TidBITS#343/02-Sep-96
=====================

This issue of TidBITS goes straight for your synapses, with essays
   on whether Apple and Be have a future together and the increasing
   complexities involved in maintaining a Mac. Adam weighs in with
   a glowing review of Web Ninja, Tonya writes about the new sixth
   edition of the Macintosh Bible, and we bring you news about
   Internet Config 1.3, Netscape Navigator for Cyberdog, OpenDoc
   1.1, and numerous personal Web servers.

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.
   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: Labor Day deals for the entire world. <---------- 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/02-Sep-96
    There Be Rumors in Them Thar Hills
    Peachpit Updates the Bible
    Attack of the Web Ninja
    Musing About Ease of Use

<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#343_02-Sep-96.etx>


MailBITS/02-Sep-96
------------------
  In the U.S., it's Labor Day, which most people here celebrate by
  not working, and I certainly hope they're enjoying themselves.
  We've sided with the rest of the world by painting the storm-
  battered trim on our house, releasing DealBITS, and publishing
  TidBITS. Speaking of TidBITS, last week's mailing list
  distribution of the TidBITS issue went well, and we're continuing
  to refine our tools and techniques. Please note that we've turned
  off the TidBITS list at the Rice University LISTSERV, which means
  that anyone who tries to subscribe via our old method will receive
  an error message. Please help spread the word far and wide that
  the way people subscribe to TidBITS is by sending email to
  <tidbits-on@tidbits.com>. [ACE]


**Internet Config 1.3** -- Peter Lewis and Quinn have released
  Internet Config 1.3, their public domain Internet Configuration
  System that centralizes a number of your Internet preferences,
  such as your email address and preferred Web browser. New in
  Internet Config 1.3, along with a few bug fixes, are windows for
  the World Wide Web, where you can set your home page and
  background color, and for Firewalls, where you set all sorts of
  firewall and proxy settings. It's worth picking up a copy of
  Internet Config 1.3 at some point, but users of 1.2 aren't missing
  out on any amazing functionality. Look for Internet Config to
  appear on Info-Mac mirror sites in a day or two - it was just
  uploaded Monday. In the meantime, it's available at the URL below.
  [ACE]

<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/select/internet-config.hqx>


**Netscape Navigator for Cyberdog** -- Following through on public
  musings, Apple and Netscape jointly announced last week that
  Netscape plans to develop a new version of Netscape Navigator that
  supports Cyberdog and OpenDoc, and (perhaps more significantly)
  that Apple will distribute as Cyberdog's default Web browser and
  as part of the Mac OS. Netscape has not announced a date for the
  release, but I don't expect to see Netscape Navigator for Cyberdog
  until the second quarter of 1997. Industry opinion seems split
  over the announcement; some see Netscape trying to secure another
  beachhead against Microsoft's Internet efforts, and some welcome
  the idea of an advanced OpenDoc Web browser. Still others are
  disappointed Apple failed to find an alternative to the damned-if-
  you-do, damned-if-you-don't choices involved in using either
  Navigator or Microsoft Internet Explorer. [GD]

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1996/q4/
960827.pr.rel.netscape.html>


**OpenDoc 1.1 Available** -- As of late last week, Apple has made
  the final version of OpenDoc 1.1 freely available. Unless you're a
  developer or one of the brave few already building your life
  around OpenDoc parts (now called Live Objects), version 1.1 is
  primarily useful for bug fixes and for running Cyberdog 1.1b3,
  also available for free from Apple. The download is about 3 MB.
  Please note that there's a special version for users of some older
  Mac models; see the Web page for details. [GD]

<http://opendoc.apple.com/users/getod.html>
<http://www.cyberdog.apple.com/beta/index.html>


**Personal Server Wars** -- The battle for putting a low-end Web
  server on your desktop is heating up. In addition to ResNova's Web
  for One (see TidBITS-337_) and rumors of Apple's plans to build a
  Web server based on Maxum's RushHour into the Mac OS, Quarterdeck
  has released a beta of Personal WebSTAR, a personal Web server
  based on its popular WebSTAR server software. Personal WebSTAR has
  reduced administrative and logging features, but offers easy
  configuration via the System 7 Users & Groups control panel and
  support for WebSTAR server-side plug-ins. Personal WebSTAR does
  not support CGI applications, and is limited to about two
  simultaneous users. If you're interested, Quarterdeck requests
  that beta testers of Personal WebSTAR subscribe to a beta
  discussion list.

