TidBITS#341/19-Aug-96
=====================

If your life revolves around new software, this week TidBITS takes
   you for a spin with information on the latest version of Netscape
   Navigator, Corel's first update to the Mac version of
   WordPerfect, and an in-depth look at the WYSIWYG Web authoring
   tool Claris Home Page. Also, we bring you news about a beta test
   of a new daily Macintosh journal, and an essay from Adam on how
   your Mac could better relate to your data.

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.
   For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
* 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.
   Win a PowerCenter 120! <http://www.powercc.com/>
* America Online -- 800/827-6364 -- <http://www.aol.com/>
   The world's largest provider of online services.
   Give Back to the Net -- <http://www.aol.com/give/>
* EarthLink Network -- 800/395-8425 -- <sales@earthlink.net>
   Providers of direct Internet access for Macintosh users.
   For eWorld refugees: no setup fee! <http://www.earthlink.net/>
* DealBITS: RAM, video cards, Macs, utilities and more! <---- NEW!
   <http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/> -- <dealbits@tidbits.com>

Copyright 1990-1996 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

Topics:
    MailBITS/19-Aug-96
    Corel Updates WordPerfect
    The Database Returns
    Homing In on Home Page

<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#341_19-Aug-96.etx>


MailBITS/19-Aug-96
------------------
  Assuming everything goes as it should, this is the first TidBITS
  issue distributed via our new ListSTAR setup. Let's hope it works!
  [ACE]


**Netscape 3.0 Ships** -- In what might be the most anticlimactic
  product release of the summer, Netscape shipped the "final"
  version Netscape Navigator 3.0 today, after about five months of
  beta releases. The download package is 3.5 (binary) to 5 MB
  (binhexed), and naturally Netscape's FTP sites are currently
  overloaded, so you might want to wait a few days before
  downloading the release. Navigator 3.0 includes Java capability,
  LiveAudio and QuickTime plug-ins, support for new Netscape-only
  HTML tags for multi-column text, and a host of other enhancements,
  partly at the cost of a 7 MB to 9 MB RAM allocation. Netscape is
  hyping its Live3D and CoolTalk Navigator plug-ins, but they don't
  appear to be available for the Macintosh. Also, the final 3.0
  version of Navigator Gold (with HTML authoring tools) isn't out
  yet, but I expect Netscape will release it soon. [GD]

<ftp://ftp.netscape.com/navigator/3.0/mac/>
<http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/3.0/relnotes/mac-3.0.html>


**A Daily Fix** -- If you think the main problem with TidBITS is
  that it doesn't arrive often enough, check out the free beta test
  of a new Internet publication, the Macintosh Daily Journal (MDJ).
  MDJ has no relationship to TidBITS, but it does have news,
  analysis, and commentary relating to the Macintosh world. Like
  TidBITS, MDJ is distributed by email and comes in setext format,
  although Adobe Acrobat format is also available. MDJ will not be
  free after the beta test period, but the publication is accepting
  up to 500 beta subscribers, so if you're interested in more Mac
  news, take a look at the Web site below. [ACE]

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


Corel Updates WordPerfect
-------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  WordPerfect users have anxiously awaited concrete signs that Corel
  plans to update WordPerfect actively. On 08-Aug-96, Corel
  announced Corel WordPerfect 3.5, an updated version of Novell
  WordPerfect 3.5. Current Novell WordPerfect users can download the
  1.7 MB Corel WP 3.5 Updater, which updates Novell WordPerfect 3.5
  to Corel WordPerfect 3.5 (the Get Info dialog labels it Corel
  WordPerfect 3.5.1, though other version checks show version 3.5).
  A few foreign language dictionaries and thesaurus files are also
  available.

  (Use the first URL from Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer,
  and the second one if you're using an FTP client like Anarchie.)

