TidBITS#376/21-Apr-97
=====================

  How will books and seminars change as the two fields meet online?
  Adam tackles this topic with a look at his most recently
  completed project. In news this week, Apple posts a quarterly
  loss and cuts prices on some models, GoLive Systems releases a
  hot-looking HTML editor, and Jeremy Kezer updates his Control
  Strip Modules. Finishing off the issue, Tonya reviews Online
  Army Knife, a Macintosh spelling checker with a new attitude.

Topics:
    MailBITS/21-Apr-97
    DigitalThink and Electronic Courses
    Onward Online Soldier: OAK, the Essential Batch Spelling Checker

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-376.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#376_21-Apr-97.etx>

Copyright 1997 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/21-Apr-97
------------------

**Apple Posts $708 Million Loss** -- As readers in the United
  States agonized over their tax forms last week, the folks at Apple
  found themselves staring at a $708 million quarterly loss, the
  second worst showing in Apple's history. The bulk of the loss
  comes from Apple's $375 million purchase of NeXT Software and a
  $155 million charge to cover "restructuring activities."

  Although the numbers sound intimidating, especially since the
  company's deep reserve pockets are now significantly shallower,
  the press hasn't jumped back on the "Apple is dead" bandwagon that
  keeps rolling along Infinite Loop. This may be due to several
  elements that support a gradual success of the company's
  restructuring plans: operating expenses were down $32 million from
  last quarter, and down $65 million from the same quarter last
  year; business sales climbed 35 percent over the first quarter;
  and PowerBook sales accounted for 22 percent of total revenue, up
  from 10 percent. [JLC]

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1997/q3/
970416.pr.rel.q297.html>


**Apple Price Cuts** -- Last week, Apple announced $200 price cuts
  on Performa 6360 and 6400-series computers, but (more
  significantly) cut some prices in the PowerBook 1400 line by more
  than 30 percent. A PowerBook 1400cs/117 system now starts at
  $1,700 ($300 more for one with a CD-ROM), with prices extending to
  $3,200 for a PowerBook 1400c/133. If you've been putting off
  buying a PowerBook and the 3400s are too expensive, it might be a
  good time to re-examine the PowerBook 1400. Meanwhile, rumors
  continue to circulate about the PowerBook 2400, a 4.2-pound
  subnotebook developed by Apple and IBM, but it still appears its
  availability in the U.S. will be quite limited. [GD]

<http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/97/04/18/aapl_x000_3.html>


**GoLive Lives On** -- Last week, GoLive Systems shipped GoLive
  CyberStudio, currently at version 1.0.1. Although the $349
  suggested retail price puts CyberStudio out of reach for casual
  Web authors, it offers a promising WYSIWYG alternative for
  professional authors, especially those who create visually rich
  Web sites, frequently employ plug-ins, or would appreciate a
  built-in JavaScript editor with color syntax checking.

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

  CyberStudio retains the elegant look of its predecessor, GoLive
  Pro (see TidBITS-337_), and adds many important features. The
  Layout Grid tool enables users to create pixel-specific layouts.
  On the HTML side of things, these layouts turn out to be complex,
  fixed-size tables, but the grid is optional and sizable, so it's
  easy to create pages that don't impose a particular browser window
  size. Site management options that I spotted on a quick tour of
  the program included viewing site structure and checking for bad
  links, plus the ability to export to Apple's Meta-Content Format
  (see TidBITS-355_). I'm particularly taken with the fact that
  although you can type HTML in the Source view, you can also create
  tags using the menus and toolbar, just as you would in Layout
  view, a seemingly obvious feature that other WYSIWYG HTML editors
  have failed to implement.

  According to GoLive Systems, CyberStudio can simultaneously
  support multiple language sets. The company has near-term plans to
  ship localized international versions, including Japanese and
  German. To run the software, you'll need to meet somewhat hefty
  system requirements - a PowerPC-based computer running System
  7.5.5 or later and at least 8 MB free RAM, with 16 MB recommended.
  A thirty-day trial version is available; the download is about 4
  MB. Upgrades from golive and golive pro cost $249. GoLive Systems
  415/463-1580 -- 415/563-1598 -- <info@golive.com> [TJE]


**Jeremy's CSM Updated** -- Jeremy Kezer has released version
  1.6.4 of Jeremy's Control Strip Modules, a $10 shareware
  collection of tiny, helpful tools. These tools consist of both new
  and replacement control strip modules for Apple's Control Strip,
  that ubiquitous utility that made its debut on PowerBooks a few
  years ago and is now available for desktop computers as well.
  Although many of Jeremy's modules are useful only on PowerBooks
  (including a revised temperature module that better keeps track of
  the computer and battery temperatures, plus a module that predicts
  how much battery time remains) version 1.6.4 also offers a revised
  AppleTalk module that improves handling of File Sharing, an easy
  pop-up menu of Open Transport TCP/IP configurations, and an
  improved speaker volume control. [MHA]