<ftp://ftp.starnine.com/pub/betas/pws_beta1.5.sea.hqx>
<http://www.starnine.com/address-list-editor.html>

  If you're looking for a free alternative to commercial Mac Web
  servers, it might be worth investigating Chris Hawk's program,
  called WebCenter. Although currently in an alpha release,
  WebCenter has received some good comments from Macintosh
  webmasters, despite recently having to (at least temporarily)
  remove support for WebSTAR plug-ins (which Quarterdeck contends is
  a proprietary technology). [GD]

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


There Be Rumors in Them Thar Hills
----------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Prompted by a report last week in the Wall Street Journal, rumors
  are flying through the Macintosh world that Apple Computer is
  negotiating with Be, Inc., and possibly pursuing the BeOS as a
  replacement for Apple's Mac OS 8.

  Be, Inc., headed by former Apple executive Jean-Louis Gassee,
  introduced the PowerPC-based BeBox computer in October of 1995.
  One of the BeBox's main attractions is its PowerPC-native, fully-
  threaded, and multi-processor savvy operating system (see
  TidBITS-298_). More recently, Be demonstrated a version of the
  BeOS for Power Macintosh at Macworld Expo in Boston, running on
  Power Computing hardware.

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

  Although sources from both companies have denied that any sort of
  offer had been made by Apple, speculation has been rampant as to
  whether Apple intends to replace the oft-delayed Mac OS 8 with an
  operating system based on the BeOS. Among other things, such an
  operating system would be fully PowerPC-native, multi-threaded,
  support multiple processors, and provide preemptive multitasking -
  all features that have been fingered as engineering hurdles
  contributing to the delay of Mac OS 8. Further, such an operating
  system would feature a system-level database, along with high
  bandwidth data streams between applications and a clean
  programming interface, devoid of a more than a decade of legacy
  code, patches, and updates.

  I can't claim to have any inside track on what might be happening
  between Apple and Be, but it's unlikely that Apple is pursuing the
  BeOS as a technological leg-up on the way to Copland. Contrary to
  some published opinions, such a task wouldn't be as simple as
  slapping a Macintosh interface on top of the BeOS, putting a "Made
  in Cupertino" sticker on the package, and calling it Mac OS 8.

  First of all, it's important to remember BeOS wasn't designed to
  run _any_ pre-existing software, whether for the Macintosh,
  Windows, or for Unix. That means every Macintosh application would
  need to be re-written to run "natively" under a Be-based operating
  system. There are technological possibilities, such as building a
  "System 7.5 virtual machine" for the BeOS that would run current
  Macintosh applications (and system software) in emulation.
  However, such options for the BeOS are untried, challenging, and
  fraught with performance considerations. In fact, finishing
  Apple's Mac OS 8 (which already has years of design and
  engineering effort behind it) seems simpler in comparison. With
  the transition to the Power Macintosh, Apple demonstrated what a
  tremendous issue backward compatibility is for the Macintosh
  world. It's worth remembering that Apple has been designing Mac OS
  8 with backward compatibility in mind; the design of the BeOS
  explicitly threw backward compatibility out the window.

  (Developers will note that Apple's Mac OS 8 - when complete - will
  also require applications to be substantially rewritten to take
  advantage of the new operating system's features and services. At
  that point, existing applications will run in a "blue box" that
  essentially lets those applications act as if they're running on a
  System 7.x system.)

  Second, it's equally important to note that Be is still developing
  the BeOS, and the operating system hasn't had the years of
  industry burn-in that have contributed to the development of
  Windows, OS/2, the Mac OS, various flavors of Unix, and other
  operating systems. It's entirely possible - even certain - that
  the BeOS contains technological gotchas. Because the BeOS has
  fewer legacy issues than other operating systems, correcting these
  problems should be simple in comparison, but it would be unwise
  for Apple to volunteer itself, its developers, or its customers
  for ferreting out unanticipated problems in the BeOS.

  However, all this doesn't mean Apple doesn't have an interest the
  success of Be and the BeOS. From the start, Be has stated that it
  intends to port its operating system to other platforms, and those
  plans currently include PCI Power Macintoshes based on PowerPC 603
  or 604 CPUs, as well as future PowerPC Platform (PPCP) machines
  from Apple, IBM, and other vendors. Like Apple's efforts with
  MkLinux, there can be no doubt that Apple would benefit if the
  BeOS were to become a viable operating system option for Macintosh
  owners - particularly for power users working in video, audio, and
  other high-bandwidth arenas that are hurt by delays in Mac OS 8.
  If developers come through with compelling, unique applications
  for the BeOS, the argument only gets stronger. And it's no secret
  that Be would benefit if, say, the BeOS were bundled with every
  high-end Power Macintosh and future PPCP-complaint Mac from Apple
  and other Macintosh vendors, like Power Computing and (soon)
  Motorola.

