TidBITS#565/29-Jan-01
=====================

  We're finally catching up on sleep we lost at Macworld Expo, and
  now we're looking at trends and notable products that will make
  this year interesting. Along with the explosion in wireless
  networking, Adam samples photo-cataloging software, Jeff Carlson
  gets the Palm market in hand, and the rest of the TidBITS staff
  weighs in with our traditional list of superlatives. In this
  week's news, Proxim reunites separated siblings Netopia and
  Farallon.

Topics:
    MailBITS/29-Jan-01
    Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Go Wireless, Young Mac
    Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Photo Catalogs
    Palms Up at Macworld Expo
    Macworld Expo SF 2001 Superlatives

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MailBITS/29-Jan-01
------------------

**Proxim Reunites Farallon and Netopia** -- The convoluted history
  of the company which began as Farallon Communications continues to
  loop back on itself. In 1997, Farallon changed its name to Netopia
  and began to focus less on the Macintosh and more on the Internet.
  Then in 1998, Farallon spun back out of Netopia to concentrate on
  Macintosh networking hardware, leaving the popular remote control
  software Timbuktu Pro behind. In June of 2000, the wireless
  networking company Proxim purchased Farallon, and now Proxim has
  announced that it is also acquiring Netopia, bringing Farallon's
  other half back into the fold. Each share of Netopia stock will be
  converted to 0.3 shares of Proxim common stock, which works out to
  a purchase price of about $223 million, well above the $14 million
  in stock and cash Proxim paid for Farallon last year. Along with
  Timbuktu Pro, the acquisition provides Proxim with DSL and other
  broadband technologies, plus access to Netopia's distribution
  network. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05038>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05986>
<http://www.proxim.com/inside/pressroom/2001pr/netopia.shtml>


Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Go Wireless, Young Mac
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Back in 1999, Apple started the ball rolling on wireless
  networking by releasing the inexpensive AirPort Base Station and
  providing an AirPort option for all Macs. Wireless networking is
  clearly here to stay - in addition to the increasingly common
  individual and corporate use of wireless networks, there were tons
  of AirPort Base Stations on the floor at Macworld. And, for the
  first time ever, Jeff Carlson and I managed to maintain Internet
  connectivity for the entire show without once dialing a hotel
  phone. Jeff has a Ricochet wireless modem that provides roughly
  28.8 Kbps of bandwidth (a different device will get the newer and
  more expensive Ricochet 128 Kbps service in San Francisco, but we
  couldn't acquire one in time), and he also has a Lucent WaveLAN PC
  Card that works with Apple's Software Base Station. Put the two
  together, and my PowerBook's Farallon SkyLINE Wireless PC card
  could connect to Jeff's PowerBook, then access the Internet via
  Jeff's Ricochet. Most interestingly, a few times when I was
  fiddling with the settings I ended up connecting to other nearby
  AirPort Base Stations. They had generic names ("Apple AirPort" and
  "Macworld") so I had no idea whose they were; perhaps people who
  don't mind sharing some bandwidth in such a situation could put
  their email address in the name so people who connect can thank
  them for the connectivity.

  Proxim's Farallon division was at Macworld with a three-room
  "house" (it turns out you really can walk into an IKEA store and
  buy an entire room of furniture) set up to show off wireless
  networking. In addition to their existing SkyLINE 11Mb Wireless PC
  Card, Farallon was showing an extremely welcome addition: a
  SkyLINE PCI Card for older non-AirPort-capable PCI-based Power
  Macs (it's basically just a carrier card into which you plug a
  SkyLINE 11Mb Wireless PC Card, so the SkyLINE PCI Card costs
  either $70 by itself or $240 complete). Also new from Farallon was
  the NetLINE Wireless Broadband Gateway, which differentiates
  itself from Apple's AirPort Base Station by providing not only
  802.11b wireless networking, but also two Ethernet ports, one for
  a cable/DSL modem and the other for a wired Ethernet. Those ports
  help make possible basic firewall capabilities, and the NetLINE
  Wireless Broadband Gateway software adds support for a variety of
  networking alphabet soup standards, including DHCP, NAT, PPPoE for
  DSL connections, and VPN with PPTP client and server pass-through.
  Farallon anticipates shipping the NetLINE Wireless Broadband
  Gateway in February for $400.

