TidBITS#361/13-Jan-97
=====================

  Last week, Macintosh faithful gathered in San Francisco for the
  Macworld Expo; this week, TidBITS brings you highlights from the
  show, including an analysis of Apple's operating system strategy,
  the companies and products that stood out from the crowd, and our
  traditional listing of booths, items, and events that caught our
  eye. Also this week, info on Internet Explorer 3.0 and
  Macromedia's acquisition of FutureWave.

Topics:
    MailBITS/13-Jan-97
    About the Show: Macworld Expo San Francisco
    Keying in Great NeXTpectations
    Macworld Expo Superlatives/Jan-97

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-361.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#361_13-Jan-97.etx>

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

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
   Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
   APS price lists: <http://www.apstech.com/aps-products.html>

* Northwest Nexus -- 800/539-3505 -- <http://www.nwnexus.com/>
   Professional Internet Services. <info@nwnexus.com>

* Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
   PowerTower Pro 225 MHz - the fastest desktop system ever.
   Build Your Own Box online! <http://www.powercc.com/>

* EarthLink Network -- 800/395-8425 -- <sales@earthlink.net>
   Direct Internet access for Mac users. New Personal Start Page,
   no setup fee for TidBITS readers! <http://www.earthlink.net/>

* Aladdin Systems -- 408/761-6200 -- <http://www.aladdinsys.com/>
   Makers of StuffIt Deluxe 4.0, the Mac compression standard, and
   InstallerMaker 3.1.1, the leading installer for Mac developers.

* Small Dog Electronics -- See our Web site for pricing on Macs,
   monitors, printers, PowerBooks, the Kibbles&Bytes newsletter,
   and more! 802/496-7171 -- <http://www.smalldoggy.com/>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------


MailBITS/13-Jan-97
------------------

**Internet Explorer 3.0** -- Microsoft released the final version
  of Internet Explorer 3.0 for Power Macs at Macworld Expo last
  week. In addition to support for HTML style sheets and the
  (debatable) RSAC Internet Ratings system, Explorer 3.0 includes
  support for ActiveX and Java. Users can choose between Apple's
  Java VM or Microsoft/Metrowerks Java favors, including the first
  Just in Time (JIT) Java compiler for the Mac. Although ActiveX and
  Java capabilities require extra memory, Explorer will still run
  fairly comfortably in 4 MB of RAM, in part because Microsoft broke
  email and Usenet news capabilities into a separate application
  (see TidBITS-355_). Various Internet Explorer 3.0 packages can be
  downloaded from Microsoft, with the full, Java-enabled version
  coming in over 7 MB in size. Internet Explorer 3.0 is not
  currently available for 68K Macs due to troubles with Apple's
  CFM-68K (see TidBITS-356_). [GD]

<http://www.microsoft.com/ie/mac/>


**Macromedia Acquires FutureWave** -- Last week, Macromedia made a
  play for dominating the online multimedia market by announcing it
  had acquired FutureWave Software, makers of the FutureSplash
  software family which (among other things) creates compact vector-
  based animations that are viewable through Web browser plug-ins.
  Macromedia is re-christening FutureSplash products as Macromedia
  Flash and plans to integrate them into the Shockwave lineup.
  FutureSplash is currently being used by a number of high-end Web
  sites (like Microsoft's "new" MSN) because it's small and fast
  compared to other Web animation technologies, including
  Macromedia's own Director. One can only hope Macromedia Flash
  doesn't acquire Director's less-attractive features, including
  stratospheric pricing. [GD]

<http://www.macromedia.com/software/flash/>


About the Show: Macworld Expo San Francisco
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  After every Macworld Expo, I write an article expressing my
  thoughts about the show. For the most part, those articles haven't
  been particularly positive in recent years. There weren't many
  interesting products, and Internet support fell primarily into
  the "wanna-be" category. This year, however, I left Macworld Expo
  with a renewed sense of optimism (along with some exotic form of
  the flu).


**The NeXT Big Thing** -- The big news, of course, was Apple's
  acquisition of NeXT. More details on the merger were available
  from Apple at the show, but they only lay out in relatively rough
  strokes the path Apple believes it will take over the next few
  years. I won't delve into those details here - check Tonya's
  article about Gil Amelio's overly long keynote for more
  information.