<http://www.mklinux.apple.com/>

  That said, Be can also benefit from Apple technologies: QuickTime
  would be a great addition to the BeOS, and Be would no doubt love
  to shake hands on a commitment from Apple to develop a Macintosh
  Application Environment (MAE) for Be, which would let the BeOS run
  many Macintosh applications.

<http://www.mae.apple.com/>

  So, I'm not surprised to learn of Be and Apple spending quality
  time together; however, rumors that Apple is looking to the BeOS
  as a ready-made replacement for Mac OS 8 should be taken with a
  grain of salt. The two companies have more substantive issues to
  talk about.


Peachpit Updates the Bible
--------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Peachpit Press recently released the sixth edition of the
  Macintosh Bible (ISBN 0-201-88636-7), and this version continue's
  the book's ten-year tradition of providing a friendly guide to the
  Macintosh universe. Edited by Jeremy Judson along with a
  distinguished crew of Macintosh writers, the new edition adds a
  thoughtful chapter about setting up a Macintosh-based home office
  as well as a chapter about the Internet, including general
  pointers for how to get online, bare bones instructions for
  creating a Web page, and excellent suggestions for client
  applications to use as you venture online.

<http://www.peachpit.com/peachpit/titles/catalog/88636.html>

  The fifth edition, which I reviewed in TidBITS-269_, was a
  disappointment. The layout seemed dull, the text slightly fluffy,
  and the content decidedly lacking in Internet-related topics. The
  layout in this new version isn't much different in terms of
  elements and design decisions, but a few critical changes -
  primarily a new font and a new hot tip icon - add more visual
  excitement. More important, the text of the sixth edition no
  longer feels lightweight, and it has more personality. Additional
  personal touches include signatures at the end of each editors'
  biography, and occasional highlighted sections that showcase
  editors' answers to questions like, "What are your favorite
  games?" and "What makes a Mac a Mac?"

  The Macintosh Bible continues to convey information with a
  slightly irreverent tone. For instance, the section about
  WordPerfect relates that, "WordPerfect is subtle techno-jazz to
  Microsoft Word's in-your-face baroque." Another section reads,
  "Let me be blunt. There's not a good grammar checker available
  anywhere yet."

  The Macintosh Bible, as always, acts as an excellent general
  reference, and strikes me as particularly useful for three types
  of people:

* Novice Macintosh users who aren't intimidated by thousand-page
  books.

* Those who require specifications for older Macintosh hardware,
  or who desire a high degree of familiarity with which bits of
  Apple software could potentially end up in the System Folder (and
  what to do about them).

* Macintosh enthusiasts who need a good overview of what to expect
  and seek out from different software and hardware categories, such
  as word processors, contact managers, input devices, and monitors.

  I predict that the sixth edition of the Macintosh Bible will be
  another best seller, not just because of its reputation, but also
  because of its merit. The sixth edition lists for $29.95 U.S.

    Peachpit -- 800/283-9444 -- 510/548-4393 -- 510/548-5991 (fax)
      <tell@peachpit.com>


Attack of the Web Ninja
-----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  No, it's not a badly dubbed karate flick. Web Ninja is a little
  utility written by Bill Tudor and distributed as a MacUser
  Exclusive, which means it's free, but can only be downloaded from
  MacUser's Web site.

<http://www.hotfiles.com/swbrowse/MC14/4/2/mac-MC14422.html>

  I've looked at almost every bookmark manager available on the Web
  (see the four-part series of reviews beginning in TidBITS-323_),
  and although Web Ninja offers some of the same kind of
  functionality, it's not precisely a bookmark manager. Instead, it
  watches where you go on the Web in the background (assuming you
  use Netscape Navigator, Microsoft Internet Explorer, or Spyglass
  Mosaic), and records your path. Even this isn't an entirely new
  feature; several other bookmark managers offer record modes.

  Yet Web Ninja is a bit different. First off, it's a complete
  no-brainer. You drop a faceless background application in your
  Extensions folder and forget about it. You don't have to turn
  anything on or launch any special applications for it to work its
  magic, nor do you have to decide what you want to record. It
  captures every Web and FTP URL you visit using a Web browser, and
  if you have more than one browser window open at a time, it
  captures the URLs in each. It can't capture URLs from multiple Web
  browsers at the same time, if you're running several
  simultaneously, which I do on occasion. If you visit the same URL
  more than once, Web Ninja merely increments a counter rather than
  recording the entire URL again.