<http://www.apple.com/airport/>
<http://www.farallon.com/products/wireless/>

  TechWorks was also showing a variety of differently configured
  AirStation 802.11b access points, its alternative to Apple's
  Airport Base Stations. Although the price of an AirStation is
  comparable to Apple's AirPort Base Station, the AirStation
  requires a Windows-based PC if you want to set it up from a
  machine on a wired Ethernet network. Also, although the AirStation
  line has four different models, only the $340 Local Router model
  offers anything unusual - in this case, an integrated 4-port
  10/100 Ethernet hub.

<http://www.techworks.com/products/airstation.html>

  More interesting for the future was Farallon's release of a
  Macintosh driver for Proxim's $130 Symphony PC Card, one of the
  products in the Symphony-HRF wireless networking suite. Symphony
  doesn't use 802.11b - the technology behind Apple's AirPort - but
  instead relies on a different 2.4 GHz wireless networking standard
  called HomeRF. HomeRF is currently slower than 802.11b (1.6 Mbps
  versus 11 Mbps), though Farallon noted that difference should go
  away by the middle of this year with the next revision of HomeRF.
  However, the main difference is that HomeRF is designed for
  applications other than data networking that require specific
  quality of service assurances, so later this year Farallon expects
  that we should start seeing consumer electronics devices that
  support HomeRF, such as cordless phones, stereos, video cameras,
  and more. Until that point, it's probably worth just keeping an
  eye on HomeRF, but it has the potential to become quite
  interesting as a way of providing wireless connectivity to a range
  of devices. And if that happens, Apple may be forced to pay close
  attention, since wireless technology is definitely a key component
  of the new digital lifestyle focus.

<http://www.farallon.com/news/01_01_08_symmac.html>
<http://www.proxim.com/symphony/>
<http://www.homerf.org/>


Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Photo Catalogs
--------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Missing from Apple's statement of support for the digital
  lifestyle was an emphasis on digital photographs. I could easily
  see an iPhoto or iPicture from Apple at the next Macworld Expo -
  something to categorize and organize digital photographs, print
  and export them in useful ways, and easily create Web pages with
  your photos for viewing by your friends and family. Luckily, there
  were a number of photo cataloging applications at Macworld Expo,
  including iView Multimedia's $45 iView MediaPro, Canto's $90
  Cumulus Single User Edition, the $100 Extensis Portfolio Desktop
  Edition, and ACD's $40 ACDSee.

  These programs are perhaps more similar than different - here's my
  current take on them, although I haven't had time to do a detailed
  comparison:

* ACDSee 1.5 is the cheapest at $40 and perhaps the most consumer-
  oriented, but it comes up lacking in a number of ways. You can't
  modify the page design for HTML exports, you can't easily
  categorize images other than via the Finder, and its interface
  combination of panes and windows is clumsy. ACDSee is more of an
  image browser than a photo cataloger, and I worry that it wouldn't
  stand up to frequent use with many photographs.

<http://www.acdsystems.com/english/products/acdsee-mac/>

* iView MediaPro 1.0 is the best combination of a fast, svelte
  image cataloger that's easy to use, sports a true Macintosh feel
  with a well-designed single-window interface, and offers all the
  features anyone is likely to want. You may need to refer to the
  documentation for some of its more obscure details, but overall,
  I've been extremely impressed with the program. It does well at
  exporting to HTML, and you can edit its templates to achieve the
  look you want. At $45, it's a good deal.

<http://www.iview-multimedia.com/>

* Cumulus 5 is a big, complex application that's clearly aimed
  more at the professional than the consumer. Although it seems to
  have all the features you could want, finding them proved somewhat
  daunting. It also relies on a number of integrated applications
  for its functions, which adds to the confusion, since some menu
  commands launch separate applications. Cumulus can export to HTML,
  and it appears to support templates. At $90 to $100 (download
  versus boxed), it's a bit expensive, but will clearly do the job.

