,").
  Another reason to customize this information is to add your own
  notes, ratings, or categorizations. SoundJam doesn't provide
  user-definable fields, but you can co-opt the Track Number and
  Genre fields if you want, and future versions of SoundJam may
  offer additional functionality in this area.

  SoundJam helps you categorize your MP3 collection in playlists.
  The Master Playlist is always available, but you can create
  additional playlists. I've started to do this for music that I
  listen to at different times (breakfast music is different from
  lunch music) and for music that fits different moods (raucous
  versus contemplative). You can store playlists anywhere, but if
  you put them in SoundJam's Playlists folder, they appear in a
  hierarchical Open Playlist menu in SoundJam's File menu. Playlists
  seemingly rely on the Mac's Alias Manager, since you can move the
  MP3 files anywhere and the playlists continue to work.


**Eye Candy & Finger Food** -- SoundJam offers two "features" that
  spice up the visual look of the program: skins and visual plug-
  ins. Visual plug-ins draw patterns in time with the music that's
  playing. Eclipse and Melt-O-Rama are pretty (Thumper is dull), but
  they're primarily interesting in full-screen mode (by pressing
  Command-F; pressing Escape returns to normal) on screens that can
  change resolution (not my PowerBook G3). SoundJam has no idea of
  your Energy Saver settings, so if you have your screen set to
  blank after a few minutes of idle time, don't bother with a visual
  plug-in. Perhaps a future version of SoundJam could prevent screen
  blanking when a visual plug-in is running.

  I'm more disappointed with skins, which are alternate interfaces
  for SoundJam's Player window. SoundJam's default Player window is
  reminiscent of Apple's QuickTime Player, but more usable. The
  other skins, however, are almost unusable. It's difficult to
  distinguish controls in most, thanks to garish color schemes and
  poor layout. My impression is that Casady & Greene felt they had
  to add skins to seem sufficiently hip and to compete with other
  MP3 players with skin support. I applaud the flexibility -
  consumer electronic interfaces are usually horrible, so it's great
  to have the option of using different interfaces. Now if only an
  interface designer could create skins that provided true alternate
  interfaces, not just non-rectangular pictures with obscure,
  randomly affixed controls.

  Speaking of controls, the Player window offers all the basics, but
  you might not want to use the mouse to click the buttons,
  especially if you're using a skin, where identifying buttons can
  be a chore. SoundJam provides keyboard control, so you can start
  playing the selected track by pressing Return, pause by pressing
  Spacebar, mute with Command-M, stop playback with the time-honored
  Command-period (but not the standard equivalent of Escape), switch
  tracks with Left and Right arrows, and increase and decrease
  volume with Command-Up and Down arrow.

  SoundJam also features simple bass and treble controls, or you can
  replace them with a 10-band equalizer. I'm never sure how to set
  these things, so if you're like me, you can choose from
  preconfigured settings. Audiophiles may appreciate the equalizer;
  if SoundJam wanted to go all out, it could enable you to associate
  specific equalizer settings for a track or album.


**Expanding My Horizons** -- After working with MP3 files for a
  week or two, my eyes started to open to further possibilities. I'm
  not talking about listening to streaming MP3 files - my 56K frame
  relay connection doesn't seem to be up to the task. (SoundJam
  author Jeff Robbin confirmed that many streaming MP3 files require
  at least 128 Kbps ISDN connections.) Nor am I talking about
  downloading MP3 songs from the Internet - although a several
  megabyte file should take only five to ten minutes to download, I
  found the MP3 sites fairly slow. Worse, these sites feature so
  many artists and are so clumsy to navigate that they're
  overwhelming. After downloading free songs that failed to arrive
  intact or that I threw away before they finished playing, I
  refocused on MP3 files converted from our personal CD collection.

  Here's where I started to realize what MP3 made possible. If I
  didn't like a song on a CD, I could avoid converting it. Some CD
  players can create programs to eliminate specific songs, but that
  information stays with the CD player, not the CD. Play it in the
  car and you have to listen the song you dislike again. As a bonus,
  when converting to MP3, eliminating songs saves disk space.

  Disk space quickly becomes a focus as you convert CDs to MP3
  format. I've converted 44 CDs containing a total of 507 songs, and
  they take up a total of 1.9 GB on my PowerBook's hard disk. Over
  the years, we've accumulated about 200 CDs, and there's no way
  I'll have room for them all. But with 20 GB ATA-IDE hard disks
  available for less than $200, I'm already contemplating how to
  bring more MP3 storage online. None of my current Macs other than
  the PowerBook use ATA-IDE hard disks or support FireWire, so I'd
  need a different computer. I also don't want anything other than a
  PowerBook in the kitchen - desktop Macs and their monitors take up
  too much space, are too loud, and, with the reported exception of
  the not-yet-released AGP Graphics Power Mac G4, don't sleep
  quietly.

  But then the possibilities spill out again - MP3s are just files.
  I could put a Mac with a 20 GB hard disk (any inexpensive Power
  Mac that would support a huge ATA-IDE hard disk) down in the
  server room and share the files via Ethernet not just to the
  PowerBook in the kitchen, but also to any Mac on the network. When
  I rushed to test this, I was disappointed that the sound broke up
  frequently. Jeff Robbin said he's seen the same problem with
  Personal File Sharing, though he said it's solved both in
  AppleShare and in Mac OS 9's Personal File Sharing. Disappointed,
  I tested a few more variables - a faster Mac serving the files, no
  other network traffic - but the only change that helped was
  sharing the files via TCP/IP rather than AppleTalk (thanks to
  ShareWay IP from Open Door Networks, but also a feature of
  Mac OS 9).

  My head swam with possibilities again - my PC has only a 150 MHz
  Pentium in it, and it's slow. Perhaps I could replace it with a
  faster PC next time I need it for work, and convert the existing
  machine into a Linux box running software to make it into an
  AppleShare server? I'll bet someone has already put together a
  tiny Linux box with a big hard disk and an Ethernet port - if it's
  cheap and can share files, that's all I need.

  All of this is silliness, of course, but the germs of ideas sprout
  here. The Mac, at least when coupled with SoundJam, happens to
  make a good MP3 player. The interface is better than your garden
  variety CD player, and there's room for improvement as we get past
  the concept of hard-wired interfaces, tiny buttons, and barely
  readable LCD displays. Macs are far too expensive, of course - I'm
  using a several thousand dollar computer to replace a $500 CD
  player. The only reason that's an economy is that I already have
  the PowerBook, and I'd have it whether or not I also bought a CD
  player. It's not cheap, but it's doing precisely what computers
  were designed to do: whatever I ask of it.

  It's been a long time since I've been astonished, and I'm enjoying
  the feeling again. You may not find SoundJam or even MP3s as
  liberating as I have, but if I can encourage you to tell Eudora to
  hold your email and head home early from the Microsoft Office,
  perhaps you'll also see new ways Macs can improve your life
  outside work.



$$

 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/>
 -------------------------------------------------------------------


