TidBITS#490/26-Jul-99
=====================

  At last week's Macworld Expo in New York City, Steve Jobs
  introduced the iBook, Apple's forthcoming consumer laptop, and
  AirPort, Apple's inexpensive wireless networking technology. Adam
  looks through the hyperbole at how these products stack up, and
  how Apple's focus on consumers may change the Macintosh world
  forever. Also this week, we note Y2K updates for FileMaker Pro
  4.x, speech recognition announcements, and the new eFax
  Microviewer.

Topics:
    MailBITS/26-Jul-99
    iBook: An iMac to Go
    Macworld New York 1999: Return to the Consumers

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-490.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1999/TidBITS#490_26-Jul-99.etx>

Copyright 1999 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/26-Jul-99
------------------

**Continuous Speech Recognition Pipes Up** -- Following closely on
  Dragon Systems' announcement last May of plans to develop a
  version of NaturallySpeaking for the Macintosh, both IBM and
  MacSpeech are raising the stakes for continuous speech recognition
  technologies on the Mac. During Steve Jobs's Macworld keynote,
  IBM's W.S. "Ozzie" Osborne demonstrated a version of IBM's
  ViaVoice system for the Mac OS, which both handles continuous
  speech input from a user and also reads text back using the Mac
  OS's existing text-to-speech technology. According to IBM,
  versions of ViaVoice for U.S. and U.K. English should be available
  by the end of 1999, with support for other languages to follow; no
  information on pricing or system requirements was released. Not to
  be outdone, Andrew Taylor's upstart MacSpeech, sporting the
  development team from Articulate Systems' PowerSecretary,
  announced an agreement to license continuous speech recognition
  technology from Philips Speech Processing to create continuous
  speech recognition products exclusively for the Mac. Although
  MacSpeech also hasn't released details on product pricing or
  system requirements, they also claim English-language products
  should be available by the end of 1999. [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05392>
<http://www.software.ibm.com/speech/>
<http://www.macspeech.com/>


**Y2K Updates for FileMaker Pro 4.0 and 4.1** -- After withdrawing
  its 4.1v2 updaters a few weeks ago, FileMaker Inc. has released
  free updaters for both FileMaker Pro 4.0 and 4.1 to address Y2K-
  related inconsistencies in the way the database applications
  handle dates. The updates also quash a few bugs and add new strict
  data validation capabilities for numbers, times, and dates. The
  updaters bring the Worldwide English edition of FileMaker Pro
  4.0v2 to version 4.0v3, and the Worldwide English edition of
  FileMaker Pro 4.1v1 to version 4.1v3; FileMaker says updates for
  localized versions of FileMaker Pro should be available shortly.
  If you installed the short-lived FileMaker Pro 4.1v2 update, you
  must revert to FileMaker Pro 4.1v1 before updating to 4.1v3. We're
  happy to see FileMaker extending these date-related fixes to
  owners of FileMaker Pro 4.0, many of whom did not pay to upgrade
  to version 4.1 for its ODBC-related features. You can download the
  appropriate 1.2 MB updater from FileMaker's support Web pages.
  [GD]

<http://www.filemaker.com/support/uninstall.html>
<http://www.filemaker.com/support/newfiles.html>


**eFax Releases Mac Microviewer** -- Mac users of the eFax online
  fax delivery service can now download the company's eFax
  Microviewer for Macintosh. (For more on Internet fax services, see
  "Facts about Internet Faxing" in TidBITS-484_.) The eFax
  Microviewer allows you to receive, view, and use password
  protection on incoming faxes. The software is a 370K download and
  requires Mac OS 7.0.1 or later. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05428>
<http://www.efax.com/mac/download.html>


iBook: An iMac to Go
--------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  The most common question I was asked at last week's Macworld Expo
  in New York (apart from the much-appreciated "How's Tonya?" - she
  stayed home with Tristan) was the standard, "So what's the most
  interesting thing you've seen?" This year nothing could compare to
  the iBook, which made its debut during Steve Jobs's keynote.


**What Is the iBook?** When Steve Jobs regained the reins at
  Apple, he outlined a four-square product matrix with desktop and
  portable products for both consumers and professionals. The blue
  and white Power Macintosh G3 and the PowerBook G3 occupied both
  squares of the professional column, and the iMac was in the
  consumer desktop square. Left tantalizingly blank until last week
  was the consumer portable square. If you missed the massive media
  coverage, the iBook fills that final space. Or at least it will
  when it ships in September.