<ftp://ftp.corel.com/pub/WordPerfect/WordPerfect/WPMac/Updates/>
<ftp://ftp.corel.com/e%3A/pub/WordPerfect/WordPerfect/WPMac/Updates/>

  Unfortunately, the updater cannot install over Novell WordPerfect
  3.5 if the copy of Novell WordPerfect doesn't precisely match what
  the updater expects. If you encounter this situation, you'll get a
  message saying, "invalid file selected for updating." According to
  WordPerfect technical support, this is likely to occur if you've
  run disk utilities like Norton Utilities. To solve the problem,
  WordPerfect technical support recommends that you throw away your
  current WordPerfect folder (don't trash any of your own documents,
  though), and then install a fresh copy of WordPerfect 3.5. The
  updater should be able to update the fresh copy.

  The update improves performance and fixes a variety of bugs. To
  see the full list of changes, you must download and run the
  updater installer, and then you'll see a list of changes within
  the installer window. In addition to fixing several crashing bugs,
  notable fixes include ruler bar display problems on PCI Power
  Macs, cleared tabs unexpectedly re-appearing, Font menus in
  Preferences and Print Envelopes not working on small monitors, and
  problems with envelope printing. The new version also improves
  table display and performance. New features include the ability to
  create HTML forms and to position a caption above a graphic or
  text box.

  Corel is also shipping Corel WordPerfect 3.5 on CD-ROM, and this
  version comes with not only WordPerfect but also with
  MasterJuggler Pro (see TidBITS-334_), Netscape 2.02, clip art
  images, background texture images, stock photography, sounds, 150
  TrueType fonts, as well as spelling checkers and thesauruses for
  Spanish, French, and German. The CD-ROM lists for $249, and
  upgrades are $89. You can sidegrade for $89 if you own a
  competitive product. It's pleasing to see Corel shipping
  WordPerfect on CD with a large complement of related files, but I
  think owners of Novell WordPerfect 3.5 should get the CD for $25
  or less.

<http://www.corel.com/wpmacnews/issues/jul96/co.htm>
<http://www.corel.com/new/1996/august/wordperfect.htm>


The Database Returns
--------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  I've noticed a trend worth watching recently. More and more
  products are putting databases under their hoods. Two Web servers,
  Web Server 4D and NetWings, are based on ACIUS's 4th Dimension
  database. The just-released FireSite (see TidBITS-340_) sits on
  top of a custom relational database, and EveryWare's Bolero Web
  tracking tool uses their Butler SQL database. Lest you think this
  tendency is just related to Web software, a database also drives
  DiamondSoft's new font management utility, FontReserve.

<http://www.mdg.com/>
<http://www.netwings.com/>
<http://www.clearway.com/>
<http://www.everyware.com/Bolero/>
<http://www.fontreserve.com/>

  What's causing this trend? Two things, I think. First, serious
  databases provide flexibility and performance not offered by the
  built-in pseudo-database functionality of the Mac OS - namely the
  HFS file system and the Resource Manager. The second, related
  reason is that database power enables additional transparency that
  would otherwise require significant manual effort. For instance,
  basing a Web server on a database simplifies the use of repeating
  elements within a Web site. Similarly, the way FireSite uses its
  relational database back-end enables it to monitor usage and
  predict which files would be best to replicate.

  For those unfamiliar with databases, there are two common types:
  flat-file databases and relational databases. A flat-file database
  is like a stack of index cards, and each card contains the same
  fields of information. Flat-file databases are useful when there's
  a one-to-one relationship between the data (Name to Telephone
  Number, for instance). In contrast, a relational database is more
  akin to several stacks of index cards. Each stack can have one or
  more different fields of information on it, and each stack can
  selectively "see" into the other stacks to access common
  information (like a name or telephone number) so information is
  only stored in one place. A relational database is useful for
  one-to-many or many-to-many relationships (Student to Classes, for
  example). In some ways, you can think of a relational database as
  a number of flat-file databases that share information.

  It's easy to see how a database can help a wide variety of
  programs. For instance, ListSTAR has great flexibility when it
  comes to processing incoming and outgoing email, but it stores
  mailing lists as simple unsorted text files. Locating an address
  within a large list like our 7,000-plus person DealBITS list can
  take several minutes. A similar search in a decent database should
  be essentially instantaneous. That's one reason why we're using a
  custom FileMaker Pro database to manage all our mailing lists.
  There's a fairly significant overlap between the DealBITS list and
  the TidBITS list, so it's silly to maintain two separate lists of
  subscribers when we can just note in a relational database that
  any given person subscribes to just DealBITS, just TidBITS, or
  both. Any future mailing lists benefit from the database as well.

