TidBITS#397/15-Sep-97
=====================

  Wondering how to run PC software on the Mac? This week we review
  Virtual PC, Connectix's entry into the PC emulation arena. We also
  continue our coverage of the clone licensing situation with news
  about Motorola's plans to discontinue cloning, note a new
  converter for Word users needing to access Word 97-98 documents,
  and take a light-hearted look at the truly strange contents of the
  Macintosh curio cabinet.

Topics:
    MailBITS/15-Sep-97
    Send Out the Clones
    The Macintosh Curio Cabinet
    Virtual PC: Slow But Well Worth the Wait

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-397.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#397_15-Sep-97.etx>

Copyright 1997 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/15-Sep-97
------------------

**TidBITS Updates** -- The rapidity of important news releases
  surrounding the clone licensing situation recently prompted us to
  launch a Web-based project we'd been considering for some time.
  When news breaks after we've published an issue of TidBITS, as it
  has for the last few weeks, we'll provide a tight summary on our
  TidBITS Updates page (with headlines on our home page). We also
  plan to publish announcements of important software releases,
  occasional letters to the editor, and information about other
  appropriate topics. As with TidBITS, however, TidBITS Updates will
  focus on what we consider to be the most important news, not
  everything that happens. We're still completing our internal tools
  for TidBITS Updates, so, for now, use our home page to access
  TidBITS Updates content. [ACE]

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


**Word 97-98 Importer Available** -- Recently, Microsoft announced
  plans to release Office 98 for the Macintosh by the end of this
  year, and - of more immediate interest - released a beta version
  of the Word 97-98 Import Converter. Macintosh Word 5 and 6 users
  can use the software to read Word 97-98 format, used by Word for
  Windows 97, the upcoming Word for Windows 98, and the upcoming
  Word for Macintosh 98. The importer is available as a 1.4 MB
  download from the Microsoft Web site, and according to a contact
  at Microsoft, it will remain a beta for at least a little while.
  If you've experienced problems with Word 97 users not remembering
  to convert documents into Word 5 or 6 format for you, the beta may
  prove helpful, though I recommend you skim the list of known
  problems in the Read Me file. The installer installs the importer
  (called Word 97-98 Import version 97081800), some new graphics
  filters (JPEG, PNG, and metafile), and a batch converter. The
  importer requires a 68020-based Macintosh or better.

<http://www.microsoft.com/MacOffice/ProdInfo/Office/CoExist.htm>

  In its announcement of Office 98, Microsoft noted Office 98 will
  run on PowerPC-based Macs only and will be self-repairing - that
  is, if a user unwittingly removes one of the many shared libraries
  required by Office 98, the software will automatically generate a
  new library. [TJE]


Send Out the Clones
-------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Despite the disbelief I expressed in some of my previous articles
  about the clone licensing situation, Apple has done what I then
  thought unlikely - eliminated at least two major players in the
  clone game. Two weeks ago, Apple purchased Power Computing's Mac
  assets, including the company's Mac OS license. Last week, the
  Motorola Computer Group announced plans to discontinue its Mac OS
  clone system business. Motorola will continue to sell its StarMax
  systems until the end of 1997, after which Motorola will provide
  warranty and technical support to its customers. Motorola also
  will provide all existing and new StarMax owners with a full year
  of telephone support instead of the previous 90 days of support.

<http://www.mot.com/GSS/MCG/new/press_rel/pr970911.html>
<http://www.mot.com/GSS/MCG/starmax/html/qna.html>

  As with Power Computing, the amount of money paid by the clone
  manufacturers to Apple didn't seem to be the final sticking point.
  Motorola was reportedly willing to pay a higher licensing fee to
  Apple, but according to a Reuters story, "Apple was not willing to
  give up the designs necessary for cloners to develop systems based
  on the Common Hardware Reference Platform (CHRP)." I suspect that
  means Apple wasn't willing to license a version of the Mac OS for
  CHRP to Motorola, since UMAX successfully renegotiated a deal with
  Apple to ship Mac OS 8 with computers that don't have CHRP
  motherboard designs.


