TidBITS#504/01-Nov-99
=====================

  Mac OS 9's new networking features may be tantalizing, but the
  gory details that Geoff Duncan's in-depth look reveals could give
  you pause. We also start a two-part article by Jerry Kindall about
  encoding MP3 files; next week's issue will bring a comparison of
  five Macintosh MP3 encoders. In the news, we track Aladdin Systems
  going public, improvements to the AppleCare program, and the
  releases of DiskWarrior 1.1 and MasterJuggler Pro 2.0.3 and 2.1.

Topics:
    MailBITS/01-Nov-99
    Making MP3s, Part 1
    Mac OS 9 with a Net

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-504.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1999/TidBITS#504_01-Nov-99.etx>

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MailBITS/01-Nov-99
------------------

**MasterJuggler Pro Tracks More Fonts** -- Alsoft has released two
  new versions of its font management utility MasterJuggler Pro to
  provide Mac OS 9 compatibility and expand the number of fonts that
  can be opened simultaneously. MasterJuggler Pro 2.0.3, a 426K
  download, is a free update that provides only Mac OS 9
  compatibility. MasterJuggler Pro 2.1 takes advantage of Mac OS 9's
  capability to have more than 348 open files by supporting up to
  1,200 open font suitcases. The 2.1 upgrade costs $18 (actually $13
  plus a $5 processing fee) for owners of MasterJuggler Pro 2.0 and
  later. However, the update is available only on floppy disk, a
  questionable move considering that no current Macintosh computers
  ship with floppy drives. [JLC]

<http://www.alsoft.com/MasterJuggler/>
<http://www.alsoft.com/download.html>


**DiskWarrior Update Adds Mac OS 9 Support** -- Alsoft's repair
  utility DiskWarrior has been updated to version 1.1, taking
  advantage of file system improvements introduced in Mac OS 9 (see
  "Fighting Corruption with Alsoft's DiskWarrior" in TidBITS-486_).
  DiskWarrior 1.1 now repairs overlapped files larger than 2 GB, as
  well as disks with folders containing more than 32,000 items
  (previously, the fix could be made, but not verified). AppleScript
  scripts for DiskWarrior also work better under non-English
  systems. The free DiskWarrior 1.1 Updater is a 588K download.
  [JLC]

<http://www.alsoft.com/DiskWarrior/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05443>


**Apple Revises AppleCare** -- Apple Computer has significantly
  revised its AppleCare Protection Plan (formerly known as AppleCare
  Extended Service) since we wrote about it in "Should You Get
  AppleCare?" in TidBITS-478_. Overall, Apple made AppleCare far
  more coherent, tying the pricing to the four main product
  families, covering certain peripherals purchased with Macintosh
  systems, and including MicroMat's TechTool Deluxe for testing your
  system (TechTool Deluxe is presumably similar to MicroMat's
  TechTool Pro). AppleCare now runs for a total of 3 years (but
  cannot be renewed after that), extending the standard 1 year
  hardware warranty by 2 years and extending the 90 days of
  telephone support out to 3 years. Due to the length of the new
  AppleCare policy, pricing is somewhat higher than before, with an
  iMac at $150, an iBook at $230, a PowerBook at $300, a Power
  Macintosh or Macintosh Server (with display) at $250, and an Apple
  display purchased separately at $100. Apple claims it will offer
  upgrades to existing AppleCare Extended Service customers, but
  details weren't yet available. AppleCare is available through
  Apple or Apple authorized resellers and is valid only in the U.S.
  and Canada. [ACE]

<http://www.info.apple.com/support/applecare_products/protectionplan/
features.shtml>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05370>
<http://www.micromat.com/>


**Aladdin Systems Goes Public** -- In an unusual event in the
  Macintosh industry, Aladdin Systems, makers of the StuffIt family
  of compression products and numerous other Mac utilities, has gone
  public via a "reverse merger," which involves a private company
  merging with a dormant public company so its shares can be traded
  on public stock exchanges. Reverse mergers are generally easier,
  less expensive, and result in less-diluted stock than IPOs
  (initial public offerings). Aladdin Holdings, Inc., the parent
  company of which Aladdin Systems, Inc. is now a wholly owned
  subsidiary, is listed under the ticker symbol ALHI and currently
  trading at about $5 per share. Going public should increase
  Aladdin's valuation, give them greater access to capital, and
  enable them to use stock to acquire other products or companies -
  a strategy Aladdin has used of late to increase its product
  lineup. [ACE]