  I've heard rumblings of other mailing list management programs
  based on databases, and depending on how well they implement their
  database functionality, they could present serious competition to
  ListSTAR unless Quarterdeck is able to graft a database onto the
  program.

  Assuming that a database back-end makes sense for a number of
  types of programs, I see several ways that a program could take
  advantage of database technology. A program's developers could
  write a database, which would undoubtedly be a lot of work, but
  provides the most control. A more efficient method would be to
  license generalized database code from another company (I suspect
  this sort of thing already exists, although I don't know the
  specifics).

  Perhaps the most interesting way to get a database into a product
  is via a system-level database that any application could utilize.
  There have been a few starts in this direction, although nothing
  has gone all the way.

* HyperCard almost seems to fits this bill, especially a few years
  back when it was likely that any given Macintosh user had and used
  it. Unfortunately, HyperCard's file format has never been public,
  which means data can only be accessed via the HyperCard
  application. More seriously, HyperCard was never designed to be
  used solely as a database; though it can sometimes perform capably
  in that fashion, it requires expertise, add-on tools, or both.
  But, HyperCard sports an accessible programming language and easy
  interface building tools, which ease prototyping if not
  implementation.

* UserLand Software's Frontier includes an Object Database, and
  Frontier users have been doing some experiments with serving Web
  pages directly out of the database to avoid the performance
  overhead of the Mac file system. Other applications could take
  advantage of Frontier's Object Database as well, although it
  currently isn't at the system level.

* Peter Lewis and Quinn's public domain Internet Config stores
  Internet-related preferences for any Internet Config-aware program
  to use. Internet Config isn't really a database, though, but it's
  a good example of the advantages of sharing information between
  programs at a system level.

  I'd be fascinated to see what might happen if someone, perhaps
  even Apple, created a system-level general purpose database that
  any application could use for storing data. In fact, it might have
  already happened. Although I've been using the term "database" in
  a traditional manner, Apple has a technology coming called V-Twin
  that enables incredibly fast text indexing and searching. It might
  be conceivable that something like V-Twin, which is already used
  in Apple e.g. and to search email in Cyberdog, could stand in for
  a general purpose database engine.

<http://cybertech.apple.com/Appleeg.html>
<http://cyberdog.apple.com/>

  Although Apple would seem to be the logical choice for defining
  what such a database could do, I frankly think that some small
  developers could get together, define some general functionality,
  and release something far more quickly than Apple could. I'm no
  database expert, but here are some of the things that I imagine
  the database needing.

* Speed. Performance is important, especially if multiple
  applications will be calling this database engine simultaneously.

* Data types. If this is a generalized database engine, it can't
  discriminate in terms of data types - it must accept anything.
  Dealing with different data types would require it to know about
  the file system to handle aliases, despite the fact that bringing
  the file system into the mix might hurt performance.

* Relational. Despite the ease-of-use of flat-file databases, they
  don't offer enough flexibility, and this database engine would
  have to be tremendously flexible for it to be useful for all the
  tasks dreamt up for it.

* Stable. Once lots of applications are using this engine, a
  single crash could cause incredible damage unless the database
  were solid and corruption-resistant. I've been distressed by the
  apparent ease with which I can destroy a FileMaker Pro database.

* Individual files. Each application should create its own file to
  reduce confusion or conflict over data, as well as to keep the
  individual files smaller.

  Clearly, these requirements would require a tremendous amount of
  integration. However, there's already a technology that Apple has
  released that deals with some of these same integration issues -
  OpenDoc. Maybe that means that the way to create a system-level
  database is to create it as a set of Live Objects (the new name
  for OpenDoc parts) and let anyone tap into its power.