**What About Sub-Licensees?** Remember that Motorola also sub-
  licenses the Mac OS to other companies, including TidBITS sponsor
  APS. Paul McGraw of APS noted:

  Though it appeared to be inevitable considering the present
  licensing climate at Apple Computer, we find the decision of
  Motorola Computer Group (MCG) to eliminate its Mac OS compatible
  computer program to be extremely disappointing. The decision is
  detrimental to the market as a whole and the businesses of its
  sub-licensees in particular. We will be forced to make a number of
  difficult business decisions over the next few months as a result
  of this decision. At the least, one would have hoped that MCG
  would have felt it incumbent upon themselves to notify their
  sub-licensees in advance of a general release to the public. The
  fact that they chose not to do so seems disappointingly consistent
  with the extent of their commitment to their sub-licensee
  partners.

  Industry sources say IBM has also decided drop its Mac OS
  business. Although IBM never manufactured a Macintosh clone (IBM
  helped design the PowerBook 2400 and was reportedly waiting for
  Apple to certify CHRP and portable designs before it started
  producing Macintosh clones), it sub-licensed the Mac OS to Tatung
  of Taiwan and Akia of Japan. Both Tatung and Akia had designed
  CHRP-based Macs using IBM's CHRP designs.

  It remains to be seen how these situations will play out, since
  the existing clone licensing contracts are still in effect.
  Motorola has not ruled out the possibility of filing a lawsuit
  against Apple. Sources have said that it cost Motorola $140
  million to start its Macintosh clone business, and the company is
  taking a $95 million charge to discontinue that business - I have
  to believe that Motorola will attempt to minimize its financial
  loss. IBM has less of a financial stake, since it never
  manufactured machines, but the various sub-licensees fall into an
  awkward position that may confuse the issue for weeks to come. For
  instance, according to a report on MacInTouch, PowerTools
  continues to manufacture machines based on Motorola's motherboards
  but has also signed an agreement with UMAX for motherboards.


**Is the Sky Falling?** Needless to say, Apple's moves (seemingly
  driven by Steve Jobs) have had some of the negative results
  predicted in TidBITS-395_. A number of Macintosh developers are
  talking about moving projects to other platforms, and companies
  are pulling back on Mac-specific advertising and trade shows.
  Apple's actions have more subtly damaged its overall business
  reputation, its relationship with PowerPC suppliers Motorola and
  IBM, and its standing in the eyes of previously loyal Macintosh
  users.

  The counter-argument being put forth by Apple executives is that
  Apple was losing too much money to survive. It's hard to evaluate
  this claim accurately, since only Apple knows all the numbers.
  Even if we give Apple the benefit of the doubt, I think there's no
  question that Apple and Steve Jobs botched this situation badly.
  It makes one wonder who, if anyone, is in charge of PR at Apple
  these days.

  The only public information from Apple has been a telephone
  conversation Jobs had with Ric Ford of MacInTouch. Based on that
  conversation, Ric believes that Jobs is centering his strategy on
  the Mac OS and the PowerPC chip. Ric also believes Jobs has a
  viable plan for expanding the Macintosh market in 1998. I hope
  Jobs is telling the truth and that his plans succeed. I wish he
  hadn't seen the elimination of clone licensing as necessary, since
  I believe the negatives involved in doing so have overwhelmingly
  dangerous consequences.

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


The Macintosh Curio Cabinet
---------------------------
  by Kris Kunze <puck@wr.com.au>

  The good folk at TidBITS, perhaps suffering from spiked Seattle
  drizzle, have asked me to write an article about my Web site,
  "Oddities, Curios, and Rarities for Macintosh." Well, hey, why
  not? We all need love, admiration, and a chance to work off our
  15 minutes of Andy Warhol-allotted fame.

<http://www.mac-curios.com/>

  The theme of my page is simple enough: it is a downloadable
  collection of odd, curious, and rare shareware for the Mac. Each
  item comes with an informative description or a long rant about
  something completely irrelevant. People take a read and think to
  themselves, "Oh, I say, that sounds jolly interesting. I'll
  download this program that simulates a stapler and entertain
  myself with it for hours." And they do. And they love it. And they
  write to me and tell me so.