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

  As with the iMac, Apple didn't skimp much on features with the
  $1,599 iBook, which boasts a 300 MHz PowerPC G3, 12.1-inch TFT
  active matrix color display capable of up to 800 by 600 resolution
  in millions of colors, 32 MB of RAM (expandable to 160 MB), a 3.2
  GB hard disk, a 24x CD-ROM drive, internal 56K modem, a
  10/100Base-T Ethernet jack, one USB port, a "full-size" keyboard,
  and a supposed six hour battery life. Those are impressive specs,
  and Jobs claimed the iBook would be the second-fastest laptop
  currently available after the PowerBook G3.

  Attention to design detail is also evident in the iBook, which
  will debut with a choice of either blueberry or tangerine
  coloring. More interesting is the handle mounted where the two
  halves of the clamshell-style case connect. Using the handle makes
  the iBook's 6.6 pounds feel lighter than the bronze keyboard
  PowerBook G3's 5.9 pounds. Apple eliminated easily broken doors
  from the recessed modem, Ethernet, and USB ports. Also new is the
  complete lack of a latch: Apple took a hint from cellular phone
  designs in creating a hinge that holds the screen shut. (The
  previous three PowerBook designs - the PowerBook G3, the PowerBook
  G3 Series, and the bronze keyboard PowerBook G3 - all feature
  different latches.) Finally, Apple outfitted the iBook in
  polycarbonate plastic edged with hard rubber for durability.


**Wireless Networking** -- The most amazing aspect of the iBook,
  though, is its support for Apple's new AirPort wireless
  networking, based on technology from Lucent and the 802.11 DSSS
  (Direct-Sequence Spread Spectrum, as opposed to the incompatible
  FHSS, or Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum) wireless networking
  standard. With the addition of a $99 card under the iBook's
  keyboard and a $299 AirPort Base Station, iBooks can share files,
  play network games, and generally do anything possible on a normal
  network, all without a single wire. This invisible networking is
  enabled by the AirPort card and a pair of internal antennas on
  either side of the iBook's screen.

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

  The AirPort Base Station is shaped like a flying saucer or a pudgy
  Hershey's Kiss with three connectors in back. A 10/100Base-T
  Ethernet jack lets you connect an AirPort Base Station to a wired
  network for communicating with desktop Macs, printers, and
  dedicated Internet connections. A standard telephone jack belongs
  to a 56 Kbps modem, so the Base Station can connect directly to an
  Internet service provider. The third jack is a relatively dull AC
  power connector, but I heard that it uses 12 volts, making it easy
  to run via an adapter in a car or boat.

  AirPort is theoretically capable of 11 Mbps, although it remains
  to be seen what sort of performance AirPort networks will enjoy in
  real world situations. Other limitations include a 150 foot range
  (diminished by thick walls or floors) and a 10 user per AirPort
  Base Station recommendation. The 10 user limit is not etched in
  stone; I heard of successful tests involving over 30 iBook users
  working with a single AirPort Base Station, although performance
  may suffer under heavy network use. AirPort will require Mac OS
  8.6 or later.

  Details on AirPort are still sketchy, but from conversations with
  knowledgeable people, it appears the AirPort includes NAT (Network
  Address Translation) and DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration
  Protocol). Combine those with the 56 Kbps modem and any iBook
  connected to an AirPort Base Station that has dialed up an ISP can
  share that single Internet connection. That's amazingly useful,
  and better yet, if you have a wired Ethernet network connected to
  the AirPort Base Station's Ethernet jack, that network can also
  share the modem-based Internet connection. According to Apple,
  Airport Base Station Access Point software can enable an iBook to
  function as a base station; the network could then also connect to
  the Internet using the iBook's internal modem.

<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n60430>

  Software will let you protect your AirPort network, since
  otherwise anyone could sit on your porch with an iBook and use
  your network without permission. The connections reportedly use
  40-bit encryption to prevent other people from eavesdropping on
  your network traffic as well. In addition, users must enter a
  password to log onto an AirPort network.

  AirPort's pricing sets a new standard in the wireless networking
  market. Before this, you could expect to spend at least $300 on a
  PC Card and between $700 and $1,100 for a base station for a total
  of $1,000 to $1,400. Compare that to the $400 you'll pay for a
  complete AirPort solution, and you can see how Apple intends to
  bring wireless networking to the masses. My guess is that within a
  year, we'll see AirPort antennas available across Apple's entire
  line, with various styles of AirPort cards available from both
  Apple and other manufacturers.

  I can't decide which superlatives to use with regard to AirPort,
  assuming the reality lives up to the promise. Just imagine the
  possible uses. Suddenly your entire house becomes network-capable
  without stringing a single wire. Classroom networking becomes much
  more of a reality than in the past. With AirPort Base Stations
  placed in strategic locations, college dorms and libraries could
  provide ad hoc Internet access to iBook-toting students. (Yes,
  this raises unknown issues about scalability, but we're imagining
  here, remember?)