<http://members.aol.com/jbkezer/shareware.html>


DigitalThink and Electronic Courses
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  As most of you probably know, along with TidBITS, I also earn a
  living writing books, the best known of which is Internet Starter
  Kit for Macintosh. What's ironic for me as an Internet book author
  is that the Internet I've helped to popularize has seriously
  altered the market for computer books. Books are sold online,
  books are advertised online, and some books are even published
  online in their entirety.

  One of the reactions to these changes has been for people to
  rethink the purpose and marketing of books. Many computer books
  are essentially tutorials - they purport to teach a set of skills,
  ranging from how to achieve certain effects in Photoshop to how to
  find things on the Internet. Book-based tutorials go beyond the
  computer field though. What are most cookbooks or gardening books,
  if not tutorials on how to perform certain tasks? And, might there
  be better ways of publishing tutorials, perhaps using the
  Internet?

  Some companies are taking the kind of tutorial content you'd find
  in a book and turning it into an interactive electronic course. Of
  these, I'm most familiar with a small San Francisco startup called
  DigitalThink, because they've adopted an interesting way of
  differentiating their content. They don't have just anyone write a
  course - they specifically look for best-selling authors who have
  proven that they know the subject matter and how to explain it.

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

  I recently spent a few months creating an interactive electronic
  course called "Living with the Internet" for DigitalThink.
  Obviously, since the course is delivered over the Internet, it
  assumes you're already connected and have a basic grasp of using a
  Web browser. However, there's a lot more to using the Internet
  than the essentials of a specific program, and that's the focus of
  my course. I have high hopes for DigitalThink, because I think
  they're on to something genuinely useful and new. If you're
  interested in online learning and interactive courses, read on for
  details on how it all works.


**Course Makeup** -- I said before that these courses were
  interactive, and I think that's an important requirement for them
  to succeed. Just putting a set of steps to follow on a Web page
  has not only been done, it's pretty much uninteresting. Instead,
  DigitalThink has come up with a number of systems for introducing
  interactivity into a course. Students are meant to interact not
  only with DigitalThink's server, but also with others enrolled in
  the class and the instructors.

  A DigitalThink course consists of five or six broad modules, each
  of which in turn holds between six and twenty lessons. Each lesson
  has a goal (DigitalThink's research showed that people liked
  having goals). Lessons also contain the lesson text, which is
  generally short since people don't like reading much online, and
  optional sidebars for related information, exercises, discussions,
  chats, and quizzes. These final elements provide the interactivity
  needed to give the online course some pizzazz.


**Lesson Text** -- The most challenging part of writing the course
  was keeping the amount of text I wrote to a minimum. Tali Bray, my
  producer, initially recommended that I aim for about 400 words per
  lesson, but when that proved unworkable with the conceptual size
  of my topics, we worked on moving lesson portions into sidebars to
  include the information in a less imposing setting. Tali's overall
  goal was help me to distill the necessary information into its
  most fundamental form, since that's what online training has to
  deliver, especially in contrast to books.

  DigitalThink addresses the issue of limiting online lesson text to
  fundamentals in other ways as well, by having required book-based
  reading for many of the courses and by encouraging interaction
  between students and between the instructor and the students.


**Exercises** -- Another part of writing each lesson involved
  coming up with an exercise. Some exercises are as simple as asking
  students to visit a couple of Web pages, read their contents, and
  think about the implications. Others are more complex (for
  instance, requiring students to rate the Internet programs they
  currently use so the scores can be compared with overall ratings
  from other students.)

  I had fun with some of the exercises - there's nothing that says a
  course has to be boring. For the lesson that explains
  client/server computing, there's an optional exercise that entails
  going out to dinner with a friend. And then, when I discuss how
  email actually works on the Internet, the exercise involves the
  use of small children, assuming you have access to any.


**Quizzes** -- Courses generally need some form of testing.
  Students submit answers to some of the exercises, but the main way
  that DigitalThink's electronic courses test knowledge is via
  quizzes. Most of them are multiple choice, although true/false
  questions also pop up from time to time. Once a student submits a
  quiz, DigitalThink's server shows which questions were answered
  right or wrong, and explains the answers, sometimes providing
  additional information in the process. Whenever you're in a
  course, you can click the Scores button to see a graph of your
  total quiz scores next to everyone else who has taken the class.


