TidBITS#513/17-Jan-00
=====================

  Macworld Expo in San Francisco is still on our thoughts, as we
  pass along our traditional Macworld Superlatives article, looking
  at the coolest of the cool. Also this week, Jeff Carlson delves
  into the Apple's Mac OS X interface preview - register your
  opinion of the Mac OS X user interface in this week's poll! In the
  news, we cover the releases of FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited, WebSTAR
  4.2, SoundJam 1.6, and DiskWarrior 2.0.

Topics:
    MailBITS/17-Jan-00
    Macworld Expo SF 2000 Superlatives
    A Quick Dip into Aqua, the Mac OS X Interface

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MailBITS/17-Jan-00
------------------

**FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited Ships** -- FileMaker Inc. has shipped
  the English language version of its $1,000 FileMaker Pro 5
  Unlimited, which removes FileMaker Pro 5.0's little-loved
  licensing restrictions and ten-Internet-users-in-twelve-hours
  limit, and adds the FileMaker Web Server Connector, a Java servlet
  that permits databases published via FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited to
  be served via popular high-end Web servers like StarNine's
  WebSTAR, Apple's AppleShare IP, Apache, and Microsoft's IIS. (See
  "FileMaker Pro 5 Released to Controversy" in TidBITS-499_ for
  coverage of the initial release of FileMaker Pro 5.) FileMaker Pro
  5 Unlimited includes all the features of FileMaker Pro 5 -
  including Web Companion for simple Web serving needs, dynamic
  XML-based rendering of FileMaker Pro screen layouts to modern Web
  browsers, ODBC client and data source capabilities, and database
  synchronization.

<http://www.filemaker.com/products/fmu_home.html>

  As expected, FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited does not include long-
  sought capabilities like multi-threaded execution that could
  mitigate the serious performance bottlenecks experienced in even
  modest database publishing. FileMaker's solution lies in its Web
  Server Connector: when installed on a compatible Web server, the
  Web Server Connector can provide load-balanced access to databases
  shared by multiple copies of FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited. Those
  databases, in turn, could be served to FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited
  via the recently released $1,000 FileMaker Pro Server, which
  doesn't offer authoring capabilities but can serve FileMaker
  databases in a multi-threaded manner. Thus, it's possible to use
  multiple computers as an array, each of which in essence serves as
  a single "thread" in a database publishing operation. (See
  FileMaker's diagram as an example of this technique.) Long-time
  database publishers using FileMaker Pro have generally been
  unimpressed by this design, noting they've been able to construct
  similar server arrays at considerably less cost for years using
  earlier versions of FileMaker Pro. However, FileMaker Pro 5
  Unlimited offers some publishers an option heretofore unavailable:
  the capability to serve FileMaker Pro 5 databases to more than a
  handful of users. FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited requires a PowerPC-
  based Mac with Mac OS 7.6.1 and at least 16 MB RAM; some volume
  discounts are available. [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05576>
<http://www.filemaker.com/images/graphics/fmu_diagram.jpg>


**Balmer is Microsoft's New CEO** -- TidBITS doesn't usually cover
  executive shifts at companies other than Apple, but we should note
  Bill Gates promoted Steve Balmer to Microsoft's CEO position last
  week. Gates will still serve as the chairman of Microsoft's board,
  and created a new position for himself as Chief Software Architect
  to oversee strategic directions and software technologies. Gates
  has extracted himself from Microsoft's day-to-day operations over
  the last few years, so it's difficult to speculate on long-term
  effects of this change. However, Gates has long demonstrated
  support for the Macintosh within Microsoft, while Steve Balmer
  has no such history. [GD]

<http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2000/jan00/final25anv.htm>