<http://www.mac-curios.com/Files/SimStapler.hqx>

  It's increasingly evident the Macintosh has bred a unique and
  silly brand of software. From Grouches that pop out of trash cans
  and satirical emulations of Windows 95 to utilities displaying
  hypnotizing, spinning yellow wheels, the Macintosh has developed a
  humorous freeware underground. There are, of course, reasons for
  this. Studies have shown we Macintosh users often lack important
  enzymes required for the stable processing of thought, and that as
  a group we are disproportionately inbred (due at least in part to
  our innate attractiveness and sexual magnetism).

<http://www.mac-curios.com/Files/95Demo.sit.hqx>
<http://www.mac-curios.com/Files/bugeyes.sit.hqx>

  Oh, whoops, did I say that? What I meant to say was that something
  sets us Mac users apart from the crowd. The original aesthetic
  that went into the creation of Macintosh continues to this day.
  This aesthetic is not only the idea that software should be easy
  to use, but also that it be fun to use. And, let's make it not
  just fun to use; let's be _crazy_ and waste space cramming goofy
  pictures of the developers into our operating system. The Mac has
  that sort of mentality as a constant undertow.

  This means my Web page has no lack of material. Every time I think
  I've hit the oddity ceiling, I uncover more treasures. Recently,
  on a foray into Hotline (a part of the Internet only a few of you
  will have explored), I came across a utility called Psychomatic
  that displays an animated stick figure in a small window. The
  author "was bored" that day and took time out from writing
  executive software to create this useless item (which is actually
  clever and contains artistic merit). In another context, you could
  easily imagine it projected on the wall of a contemporary art
  gallery, right next to the exciting multimedia display of nostril
  hair.

<http://www.mac-curios.com/Files/Psychomatic.sit.hqx>

  Not all items in my Curios collection have such obvious merit. A
  good example is Lobsterpetting, a utility that displays a picture
  of a lobster which you then proceed to pat. As it squeaks
  appreciatively, you wonder what on earth you are doing and try to
  comprehend what was going through the mind of its creator. Very
  little, you find out when you peruse the accompanying ReadMe. Is
  it bad art? Comedy? An existential statement channelled through
  the mind of the proverbial fool?

<http://www.mac-curios.com/Files/Lobster.sit.hqx>

  Probably none of the above. But Lobsterpetting is unique to the
  Macintosh. People who are bi-platformal (oh yes, very modern) tell
  me Windows has not spawned a similar genre. Sad really. The cold,
  grey corporate machine strides into the infinite night, filled
  with a frigid unswerving purpose, dragging its empty and corrupt
  creators into the dawn of an emotionless void.

  Meanwhile, somewhere in a field on the outskirts of the Empire, a
  band of madmen and fools plot the beginning of a new age. They buy
  colorful paints, sniff and drink a good variety of them, laugh,
  and paint their way into a joyous crimson-stained sunrise. They
  are destitute and their profits are poor, but there is something
  appealing about them; they seem to be filled with life. The
  software I catalogue may be foolish, inane, or trivial (and often
  a solid combination of all three), but it shows that a crazy
  spirit lives on in the Macintosh world.


Virtual PC: Slow But Well Worth the Wait
----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@popco.com>

  Running Connectix's new Virtual PC is a little eerie. Within a
  minute of double-clicking its icon, you have a Windows 95 startup
  screen staring you in the face. For some people, this is a
  horrible nightmare; for others, an inevitability; and for still
  others, the business reality of using a Macintosh in organizations
  which rely on software that runs only on Intel-based computers.

<http://www.connectix.com/html/connectix_virtualpc.html>

  Consider this: I have a PowerBook 3400c/200. With Virtual PC
  installed, I can carry around both Mac OS 8 and Windows 95 with
  CD-ROM and floppy access for both, plus dial-up and Ethernet
  connectivity. It's a truly weird experience to watch Virtual PC
  running Windows 95 running the Dial-Up Connectivity tool using a
  Macintosh modem to do a PPP connection. It's much more like a
  fantasy than a nightmare for those of us who must run Windows
  software occasionally but don't want the extra equipment or
  expense.