  If you want to add wireless networking capabilities to older
  PowerBooks, you'll need a WaveLAN PC Card from Lucent or the
  just-announced SkyLINE PC Card from Farallon after their testing
  confirms it is compatible with AirPort. (Both run at 2 Mbps.) The
  AirPort press release from Lucent also claims that Apple will
  offer a wireless card for the PowerBook G3.

<http://www.wavelan.com/>
<http://www.farallon.com/products/wireless/skylinespec.html>
<http://www.lucent.com/press/0799/990721.cob.html>


**Quibbles and Bits** -- Although I'm impressed with the iBook and
  AirPort networking, I have a few quibbles.

* A mere 32 MB of RAM is rarely enough, even for a consumer. Every
  iBook should have at least 64 MB of RAM, and I expect dealers will
  install additional memory at the point of sale as they do for
  iMacs. Dealers may like this setup, since RAM can be a high-margin
  addition. I don't know what form factor the memory modules will
  be, but I hope the iBook uses the same RAM as the current
  PowerBook G3.

* The 12.1-inch screen, with a maximum resolution of 800 by 600
  pixels, seems small and was undoubtedly one of the places Apple
  skimped to keep the price down. I wouldn't be surprised if future
  iBooks increased the screen size to 13 inches or more with a
  higher maximum resolution. The plastics would seem to be big
  enough to accommodate a larger screen.

* Limiting the iBook to two colors - blueberry and tangerine -
  seems an odd decision, especially since tangerine is the least
  popular iMac color. I've heard various speculation, including the
  simple requirement for an alternative to blueberry, the need to
  use up an enormous vat of orange plastic, and the claim that
  tangerine is Steve Jobs's favorite color. The most credible
  explanation was that the other three iMac colors - grape,
  strawberry, and lime - simply didn't look good in the iBook's
  rubber attire.

* The iBook keyboard has the fn (Function) key in the lower left
  corner of the keyboard, like the PowerBook G3s. I hate that
  location because it creates confusion when switching back and
  forth from a desktop keyboard, where the Control key is in that
  position. With Control being used heavily for contextual menus and
  applications using Option and Command with ever-increasing
  frequency, I wish Apple wouldn't change the order of modifier keys
  relative to the left edge of the keyboard.

* It isn't clear if the AirPort Base Station's modem can connect
  to America Online or other non-Internet services. AOL is the most
  important, because the iBook is aimed at consumers, who often use
  AOL.

* I could see an argument for adding FireWire so digital
  camcorders could connect to the iBook, but I suspect Apple's
  stance is that since the iBook's 800 by 600 screen isn't ideal for
  digital video, it's better to point roving digital video
  aficionados to the PowerBook G3.

* The iBook is both heavier and larger than I'd like. Consumers
  want small and light portable computers as much as professionals
  do, so it would have been nice to see Apple drop the weight by a
  pound or two and shrink the footprint. The weight is probably due
  to the durable plastics, and also because Apple was trying to keep
  the price down: lighter components cost more.


**Target Markets** -- The iBook has been a topic of discussion on
  TidBITS Talk, with some people expressing disappointment and
  others raving about how perfect it is for their modest needs.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=723>

  Remember that the iBook is not designed for professional use, and
  as much as a typical TidBITS reader might want additional features
  and capabilities, many of us aren't the target audience. Apple is
  targeting the consumer market with the iBook, and the designers
  obviously thought long and hard about which features could be cut
  to save money while at the same time differentiating the iBook
  from the PowerBook G3. Unless some as-yet-unforeseen problem
  surfaces, I think we'll have another iMac-style hit on our hands.


Macworld New York 1999: Return to the Consumers
-----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  This year's Macworld Expo in New York City opened with a stunt-
  filled keynote in which actor Noah Wyle briefly impersonated Steve
  Jobs and Apple vice president Phil Schiller jumped from a 30-foot
  ledge holding an iBook to demonstrate its wireless networking. The
  rest of the show was decidedly upbeat and somewhat larger than
  last year's Macworld Expo in New York, though still significantly
  smaller than January's Macworld Expo in San Francisco.

  That said, the big news was Apple's introduction of the iBook, the
  long-awaited and overly rumored consumer portable. But the iBook
  unveiling was more than just the most notable announcement: it set
  the tone for the entire show, highlighting a somewhat awkward
  transitional moment in the Macintosh industry.