  Attitudes about the acquisition were generally upbeat, although a
  number of people agreed with me that Apple simply had to do
  something, and the specifics mattered somewhat less. A number of
  elderly NeXT machines were in evidence on the floor, having been
  pulled from the closet to show support for future operating
  systems directions. The main negative opinion I heard came from an
  ex-Apple employee who felt that purchasing NeXT was all fine and
  nice, but didn't solve any of Apple's real problems (mainly
  management, in his view).

  Ex-NeXT employees and developers were coming out of the woodwork,
  lending an air of surrealism to some of the late night parties. An
  interesting level of support came from current NeXT developers,
  who were ecstatic about the promise of a mainstream market for
  their products, many of which have been on the shelf for years.
  One person estimated that Apple sells more Macs in a month than
  copies of NeXTstep (on or off NeXT hardware) have ever been sold,
  so it's easy to see why NeXT developers would be happy about
  having access to a larger market.


**The Power to Be** -- Despite the positive reception of the NeXT
  deal, the Be booth was one of the busiest; it was almost
  impossible to squeeze in for a look at Power Macs running
  Macintosh applications under the BeOS. Other companies made big
  splashes, including Iomega, which gave out enough big, yellow
  buttons for serious button geeks to armor-plate themselves.

  In terms of pure showmanship though, no one even came close to
  Macintosh clone maker Power Computing. Continuing its "Fight Back
  for the Mac!" theme, Power took over an entire corner of a hall,
  decorating their booth in camouflage netting and other survivalist
  accoutrements. All of Power's staff wore black T-shirts and
  camouflage pants, which made for easy identification and probably
  more comfort than other companies' booth uniforms. Head-shots of
  Power Computing CEO Steve Kahng adorned posters, T-shirts, and a
  huge banner outside one of the two exhibition halls. Underneath
  Steve's visage were "Steve says" slogans about fighting back for
  the Mac - they were enough to unnerve a few people who thought the
  slogans Maoist. Power also rented an entire fleet of Hummers, U.S.
  Army transport vehicles, mounted loudspeakers on them, and drove
  them around San Francisco blaring the "Steve says" slogans.

  After watching Mike Rosenfelt, Power Computing's Director of
  Marketing, whip a crowd into a frenzy as a Power Computing machine
  easily bested a Compaq 200 MHz Pentium Pro in Adobe Premiere, all
  I could think was that Apple could use a serious dose of that kind
  of enthusiasm. Apple's most significant strength has always been
  its loyal user base. That allegiance often wavers these days, and
  displays like Power's - pure, unadulterated hucksterism though it
  may be - help people feel there's still a fire burning in the
  Macintosh world.

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


**Internet for Real** -- Internet offerings at last few Macworld
  Expos left me with a bad taste in my mouth, since every other
  company was pretending it was now an Internet company. (Never mind
  that most products had little or no relationship to the Internet -
  that was the claim.) This year, however, Internet claims were
  somewhat lower-key, and more important, when made they were often
  backed up by reality.

  Booth shirts with company URLs on the back were commonplace this
  year, and we received fewer clueless looks when we asked for the
  smallest piece of paper with a URL on it, given that a business
  card or postcard works just as well as a glossy brochure for
  reminding me that I want to investigate some product further.
  Despite the effort and expense of printing glossy brochures,
  they're next to useless when stacked up against even a mediocre
  Web site.


**Thanks To All the Little People** -- A significant factor in my
  overall positive opinion of the show is that there were a lot more
  small companies. In large part, thanks are due to the people who
  organized the Developer Central area, the Developer Greenhouse
  area, and the Component 100 area, all of which gave small bits of
  space to companies that would never have been able to afford to
  appear at the Expo otherwise.

  Developer Central tried to concentrate on software development
  tools, though I found a number of interesting products there that
  had nothing to do with development, including my pick for best new
  product of the show, 6prime's Rev, a revision control program for
  the rest of us (more in our next issue). The Developer Greenhouse
  apparently chooses the most interesting companies from a pool of
  applicants - I was pleased to see a number of Internet companies
  there, lending credence to the opinion that much of what's
  interesting on the Mac is on the Internet these days. Component
  100 was a tightly packed group of companies showing (and selling)
  low-priced LiveObjects for those who have adopted OpenDoc. I was
  impressed with some of the tools and will be investigating them
  further.