<http://web.wt.net/~bellco/shell2.htm>
<http://www.aladdinsys.com/company/news/releases/aladdin/
102599-aladdinholdings.html>


**Poll Results: Mac OS 9 Upgrade Plans** -- Last week's poll
  inquiring about your schedule for Mac OS 9 showed the TidBITS
  poll-going readership being more cautious than we had expected.
  Results were evenly split among those who planned to upgrade
  immediately (26 percent) and within 1 to 2 months (27 percent),
  with 3+ months being the most popular answer at 37 percent. Only
  10 percent of readers had no plans to upgrade. Frankly, I would
  have expected more people to consider upgrading sooner - it's
  possible that people don't consider Mac OS 9's new features
  sufficiently compelling to upgrade before early adopters have
  identified any hidden problems and before compatible versions of
  popular utilities like RAM Doubler and StuffIt Deluxe are
  available. [ACE]


**Poll Preview: QuickTime & Sherlock Interfaces** -- Apple has
  made much of its new "stylish" interfaces for QuickTime 4.0's
  QuickTime Player and Sherlock 2. However, these interfaces violate
  Apple's own user interface conventions (try expanding the
  QuickTime Player window and note the lack of a collapse button in
  both applications) and have proved controversial in the Macintosh
  community. QuickTime Player could have been an anomaly, but
  Sherlock 2's similar interface shows that Apple is continuing the
  design trend. And where Apple leads, others are likely to follow.
  The question, then, is: do you think Apple and other developers
  should make their user interfaces more like QuickTime Player and
  Sherlock 2? Express your opinion at our home page! [ACE]

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


Making MP3s, Part 1
-------------------
  by Jerry Kindall <kindall@manual.com>

  Although MP3 is turning into a great way to expose yourself to new
  music - like the new single "Icicle" from local Michigan band
  Troll for Trout, or Alan Parsons' "Dr. Evil Trance Remix" of the
  title track from his new album - half the fun is in rolling your
  own. Happily, there are no fewer than five separate Macintosh
  applications available for creating your own MP3s. With one
  exception, all of them let you encode MP3 files directly from an
  audio CD - and they'll do it faster than real-time with a
  reasonably speedy CD-ROM drive and processor.

<http://www.mp3.com/artists/16/michigan_rocks_99.html>
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/subst/music/download/alan-parsons/
ap-main.html>

  Making MP3 files of CDs you already own and playing them back on
  your own equipment is perfectly legal. Making MP3 files of music
  you've created and giving them away is also legal. But uploading
  and downloading "bootleg" MP3s (songs encoded from commercial
  albums without the artist's or record label's permission) is
  illegal. Remember, it's up to you to keep your use of MP3 players
  and encoders on the light side of the Force.

  We donned headphones and put together a four-minute AIFF audio
  file containing several different styles of music, and next week
  we'll tell you how quickly our five contenders encoded MP3 files
  and how these files sounded. But first, a journey into the
  psychology of sound.


**Why Encoders Matter** -- When you make a 128 kilobit per second
  (Kbps) MP3 file from an audio CD, the encoded file is less than 10
  percent of the size of the original, which means that the encoder
  essentially discards over 90 percent of the original data. It's
  been known for decades that our sense of hearing is as much
  between our ears as it is in them. By taking advantage of our
  knowledge of how humans perceive sound (the science of
  psychoacoustics), it is possible to extract the most important
  parts of an audio signal and encode them with high fidelity, using
  lower fidelity for less noticeable parts of the sound, or
  discarding such parts altogether. This is the basic principle
  behind MP3 and other lossy audio compression schemes, such as the
  QDesign Music Codec built into QuickTime.