  Virtual PC uses your Mac's PowerPC processor to emulate the
  behavior of an Intel Pentium MMX chip and its several secondary
  support chips, creating a "virtual machine" capable of running
  software that would never otherwise work on a PowerPC processor.
  As a result, though Virtual PC comes with Windows 3.1 or Windows
  95, according to Connectix, you can install any Intel-based
  operating system, such as Windows NT, OS/2, or the Rhapsody
  preview for Intel boxes. This review concerns itself entirely with
  running Windows 95 under Virtual PC.

  Although Virtual PC helps Mac owners around the problem of
  potentially needing to buy a PC clone, it does require a Mac with
  a decent amount of horsepower. To run Virtual PC Windows 95
  Version, Connectix recommends you have at least a PowerPC 603e
  processor running at 180 MHz, with a minimum of 32 MB RAM and 300
  MB of free disk space.  Connectix also notes Level 2 cache
  improves performance, and larger Level 2 caches help even more. In
  fact, Brian Grove at Connectix said that "one of the single best
  methods to help Virtual PC performance (especially for Windows) is
  to increase the size of the Level 2 cache. This is especially true
  for 603e configurations. There are cases where, even on fast
  PowerPC processors, Virtual PC is actually waiting for data from
  the cache." (The hardware requirements decrease slightly for the
  Windows 3.11/DOS Version.)


**Installation** -- Virtual PC is a breeze to install. It requires
  a CD-ROM drive, but the process takes only a few minutes because
  the installer merely copies over disk images containing
  preinstalled configurations.

  The coolest part of the installation process is that you don't
  need to reboot. There are no extensions or other system
  modifications. This fact elicited an audible "Wow!" from my
  office-mate Steve Broback, co-author of Beyond the Little Mac
  Book - who quickly thereafter bought and installed his own copy.

  After installation, you can decide how much RAM your Windows
  virtual machine will have. Select the Virtual PC icon, choose Get
  Info from the File menu, and change the Preferred Size field.
  Virtual PC requires some memory for overhead, so specifying 40 MB
  in the Preferred Size field allots about 33 MB to Windows.

  I noticed one irony using Virtual PC: the version of Windows 95
  that ships with Virtual PC is "revision B," which includes a File
  Allocation Table (FAT) update that doesn't use minimum file
  allocation units. That means the Windows 95 file system wastes
  considerably less disk space (especially with large groups of
  small files) than the Mac OS. Although Mac OS 8.0.1 is scheduled
  to include HFS Plus, a major enhancement to the Macintosh file
  system that also removes this limitation, it's ironic that my
  Mac's disk space is used more efficiently in the disk images files
  controlled by Virtual PC than by my Macintosh itself.


**Using It Like a PC** -- In ordinary usage, Virtual PC works like
  a charm. I've installed all kinds of imaging and Web-related
  software without a hitch. Netscape Communicator 4.0, Microsoft
  Internet Explorer 3.0, DeBabelizer 4.0, and the whole Ulead
  PhotoImpact line all worked without a hitch.

  However, I pushed Virtual PC over the edge by installing a preview
  release of Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 for Windows 95. Unlike
  the Macintosh preview release of Explorer, the Windows Internet
  Explorer 4.0 beta can change the entire desktop environment.
  That's not such a hot idea even for Windows users - I've seen
  reports of numerous problems occurring on real PCs, and it's
  definitely out of the question for Virtual PC. I had to go back
  and install Virtual PC from scratch (which was much easier than
  re-installing Windows on a real PC, admittedly).

  When working on a LAN and using TCP/IP, Virtual PC requires a
  different IP number than the one being used by your Macintosh. In
  this regard, it's one of the first consumer products that allows a
  Mac to use two IP numbers simultaneously (it requires Open
  Transport to use Ethernet). The practical upshot is that you can
  use the Internet in both the Macintosh and Windows environments
  simultaneously. I've browsed on the Mac while downloading files
  via FTP in Windows.