  Finally, a quick story. While eating breakfast with friends at the
  Marriott Hotel (one of the main conference hotels), I had a
  fascinating discussion with our waiter. He wasn't technically
  savvy and knew nothing about the industry other than what was
  proclaimed by the headlines, and yet he felt that the Mac industry
  was recovering well from last year. He judged everything by the
  mood of the people he served, and if you consider the number of
  people a waiter encounters in several days of a trade show, we're
  talking about a fairly large sample size. Last year, apparently,
  he had people literally crying at their tables, and the overall
  tenor ranged from glum to downright depressed. This year, though,
  he said that people seemed brighter and more upbeat, despite
  Apple's recently posted $150 million loss. I won't pretend this is
  a scientific evaluation of Apple's future, but I know I'm going to
  be chatting more with the wait staffs at trade shows in the
  future. They may prove the best analysts of public opinion yet.


Keying in Great NeXTpectations
------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  As you might imagine after reading Adam's and Geoff's essays in
  TidBITS-360_, last week's Macworld Expo buzzed with talk about
  Apple's acquisition of NeXT Software. Many people attended the
  keynote, hoping to learn solid details about the new OS, codenamed
  Rhapsody, which Apple plans to create using NeXT technology.
  Although I left the three-hour keynote with a pad full of notes
  and my mind brimming with details, several days later I found that
  my analysis agreed with that of most others: the keynote didn't
  tell us much that we didn't already know.

  The keynote did not fully address several of the more important
  questions surrounding Rhapsody. Although Gil Amelio emphasized the
  importance of backwards compatibility, it appears Rhapsody will
  only run on PowerPC Macs "sold by Apple and its licensees today."
  Apparently Apple is still figuring out what to do about older
  Power Macs and 68K Macs. Another big unknown may be resolved more
  favorably: Apple plans for today's System 7.x applications to run
  in Rhapsody natively, not in some sort of emulation mode, though
  this capability may not be fully present in Rhapsody's "premier"
  release. We can also expect Rhapsody to look and feel like a
  Macintosh, though with interface changes and enhancements.

  Apple is sticking to its plan of releasing System 7.x updates
  every six months, though the keynote revealed few hard facts.
  Still, between the keynote and Apple's Web site, I was able to
  piece together some additional specifics. I'd like to add the
  caveat that I always take announcements about future software
  releases with at least a grain (and sometimes a shaker) of salt.


**Coming Soon to a Mac Near You** -- Apple plans to release Mac OS
  7.6, codenamed Harmony, on 31-Jan-97. This release has a new
  installer and integrates a number of currently-existing components
  with a few new ones. A quick rundown of the highlights includes
  QuickTime 2.5, QuickDraw 3D 1.0.6 (PowerPC only), QuickDraw GX
  1.1.5, LaserWriter 8.4.2, and a more sophisticated Extensions
  Manager. I'm looking forward to checking out the OpenDoc
  Essentials kit, which includes a number of OpenDoc parts. Mac OS
  7.6 will run on most modern Macintoshes, but not on 68020- or
  68000-based machines, nor on the SE/30, IIx, or IIcx. However,
  owners of 68K-based Macs have less incentive to upgrade due to the
  now-infamous CFM-68K bug (see TidBITS-356_), which sidelines
  OpenDoc, Cyberdog, and LaserWriter 8.4 on 68K machines. Apple has
  not yet indicated when the CFM-68K problem might be fixed.

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1997/q2/
970107.pr.rel.macos76.html>

  It seems that Apple is using this release as a revenue generator.
  Look to pay an estimated retail price of $99 for Mac OS 7.6; $69
  if you can prove you already own System 7.5 or 7.5.x . (Add $30 to
  either price to purchase the floppy disk version.) Those who
  purchased a Mac on or after 07-Dec-96 should check out the Mac OS
  Up-To-Date program to see if they qualify for an even deeper
  discount.

<http://www.macos.apple.com/macos/releases/fulfillment.html>

  No doubt there will be many ways to acquire the update; to
  purchase it from within the United States, call Apple at 800/742-
  1926.


**Increasing the Tempo** -- Mac OS 7.6 strikes me as somewhat
  dull, mostly because much of it is already available separately.
  Tempo, due out in about six months, should be more exciting in
  that it will include many elements of the Copland Finder, which
  will run native on the PowerPC (Copland was the codename of
  Apple's formerly planned Mac OS 8). Folders will be "springloaded"
  in such a way that it's easy to file items multiple levels deep
  within a folder. The Finder will offer new views such as one where
  files sort by creation date and one where files and folders look
  and act like Launcher buttons.