  One interesting fact about the MPEG standard (of which MP3 is only
  one small part) is that the specification says nothing at all
  about how an MPEG encoder should work - it only defines the format
  required by the decoder. This means that developers are free to
  innovate their own encoding schemes - as long as the resulting
  file has the right format, it can be decoded by any MP3 player.
  Competition, the theory goes, will drive developers of MP3 encoder
  software to develop better and better psychoacoustic simulations.
  Better encoders mean better-sounding MP3 files - and the best part
  is that you don't need new playback software to enjoy the
  improvement, just a new version of the file.

  So, counterintuitively, the software used to create an MP3 file
  can have as much or more effect on its sound quality than the
  software you use to listen to it. Although some MP3 playback
  programs have built-in equalizers and other enhancements to allow
  you to shape the sound to your liking, all software MP3 players
  sound pretty much the same with those features turned off.

  The good news is that the encoders we tested produced listenable
  MP3s at bitrates of 128 Kbps and higher regardless of the style of
  music. Bitrate is just a fancy word for how many bits are required
  to encode a second of music. The more bits you use, the less audio
  information you have to throw away, and thus the better the
  resulting file sounds, all other things being equal. If the
  bitrate of an MP3 or QuickTime file is lower than the bitrate of
  your modem (generally 56 Kbps or lower), and the planets are
  aligned just right, you can actually play back the file as it
  downloads. Most stereo MP3s you'll find on the Internet are
  encoded at 128 Kbps or higher, which means you'll need ISDN or
  better to listen to them in real-time.

  In naked ear tests, you'd be hard pressed to notice any
  differences between the files encoded by our selection of audio
  bit-crunchers. With headphones, some minor differences become
  apparent, although nothing earth-shattering was revealed until we
  conducted a torture test, encoding stereo files at bitrates of 64
  Kbps and lower. At this point, a number of encoding inaccuracies
  (commonly referred to as "artifacts") became apparent as the
  encoders struggled to decide which parts of the sound were least
  important and thus disposable. It was obvious which had the best
  psychoacoustic models under the hood. Tune in next week to see how
  the different encoders fared in our tests, including
  AudioCatalyst, SoundJam MP, N2MP3, MVP, and the free MP3 Encoder.

  [Jerry Kindall is the founder of Manual Labor, a technical writing
  and Web design firm specializing in the Macintosh. His music
  collection includes, at last count, over 900 CDs.]

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


Mac OS 9 with a Net
-------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Previously, we looked at some installation and compatibility
  issues with Mac OS 9, as well as some major new features: Sherlock
  2, Multiple Users and Voice Verification, plus the Keychain and
  Apple File Security. This article examines some of Mac OS 9's
  networking and file sharing features.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05624>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05625>


**Internet File Sharing** -- A significant power-user feature in
  Mac OS 9 is the capability to use both Personal File Sharing and
  Program Linking over the Internet. Personal File Sharing, which
  enables users to access files on a remote Macintosh over
  AppleTalk, debuted with System 7 back in 1991, and though it's
  limited to ten simultaneous users, it has proven the be one of the
  Mac OS's most-loved and most-used features.

  Now you can use those same capabilities over the Internet, thanks
  to a special background-only version of Open Door Networks'
  ShareWay IP that Apple has rolled into Mac OS 9, adding only a
  single activation checkbox to the File Sharing control panel. You
  configure users, groups, and privileges as you normally would for
  Personal File Sharing - except now users can connect to your
  Macintosh by entering your Mac's IP address into the Chooser
  (using either a DNS name or an IP number), or perhaps by locating
  your Macintosh in the Network Browser application. Although TCP/IP
  File Sharing may not be too useful for folks with dial-up Internet
  access (and hence ever-changing IP addresses) it's handy for
  accessing machines with fixed IP addresses from the road or
  anywhere else that's not on your local AppleTalk network. Note
  that AppleTalk must still be active in the AppleTalk control panel
  for TCP/IP File Sharing to work - the feature simply provides
  access to AppleTalk-based services you've already defined.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04961>

  Program Linking - otherwise known as the Program-to-Program
  Communications (PPC) Toolbox - was another feature that appeared
  way back with System 7, although it hasn't enjoyed the widespread
  popularity of File Sharing. Program Linking enables applications
  on separate machines to communicate with each other over a
  network, all controlled by the users and groups privileges set up
  in the File Sharing control panel. However, since most programs
  don't talk to other programs by default, few users took advantage
  of this capability, and using it to its full potential often
  required scripting. I may be alone in the universe, but I use
  Program Linking regularly, both to monitor the status of servers
  on my network, and also to perform everyday tasks - in fact,
  issues of TidBITS would never make it to our Web site or be
  distributed via email if it weren't for Program Linking. For many
  users, the utility of Program Linking over the Internet will be
  the capability to run AppleScript scripts that can interact with
  applications on remote machines via the Internet.