**WebSTAR 4.2 Optimized for G4s** -- StarNine Technologies has
  unveiled WebSTAR Server Suite 4.2, the latest version of its
  integrated collection of Internet servers. The collection includes
  Web, email, FTP and proxy servers as well as database publishing
  and site searching capabilities. WebSTAR 4.2's primary advance is
  that the main WebSTAR application and the majority of its
  components have been optimized for the PowerPC G4 and its Velocity
  Engine, enabling WebSTAR to process requests faster, especially
  for dynamically generated material. WebSTAR 4.2 also includes bug
  fixes and enhancements unrelated to G4 systems - particularly in
  its email, Lasso Web Publisher, and search components - making the
  upgrade valuable to all version 4.x owners. Version 4.2 is a free
  upgrade for owners of WebSTAR 4.x; otherwise, WebSTAR Server Suite
  is $600 with educational, upgrade, and volume discounts available.
  [GD]

<http://www.starnine.com/webstar/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05459>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05546>


**SoundJam 1.6 Adds MP2, Hierarchical Playlists** -- Casady &
  Greene has shipped SoundJam 1.6, a free update to the company's
  popular MP3 player and encoder. SoundJam 1.6 can now encode into
  MP2 format (MPEG Audio Layer 2, an older and less-efficient audio
  format that sounds better than MP3 at high bitrates) and also
  supports transparent skins, adds hierarchical playlists, provides
  fast forward and fast reverse buttons for currently playing music,
  supports live window dragging, and includes a skin builder. The
  release also includes a SoundJam Extension that changes CD track
  names in the Finder to those found in the CDDB. SoundJam 1.6 is a
  1.8 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.soundjam.com/>
<http://www.cddb.com/>


**DiskWarrior 2.0** -- Alsoft has introduced DiskWarrior 2.0, the
  latest version of its data recovery and directory optimization
  tool. In addition to its lauded directory optimization, fully
  functional preview feature, and near-magical CD-ROM that can start
  up a wide range of Mac systems (see "Fighting Corruption with
  Alsoft's DiskWarrior" in TidBITS-486_), DiskWarrior 2.0 adds
  DiskShield, a new feature that checks the validity of any
  directory information being written to or read from your disks. In
  theory, DiskShield could prevent directory damage from occurring
  in the first place and alert you to potential problems before they
  grow into catastrophes. DiskWarrior 2.0 also includes the
  capability to graph fragmentation in disk directories so you can
  get an idea how much an optimized directory might help.
  DiskWarrior still lacks traditional disk optimization and brute-
  force data recovery offered by other disk recovery products, but
  the DiskWarrior CD ships with Alsoft's PlusOptimizer, a disk
  defragmenter that can be used on Mac OS Extended Format (HFS Plus)
  volumes. DiskWarrior 2.0 is $70 plus shipping; currently the
  download-only version remains at 1.1. Upgrades from previous
  versions of DiskWarrior are $30 plus shipping. [GD]

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


**Poll Results: Apple of Your iFuture?** Although many Macworld
  Expo attendees were expecting Steve Jobs to make hardware
  announcements (even the attendees not swayed by rumor sites), the
  major news turned out to be Apple's suite of new Internet services
  such as iTools and iCards. Despite the undeniable fact that
  Apple's new Internet services certainly aren't perfect (and we'll
  be looking at more of the concerns in a future issue), we've been
  impressed with their overall design and integration. So when we
  asked, "Do you plan to use any of Apple's new Internet services?"
  we weren't surprised to see that 82 percent of respondents
  answered yes. Apple has grabbed the interest of a lot of people
  with these Internet tools; let's hope they continue to polish the
  existing tools and offer new ones as well. [JLC]


Macworld Expo SF 2000 Superlatives
----------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>

  At each Macworld Expo, we endeavor to locate a singular example of
  what the show represents: a product or clever metaphor that
  perfectly encompasses the deeper currents of what it means to
  float in a sea of 70,000+ Mac enthusiasts. After a few minutes of
  that, we come to our senses and instead look for products, booths,
  or people that pique our interests or catch our jaded eyes. If
  your product is featured here, feel free to display our new
  Macworld Expo Superlative badge on your Web page and link to this
  article in our article database. You can pick up the badge on our
  badges page (which has a lot of fun badges for readers too) at:

<http://www.tidbits.com/about/badges.html>

  We can't pretend any sort of monopoly on noticing cool stuff at
  the show, and Omar Shahine and Travis Butler both contributed
  excellent lists of their show picks (complete with links to
  pictures that Travis took) to TidBITS Talk.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkmsg=5499>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkmsg=5542>