  Connectix manages to provide two separate IP numbers on the same
  physical machine by _not_ doing anything special. The virtual
  machine runs its own, separate TCP stack - essentially the
  software that handles interactions between application software
  and network hardware. Each stack can have its own logical IP
  number even though the computer has a single physical Ethernet
  device; the two are totally independent. In the Unix and Windows
  NT worlds, people often have numerous IP addresses with a single
  Ethernet device.

  You configure PPP in Windows rapidly using wizards in Windows 95
  that walk you through a task while explaining it. The wizards
  suited me well, because it's complex to configure PPP without
  assistance. My PowerBook 3400c's internal modem wouldn't work with
  Windows PPP (although other applications in Windows 95 recognized
  it), so I switched to a Global Village PowerPort Platinum Pro PC
  Card (I like to call it a GV PPPPP). This caused bizarre
  "processor errors" as Virtual PC launched; I eliminated them by
  disabling Ethernet temporarily via the Preferences submenu.
  Connectix has identified the issue and should have a solution in
  an upcoming maintenance release.


**Mac-specific Issues** -- I found it easy to switch between the
  Mac and Windows environments. You can choose a full screen or a
  within-a-window display for the Windows environment. In full
  screen mode, pressing Command displays the Mac menu bar as well as
  a status bar that indicates activity on your Ethernet connection,
  CD-ROM drive, floppy disk, and hard disk.

  Virtual PC also makes it easy to change video modes, and the
  display has worked well with both the PowerBook 3400c's 800 by 600
  display and an external monitor. You select resolutions in Windows
  using the Windows Displays control panel; you determine how much
  virtual video RAM Windows has in Virtual PC's Preferences dialog
  box.

  One of the neatest features of Virtual PC is that it can save its
  state, which is much like putting the Virtual PC's Windows
  environment to sleep. When you quit Virtual PC through its own
  menu (rather than shutting down via Windows 95's Start menu)
  you're given the option to save Virtual PC's current state to
  disk. Next time you launch Virtual PC, you must wait a bit (about
  twenty seconds on my 3400c), but after the wait you are - in
  theory - right back where you left off. I've found these saved
  states a mixed blessing because they don't work exactly as
  expected. The 3400c's hot-swappable drive bay (CD-ROM or floppy)
  and the Mac's ease of changing Ethernet and TCP/IP configurations
  are fabulous, but those capabilities play havoc with Virtual PC
  when I restore a saved state. It's as if I reached into a running
  PC and yanked out the Ethernet card or CD-ROM drive. You must do a
  full shutdown inside Windows 95 before changing configurations,
  though you still need not shut down the Mac.


**System Resources** -- You must consider system resource issues
  before installing Virtual PC. For instance, I originally had 48 MB
  of RAM. After experimenting with RAM Doubler and running multiple
  applications alongside Virtual PC, I upgraded to 80 MB of RAM,
  though I can still run RAM Doubler at the same time for memory
  management benefits. Adding more RAM enabled me to allocate more
  than 32 MB to Windows, which is effectively the minimum amount of
  RAM necessary for Windows 95, whether or not Virtual PC is
  involved.

  Disk space is another concern. Virtual PC creates a single file
  that acts as the C drive for the PC. You can choose to create
  either a 150 MB or 260 MB disk image, depending on whether you use
  the minimum or standard disk images. Even 260 MB is barely enough
  space to work in, and since Windows' memory management system is
  constantly swapping material between RAM and disk (like Virtual
  Memory on the Mac), you should leave 40 or 50 MB free just for
  kicks. These disk images are Finder mountable just by double-
  clicking on them, very much like ShrinkWrap disk images. The disk
  images are mounted in such a way that Windows 95 long file names
  re-map to DOS-style eight-dot-three character names.