**Discussions and Chats** -- Exercises and quizzes force you to
  interact with DigitalThink's server, and although that's a good
  first step in providing a compelling interactive experience,
  there's no substitute for live people. Because of that, most
  lessons have a discussion, and each module has at least one live
  chat scheduled. The discussions work a bit like Usenet news, with
  messages posted one after another. Online chats use the iChat
  plug-in.

  As the author, I show up for a few hours a month in the course,
  participating in the discussions and perhaps an occasional chat,
  although I generally avoid online chats because they're hard on my
  hands. I seeded each discussion with an initial post, and each
  lesson also has questions for students to consider. Along with
  everything else, I'm trying to help people think about the
  Internet and the issues that surround it.

  Whether in the discussion forum or the online chats,
  DigitalThink's hope is that encouraging students to interact with
  one another and with the instructor will not only make the course
  more fun, but will also make it more instructive. Some recent
  research has shown that the interactivity involved in online
  instruction can make it even more successful than traditional
  classroom instruction.

<http://www.csun.edu/sociology/virexp.htm>


**The Overall System** -- DigitalThink's technology for providing
  these courses goes well beyond basic HTML. I don't know all the
  details, but I do know that they have developed a proprietary
  system that tracks all the parts of a course and all the students.
  That's how it can grade quizzes instantly and update scores
  immediately. Students can also click the Classmates button
  whenever they're in a course to see who else is taking it. As a
  nice touch, though, DigitalThink gives each student a special
  DigitalThink email address that forwards to the student's real
  address. That way, students can contact each other, but still
  maintain a level of privacy.

  The unfortunate side-effect of this mechanism is that it relies on
  JavaScript for the course syllabus and discussions, and currently
  Microsoft Internet Explorer 3.0 for the Mac doesn't support
  JavaScript (although Explorer 3.0.1b1 just added JavaScript
  support; see TidBITS-373_). Other technical requirements include
  the Shockwave plug-in if you want to listen to my dulcet tones at
  various points throughout the course, and the iChat plug-in that's
  necessary to participate in chats.

  Students' personal information is maintained in their lockers,
  which contain information about their courses and any other
  information they wish to give out. For instance, my Bio field
  reads merely "Carbon-based." After you've enrolled in a course,
  you go to your locker every time you revisit the DigitalThink site
  to continue with the course.

  As I understand it, DigitalThink is hoping to meet the needs of
  people and companies who can afford a one- or two-day seminar but
  don't have several days to devote to full-time instruction.
  Courses are designed to take about 25 hours to complete, and
  students can spread that out over time, working as quickly or
  slowly as they want, within reason.


**Courses** -- Currently, DigitalThink offers a number of courses
  in the three main categories of Internet, Computer Science, and
  Multimedia. Some titles include: Object-Oriented Programming with
  C++, Home Sweet Home Page, Advanced Perl for the Web (part of the
  Perl for Programmers Series), Building Graphical User Interfaces
  (part of the Java for Programmers Series), and Hands-On Photoshop.

<http://www.digitalthink.com/catalog/>

  DigitalThink has two new sections which should be available by the
  end of April, Finance and Lifestyles. As you'd expect, Finance
  covers personal finance software, investments, and so on. I'm
  looking forward to the Lifestyles section, which will have
  subjects that aren't work-related, such as wine-tasting. That
  should prove interesting, although quizzes might become
  significantly more difficult if you don't spit during the tasting
  exercises.

  Course fees vary widely, depending on the type of course and its
  length. Introductory courses are only $45, but the range goes up
  to $275 for the full-length, advanced Computer Science courses.

  If you like going to seminars and taking short classes, check out
  the DigitalThink Web site and the course offerings, especially
  Tali's free course on searching on the Internet. I enjoyed
  creating the "Living with the Internet" course more than my major
  book projects thanks to the way it helped me rethink the way I
  explain the Internet. If that's true of the other DigitalThink
  authors too, I can only assume that their courses will have
  benefited as well. Who knows, these sort of electronic courses may
  be the future of certain types of computer books.


Onward Online Soldier: OAK, the Essential Batch Spelling Checker
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Late last year, I reviewed Casady & Greene's Spell Catcher, a
  handy utility that helps with spelling and other writing tasks
  (see TidBITS-353_). I was particularly taken with the fact that I
  could set up its user dictionary and Interactive Checking glossary
  once, and then use them in any program - words I taught the user
  dictionary while in my word processor would also be understood
  when I spell checked an email message. At the time, I promised to
  review other, similar utilities, and the next one up is Online
  Army Knife 1.21 (OAK) by JEM Software.