  TCP/IP File Sharing and Program Linking raise security questions
  for many users. Although Internet sharing features are not enabled
  by default (and guest access isn't available at all for Program
  Linking over TCP/IP), once they're turned on your Mac's security
  is limited to the quality of the usernames and passwords you've
  defined - and, of course, whether you've enabled guest access.
  Theoretically, your Mac could be accessed by anyone on the
  Internet, rather than just the comparatively few souls on your
  local AppleTalk network. Although you can certainly protect your
  Mac adequately using good, hard-to-guess usernames and passwords
  and disabling any sort of guest access, Open Door Networks - the
  same folks who developed these capabilities in the first place -
  offer enhanced utilities with improved security and monitoring
  features. ShareWay IP 3.0 adds logging features and the capability
  to enable or disable IP-based connectivity on a user-by-user
  basis. You can also change the port number of TCP/IP File Sharing
  to something besides the standard port 548. Special pricing is
  available for Mac OS 9 owners. Open Door also offers versions of
  DoorStop, a stand-alone firewall that offers highly selective
  allow-or-deny access of Internet services on a Macintosh going
  back to Mac OS 8.1.

<http://www2.opendoor.com/shareway/MacOS9upgrade.html>


**AppleScript 1.4** -- Program Linking over TCP/IP creates new
  possibilities for Internet-enabled scripts. Typically, AppleScript
  scripts are confined to running on your local computer as one-shot
  tasks you trigger yourself or as Folder Actions that act
  automatically on your behalf. Only ambitious scripters have used
  the PPC Toolbox to run scripts over AppleTalk, but the rewards of
  doing so can be substantial: you could open or close databases on
  a Web server, transfer data to and from remote applications,
  shuffle files between folders on a remote Macintosh, launch and
  quit applications on another machine... in short, just about
  anything you could do with a script on your local Mac, you could
  do remotely if you were willing to tussle with obscure syntax and
  scripting tricks.

  AppleScript 1.4 adds two enhancements to this scenario - in
  addition to prepping AppleScript for the forthcoming world of
  Carbon and Mac OS X. First, AppleScript 1.4 enables the use of
  "eppc" URLs in tell statements, so scripts can connect to remote
  machines running Mac OS 9 with TCP/IP Program Linking turned on:

 tell application "Finder" of machine "eppc://pointless.quibble.com/"
   beep
 end tell

  Second, AppleScript has a new "using terms from" block to get
  around the infamous "double-tell" trick of writing scripts for
  applications on remote machines: you can use terminology from a
  local application to compile a script that will execute on a
  remote system:

 using terms from application "FileMaker Pro"
   tell application "FileMaker Pro" of machine "eppc://pointless.quibble.com/"
     open database "Contacts" with password "LaVidaPoca"
   end tell
 end using terms from

  Unfortunately, Apple doesn't document these capabilities online or
  in any of the materials that ship with Mac OS 9. Hopefully, Apple
  will update its AppleScript Web site soon discuss these features,
  as well as additional scripting enhancements in Mac OS 9. In the
  meantime, Bill Cheeseman's AppleScript SourceBook is a good place
  to look for information about AppleScript 1.4.

<http://www.apple.com/applescript/>
<http://www.applescriptsourcebook.com/applescript/applescript140.html>


**Network Services Location** -- Although AppleTalk is often
  maligned by network administrators (especially those who don't use
  Macs), Apple's age-old networking protocol has always offered good
  ease of use, simple administration for small groups, and features
  still not found in many modern networking environments, such as
  the ability to "see" network resources dynamically as they appear
  and disappear from a network. Nonetheless, AppleTalk faces two
  fundamental problems: AppleTalk isn't based on Internet
  technologies, and network administrators believe (mostly
  erroneously) that AppleTalk services consume lots of bandwidth as
  they "chatter" to locate other AppleTalk services.