  For the most part, Apple isn't making overt moves toward the
  business world right now. Why should they? The business world has
  generally scorned the Macintosh, denigrated Apple, and bought into
  the Microsoft-and-Intel message. Apple would love to break into
  the business market, but there's little chance of that happening
  soon with the death spiral days of 1996 and 1997 still a recent
  memory.

  The light that Apple has seen is a spotlight on Jack and Jill
  Consumer, credit cards in their hands. Compared to business users,
  consumers place a higher value on industrial design, worry less
  about specifications, and aren't as susceptible to the FUD (fear,
  uncertainty, and doubt) tactics that work so well on suits trying
  to plan for a future that involves not being fired.


**Tension** -- Herein lies the problem. If Apple points the way to
  the consumer market, the Macintosh industry will follow. To
  paraphrase Jesse James, it's because that's where the money is.
  But think briefly about the implication of the industry orienting
  more on the consumer. Those of us who have been in the Macintosh
  world for quite some time aren't novices, aren't happy about
  having to switch existing peripherals to new interfaces like USB
  or FireWire, and have numerous older Macs that still serve us
  faithfully.

  In short, we're a different audience, one with overlap certainly,
  but different nonetheless. Reactions to the iBook are most
  telling, because it's not really aimed at Macworld Expo attendees.
  People complain about the iBook's lack of FireWire, a video out
  port, a microphone, PC Card slots, and media bays, plus its
  somewhat hefty size and weight. These complaints would be totally
  justified if we were talking about a PowerBook - but we're not.
  We're talking about an iMac to go, as Apple puts it. Repeat after
  me: the iBook is for consumers. Consumers don't hook up external
  monitors, plug in PC Cards, or need more than 3.2 GB of hard disk
  space. Consumers want low prices, and lighter parts would have
  driven the cost up.

  Sophisticated Mac users want something else. We want a PowerBook
  that weighs less than four pounds, has a form factor closer to the
  PowerBook 2400 or the PowerBook Duos, features USB and FireWire
  and PC Card slots, and offers connections via a 56 Kbps modem and
  wired and wireless Ethernet. And many people in business would
  like something without a gaudy color scheme. Such a PowerBook may
  one day appear (I'd strongly encourage it!), but it's a far cry
  from today's iBook.

  So we have these two positions, as exemplified by the iBook and
  the hypothetical PowerBook I just described. The two positions
  aren't mutually exclusive, and the connection between them is that
  the more experienced Macintosh users are often the ones who
  recommend and support the novices. We may not buy the iBook for
  ourselves, but we'll buy them for our kids and extol them to our
  friends, just as we do with the iMac.

  Who then should Macintosh industry companies target? Both segments
  of the market, obviously, but doing that successfully is more
  difficult than it may sound. The tension created by the clash of
  product strategies marked a number of things I noticed at the
  show.


**Microsoft's Moves** -- Watching Microsoft can be revealing,
  since Microsoft's deep pockets enable it to devote more resources
  to research and product development than other companies.
  Microsoft's announcements at the show, Word 98 Special Edition and
  early looks at the forthcoming Internet Explorer 5.0 and Outlook
  Express 5.0, reflected the fact that Microsoft learned that the
  three most common activities of the 1.9 million iMac users were
  Web browsing, word processing, and email. There wasn't much to see
  with Internet Explorer 5.0 (and Web browsers are often shallow
  applications with little differentiation between the needs of
  novice and experienced users), but the $99 Word 98 Special Edition
  was aimed squarely at the consumer market, adding a variety of
  templates and clip art, plus wizards for creating different types
  of documents. Outlook Express 5.0 featured numerous new features
  and interface elements intended to address problems novices have
  with email.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/000word98info.htm>
<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/000oe5info.htm>

  Look more closely at Word 98 Special Edition and Outlook Express
  5.0 and you'll see the tension between the consumer and
  professional. With Word 98 Special Edition, Microsoft wants to
  make Word more attractive to consumers, but we're talking about a
  powerful and sometimes obtuse word processor that's overkill for
  most users, let alone novice consumers. To convince people to
  switch from the bundled AppleWorks, Word 98 Special Edition uses
  the carrot of templates and clip art for consumers, along with the
  stick of cross-platform file compatibility for professionals. The
  free Outlook Express 5.0 already owns the coveted bundling spot,
  making it the first and perhaps only email program many consumers
  will see. Thus, Microsoft's emphasis on making the program easier
  to use makes perfect sense and will be welcome. But the Outlook
  Express team has by no means limited itself to ease-of-use, adding
  neat features like a message history that tracks everything you've
  done with a message. Consumers don't need such a feature, but
  professionals might. This and other additions to Outlook Express
  5.0 point toward a desire to satisfy both markets.