<http://www.casadyg.com/C&G/Products/SpellCatcher/description.html>
<http://arielpub.com/jem.html>

  OAK aims to provide spell checking and other services to Internet
  users, particularly in Internet-related programs like email
  clients or HTML editors that lack adequate spell checking
  features. Additionally, in Swiss-Army Knife-style, OAK piles on
  additional features: grammar checking, playing a QuickTime movie,
  opening GIF, PICT, or JPEG graphics (and optionally converting
  them to a variety of formats including EPS and TIFF), opening and
  converting among WAV, SND, and AIFF sounds (plus a basic sound
  recording feature), encrypting text (encrypted text can be
  decrypted by anyone owning OAK or the OAK decrypter), and removing
  high-ASCII characters like curly quotes that can be messed up when
  sent over the Internet.

  I won't deny the potential uses of any of these features, but OAK
  put itself on my list of must-have utilities after I experienced
  its most important feature - batch spell checking (a feature Adam
  suggested in part to JEM Software after he grew tired of linear-
  mode spell checkers).

  OAK is a control panel and an application, so after installing it,
  I put an alias to the OAK application in my Startup Folder. OAK
  launches as a small window containing eight buttons. Press a
  button, and you'll see a short list of options relating to the
  button. You can hide OAK just like any other application, so it's
  easy to hide if screen real estate gets tight.


**The Basic Batch Check** -- At a basic level, OAK performs its
  spell checking via the Spelling button. Press it, and you may
  choose to check the contents of the clipboard or a file. (You can
  also spur the spelling checker into action by selecting text in
  any program and issuing a configurable keyboard shortcut.) OAK
  responds by listing possible errors in the Batch Processing dialog
  box. If a mistake occurs more than once, OAK only lists it once.

  I've found this list to be a great convenience. To process the
  list of possible errors, I first select words I want ignored, and
  then I click the Ignore button (the Ignore option can be set to
  work until you quit OAK). Second, I select words I want learned
  and click the Learn button. Finally, I select the remaining words
  and click the Correct in Context button. This button leads to a
  more traditional spell checking window, which can be driven
  completely from the keyboard. There's also a button for starting a
  Grammar Check or checking for doubled words.

  To measure speed, I batch-checked a recent TidBITS issue. It took
  OAK a hair more than a second to list 24 unknown words out of 4561
  total on my Power Mac 7600 (120 MHz PowerPC 604) and almost ten
  seconds to complete the same task on my Duo 230 (25 MHz 68030).
  According to JEM Software, OAK can check as large a file as you
  have memory available.

  The batch checking is great, so great that I intend to keep OAK
  installed just to use it with Eudora and other instances where I
  work with unformatted text. Unfortunately, OAK won't replace Spell
  Catcher in my software collection. When OAK pastes text into a
  document after a spelling check, styles and formatting tend to
  disappear. In my testing, serious loss-of-formatting problems
  arose after an OAK spell check in Word 5.1, Nisus 4.1 and 5.0,
  WriteNow 3.0, and WordPerfect 3.5. However, OAK and Word 6.0 got
  along well for the styles and formats I tested. JEM Software may
  add Word Services support to a future OAK version, which might
  help avoid this problem.


**The Interactive Zone** -- Beyond basic batch checking, OAK
  offers interactive checking features galore, including a real-time
  spelling checker that doesn't suffer formatting problems, so you
  can use it with most programs. Turn on the Real-Time option and
  OAK puts up a tiny Unknowns & Suggestions windoid that floats over
  application windows. If you type a word OAK doesn't understand,
  OAK (optionally) plays a sound or flashes the menubar. The sound
  or flash is your cue to look in the Unknowns & Suggestions
  windoid, which contains two lists. The left-hand list shows words
  you've typed that OAK considers misspelled. When you click an
  alleged error, OAK displays suggestions on the right. If you deal
  with the error right away, you can simply tell OAK to skip,
  ignore, or learn the word, or you can choose a suggested fix. You
  can even click the Glossary button so the next time you make that
  mistake, OAK automatically replaces it with the correction. You
  can also deal with errors later - OAK stores them in a list in the
  windoid. I don't like dealing with errors later because all OAK
  can do is paste corrections into your document at the location of
  the cursor, not over the mistake.

  If you turn on the appropriate options, OAK can instantly
  uppercase letters accidently left lowercased and instantly fix
  accidental character transpositions (i.e. incorrectly spelling
  "Apple" as "Appel").

  Although the batch checker ignores email addresses and Web URLs,
  the real-time checker flags pieces of them that it doesn't
  understand. (I had to teach it the likes of www and com.) This
  trait is particularly annoying in Web browsers. Future versions of
  OAK should feature an interface for turning OAK off in
  applications where it's not wanted.