  OpenDoc or no, I won't pretend that such a project would be
  simple, but I believe that providing such functionality to any
  application that wished to use it could result in significantly
  more powerful programs with more transparent interfaces. As an
  example, a look at the BeOS (used by Jean-Louis Gassee's BeBox
  machine and possibly by Power Macintosh machines in the future) is
  instructive, since the BeOS file system is a relational database.
  You can use it as though it were a traditional file system or as a
  database, and an object in the database doesn't have be a file,
  nor does it even have to be on disk. There's no easy way the Mac
  OS could change in this fashion and maintain backward
  compatibility, but the fact that Be designed their file system in
  this way is telling. The question is, who will listen?

<http://www.be.com/aboutbe/pressreleases/96-08-06_BePower.html>


Homing In on Home Page
----------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  When a pre-release version of PageMill 1.0 appeared at last
  summer's Macworld Expo, it was heralded as HTML software for the
  rest of us, software that let users work in a WYSIWYG environment
  and create Web pages without contending with the complexities and
  rigidity of HTML. When Adobe purchased and then shipped PageMill,
  they set the standard for WYSIWYG HTML software, and since then
  we've seen several PageMill wanna-be applications including
  gonet's golive (and now golive Pro), Concept 1's Tapestry, and
  Netscape's Navigator Gold). The latest member of the PageMill
  wanna-be category is Claris Home Page, and - primarily by building
  on ideas in existing software - Home Page surpasses much of its
  competition in terms of overall feature mix and interface
  fluidity.

  Home Page 1.0 is shipping for $99 in both Macintosh and Windows
  versions. Through 31-Oct-96, Claris is offering a $20 rebate to
  people who own a competing program, such as Adobe PageMill. To run
  Home Page on a Macintosh, you need at least a 68020-based Mac,
  System 7.1, and 2.5 to 5.5 MB of available application RAM (if you
  use a lot of graphics, you'll need to allocate RAM near the high
  end of the spectrum; if you don't have enough RAM allocated, Home
  Page will work, but graphics won't display).


**Getting Started** -- What would it be like to create a Web page
  in Home Page? Let's take a look. We'll begin in the Document
  Options dialog box, which provides one-stop shopping for page-
  centric options like a title, background color, and much more. If
  you consider yourself a savvy Web master, you'll enjoy the many
  esoteric options for customizing the head section of your page; if
  you haven't the foggiest idea what might go in the head section,
  you'll find some of this dialog box inscrutable.

  After setting up the document options, it's time to create and
  format text. If you've used a Macintosh much, you'll have no
  trouble using the formatting options on the toolbar and menus,
  though I'd prefer the toolbar buttons a bit larger and less
  bunched together. I'd also prefer more keyboard shortcuts. You can
  choose from formats initiated in HTML 2.0 as well as new options
  in HTML 3.2, such as superscripting, text size, and text colors.
  Regrettably, strong and emphasis are offered as almost an
  afterthought on a hierarchical menu, thus further removing users
  from the concept of HTML as a system for providing context-based
  clues as to how a browser should show content, not as a system for
  dictating the look of content.

  This distance also shows in Home Page's use of 12-point Times as a
  non-customizable body font. Although 12-point Times is the default
  in Netscape Navigator, many online mavens have changed to a font
  more appropriate to screen viewing. It's a shame that Claris left
  out this simple customization option.

  Making links of all sorts (within a page, within a site, within
  the Internet) works well. Home Page stores recently linked-to URLs
  so you can choose them from a menu without retyping or re-pasting
  them. You can also drag in links from Internet Explorer or
  Netscape Navigator pages.


**Graphics** -- Placing graphics on a Home Page document is as
  easy as dragging them in from the Finder, though you can also use
  a standard file dialog. Home Page imports GIFs, JPEGs, and PICTs
  (it converts PICTs into GIFs), and automatically creates height
  and width tags (so they'll display online in a more polite
  fashion).

