TidBITS#436/29-Jun-98
=====================

  When Apple releases the iMac, Mac users won't have to sit at the
  back of the (Universal Serial) Bus any longer. Jerry Kindall
  explains USB and what it means for Mac users. We also look at how
  ShareWay IP keeps the TidBITS staff connected, plus news about
  PlusOptimizer and DiskExpress Pro, the Web log analyzer Summary,
  Extension Overload, BBEdit 4.5.3, the new WinMac mailing list, The
  Tilery 4.0, and Palm Buddy, a helpful tool for PalmPilot users.

Topics:
    MailBITS/29-Jun-98
    Share and Share IP Alike
    USB and You

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-436.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1998/TidBITS#436_29-Jun-98.etx>

Copyright 1998 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
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MailBITS/29-Jun-98
------------------

**Mac/Windows Integration Mailing List** -- Marc Bizer
  <mlbizer@mail.utexas.edu> has set up the new WinMac mailing list
  for intelligent discussion of Windows 95/98/NT and Mac OS
  integration issues among experienced users. Discussion will be
  actively moderated by Steve Hyman <steveh@practech.com> and will
  be limited to software issues. Acceptable topics include
  connectivity, file exchange, emulation, user management, service
  management, and so on. Comparative usability topics are acceptable
  in the context of rational discourse, but civility is required. To
  subscribe, send email to <winmac-on@xerxes.frit.utexas.edu>. Since
  initial traffic is expected to be heavy, you can subscribe to the
  digest version of the list by sending email to <winmac-
  digest@xerxes.frit.utexas.edu>. To unsubscribe, send email to
  <winmac-off@xerxes.frit.utexas.edu>. [ACE]


**The Tilery 4.0 Squares Off** -- Rick Holzgrafe of Semicolon
  Software today released The Tilery 4.0, the latest version of his
  $15 shareware desktop launcher application. (TidBITS looked at the
  previous version in "Desktop Launchers, Part IV" in TidBITS-278_.)
  The Tilery provides graphical tiles that, when clicked, open
  applications, documents, folders, volumes, control panels, and
  servers. In addition, automatic tiles appear for currently active
  applications. New features in version 4.0 include tile pop-up
  menus for access to additional features, keyboard control, hot
  keys for tiles, working sets of tiles, and editable tile text
  labels. The Tilery 4.0 is a 442K download.

<http://www2.semicolon.com/Rick/Tilery.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=01479>


**A New Buddy for Mac PalmPilot Owners** -- Florent Pillet
  <florent.pillet@wanadoo.fr> has released Palm Buddy, a $20
  Macintosh shareware application that gives PalmPilot owners
  greater options for working with the data on their handheld
  organizers. Unlike the built-in HotSync software (which
  synchronizes data between the Palm device and your desktop
  computer) Palm Buddy establishes an open, active connection with
  the PalmPilot. This enables you to view the directory of files on
  the Pilot, install applications from the Finder via drag & drop,
  perform a full backup of all the Pilot's data, and restore
  previous backups. Palm Buddy also features a plug-in architecture
  that, in its current incarnation, translates text files into the
  AportisDoc document format for reading on the Pilot.

<http://perso.wanadoo.fr/fpillet/#palmbuddy>
<http://www.aportis.com/products/AportisDoc/benefits.html>

  If you've recently installed the Palm 2 MB Upgrade for your
  PalmPilot, Palm Buddy offers a partial workaround for the software
  glitch in the upgrade card's ROM that plagues Mac users (see
  "PalmPilot Upgrade Card Problematic for Mac Users" in
  TidBITS-435_). Since the problem prevents Mac users from
  installing new applications via the HotSync feature, you can
  use Palm Buddy to load programs directly and maintain backups
  of their data files. The downside is, although you can create
  backups of the data files belonging to the Pilot's built-in
  applications (such as the Address Book), Palm Buddy doesn't
  _synchronize_ the PalmPilot files with the desktop files. So,
  changes made using the Pilot Desktop software likely won't
  transfer to the PalmPilot the next time you try to use HotSync.
  Palm Buddy is a 990K download. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04944>