  There's also a glossary for storing commonly used blocks of text,
  and it's easy to edit the glossary or add additional entries. For
  example, I used the glossary to make it so every time I typed
  "ti", OAK expanded my typing to "TidBITS." I also used it for my
  standard email signoff, long company or product names, and my
  snail mail address. The glossary does not come preconfigured with
  entries for common typos and their corrections, but it's easy to
  generate a custom set of typos quickly if you pay attention and
  use the Glossary button in the Unknowns & Suggestions windoid.
  Also, the folks at JEM Software have pointed out that the
  transposition fixer eliminates many common typos.


**A Kajillion More Features** -- OAK has additional features that
  you might expect, like one that stores keystrokes so you can
  rescue data in the event of a crash, and features that you might
  not expect, such as one that helps you complete crossword puzzles
  and another that enables you to launch programs with a keyboard
  shortcut and set up a schedule for your Mac to launch programs on
  its own automatically.

  There's also a grammar checker that will be mainly of use to
  people having trouble with common usage rules. Most grammar
  checkers offer a haystack of inappropriate suggestions, making it
  hard to focus on the few needles that point to important problems.
  OAK's grammar checker flags words in a document that match its
  list of 25 commonly confused word pairs (pairs range from simple
  ones like "your" and "you're" to the less common "stationery" and
  "stationary"). When OAK flags a word, it notes a possible error
  and gives information about proper usage for each word in the
  pair, often with a tip for remembering the information. You can
  keep your word choice or exchange it for the other word in the
  pair. You can easily remove pairs from the grammar checker or add
  your own.

  Additionally, Online Army Knife comes with MemoEdit, a text editor
  intended to replace Simple Text for basic text editing needs. On
  top of SimpleText's basic functionality, it has a simple Find and
  Replace command and a sleek color selector (for coloring text)
  where you wave your mouse around on a multi-colored field, and
  watch the RGB numbers posted beneath the field update
  correspondingly.


**Spell Catcher Comparison** -- I used Spell Catcher for about
  three months before switching to OAK for this review. My main
  frustration with Spell Catcher was that it has no clue about URLs,
  a problem that OAK's batch checker does not share. Another issue
  was that Spell Catcher's Interactive Checking performance was
  noticeably slow in ClarisWorks 4.04 and NisusWriter 4.1; OAK is a
  snappy performer and did not experience slowdowns with those
  programs. Further, I found it hard to recommend Spell Catcher for
  use on machines slower than my Duo 230. OAK's Real-Time spelling
  checker is a little slower to suggest replacements on the Duo, but
  overall performance is fine.

  Spell Catcher has been tweaked over the years to focus on the
  needs of writers and match many different writing styles (and the
  latest release, version 1.5.7, includes a few additional tweaks).
  It curls straight quotes, eliminates double spaces, and comes with
  a glossary that automatically corrects 1,000+ typos. Unlike OAK's
  all-or-nothing approach, these features start turned off and you
  turn them on as needed on a per-application basis. It comes with a
  thesaurus, but not a grammar checker. Spell Catcher's Ghostwriter
  feature helpfully organizes saved keystrokes by day and
  application. Also, it comes with numerous dictionary options for
  different languages and professions; OAK only supports American-
  English speaking Internet users. Both programs have useful manuals
  that read as though real people wrote them; OAK's is a bit more
  casual and personal.

  OAK is a young, enthusiastic program with new ideas. Don't try its
  batch checker unless you plan to keep OAK installed, because once
  you've tried it, there's no going back to the clunky, linear
  method of spell checking. Another big difference between OAK and
  Spell Catcher is that OAK's glossary accepts far longer entries
  than Spell Catcher's somewhat grudging 255 characters. And, of
  course, OAK comes with tons of other frills and utilities that add
  to its overall value.

  According to JEM Software OAK works with any Macintosh running
  System 7.1 or later and requires 1 MB of available RAM to run its
  core spelling and grammar checking features. A full installation
  takes about 4.5 MB of disk space. The suggested retail price is
  $128; direct orders placed before 01-Jul-97 cost $69.95. Spell
  Catcher/Thunder 7 owners can crossgrade for $49.95 (and the OAK
  glossary can import a Spell Catcher/Thunder 7 glossary), and
  owners of several other competitors can crossgrade for $59.95. A
  seven-day demo is available on JEM's Web site; the download is
  sized at about 1 MB.

    JEM Software -- 800/335-0935 (orders through Ariel Publishing)
      <jemsoftware@kitchen-sink.com> -- 303/422-4856 (fax)


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