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

* Extensis Portfolio started life many years ago as Aldus Fetch,
  and is also aimed more at the professional user than the consumer,
  with features like password protection, sophisticated cataloging
  options, flexible keywords and categories, and more. It can export
  HTML with template control, though it's not clear at first blush
  if you can export full-size images as well as thumbnails. At $100
  it's on the high-end for these programs, but it looks fully
  functional and has a strong Macintosh feel.

<http://www.extensis.com/portfolio/indexDesktopEdition.html>

  There are other photo cataloging applications out there that I
  didn't see at Macworld; a few have been mentioned in TidBITS Talk.
  I'll be looking at this space more in the future, so if you want
  to make sure I don't miss your favorite, be sure to send it in to
  TidBITS Talk.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1269>


Palms Up at Macworld Expo
-------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  Computer sales may have dipped industry-wide, but the popularity
  of Palm handhelds is looking up - two stories up, to be precise.
  At Macworld Expo 2001 in San Francisco, Palm's booth featured not
  only a contingent of Palm OS developers and Palm's lineup of
  devices, but also a two-tiered presentation stage with balconies
  that inspired at least one attendee to exclaim, "But, soft! what
  backlight through yonder window breaks?"

  Not to be outdone, Palm OS licensee Handspring dazzled attendees
  with a large main screen and video displays set behind huge mock
  Visor handhelds. In addition, there was a color Visor which - if
  it were functional - could have been dubbed the organizer that
  fits in the back of your pickup truck.

  Why so much size for products that fit into your hand? We've seen
  large booths before - for example, Power Computing's 1996 massive
  military outpost was a study in brilliant last-minute exterior
  decorating (after Apple bought NeXT instead of Be, the choice
  Power Computing had anticipated) as well as being a promotional
  tool - but this year the spaces occupied by Palm and Handspring
  were clearly built to accommodate the crush of curious attendees.
  Standing room only during presentations was the norm, with
  Handspring's crowds completely blocking a side aisle at times.

  Seeing Palm devices in use is now commonplace at Macworld; I was
  privy to a few spontaneous "pick-up beams," or small knots of
  people swapping their favorite games and utilities (one new
  treasure is PicChat, a collaborative drawing program for multiple
  IR-enabled devices). Of course, folks were also beaming their
  business cards back and forth; I even created a Zoos Software
  E-Card with some general information and tips from my Palm
  Organizers Visual QuickStart Guide.

<http://www.jps.net/seko/main/picchat/chap_e.htm>
<http://www.zoosware.com/>
<http://www.necoffee.com/palm/>

  The large booths held more than eager attendees: both companies
  featured pods where a number of developers could showcase their
  Palm-related products.


**Talk to the Hand(spring)** -- Probably the most notable trend on
  Handspring's side of the floor was the fact that Springboard
  modules - expansion devices that snap into a slot on the Visor -
  are actually shipping. A year ago, modules were just a promise.
  The showcase module was Handspring's VisorPhone, an attachment
  that turns your Visor into a GSM-compatible cellular phone. Folks
  who typically carry multiple electronic devices finally have the
  chance to merge the handheld and phone.

<http://www.handspring.com/products/visorphone/>

  The VisorPhone does everything a cellular phone does, but with a
  usable interface. Say goodbye to using a numeric keypad to choose
  letters: just add new phone numbers by writing them in Graffiti.
  Having an actual interface also means some tasks are much easier.
  At a Handspring user group breakfast, Handspring CEO Donna
  Dubinksy demonstrated how to set up a three-way call: call one
  person, tap his name to put him on hold, call the other person,
  then tap the 3-Way Call button. All the contacts in your Address
  Book are available for dialing, and when you receive a call the
  Caller ID feature searches your records to display the caller's
  name and number. And of course, you can use your Visor normally
  while talking to someone when you plug in a hands-free microphone
  or earphone.