**Personal Publishing** -- I saw a few different programs trying
  to meet the same need - personal publishing - but doing so with
  different levels of consumer and professional features. As I noted
  above, although Word 98 Special Edition is aimed at iMac and iBook
  owners, the features are grafted onto a powerful program. Moving
  down the spectrum, you run into Corel's Print House 2000 and Print
  Office 2000, a pair of programs that simplify the process of
  creating documents like calendars, greeting cards, brochures, and
  business cards. (The difference between the two products is the
  types of documents they create - those useful for individuals and
  those generally seen in office settings.) In Corel, we see a
  company refocusing on the consumer space, although it is
  previously been best known for the high-end illustration program
  CorelDRAW and the word processor WordPerfect 3.5. Whether that
  transition will be smooth and successful remains to be seen, but
  the new products seem to show a renewed interest in the Macintosh.
  Finally, Nova Development's Print Explosion appeared to be
  unabashedly aimed at the consumer market, providing an easy
  interface and boasting extensive help implemented using all of
  Apple's help technologies: balloon help for quick explanations of
  interface elements, Apple Guide for tutorials, and HTML Help for
  reference.

<http://www.corel.com/corelprinthouse/printhouse2000_formac.htm>
<http://www.novadevelopment.com/products/printexpl/>


**MP3 Goes Mainstream** -- The vast interest in online music and
  the MP3 format (see "Move Over MTV, Now There's MP3" in
  TidBITS-455_) revealed yet another facet of the move toward
  consumers at Macworld. I saw many tiny devices for playing
  MP3 audio files downloaded from a Mac, including the I-Jam,
  the jazPiper, and the Diamond Rio 500. Not all were shipping,
  but the fact that multiple companies were showing these devices
  indicates that MP3s, once the domain of geeks with appropriate
  hardware and too much time to spare, are now something companies
  expect consumers to want. One company representative said that
  by this time next year he expects to see as many as 50 competing
  MP3 players.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05174>
<http://www.ijamworld.com/>
<http://www.mcpiper.com/jppmain.htm>
<http://www.rioport.com/>

  Fueling much of the fire was Casady & Greene's SoundJam, which
  offers the first complete solution for MP3 creation and playback.
  Several features show how SoundJam straddles the fence between
  geeks and consumers: a variety of "skins" (user interface changes
  along the lines of the modular interfaces available for the
  shareware MacAmp MP3 players) and several visual plug-ins that
  display mesmerizing patterns in sync with the music. Such eye
  candy seems superfluous to the program's tasks of creating and
  playing MP3s, but I think the visual fluff will appeal to both the
  geek and consumer crowd simultaneously.

<http://www.soundjam.com/>
<http://www.macamp.net/>


**Get Some Color** -- Finally, color is here to stay, something
  that may concern business users or those bothered by Apple's push
  to brighten up our lives. Many peripherals came in at least
  blueberry, if not in the full panoply of iMac colors. The largest
  was probably the Tektronix Phaser 840, a beefy color printer
  dressed in blueberry, and even Radius's tiny iBug color
  calibration devices had evolved in all five iMac colors.

<http://www.tek.com/Color_Printers/products/840/840fe.htm>
<http://www.miro.de/news/e/press/displays/ibug.html>

  I worry somewhat about this adherence to Apple's fashion lead. The
  previous platinum, dark grey, and brushed aluminum looks (which
  remain solidly entrenched in the digital camera market) clash with
  the blue and white Power Macintosh G3s, the iMacs, and the new
  iBooks, but the current crop of colored peripherals are tied too
  tightly to today's colors. I don't trust Apple not to introduce
  new colors, eliminate existing ones, or switch to an entirely
  different look. Some companies are being appropriately cautious:
  at least one manufacturer showed a keyboard in pure white ice so
  it would match any iMac, and Apple's own AirPort Base Station
  sports a flavor-free look. I'd encourage peripheral manufacturers
  to think creatively about participating in Apple's design
  revolution without being left in the dust by any significant
  design changes. As much as I like Apple's design direction, the
  iMac and iBook designs will look quite dated in five years.
  Peripherals often have a longer life span than computers, so
  designs that can outlast the current fad would both aid longevity
  and mollify the business and professional users for whom color is
  a negative.


**Final Thoughts** -- It's important that the Macintosh industry
  welcome new users with products designed to meet their needs, but
  it's equally important that the industry continue to provide
  experienced and professional users with powerful tools. We're
  seeing the Macintosh market expand after a time of contraction and
  focus. With that expansion comes some confusion, but with luck,
  we'll find ourselves at Macworld Expo next year with an
  increasingly large, healthy, and broad-based Macintosh market.


$$

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