  Creating another file to act as another drive is simple: in
  Virtual PC's Preferences dialog, click the D drive, click the New
  Hard Drive Image button, and then enter the size of the disk image
  file you want to create. Unfortunately, if you do this while in a
  Windows 95 session, you are presented with an option to restart
  the virtual machine. Just as powering a Mac down in the middle of
  working is bad, so too is powering down a PC running Windows 95 -
  and the same applies to the Virtual PC virtual machine. Instead,
  first choose Shut Down from the Windows 95 Start menu, then select
  Restart in DOS Mode in the Shut Down dialog. Once in DOS mode, you
  can reboot at will, so you can create the new disk image and allow
  it to restart. Some warning or documentation in the Preferences
  dialog would have been welcome: I figured this out through trial
  and error.

  Once you create a drive, you can't modify its size, and the image
  occupies its entire volume size on your Macintosh hard disk no
  matter how full (or empty) it is so far as Windows is concerned.
  These disk images can play havoc with backups created with Dantz's
  popular Retrospect backup software (and other backup programs as
  well). Just launching and quitting Virtual PC modifies its disk
  image files, which means Retrospect will back them up during its
  next backup run. With my current disk images, I'd add about 600 MB
  to my backups every night if I didn't specifically prevent
  Retrospect from backing up those files.

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

  I've found several solutions to the sizing problem. First, you
  need not rely on disk images for all PC files. Virtual PC enables
  you to share folders between the Mac and Windows environments, so
  you can save most of your work to a shared folder (the K drive,
  perhaps), at which point Retrospect would see individual files.
  Or, you could mount the disk images in the Finder and have
  Retrospect recognize them as volumes, not individual files. Both
  mounted disk images and the shared folders use DOS file naming, so
  restoring files could be a problem later. Second, you could leave
  Virtual PC running all the time and use the Windows 95/NT
  Retrospect Remote control panel to back up Virtual PC's disk
  images as though they were real hard disks on a physical PC!
  That's a bit peculiar, but it should work and it would preserve
  long file names.


**Performance** -- I'm asked frequently about Virtual PC's speed.
  I'm at the low end of Connectix's recommendations with a 200 MHz
  603e chip in my PowerBook 3400c, and, to me, Virtual PC is slow.
  [Surprisingly, I've received a few comments from Virtual PC beta
  testers who happily ran Virtual PC on PowerPC-based Macs that
  didn't meet Connectix's recommendations. -Tonya] I often feel as
  though I'm running a 50 MHz Pentium MMX system. With some tasks,
  it feels fast; other times, I wait minutes for basic network or
  image functions to complete. One advantage of having Virtual PC as
  a separate Macintosh application, though, is that it functions
  perfectly well in the background, without stealing an overwhelming
  amount of processor power. A speedier chip than my 603e would
  help, although I doubt Virtual PC's performance will ever cause
  jaws to drop.

  Virtual PC requires more rebooting than the PC hardware I'm
  accustomed to, and it's a little finicky about settings. On the
  whole, though, doing a normal Shut Down in Windows 95 and then
  starting it up when I needed it again resulted in consistently
  good behavior.

  At a street price hovering below $150, it's impossible to not
  recommend Virtual PC if you need to run Windows software and have
  a machine that meets Virtual PC's minimum specs. If you design or
  write for the Web, it's increasingly critical to test pages in
  browsers running on the Mac and the PC. Being able to do this on a
  single machine is a boon, even with the wait.

  [Today, Insignia Solutions, long-time makers of SoftWindows, which
  enables you to run Windows applications on the Mac, shipped
  RealPC, a Pentium MMX emulator complete with Sound Blaster support
  and an emphasis on running games under DOS and Windows. RealPC has
  an estimated street price of $79, Windows operating system not
  included. -Tonya]

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


**DealBITS Discount** -- Cyberian Outpost is offering Virtual PC
  with Windows 95 to TidBITS readers for $134.95 through the URL
  below. This represents a $5 discount off Cyberian's regular price.

<http://www.tidbits.com/products/virtual-pc.html>

    Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100 -- 415/571-0850 (fax)
      <sales@connectix.com>
    Insignia Solutions -- 800/848-7677 -- +44/131-458-6849
      <maccs@isinc.insignia.com>


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