  The VisorPhone is also capable of transferring email and accessing
  the Web, though Handspring isn't emphasizing these features given
  the data speeds of cellular networks. Handspring did promote SMS
  text messaging, a quick way to send short text messages to other
  GSM-enabled phones that becomes a lot easier when you can write
  messages in Graffiti. Also, since GSM is far more widespread
  outside the United States (where GSM coverage is unfortunately
  spotty), Handspring will soon be pushing VisorPhone use around the
  world. The device costs $300 when you sign up for a calling plan,
  or $500 without a plan (if you're migrating your existing GSM
  service).


**You Are (Always) Here** -- Another Palm trend picks up on the
  ever-shrinking technology of GPS (Global Positioning System)
  receivers (see "Feeling Lost? An Overview of Global Positioning
  Systems" in TidBITS-388_). The most promising (though largest)
  device was GeoDiscovery's $290 Geode Springboard module. It
  includes two "MultiMedia Card" slots for adding memory to the
  unit, allowing you to store more map data than will fit in the
  Visor's memory. As the cost of expansion memory comes down, you
  could keep chips containing your favorite locations and swap the
  appropriate one in when you arrive at your destination. A future
  update to the software will also let you use the cards as regular
  memory for other Palm data.

<http://www.geodiscovery.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=02222>

  Nexian demonstrated its less expensive HandyGPS device, which at
  $150 provides basic GPS service in a smaller Springboard profile.
  Magellan was also showing off its forthcoming GPS Companion for
  Visor.

<http://www.nexian.com/>
<http://www.magellangps.com/products/handspringvisorcompanion.htm>


**Wireless Internet Access** -- Of course, no self-respecting
  handheld developer in 2001 would fail to have some type of
  wireless Internet access on display. OmniSky showed off the
  Springboard version of its wireless device, which feels less bulky
  than the Palm V modem that's been available for the last year. The
  OmniSky modem so far seems to be the best wireless method of
  getting onto the Internet from a Palm, offering decent speed and a
  slew of Palm applications for accessing email and the Web. (The
  Palm VII, conversely, only offers features mediated through the
  Palm.net service.)

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

  Taking a slightly different approach, Palm was demoing its Palm
  Mobile Internet Kit, a software package that enables any current
  Palm device to get onto the Internet by connecting through a
  cellular phone. Be sure to check out Palm's list of supported
  phones, however, since some phones can set up an infrared
  connection to the Palm, while others require a separate cable to
  work. Also on the software front, Palm showcased its recently
  acquired MultiMail email client.

<http://www.palm.com/software/mik/>
<http://www.palm.com/software/mik/phone.html>
<http://www.palm.com/software/muiltimail/>


**Talk Back to Me** -- One surprising trend was the presence of
  multiple digital voice recorders for Palm devices. LandWare has
  previously offered the $65 goVox, a recorder whose only connection
  to the Palm is the fact that it doubles as a screen cover. Targus
  was showing Digital 5's $100 Total Recall recorder, a Springboard
  module for Visor that uses the Palm interface to organize and play
  back your flashes of brilliance. The nice thing about the Total
  Recall is that you can use it as a recorder when you don't have
  your Visor handy or are using another Springboard module. Shinei
  International also showed its My-Vox recorder, which plugs into
  the Visor's Springboard slot.

<http://www.landware.com/govox/>
<http://www.digital5.com/targus.html>
<http://www.i-vox.com/my-vox.htm>


**Keep Those Pod Bay Doors Open, HAL** -- Palm is clearly enjoying
  success in the market, but it's good to see that Palm recognizes
  where much of that success comes from: outside developers. Palm's
  presentation pods offered space to established companies like
  AvantGo and DataViz (showing the professional edition of Documents
  to Go), but also smaller niche developers. For example, Sunburst
  has developed Learner Profile to Go, a Palm program that enables
  teachers to evaluate student progress over time, then generate
  reports on the desktop based on data collected on the handheld.
  ImagiWorks had more of their intriguing data acquisition devices
  on display, such as temperature and water probes that replace
  traditionally bulkier equipment. These are the types of products
  that give the Palm world variety and depth, much as the education
  pavilion and developer areas of the Expo remind us that there's
  more to the Mac market than image editors and word processors.