  So, Apple started working on Network Services Location (NSL), a
  protocol-independent way for programs to learn about services
  available on a local intranet. The key phrase here is "intranet",
  not "Internet" - although these services can operate over the
  Internet because they aren't bound to any one protocol, they
  aren't intended to encompass the entire Internet. The idea is to
  bring some of the best features of AppleTalk - discoverability and
  ease of use - to other protocols and network services.

  Apple quietly introduced support for NSL in Mac OS 8.5 and 8.6,
  although there were no visible manifestations. Apple solidified
  NSL in Mac OS 9, although users may still find it confusing and
  hard to use until applications and servers intelligently take
  advantage of its capabilities.

  In Mac OS 9, NSL includes plug-ins for four services - DNS, LDAP,
  Service Location Protocol, and AppleTalk. In theory, this enables
  NSL-savvy applications like the Network Browser to locate and
  connect to network services using any one of these protocols.
  Items from each of these services appear in "neighborhoods" -
  hierarchical groupings of network items - that can contain items
  from any of the available network services, as well as other
  "sub-neighborhoods". Depending on your LAN setup, the Network
  Browser might be able to see your local FTP servers, Macs running
  Personal File Sharing and Personal Web Sharing, Web servers on
  your intranet, organizational information kept in an LDAP
  directory server - plus everything you'd expect to see on an
  AppleTalk network, including zones and file servers, but not
  printers. Apple's Personal File Sharing and Personal Web Sharing
  use Service Location Protocol (SLP), a new way for clients to
  learn about available network servers, so these services
  automatically appear in the Network Browser as local services
  under Mac OS 9.

  There are several catches with NSL and SLP. First, Apple shipped
  SLP 1.0 in Mac OS 8.5 and 8.6, and SLP 2.0 in Mac OS 9. These two
  versions are _not_ mutually compatible, so Mac OS 9 systems can't
  discover SLP services on Mac OS 8.5 and 8.6 systems and vice
  versa, creating confusion for users. Fortunately, version 1.1 of
  the SLP plug-in from Mac OS 9 (which implements SLP 2.0; it's
  called "SLPPlugin" in the Extensions folder) _will_work_ with Mac
  OS 8.5 and 8.6 systems, but Apple doesn't document this trick, and
  it could create administration headaches. Second, although SLP-
  savvy clients can discover services on a local network, there's
  currently no way to organize or administer them. On medium-to-
  large networks SLP is designed to work with servers called
  "directory agents," which register and administer network
  services. Directory agents enable the scalability of network
  services, permit centralized administration of what is and isn't
  allowed to advertise itself as a network service, and define how
  those services are organized. However, no SLP directory agents are
  available right now, although Apple claimed it intended to ship a
  directory agent for SLP last May at WWDC. So, SLP services can't
  easily be organized at the moment, which limits their utility.

  All this might be moot if your LAN's routers - or those of folks
  with whom you'd like to communicate - don't support IP
  multicasting. IP multicasting is a technology designed to
  facilitate IP-based audio and video transmission - basically,
  instead of each client or audience member requiring a separate
  data stream, each client can receive the same data stream, thereby
  using the network more efficiently. Although most recent routers
  support IP multicasting, older equipment may not. In the absence
  of directory agents to coordinate network services, SLP-savvy
  clients rely on IP multicasting to query the network for desired
  services. If those queries don't go anywhere, the services on the
  same LAN can't be discovered and won't appear in the Network
  Browser.

  (Open Door Networks has published a good discussion of SLP and the
  Mac; it bears reading if you're interested in SLP's history and
  development.)

<http://www2.opendoor.com/shareway/SLP.html>

  So the SLP situation is complicated: what about using NSL in real
  life? On a small network, NSL can come close to AppleTalk's ease-
  of-use, especially if users standardize on Mac OS 9 or at least
  version 1.1 of the SLPPlugin extension. In other situations, using
  NSL's utility may be hard to predict.