  The keynote demonstration also made note of a change in the upper
  right hand corner of the window. Today, the zoom box is the only
  control at the upper right; in Tempo, the upper right will also
  sport a "window shade" box that can be clicked in order to roll up
  the window so only the title bar shows. (You can get a sneak peak
  of this feature with Aaron and Kaleidoscope; one new addition in
  Tempo will be the ability to Option-click the window shade box to
  roll up all open windows.) If you don't need to upgrade to 7.6 and
  operate on a limited budget, you may wish to wait for Tempo, which
  is likely to have similar pricing.

<http://greg.math.harvard.edu/>


**Singing Apple's Song** -- In mid-1997, Apple plans to ship a
  developer's release of Rhapsody, and Apple says you can look for a
  premier release to general Macintosh users in time for the new
  year, although many industry observers find this timetable
  unrealistically ambitious. Apple also plans to ship another
  version of System 7 by the beginning of 1998, codenamed Allegro.
  By mid-1998, there will be another version of System 7, codenamed
  Sonata, and a more solidified version of Rhapsody. There's
  currently little information about what technologies might appear
  in Sonata and Allegro.

  I expect that most users will not take advantage of Rhapsody's
  world of protected memory and pre-emptive multi-tasking until
  mid-1998, and that world still has some big unknowns. According to
  Apple's Web site, Rhapsody will incorporate Display PostScript,
  though with the addition of some of Apple's display technologies
  like ColorSync and QuickDraw GX typography (though not necessarily
  all of QuickDraw GX). This may mean - at least in part - that Macs
  running Rhapsody will generate their screen displays using
  PostScript, giving PostScript-dependent designers better WYSIWYG
  than the Mac offered previously. Apple has always emphasized
  multimedia, and they plan to enhance that position by placing
  optimized versions of QTML (QuickTime Multimedia Layer) technology
  in Rhapsody. Perhaps the biggest unknown is what kernel the
  operating system will center on, a decision that Apple must make
  in the near future.

<http://www.macos.apple.com/macos/releases/rhapsody/letter.html>


**Salting the Future** -- For Apple to ship Rhapsody as promised
  depends on Apple and NeXT employees efficiently joining forces. In
  addition, NeXT developers (of which a number attended Macworld
  Expo to check out the latest Mac software) must be brought into
  the fold, and all developers will require significant technical
  information and assistance. Finally, Mac users and the general
  public must get so excited about Rhapsody that they are
  practically drooling for it. Not only must Rhapsody provide the
  "relevant compelling solutions" promised by Steve Jobs at the
  keynote, but for Rhapsody to succeed, people must understand these
  solutions and believe in them.


Macworld Expo Superlatives/Jan-97
---------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>

  Macworld Expo brings out not just the best and the worst in the
  Macintosh industry, but also the strangest. Besides, after four
  days of walking around the cavernous Moscone Center, surrounded by
  70,000 Macintosh fans, it's hard to keep a firm grip on reality.
  Here then are some of the products, booths, announcements, and
  miscellany that particularly caught our attention.


**Best Kids' Software** -- Apple's Cocoa, a wonderful tool for
  kids of all ages for creating game and simulation worlds (written
  with Prograph, no less) has gone into free DR1 release and is
  available for download. It makes stand-alone applications or can
  be played on the Internet using a Netscape plug-in. Already some
  kids calling themselves Tenadar Software have marketed a game
  written with it; being shown a demo by munchkins is somewhat
  unnerving, but I guess I will have to have to get used to it. [MN]

<http://cocoa.apple.com/>
<http://www.millertime.com/tenadar/>


**Most Expensive Giveaway **-- Symantec gave a free copy of the
  $99 Visual Page to anyone who sat through a demo of any of their
  products. It's yet another WYSIWYG Web page builder, but I didn't
  own one and it works just fine. I suspect they gave it away
  because (a) there were minor errors with the CD pressing, (b) the
  program has slightly rough edges, (c) HTML has evolved somewhat
  beyond the program, and (d) they needed to get into step with
  Adobe PageMill which is being given away left, right, and center.
  Symantec won't lose out because they'll hook a lot of users and
  then be able to charge them for future updates. [MN]