  If you don't want to roll your own graphics, you can use the
  sizable clip art collection that comes with Home Page. A perfectly
  respectable and useful set of images comes from Claris, but Home
  Page also comes with a wonderful set sample clip art files from
  Little Men Studio Library. In both cases, the images consist
  primarily of Web-related graphics: horizontal rules, arrows,
  background tiles, and the like.

<http://members.aol.com/lmenstudio/index.html>

  Once you've imported a graphic, you can drag it around in your
  document. An object editor palette permits you to change some
  attributes of the image or turn it into an image map. Oddly,
  you'll find the tools for making a graphic interlaced or changing
  a color to transparent in the image map editor.

  You can keep tabs on the overall size of your graphics through the
  Statistics dialog, which shows (for both the entire document and
  just for selected portions) the total size of all images and gives
  estimated minimum download times for 14.4 and 28.8 connections.
  The dialog also tracks character and word counts. Expect to see
  this feature in most of the HTML authoring tools that ship in the
  coming weeks.


**Easy Tables** -- Setting up tables in Home Page is far easier
  than making pie, and you can even press Tab to move from one cell
  to another as you do data entry. Unlike many other HTML editors,
  you're unlikely to encounter problems with awkward redraws or
  unwieldy display glitches. Home Page uses a dark border to
  indicate the currently active cell. The border has selection
  handles for dragging the cell out to span more than one row or
  column. Watch out, though - expanding a cell deletes the contents
  of cells it expands over. You can configure a selected table cell
  inside the Table dialog box, but you may find yourself wishing for
  a way to select multiple cells at once.


**Text** -- At this point, you may wish to check out the HTML
  created by Home Page, or even type some of your own. Text view is
  but a button click away, and although the journey is short, the
  view is poor. It seems as though Home Page's creators tried to
  hammer home the validity of WYSIWYG HTML programs by making the
  text editor cumbersome. The editor doesn't color tags, and it
  cannot wrap text. That is, if you type so much that text reaches
  the right edge of the window, the text disappears into the right
  edge and continues for quite a distance. Additionally, none of the
  formatting commands work in text view, so you must manually type
  tags.

  On the plus side, the text editor does nicely indent HTML so that
  you can see its structure, especially table text. Changes made in
  the text editor do appear in the WYSIWYG view if the changes are
  understood by Home Page. In WYSIWYG view, Home Page shows
  misunderstood tags in red.


**Frames** -- After creating a number of pages, you may wish to
  set them up so they can be browsed via a frame-style interface. If
  you choose to do this, I hope you've thought carefully about your
  design, because many frame-based sites look showy but trip all
  over themselves when it comes to functionality.

  To make frames in Home Page, you create a mother frame page (also
  called a frame document), where you indicate how many frames you
  want on the page and how they should be positioned. The mother
  page then shows these frames, but it does not show the secondary
  pages inside the frames. In a frame, it can show the frame's name
  and the URL to its initial page. To preview the mother page, you
  must view it in a browser, which you can do with a simple click on
  the Preview button. You may run into problems with this preview
  method - I  had to be careful to always save my various frame-
  related Home Page files and to reload in the browser; normally,
  neither step is necessary. If you don't understand the HTML that
  underlies frames, you'll probably find this feature frustrating.


**Forms** -- Forms let you query Web page viewers for names,
  opinions, t-shirt sizes, or whatever. Home Page enables you to
  insert form elements and set up the visual look of a form, but it
  doesn't create a CGI for your Web server to collect or process
  form information. Home Page's WYSIWYG interface becomes
  increasingly awkward as you attempt to set up names and values and
  add attributes to form elements. There's nothing seriously wrong
  with Home Page's forms, but there's nothing special about them.
  You are limited to one form per page.


**Finishing Up** -- If you remember the fuss over PageMill 1.0's
  HTML, you're probably wondering if Home Page puts out acceptable
  HTML. In my testing, Home Page's HTML has been fine, and I haven't
  heard of any major snafus. You can customize whether Home Page
  uses a <CENTER> tag or an ALIGN=CENTER attribute. You can also set
  whether Home Page inserts closing </P> tags. Home Page takes a
  Return to mean the end of a paragraph and Option-Return to mean
  the end of a line. For blank paragraphs, it uses a non-breaking
  space entity surrounded by paragraph tags

  Now that you've checked out your HTML, it's time to upload the
  page and its related files to your Web site, and you'll find that
  Home Page does nothing to help, unless you know the secret key.
  It's as though you arrived at the airport with your ticket and
  luggage and found that you couldn't find your plane unless you'd
  known in advance to wear a special decoder ring.