<http://www.avantgo.com/>
<http://www.dataviz.com/>
<http://208.11.137.51/sunburst/schoolhouse/learnerprofile/lptogo.cfm>
<http://www.imagiworks.com/>


Macworld Expo SF 2001 Superlatives
----------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>

  We couldn't conclude our Macworld coverage without our biannual
  collection of Macworld Expo superlatives, the products that caught
  our eyes this year in San Francisco. We also have something a
  little unusual - a set of photographs Adam took with his Canon
  PowerShot S100 Digital Elph while wandering around the show. The
  photo gallery (courtesy of iView MediaPro) is by no means
  representative, but it might elicit a few giggles.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/565/>


**Widest Screen** -- Panoram Technologies didn't have a booth, but
  another company was using their amazingly large three-panel
  integrated monitors and providing product literature. Basically,
  Panoram Technologies builds three LCD panels into a single wrap-
  around console, combining the cabling as appropriate. You still
  need three video cards, since the displays are actually separate
  monitors. The PV290 DSK offers three 18.1" LCD panels that give
  you 3830 by 1024 pixels for a mere $22,750. For only $10,000, the
  PV230 DSK uses three 15" LCD panels running at 3072 by 1024.
  Panoram Technologies also offers some bundles with Macs and
  appropriate video cards; the new video cards are probably a good
  idea, since mixing and matching older video cards may produce
  suboptimal results. [ACE]

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


**Best Background Noise** -- So once we're all using our Macs as
  digital hubs, what if you don't want to be playing MP3s all the
  time? Check out MindChimes, which generates the tones of wind
  chimes, and OceanSongs, which sounds like, well, an ocean. Both
  are configurable, just in case you're trying to match the sound on
  some particular beach or want to design your own chimes. They
  would both benefit from some interface work, but for $10 for
  MindChimes and $8 for OceanSongs, or $15 for both, you're still
  well below the cost of a single CD of relaxing background sounds.
  20-day demos are available as 1 MB (MindChimes) and 1.3 MB
  (OceanSongs) downloads. [ACE]

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


**Best Background Art** -- Continuing in the same vein, you can
  certainly turn your digital hub Mac into a digital picture frame,
  but thanks to the Onadime Free Player, you can also play music
  (CDs or MP3s) and watch stunning visuals seeded from and
  interacting with the music itself (Onadime would say they're "a
  dynamic part of the aesthetic experience") and based on
  compositions created with the $200 Onadime Composer (a free 8.6 MB
  demo is available). Onadime compositions are roughly akin to
  visual plug-ins available for various music players but can react
  not just to the music playing, but also to sound input from the
  Mac's microphone, mouse movement, and more (making them popular in
  performance art and the dance party scene, I imagine). Though
  fully functional, the Onadime Free Player is mostly a technology
  demonstration, but here's hoping we see Onadime's display
  technology appear elsewhere or become independent of individual
  applications. [ACE]

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


**Nocturnal Typists, Rejoice!** We think of our USB ports as
  input, but of course they are also a form of output - for power.
  This point was brought home by both Kensington and MCE selling $20
  flexible gooseneck lamps powered off the USB port (the USB
  FlexLight and the FlyLight Notebook USB Light). You could use this
  to illuminate your PowerBook's keyboard or a book while working in
  bed, in a darkened airplane, or while using a PowerBook as part of
  a stage performance. [MAN]

<http://www.mcetech.com/usbfl.html>
<http://www.kensington.com/products/pro_cas_d1334.html>


**Honey, I Shrunk the Keyboard** -- One size does not fit all when
  it comes to keyboards, and that's especially true for children,
  whose hands simply aren't large enough to use standard keyboards
  properly. Datadesk Technologies has picked up on that with their
  LittleFingers keyboard, a real keyboard shrunk down to fit
  children's hands. It has basically the same keys as a PowerBook
  and includes a right-mounted trackball. ADB versions have been
  available, and at Macworld Expo Datadesk showed a $70 USB version.
  Proper ergonomics are hard enough to achieve for adults; it's even
  worse for kids, and a LittleFingers keyboard could help. One
  annoyance - Datadesk quite reasonably located the Control key in
  the lower left corner, but then put the little-used Fn key to its
  right, in between the Control and Option keys. [ACE]