<http://www.symantec.com/vpagemac/>


**Get Thee to REI** -- This award goes to Adaptec, a company that
  makes relatively dull-looking SCSI and network adapter cards. They
  increased the visual appeal of their booth by including of a
  25-foot high fake mountain, reminiscent of the much larger indoor
  climbing wall (reportedly the world's largest) that Seattle's
  Recreational Equipment, Inc. (REI) recently installed in their
  flagship store. Apparently someone came by the Adaptec booth and
  offered to install a climbing wall - too bad the rock-colored foam
  wouldn't have supported crampons. [ACE]

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


**Saddest Words of Tongue or Pen** -- "PowerPC Only." This
  increasingly popular mantra was especially prominent with visual
  Java creation tools, including Symantec Visual Cafe and
  RandomNoise Coda (the exception was WebBurst, from Power
  Production Software). I knew this was going to happen but my 68K
  Mac and I are having trouble accepting it. [MN]

<http://www.symantec.com/vcafemac/>
<http://www.powerproduction.com/>


**Coolest External Technology** -- My vote for coolest external
  technology goes to SMART Board, from SMART Technologies Inc. It's
  a whiteboard which you attach to your computer through the serial
  port. You can write on it with colored markers, and whatever you
  write can be captured into the computer as a graphic; or (this
  part is even cooler) you can project your computer's screen onto
  the whiteboard, and then touching the whiteboard with your finger
  is just like mousing there to control the computer. Plus, you can
  "write" on the picture with virtual colored markers whose traces
  are actually projected. How I wish I'd had this when I was
  teaching! [MN]

<http://www.smarttech.com/smtboard.htm>


**Runner-up for Coolest External Technology** -- The Wireless
  Modem, from Metricom. Already, I picture myself with my PowerBook,
  sitting in a yuppie cafe, connected to the Internet through the
  antenna of this cool-looking black box. Now if only Metricom would
  complete their receiver infrastructure; they have to attach
  receivers to streetlight poles all over your city before you can
  use the modem, and so far they've only done a few major cities.
  Besides, I can't afford a seat at a yuppie cafe. [MN]

<http://www.ricochet.net/>


**Neatest Utility** -- PreFab Text Machine, an ingenious program
  by the same folks who brought us PreFab Player, is a search-and-
  replace engine using an English-like GREP which in some ways is
  even better than Nisus Writer's! This could bring powerful text-
  manipulation to any program that can interact with TextMachine via
  AppleScript or Frontier, or that can use TextMachine as an OpenDoc
  part. So far it's in alpha only, but, as someone once prophesied
  of the Wright brothers, "These boys will bear watching." [MN]

<http://www.tiac.net/prefab/textmachine.html>


**Safest Email** -- Belgian developer Highware showed a beta
  version of Pretty Safe Mail, which uses PGP (Pretty Good Privacy)
  to encrypt and decrypt files, folders, email messages, or even
  parts of email messages, all by choosing a command from a system-
  wide menu. Pretty Safe Mail also supports digital signatures and
  is the simple implementation of strong cryptography software that
  I've been waiting for. [ACE]

<http://www.highware.com/highware/safemail/safemail.htm>


**Most Boring Vaporware** -- Apple takes this prize, with Mac OS
  7.6. It hasn't even appeared yet and already everyone's wondering
  what all the fuss is about. [MN]


**People That Most Closely Resemble Their Software** -- The
  employees of Alien Skin Software, makers of the Photoshop filter
  package Eye Candy 3.0 (formerly known as Black Box), dyed their
  hair fluorescent colors, presumably to show off their Hairdresser
  plug-in for Photoshop. [ACE]

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


**Best Way to Watch the Show at the Show** -- Rearden Technologies
  set up several video cameras around the show floor using
  MacWebCam, which captured either static images every so often or
  streamed live video. You can even build time-lapse QuickTime
  movies with MacWebCam. New at the show was a pan/tilt unit that
  you could control from your Web browser to check out different
  sights around the camera. [ACE]

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


**Best Potential HyperCard-beater** --  Despite my desperate
  loyalty to HyperCard, I was strongly shaken by the demo of
  Allegiant's SuperCard 3.0, which looks like HyperCard done right
  (helpful palettes, true integrated color, vector-based graphics,
  easier "automatic" scripting) and can already operate across the
  Internet in Web pages by means of a Netscape plug-in called
  Roadster. [MN]