  That's the data collection part of Web Ninja, and it's performed
  that task well for me. Then comes the Web Ninja application, which
  provides access to the collection of URLs. It lists URLs you've
  visited and enables you to sort the list by URL, by number of
  visits, by date of last visit, and by the amount of time you've
  spent at the site. Double-clicking on a URL (or dragging it to the
  browser window) sends it to your preferred Web browser and
  resolves it. I enjoy sorting by number of visits, although it's
  not tremendously useful since it mainly tells me that I go to Alta
  Vista, my home page, and sites that I'm writing about for some
  article - as if I didn't know that. Most Web pages I visit once
  and only once. Similarly, the date of last visit and time spent at
  the site aren't terribly useful to me, especially since I don't
  shut my Mac off all that often and I tend to leave my Web browser
  running, which means that Web Ninja thinks I've spent hours
  perusing some Web sites when in fact my monitors were off and both
  me and my Mac were resting quietly.

  You can also export your list of URLs as an HTML file or as a
  tab-delimited data file, should you think of some need to perform
  either of those tasks. New in the 1.0.4 release of Web Ninja is a
  command to empty your log file, although I'm not entirely sure why
  you'd want to do that, since your log file increases in value as
  it grows.

  More interestingly, you can drag URLs from Web Ninja's list to an
  Items to Download window, and when you click the Download button
  in that window, Web Ninja will try up to a user-specified number
  of times to retrieve those URLs. Web Ninja supports both Web and
  FTP URLs, so it could be a good way of breaking through a busy
  site, but since it only retrieves the HTML part of a Web page (not
  graphics), it doesn't compete with a utility like WebWhacker from
  the Forefront Group, which can download an entire Web page,
  complete with graphics and fixed links.

<http://www.ffg.com/whacker.html>

  All this is nice, but the killer feature in Web Ninja is its
  filter field. Type a couple of characters in that field and Web
  Ninja quickly narrows the list of URLs to those that contain the
  characters you typed. Forget the URL to Apple Internet Mail
  Server? Just type "aims" in the filter field. If that's not good
  enough, you can just expand the filter term slightly, to say,
  "apple.com" to find all the Apple Web pages you've visited. You
  don't have to be accurate - you just have to zero in on a couple
  of characters in the URL you want and hopefully not too many
  others. I've been doing some research on directory services
  recently and visiting a page about Ph servers. When I wanted to
  find that site again, I typed "ph" into the filter field, and got
  every URL with a word that started with "ph," like
  "www.phillynews.com." Still, there weren't so many hits (Web Ninja
  tells you how many it has found, 26 in my "ph" example above) that
  I couldn't quickly scan for the URL I wanted.

  I've taken to visiting some Web sites quickly just to get their
  URLs into my Web Ninja list. Sure, I could search in Alta Vista,
  but it's faster to do everything on my Mac, especially if I know
  I've been to a page before and merely need to find it in my log
  file. Of course, at some point URLs will start disappearing from
  the end of my log file, but since I've only racked up about 1,100
  URLs visited in three weeks of use (Web Ninja holds a total of
  4,096 URLs at a time), I suspect this technique of recording
  potentially interesting URLs will work fairly well.

  One tip - on my 660AV, Web Ninja's response time to typing in the
  filter field is much slower if you have your list sorted by URL
  than if it's sorted by any of the other columns, like number of
  visits. Filter first, then sort by URL if you want.

  I've been thinking quite a bit about what makes for good software
  recently, and I think Web Ninja hits quite a few of the necessary
  criteria. First, it's dead simple to use. It comes with
  documentation, but for the most part, you can figure out
  everything it does from simply looking at the menus and windows.
  Second, it solves a specific problem - wanting to go back to a
  site you've visited once before - and solves it well. And, at
  least for me, the problem turns out to be a real one. I find it
  hard to predict when I will need a bookmark to a site, but I know
  that Web Ninja has saved the last 4,096 URLs I've visited, and
  whatever I need is probably in that list. Third, Web Ninja does
  most of the work itself, without requiring any extra attention
  from me. I have enough to do with my time - I don't need to
  maintain more utilities.

  MacUser deserves kudos for commissioning useful utilities like Web
  Ninja and releasing them for free. In the past, the MacUser
  Exclusives were only available on ZiffNet/Mac via CompuServe,
  which limited their audience significantly. Now that everyone on
  the Internet can download these utilities (check back - there are
  a bunch of great ones) from MacUser's Web site, the Macintosh
  utility world has been greatly enriched.