  You can add neighborhoods to the Network Browser by entering DNS
  machine names or IP numbers. However, you can only delete
  neighborhoods using the Finder - some neighborhoods appear in the
  Favorites folder in the Apple Menu, others are buried deep in your
  Preferences folder - or using control panel settings (see below).
  This difficulty of configuration is an unneeded aggravation since
  most neighborhoods won't work as people expect.

  The Network Browser creates neighborhoods for you when it starts
  up. If you're on an AppleTalk network, the Network Browser
  displays an AppleTalk neighborhood which works much as you'd
  expect. Since NSL has an LDAP plug-in, it also tries to create a
  neighborhood based on any LDAP server settings you've specified in
  the Hosts settings of the Advanced tab in your Internet control
  panel. (If you don't see an Advanced tab, you need to switch to
  Advanced mode using the User Mode command on the Internet control
  panel's Edit menu.) Even if you can connect to the specified LDAP
  server, LDAP resource listings in the Network Browser may be
  nearly useless: email addresses don't appear as Internet resource
  files but rather as entirely new neighborhoods which, in turn,
  contain the entire LDAP directory information again, ad infinitum.
  Any URLs associated with an LDAP entity are listed separately,
  creating more confusion.

  The Network browser may also try to create a neighborhood based on
  information you have entered in the search paths fields in your
  TCP/IP control panel. These neighborhoods display any services
  discovered using SLP (right now this means only Personal File
  Sharing over TCP or Personal Web Sharing) or DNS. Unfortunately,
  the only way a service can be "discovered" using DNS is if the DNS
  server administrator has created TXT records in that domain
  identifying services. The format for this record is tucked away in
  an Apple manual on NSL; if you think network administrators
  dislike AppleTalk, they'll respond even less favorably to hard-
  coding references to services into their DNS zones.

<ftp://manuals.info.apple.com/Apple_Support_Area/Manuals/software/
NSLAdminGuide.pdf>

  In short, Apple has introduced some new fundamental networking
  technologies with Mac OS 9 that may be useful now to some users in
  specific environments. However, until server and application
  support improves, many of these new capabilities may exacerbate
  confusion about how to access network services.


**Remote Access** -- Apple has also rolled the features of Apple
  Remote Access Personal Server into Mac OS 9, enabling a Macintosh
  to answer modem calls from clients using either PPP or ARAP (Apple
  Remote Access Protocol) and grant access to either the local
  computer or the entire local network - this puts Mac OS 9 on par
  with the dial-up access capabilities built into Windows 98. Remote
  Access is handy if you need to access your desktop Mac from your
  PowerBook while you're away from the office, and potentially
  access your entire office network at the same time.

<http://www.apple.com/networking/applepersonalserver.html>

  You can set up call answering in the Remote Access control panel
  (select Answering from the RemoteAccess menu); Remote Access can
  act as a PPP server and assign an IP address to a caller using
  TCP/IP, or allow a caller to use a pre-determined IP address. The
  File Sharing control panel's User & Groups tab determines which
  users have the ability to dial in to a Macintosh using Remote
  Access: dial-in privileges must be enabled on a user-by-user
  basis, and can be configured to call a user back at a pre-defined
  number rather than granting immediate access. Mac OS 9's Remote
  Access capability isn't sufficient to support a pool of remote
  users - it supports only one modem - but does offer the most
  current modem scripts for Apple and third-party modems, improved
  DNS negotiation, support for MS-CHAP, and improved compatibility
  with AppleTalk/PPP servers. Remote Access also keeps an activity
  log, so you can check to see if folks are abusing the service or
  trying to break into your system. Although I haven't tried this in
  almost two years, there's no reason Windows or Unix machines
  wouldn't be able to connect to Remote Access using PPP, although
  they would need AppleTalk software to access any AppleTalk
  services.


**Looking Ahead** -- Even all this detail doesn't fully cover Mac
  OS 9's changes, and we'll be looking at some additional features
  in a future issue, along with the groundwork for Mac OS X that
  Apple has laid in the foundations of Mac OS 9.


$$

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