  In fact, if you press Option and look in Home Page's File menu, a
  Remote hierarchical menu appears and offers options for opening
  and saving files located on a remote FTP server. Why the secrecy?
  According to Marianne at Claris Technical Support (who seemed
  quite knowledgeable about Web authoring and Home Page), the
  feature is undocumented and unsupported for two reasons. First,
  it's not implemented at all in the Windows version. Second, the
  feature "just doesn't work sometimes" in the Macintosh version. If
  the feature doesn't work, you'll know because the connection will
  fail. Marianne assured me that your Mac won't crash and your
  document will remain intact.

  If you don't have a Web site of your own, Home Page comes with a
  three to six month free trial deal using HoloNet as a Web hosting
  service, and it's easy to sign up after you guess at which
  unlabeled number on the flyer is your coupon number.


**Working Smart** -- Home Page's answer to folks looking for
  macros, templates, and quick insertion of esoteric HTML code is
  its Library feature. A Library file can store snippets of text or
  graphics, and you can edit any entry within its Library, using the
  full range of tools available in Home Page. Any Library entry can
  be dragged into a Home Page document, but there's no way to assign
  keyboard shortcuts to Library entries. There's also no way to
  speed up entry of HTML tags that Home Page doesn't know about.

  The clip art collection that comes with Home Page is available in
  a series of Libraries. You can drag clip art out of the library
  onto your page, but the links won't work unless the computer you
  are working on is also the Web server.


**In the End** -- Those who read Adam's Milling Around On the
  Internet article in last week's TidBITS-340_ may remember Adam's
  gripe that much Internet software fails to have a strong vision
  for what problem it solves. At its core, Home Page does have a
  vision and does solve a problem - it provides a useful WYSIWYG
  HTML editor that both beginners and experts will appreciate. But,
  around its periphery, Home Page has a vague feeling to it.

  If Home Page is supposed to help beginners easily create Home
  Pages, then why doesn't it assist in keeping relative links
  working correctly and come with a more detailed manual? Similarly,
  why aren't harder features, like frames and form interfaces, more
  hidden so you can explore the program like an onion - revealing
  layers of sophistication as you go?

  Conversely, if Home Page is a great tool for experts to use for
  layout and prototyping, why don't the form elements have keyboard
  shortcuts for faster access? Why is the built-in text editor so
  ugly? Where are the multi-level undo and multi-file Find/Replace?
  Instead of offering a strong vision for what a Claris-style HTML
  authoring tool would be like, Claris has shipped a mishmash of
  distinctly useful but surprisingly unfocused features. Given
  Claris's disastrous ClarisWorks to HTML converter (see
  TidBITS-295_) and the fact that Claris waited until earlier
  this year to buy someone else's HTML program, this lack of focus
  isn't surprising. Home Page makes me wonder just how many people
  at Claris maintain Web sites of their own.

  I expect that many people will enjoy using Home Page and think
  it's worth $99; I also expect that novices will find Home Page
  frustrating if they don't supplement it with help from a friendly
  local HTML guru. I hope that in Home Page 2.0 Claris will exhibit
  innovation and leadership with a more focused tool.

To chat about Home Page, join the official Home Page Talk list.

<http://www.blueworld.com/lists/homepage/>

  Home Page has a home page on the Claris site, but it doesn't say
  anything that I haven't already covered in detail. There's also a
  Home Page Support Center that you may find interesting:

<http://www.claris.com/products/clarispage/clarispage.html>
<http://www.claris.com/support/clarishomepage/>

    Claris -- 800/331-6187, ext. 311 -- 408/727-8227
      800/800-8954 (fax answer line) -- 408/987-3900
      (fax answer line)


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