<http://www.zdnet.com/macuser/software/>


Musing About Ease of Use
------------------------
  by Wayland Y. Brown <wb@sava.gulfnet.com>

  I have an interesting and puzzling feeling about being a Mac owner
  that I want to share and about which I would value your opinions.
  I believe I am a happy and productive Mac person - a convert from
  the world of the Apple II - because I was able to leave behind
  almost all of my knowledge of computers and computing with my
  Apple II and concentrate on getting real, creative work done with
  my very first Mac. The early Apple IIgs operating system, which
  was quirky, had given me all the taste I needed, and the
  transition to the Mac, once made, was a delight. My productivity,
  my creativity, and my mood were all enhanced almost from the first
  day. For years I kept up with Macintosh technology, though I have
  never needed to own the latest machine with the most RAM or the
  biggest hard drive. Today, for instance, I am writing on a Power
  Mac 7100/66AV with 40 MB of RAM and a 1 GB hard drive: hardly on
  the cutting edge, not to mention the fact that I work on a 21"
  gray scale monitor, rather than on a color monitor.

  Over this time I have acquired an undeserved reputation as a local
  Mac expert, though I have constantly maintained that I know little
  about computers. Most local professional consultants refuse to
  touch a Mac because if they sell a business a Macintosh system,
  they'll receive few, if any, repeat service or support calls, and
  that's how consultants make their livings. Some of my friends in
  that business are quite open with me about their complete
  unwillingness to install Macs for that very reason. (Small
  businesses rely almost entirely on such consulting firms, which is
  one reason why there is so little Mac software for small
  businesses. But that's another story.)

  Two things seem to be happening. First, we now seem to be under
  external pressure to become computer experts or to leave behind
  the ease and power which computers can bring to life and work. In
  part, this pressure stems from the increased interest in the
  Internet. Connecting to the Internet and maintaining a collection
  of functional Internet software tools requires that even Mac
  people have at least a bit of arcane knowledge - knowledge that
  was common in the Apple II world and that is taken for granted
  among DOS folks. In my opinion, the Macintosh world isn't even ten
  percent as bad, yet, but I have a sinking feeling the operative
  word in that sentence is "yet."

  I also wonder if this level of increased complexity becoming a
  trend. The sad fact is that the 85 to 90 percent of computer users
  who use Windows see no problem with this complexity, perhaps
  because things could only get better in that world. Windows users
  who lack computer knowledge (the majority) simply pay someone else
  for help. This extends even to tasks like hooking up a new, basic
  home system, for which resellers regularly charge $50 and up in my
  area. Can a Mac person _imagine_ paying a store $50 to get their
  first system up and running?

  But if almost no one, percentage-wise, sees any problem here, I
  fear we are on the way to losing our ability to concentrate on
  working _with_ rather than _on_ a computer.

  Secondly, on the internal end of things, I am worried Apple may be
  infected with the prevailing mentality that flawed operation is
  acceptable without extensive knowledge. One does not have to read
  TidBITS or Ric Ford's MacInTouch for long to figure out the Mac is
  no longer really a "plug-and-work" machine. It's seemingly always
  something: this system update will not work with that hard disk
  driver. That hard disk driver will not work with this menu
  utility. This PPP extension won't work with that memory
  enhancement utility. This update to the system update does not
  contain the new version of Open Transport. And so on.

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

  The chaos that prevails in the Windows world and that enriches so
  many small consulting businesses - look in your yellow pages and
  marvel at the number of local computer service storefronts - is
  encroaching on us from within. Apple's decision to release future
  enhancements to the operating system in bits and pieces is,
  indeed, an ominous sign. How is the average Joe who wants to work
  (and work hard) with his computer going to keep up with all the
  changes and updates? Even I, the "local expert," can no longer
  expect to have my computer work well all the time without
  undertaking some remedial research. Why, without warning, did
  inserting a SyQuest cartridge cause 18 copies of its icon to
  appear on my desktop? I guessed I should update the driver on the
  cartridge or, alternatively, reboot my system. I was right, but
  why should I have needed to know that? And why should I have had
  to go online and try to find drivers or a tech note about what I
  was seeing?

  Let me be perfectly clear. I am a Macintosh fan because the Mac is
  the best computer we have currently - not the most elitist, but
  the best workhorse. The day the Windows world can offer me a
  better, easier alternative at a competitive price is the day I
  switch platforms. Today that is clearly not the case, at least to
  me. My fear is that my present level of comfort will continue to
  deteriorate as the world forces me from excellence into
  increasingly complex mediocrity, both from without because the
  majority of the computing world neither knows, expects, nor
  demands anything better, and from within because Apple may be
  forcing this man to become a computer expert against his will.

  In the end, the world will have the computing technology the world
  deserves. That is not a comforting thought. You and I deserve
  better!


$$

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