**The Perfit Fit** -- In "Pointing the Way with USB Mice," in
  TidBITS-506_, Warren Magnus noted that he could never use the
  beefy Contour Designs UniMouse comfortably. Contour has addressed
  this with their three-button Perfit Mouse, which features five
  different sizes for right-handed users and three for left-handed
  users. And if you don't want to spend $90 to $100 on the Perfit
  Mouse in graphite or blueberry, at least pick up a $15 UniTrap,
  which replaces the plastics on Apple's awful puck mouse, turning
  it into a usable shape. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1154>
<http://www.contourdesign.com/perfit.htm>
<http://www.contourdesign.com/unitrap.htm>


**Scan This, Bub!** While walking through the Consumer area, we
  were commenting on all the neat products from small companies we'd
  never heard of before, then paused and realized the "little"
  company with a very cool flatbed/handheld scanner in front of us
  was actually NEC Technologies. Despite the size of the company,
  their $125 PetiScan merits an award for the coolest scanner we
  saw. You can use it as a flatbed scanner for documents, but if you
  pop off the lid, it becomes a portable handheld scanner, tethered
  only by a single USB cable (which carries power as well), that's
  ideal for scanning clothing, trees, posters, or whatever. Because
  of its small size (8.5" wide by 5.5" high by 1.4" thick), the
  PetiScan can scan a maximum of 5.8" by 3.9", but it includes
  Presto ImageStitching for joining scans together. [ACE]

<http://petiscan.nectech.com/>


**We Control the Horizontal...** If you've longed for more
  keyboard control of the Mac OS, check out MindVision's new $20
  MindControl launcher utility. Press a user-defined hot key and a
  command line appears for you to type either type pre-defined
  shortcuts you've set up ("nw" for Nisus Writer, for instance), or
  full names of documents, applications, servers, or URLs. Press
  Return and MindControl launches the appropriate item. MindControl
  has lots of tweaky little features (like support for passing some
  parameters) and configuration options, but I love just having
  keyboard access to some of the items on my hard disk, especially
  now that I'm so used to switching to my Web browser and typing a
  company name to visit their Web site. [ACE]

<http://www.mindvision.com/mindcontrol/>


**We Control the Vertical** -- MacSpeech's speech-based macro
  utility, ListenDo 1.1, offered a great price: free! Plus they were
  selling nearly a dozen of their application-specific ScriptPaks,
  normally $10 to $20 each, for a grand total of $20. ListenDo
  replaces Apple's Speakable Items folder with better management of
  scripts, including automatic application-based sets (having fewer
  active scripts at each moment means recognition is faster and more
  accurate) plus you can choose menu items, click buttons, and type
  stock phrases just by saying their names. [MAN]

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


**Notable Quotables** -- Despite the brain-damaging effects of
  over-amplified Macworld party bands, we keep an ear out for juicy
  quotes. For example, when Steve Jobs accidentally turned over a
  VST 100 GB RAID array, causing one drive to fall to the stage, our
  colleague Hartmut Koenitz remarked that it was fully "hot
  droppable." We also overheard a reference to Mac OS X's new "Jolly
  Rancher interface" at a party. No wonder Steve Jobs said Aqua was
  good enough to lick. [JLC]


**Notable but not Quotable** -- Several companies went overboard
  with marketing copy. See if you can guess what this sentence from
  a company's booth sign describes: "The powerful document
  processing solution for your mobile or desktop Macintosh." (It was
  a small, tangerine-colored scanner.) And then there was this
  headline in a product sheet from MediaLot.com, a company we
  couldn't figure out from their booth signs: "The online teamspace
  for collaboration, project management, and digital asset
  management." (It was a Web-based project management tool.) After
  these examples of tortured prose, TechWorks picks up Hemingway
  points for "Buy TechWorks RAM Here." [ACE]