<http://www.datadesktech.com/lfinger.htm>


**Half a Keyboard** -- Going still smaller, perhaps the most
  unusual product at Macworld was the $100 Matias Half Keyboard.
  It's available in USB, Palm, and Handspring versions, and is a
  compact text entry device with, appropriately enough, half of a
  traditional QWERTY keyboard. Daunting though it appeared, I found
  my left hand figuring out fairly quickly how to substitute for my
  right, mirroring the right-hand motions to type. Matias claims
  users can reach up to 88 percent of typing speed. The half space
  bar doubles as a modifier key; when held down, it makes the left-
  hand keys act like a mirror image of the (absent) right-hand keys.
  Although the Half Keyboard might be useful for some graphic
  designers and people who have problems with one hand, it's most
  likely to be popular with Palm users, who could easily type and
  use the stylus simultaneously. [MHA]

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


**Hottest Network** -- Gigabit Ethernet was last year's news. This
  year, the hottest networking product was Unibrain's FireNet,
  software for Mac OS and Windows that lets you do workgroup
  networking over standard FireWire (IEEE 1394) cabling. In
  situations where a small group of nearby machines needs very fast
  networking, this inexpensive (as low as $37 per machine) 400 Mbps
  solution seems ideal, and a good alternative to the still-costly
  gigabit option. Such a FireNet network could be linked to an
  existing Ethernet network using such tools as Sustainable
  Softworks' IPNetRouter, which the company confirmed works fine. I
  can see FireNet as a viable low-cost option for folks moving huge
  digital image or video files around locally. A 358K demo that
  works for 15 minutes per restart is available. [MHA]

<http://www.unibrain.com/products/ieee-1394/firenet.htm><http://www.sustworks.com/site/prod_ipr_overview.html>


**New Tricks for an Old Dog** -- It was a thrill to meet Jim
  Matthews, author of Fetch, the first Internet program I ever used
  (back when it had an interface like the Font/DA Mover, if you
  remember that). With the winnings from his recent success on ABC's
  Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, Jim has acquired Fetch from his
  employer, Dartmouth College, and is now developing Fetch 4.0,
  which sports many cool new features, such as moving files from one
  remote computer to another without downloading them to your own.
  Fetch 4.0 looks to be a powerful, attractive FTP client, at the
  low price of $25. [MAN]

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


**Better Backups** -- Imation is well known as a media company,
  but now they're branching out into hardware. One impressive
  showing was the Travan FireWire Plus, a tape drive that includes a
  30 GB hard disk; the hard disk is larger than the tape, so you can
  copy your files to the hard disk quickly, and then the hard disk
  will perform the much slower backup to the tape automatically and
  at leisure, even with the device disconnected from your computer.
  Much further down the road, Imation is betting on a new medium,
  the DataPlay, an optical write-once disk holding nearly as much as
  a CD-R, but about the size of a quarter and protected inside a
  plastic cassette (like a tiny floppy); they hope to market a small
  lightweight portable device that will act as a drive for reading
  and writing, a transfer point for digital camera data, and perhaps
  even a music player. Both devices are expected to ship much later
  this year. [MAN]

<http://www.imation.com/about/news/newsitem/0,1233,413,00.html>


**Best Tchotchke** -- What makes a good tchotchke? It should be
  useful yet nutty, simple, durable, memorable, and unique. Despite
  a truly disturbing entry from Totally Hip Software that was a
  clear, syringe-shaped pen with red ink sloshing around in it, the
  winner this year comes from Anthro, makers of the wonderfully
  adaptable AnthroCart computer desks. Anthro's tchotchke was two
  plastic cylinders with slots in them, one inside the other, and is
  absolutely incomprehensible until you are told that you're
  supposed to insert the end of the toothpaste tube into both slots
  and wind the inner cylinder as a way of slowly squeezing the
  toothpaste from the end of the tube, gathering the used tube
  between the two cylinders. You have to be really truly anal-
  retentive to like this. But ... guess what?! [MAN]

<http://www.totallyhip.com/>
<http://www.anthro.com/>



$$

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