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


**Best Program for Sun Worshippers or Cube Dwellers** -- Sundial,
  from John Neil & Associates, replaces your desktop pattern with
  one of ten professionally photographed California landscapes.
  What's cool is that the image is actually a 288-frame, 24-hour
  QuickTime movie that changes slowly during the day to match the
  progress of the sun. Sundial even synchronizes with sunrise and
  sunset in your part of the world. Just imagine the non-scenic
  possibilities for future Sundial movies - "A Day in the Life of
  Sarajevo," "Living on the Street," or "Hotel Lobby." Sundial can
  theoretically use any 288-frame QuickTime movie, and John Neil &
  Associates is sponsoring a contest for new ideas. Imagine what it
  could be like if they add support (it's theoretically already
  there) for the sound track in QuickTime and/or QuickTime VR. [ACE]

<http://www.jna.com/sundial.html>


**Scariest Support** -- Casady & Greene featured an extremely
  large man dressed up as a genie at their booth, calling him the
  Answer Genie (he was reportedly a member of the tech support
  staff). Unfortunately, he was so imposing that one show-goer, when
  prompted to direct a technical question to the Answer Genie
  instead of a more diminutive marketing person, looked quickly at
  the hulking genie and declared firmly, "No, I don't think so."

<http://www.casadyg.com/C&G/Welcome.html>


**It's About Time** -- Long-time Internet developer InterCon
  Systems has come up with a product that tons of people have wanted
  for years - MacVPA (VPA stands for Virtual Private AppleTalk).
  Basically, MacVPA provides AppleTalk access for people who only
  have a PPP-based Internet connection. So, if you're travelling,
  MacVPA enables you to dial any Internet provider and get AppleTalk
  access to your Internet-connected network back at the office, all
  without needing to run your own dial-in servers (or make long-
  distance telephone calls). [ACE]

<http://www.intercon.com/macvpa/macvpa.html>


**Neatest Ergonomic Aid** -- The No Hands Mouse, by Hunter
  Digital, isn't a mouse, and it doesn't even sit on your desk. It's
  actually a pair of foot pedals; the right one controls mouse
  movement with a joystick-like action, while the left pedal
  controls mouse clicking (rock forward to click, back to double-
  click). I had trouble moving the cursor around, and found myself
  unconsciously grabbing for a nonexistent mouse, but others I
  talked to liked the feel. I assume you'd get used to it fairly
  quickly. [JLC]

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


**Most Dissonant Booths** -- This award goes to all the RAM
  vendors at the show who had large, elaborate booths that stood in
  stark contrast to the small size of the almost identical products
  they sell. RAM is small, all SIMMs and DIMMs look the same, and
  RAM doesn't exactly provide much demo fodder. On the other hand,
  you can never have too much of it. [ACE]


**Our Favorite Button** -- "Email Rules", from StarNine. How true.


**Coolest Computer Case** -- Apple's four pound eMate Newton,
  which will be available shortly for the education market and for
  the rest of us in the middle of 1997, features an integral handle
  and (in the unit we saw) a murky green translucent plastic case.
  The handle has prompted some to label it the "Power Purse," but
  overall, I was extremely impressed. The keyboard was obviously
  designed for small hands, but was usable by adults. The Newton
  operating system worked well and the applications included a
  functional word processor, spreadsheet, drawing program, graphing
  calculator, address book, and calendar. I've been waiting for a
  Newton with a keyboard and larger screen (480 x 320) for a while.
  One neat feature I haven't seen before was a tripod mount on the
  bottom - a tripod would be an excellent way to use the eMate in
  the field. [ACE]

<http://www.newton.apple.com/newton/productinfo/eMate300.html>


**Best Tchotchkes **-- Drive Savers, the folks who can recover
  hard drives from PowerBooks run over by buses or dropped in lakes,
  gave out Roomerangs, little foam four-pronged boomerang-like toys
  designed for tossing indoors. If you need to use DriveSavers'
  services, you're definitely going to be up for throwing something,
  so why not make it a Roomerang? [JLC]

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


$$

 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 on TidBITS: how to subscribe, where to find back
 issues, and other useful stuff, send email to: <info@tidbits.com>
 Send comments and editorial submissions to: <editors@tidbits.com>
 Issues available at: ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/
 And: http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/
 To search back issues with WAIS, use this URL via a Web browser:
 http://wais.sensei.com.au/macarc/tidbits/searchtidbits.html
 -------------------------------------------------------------------