<http://www.medialot.com/>
<http://www.techworks/com/>


**Will Distribute Flyers for Food** -- One of the most depressing
  aspects of Macworld Expo in San Francisco is the homeless
  population around Moscone Center. Kudos to WISP, Inc. for giving a
  homeless guy a job handing out flyers about their wireless
  products and services. He was much more enthusiastic than the
  normal folks who try to push flyers into your hands as you walk
  the streets around Moscone, and he was clearly trying to do a good
  job. [ACE]

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


**Is that a Hard Disk in Your Pocket?** LaCie's new PocketDrives
  bring back the times when you could schlep your hard disk around
  rather than heft a PowerBook. Today's PocketDrives, however, boast
  6 GB ($400) and 18 GB ($750) capacities, plus hot-swappable USB
  and FireWire interfaces. Despite building in both USB and FireWire
  controllers, the 1" high units measure only 3.5" by 5.75" and
  weigh 12.5 ounces. The casing also sports a rubberized edge that
  protects against shock and provides a place to wrap cables. [ACE]

<http://www.lacie.com/pocket/>


**Coolest Beachwear** -- This summer, all well-dressed laptops
  will wearing the $40 e-clipse, from Hoodman, of (naturally enough)
  Hermosa Beach, California. It's a hood that fits over your
  PowerBook screen so you can see it even in bright sun. The nylon
  e-clipse packs into a small flat bag and is spring-loaded, so it
  assumes and holds its hood shape automatically. The viewing hole
  is quite a bit smaller than the screen, unfortunately, so you have
  bend close to see the full picture, but the Hoodman guy we spoke
  with said it had to be that small or glare still snuck in. You'll
  impress everyone by whipping it out when a bully tries to kick
  sand in your PowerBook's face. [MAN]

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


**Kill the Golden Goose Award** -- To IBM, for demoing but not
  selling ViaVoice at the show. Everyone wanted it; many folks had
  come just to buy it, and would have paid any price for it; no one
  could get it. Angry would-be customers can take revenge by waiting
  for iListen, MacSpeech's dictation offering, which will probably
  be ready in time for the next Expo and will let you dictate into
  any application (with ViaVoice, you must dictate into the SpeakPad
  application and then transfer the text elsewhere). Despite the
  disappointment of IBM's sales policy, I went ahead and bought
  ViaVoice through mail-order and am already hopelessly addicted.
  [MAN]

<http://www-4.ibm.com/software/speech/mac/>


**Internet-Enabled Voice Mail Done Right** -- At first I thought
  Pagoo was another attempt to clog up email by attaching sound
  files to messages. Instead, Pagoo is geared toward the people who
  busy out their phone lines while online via modem. Pagoo provides
  a voice mail system that lets callers leave a message that you can
  hear while still online. The Pagoo application runs in the
  background and alerts you when a new message appears; you can then
  listen to it using Pagoo or access it from the Web. One nice
  advantage is that Pagoo doesn't hog your bandwidth checking for
  messages; it simply registers your computer's temporary IP number
  with Pagoo's servers, which ping your machine only when a message
  is waiting. And it's cheaper than voicemail. [JLC]

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


**Fill Gaps with iLiner** -- Mercury Software's new $50 iLiner
  gets points for filling in some thin patches in the Macintosh
  software line: outlining and presentation tools. iLiner is
  nominally a basic outliner, but it can also export to QuickTime
  4.0 slide presentations, providing another option for presentation
  software. Where iLiner shows the most promise, though, is in
  accessing Sherlock's text summarization feature in any
  application. iLiner is clearly a 1.0 product, and Mercury
  Software's Ian Shortreed said that he has a long list of features
  he wants to add now that he's gotten 1.0 out the door. [ACE]

<http://www.mercury-soft.com/>


**Try and Try Again** -- Kudos to Copernican Technologies for
  Boswell, which makes another attempt to succeed in the space of
  personal information archives. We all have snippets of information
  floating around our hard disks as clippings, text files, URL
  bookmarks, and more. Boswell aims to help you capture, archive,
  and organize that data, and although it's still in beta you can
  order for $40 now and get a free upgrade to the $130 final
  release. Boswell looks promising, and we plan to take a closer
  look once it's final. For suggestions on how other Mac users store
  and access bits of data today, check out the TidBITS Talk thread
  on the topic. [ACE]

<http://www.copernican-tech.com/Boswell/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=872>


A Quick Dip into Aqua, the Mac OS X Interface
---------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  One of the few surprises at last week's Macworld Expo in San
  Francisco was a first look at the new Mac OS X user interface.
  Although the new operating system was announced in mid-1998 and
  its technical features (like preemptive multitasking and protected
  memory) are known, those things don't have the potential to stir
  up the ire and interest of Mac users quite so much as the notion
  of tampering with the Mac OS look and feel.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04881>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05415>

  So when Steve Jobs said that he was going to show off the Mac OS X
  user interface, which he claimed has been one of the best-kept
  secrets within Apple, I perked up. Sure, Mac OS X can do some
  whiz-bang things under the hood and not turn your Mac into putty
  when an application crashes, but what will I be looking at for
  several hours each day? How will Mac OS X affect the way I
  interact with my computer?

  It's important to note that the demos at Macworld Expo, both
  during Jobs's keynote and in the Apple booth, represent the
  closest look at Aqua so far - and it's not much. A limited preview
  is available from Apple's Web site, but questions remain about
  elements not demonstrated at Macworld. No doubt there will be
  tweaks and revelations by the time Mac OS X is released later in
  the year.

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


**The Look You Want to Feel** -- The success of Apple's iProducts,
  from iMac to iBook, has shown that appearances do matter, that the
  look of something can often determine its success, regardless of
  other technical merits. So it's no surprise that Apple's emphasis
  on look is moving to its software as well.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05501>

  Overall, Aqua is surprisingly sparse and clean, and will be
  familiar to anyone who has used a Mac. The gray fill of the
  current Platinum interface is replaced by white, with a subtle
  horizontal line pattern similar to the iMac's faceplate texture.
  Aqua gets its name from the use of a watery, translucent look for
  interface elements like buttons and sliders; the top navigational
  elements at Apple's Web site use a similar effect.

  Aqua also employs soft drop shadows to windows and menus to
  provide a more polished appearance and emphasize layered items.
  I'm surprised that I like the effect as much as I do, since drop
  shadows are overused. Other effects, like animation, make an
  appearance in Aqua. Rather than a dull black outline to denote a
  default button in dialog boxes, Aqua's method of highlighting a
  button is for it to light up and slowly pulse like the iBook's and
  iMac's power button.

  One noticeable departure from today's interface is the placement
  of window controls for close, zoom, and minimize (the successor to
  WindowShade, which collapses the window into a new element, the
  Dock). All three are now round buttons located at the left edge of
  the title bar, and follow a traffic light metaphor: red closes,
  yellow minimizes, and green zooms. For people who are color blind
  or who still use grayscale displays, the buttons also feature a
  roll-over effect when you pass your cursor over them: the close
  button displays an X, the minimize button displays a minus sign
  (-), and the zoom button displays a plus sign (+). The new
  controls also function for both active and inactive windows, so
  you can close a background window without bringing it to the
  foreground.

  It will be interesting to see how current Mac users adapt to the
  new arrangement. There's bound to be a bit of frustration from
  users who have been zooming their windows from the right side for
  years. Plus, a few TidBITS Talk participants have pointed out that
  putting destructive commands (the close button) and nondestructive
  commands (minimize and zoom buttons) next to one another invites
  danger.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=901>


**Less Clutter, Less Confusion** -- In Mac OS X's Finder, the
  title bar sports one other button: a transparent blob at the right
  side that toggles Single Window Mode. Unlike the current user
  interface, where burrowing deep within a folder structure can
  leave a scattering of overlapping open windows, Single Window Mode
  displays only the active content. If you're using the Finder in
  Single Window Mode, only the current directory is shown; within an
  application, you can have multiple files open but only the active
  one actually displays.

  Long-time Mac users may scoff at the Single Window Mode, but I
  think it's a great idea. Computers can be intimidating to new
  users, and part of that intimidation is caused by complexity; a
  screen full of windows that aren't in active use is complex.
  Sticking to the current task reduces clutter and confusion.
  Luckily, it's easy to toggle between modes by clicking the Single
  Window Mode button, though it's odd to have what appears to be a
  system-wide preference on every window, whereas the other controls
  are window-specific.

  Modal dialogs are also now specific to the windows they belong to.
  If you close a file that hasn't been saved, the standard "Do you
  want to save changes?" dialog is attached to the file's title bar,
  and remains there until you've acted on it - but you can still
  switch to another application. Also, dialogs are translucent,
  letting you see the data beneath them. It's hard to tell from the
  demo if this is actually a useful feature or an example of eye
  candy. Still, the translucency adds yet another level of visual
  polish that isn't found in current operating systems.


**The Dock Is In** -- A new interface element to the Mac OS is the
  Dock, an area along the bottom of the screen where you can store
  apparently anything. The Dock resembles the Windows Task Bar, but
  you can drop inactive applications, frequently used folders or
  files, or favorite QuickTime movies into the Dock. The Trash is
  also now a member of the Dock, rather than its own element on the
  desktop. During Steve Jobs's demo, he repeatedly minimized items
  to show off the way they move: windows don't just disappear and
  appear in the Dock, but rather stretch and shoot their way to the
  bottom of the screen like an animated sheet of rubber sucked down
  by a vacuum cleaner, a transition called the "genie effect."

  A docked item appears as an icon, either generic (like a folder)
  or as a preview of the item's content (such as images or QuickTime
  movies, which can continue to play). You can specify whether the
  Dock always appears or is activated when the mouse moves to that
  area. You can also specify the size of the Dock icons dynamically.
  And as the bottom of the screen fills up, the icons automatically
  shrink to accommodate more items. One of the highlights of Jobs's
  demo was the Dock's capability to enlarge each icon as the mouse
  passed over it, resulting in a shifting sand dunes effect whereby
  the adjacent icons resized in diminishing proportions.

  The Dock demo elicited the biggest wows of the talk, and though
  it's certainly snazzy, I wonder how effective it will actually be.
  It feels random to have your applications and documents and
  whatever else just hanging out at the bottom of the screen. The
  placement also begs the question of what will happen to the
  current Mac OS's tabbed windows, which also occupy real estate at
  the bottom of the screen. I rely on pop-up windows for quick
  access to email attachments, file downloads, and aliases, and it's
  unclear if I can transfer that functionality to Mac OS X.


**Finding the Finder** -- Long-time Mac users will also have to
  become accustomed to the idea that the Finder lives in a window by
  itself. (In fact, the Mac OS X Finder looks like a variation of
  Mac OS 9's Sherlock 2). It features buttons to access your
  computer, applications, documents, favorites, and people, plus a
  button labelled Home that takes you to a main directory of your
  choice (whether it's on your machine or on a network). The Finder
  works as a single window view by default, but you can also open
  multiple windows as in the existing Finder. The Finder also
  incorporates a third, split-pane column view, inherited from Mac
  OS X's NeXT origins. As you navigate the file structure of your
  hard disk, new columns appear to display a horizontal hierarchy of
  the structure.

  Although putting the Finder into its own window sounds alien to
  most of us, it makes sense for new users. Under the current Mac
  OS, tell a new user to switch to the Finder, and they're likely to
  reply, "Huh?" That's because the Finder and the desktop are
  synonymous to most of us. The Finder will become the tool to find
  information, instead of a catch-all for file and application
  icons. It's also good that you can choose which view to use. It's
  no secret that Jobs has advocated the split-pane browsing method
  for years. And allegedly it took quite a bit of work within Apple
  to convince him that the Finder should offer traditional
  navigation as well as the split-pane view.


**Graphics, of Quartz** -- Mac OS X's 2D graphics capabilities
  come from Quartz, a rendering engine based on PDF (which is a
  vague descendant of Display PostScript used in the NeXT operating
  system). In fact, much of the effects mentioned so far, like
  translucent dialog boxes and menus, drop shadows, and resizable
  Dock icons, are due to the Quartz engine. Another example is the
  use of anti-aliased text, though hopefully this feature will also
  be a user-definable preference. Although I find well-designed
  aliased text is easy to read, others find most if not all anti-
  aliased text alarmingly smudged, especially at small sizes. (See
  "Better Typography Coming to a Screen Near You" in TidBITS-403_).

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04228>

  Having built-in PDF support means that applications will be able
  to save to PDF without additional software. However, it's not
  clear if Quartz will provide many of the more subtle features of
  PDF, such as forms, routing information, and digital signatures.
  Jobs did demonstrate the Quartz PDF Compositor, an application
  that could easily add, manipulate, and export PostScript-based
  artwork with drop shadows and variable transparency.


**Good Enough to Lick?** During the Macworld Expo keynote, Steve
  Jobs reinforced his unusual oral fixation on Apple products by
  claiming that they were good enough to lick. Certainly, the
  interface looks different from the softly beveled appearance of
  Mac OS 8 and later. But is the Mac OS X interface just iCandy?
  Will the pulsing glow of an OK button really make a difference?
  Yes and no. The new look adds pizzazz to the interface, which is
  both cosmetic and functional. It's an implementation of Look
  Different: for someone who has never used a computer before, the
  interface is clean and inviting.

  But the new design also serves a similar function to the iMac's
  external design: it will be harder for Microsoft (or others) to
  add pulsing buttons and animated windows to their operating
  systems without acknowledging that they're copying the look of the
  Mac. Computer makers are finding that they can't directly copy the
  look of the iMac, and it's likely that Apple could pursue
  companies that infringe upon the Aqua interface. Surprisingly,
  this has already begun to happen. Apple's lawyers recently sent
  cease-and-desist letters to a site for posting a "skin" titled
  WinAqua for use with the Windows interface-customization tool
  WindowBlinds. Apple also apparently asked Casady & Green to yank
  an Aqua-looking skin for SoundJam.

<http://www.skinz.org/>
<http://www.windowblinds.net/>
<http://www.soundjam.com/>

  The demonstration at Macworld Expo was definitely a fun peek at
  Aqua, and it will be interesting to see more details emerge as the
  estimated Mac OS X release date of the middle of 2000 nears.
  Numerous questions remain that weren't answered in the demo. For
  example, the Apple logo appears in the middle of the menu bar; is
  it the functional Apple menu we've used for years, or just
  corporate branding? Either way, what happens in a program that has
  more than the standard handful of menus? Does the logo slide
  aside, or do menus wrap around it? Also, how much of the interface
  will be controlled by the user? Can I specify solid buttons and
  scroll bars if Aqua's watery elements make me seasick? Only time -
  roughly six months if Apple can keep its intended schedule - will
  give us these answers.

  We'll have to wait longer for the more difficult answers, however.
  As Apple embarks on the next major revision of its Macintosh
  operating system, how durable is the interface? What happens in a
  few years when the translucent, bright-colored look is out of
  fashion - not only onscreen, but in case designs as well? Will we
  look back on the Aqua interface someday the way we look back on
  bell-bottomed pants or fluorescent leg-warmers? Will the Mac OS
  interface change according to Apple's ad campaigns?

  It's possible. However, at the Expo keynote, Jobs began his
  introduction to Aqua with a black-and-white image of the first
  Macintosh interface. The crowd laughed, but the joke had two
  faces: that original screen looked so foreign compared to the
  colorful displays on our modern desktops; yet at the same time its
  windows, icons, menu bar, and Trash can are elements we see on our
  Macs every day. In other words, interface change is not bad in and
  of itself, but it must be managed carefully to be both
  comfortingly familiar and invitingly different.


**Poll Preview: Think Different about Aqua?** For this week's
  TidBITS poll, we're asking, "How do you feel about Apple's new
  interface for Mac OS X?" Preliminary correspondence suggests four
  approaches: "Love it!", "Seems OK", "I'm worried", or "Hate it!"
  Does Aqua float your boat, or is destined for a watery grave?
  Register your opinion today on our home page!

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


$$

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