**PlusOptimizer Jumps, DiskExpress Pro Upgrade Promised** --
  Little more than a week after Alsoft released the $29.95
  PlusOptimizer, the company's disk optimization software that works
  with HFS Plus volumes (see the TidBITS Update "PlusOptimizer
  Defragments HFS Plus Volumes"), a free update to version 1.1 has
  appeared. The update enables PlusOptimizer to work even in the
  presence of directory damage that Disk First Aid can't repair,
  adds an optimization report, lets users anchor and unanchor files,
  and provides a more accurate progress bar. To receive the free
  update, existing users must use Alsoft's email service that
  verifies registration numbers before mailing the 532K file.

<http://www.alsoft.com/plusoptimizer.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04937>

  Several readers expressed confusion with our coverage of
  PlusOptimizer, which implements only some of the features of
  DiskExpress Pro. Although no statements have been published on the
  company's Web site, Alsoft has said to several readers that they
  will provide the Mac OS 8.1 and HFS Plus-compatible upgrade to
  DiskExpress Pro for free to existing customers. In the meantime,
  some DiskExpress Pro users have felt that they have no choice but
  to buy PlusOptimizer as an interim solution until the DiskExpress
  Pro upgrade ships. The other option, of course, is not to worry
  about disk fragmentation issues since the concern often outweighs
  the reality of the performance problems related to fragmentation.
  A simple backup and restore also eliminates all fragmentation, and
  you do have good backups, don't you? [ACE]


**BBEdit Moves to 4.5.3** -- Bare Bones Software last week
  released a free updater for BBEdit 4.5, the commercial version of
  the company's popular text and HTML editor. The 4.5.3 update
  offers improvements to BBEdit's built-in FTP capabilities and Find
  Differences functionality, plus a number of minor bug fixes. It's
  either a 2.7 MB (BinHex) or 1.9 MB (MacBinary) download. [ACE]

<http://web.barebones.com/products/bbedit/bbedit.html>
<http://web.barebones.com/support/update.html>


**Serving Up Web Summaries** -- Jason Linhart, who maintains the
  Macintosh version of the freeware Web log analysis program Analog,
  has released Summary 1.0, a fascinating take on Web log analysis.
  Rather than generating a single Web page containing multiple
  reports, Summary acts as a special purpose Web server, serving up
  any one of its more than 60 reports on the fly to anyone with a
  Web browser. Luckily, password protection is available, and an
  option enables you to quit Summary and restart it without re-
  indexing log files, making it possible to run Summary only at
  selected times. Summary can also analyze multiple Web logs to
  provide totals over time, something that was difficult using many
  traditional Web log analyzers. Summary is $59 shareware and is a
  345K download. Requirements include a PowerPC-based Macintosh, an
  active Internet connection, and a Web browser. [ACE]

<http://summary.net/summary/>
<http://summary.net/soft/analog.html>


**Overloaded with Extensions** -- Teng Chou Ming has released the
  $10 shareware Extension Overload 2.7, a stand-alone DOCMaker
  document that provides information about 666 extensions, 245
  control panels, Easter Eggs, Macintosh error codes, and more. It's
  smaller than, but otherwise quite similar to, Dan Frakes's
  InformINIT 8.1 (see "InformINIT: Your Personal Macintosh
  Informant" in TidBITS-429_). Although there's obviously much
  overlap between the two, they provide complementary information in
  places. Extension Overload is a 227K download. [ACE]

<http://www.mir.com.my/~cmteng/>
<http://cafe.AmbrosiaSW.com/DEF/InformINIT.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04879>


Share and Share IP Alike
------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Like an increasing number of small organizations, TidBITS has no
  central office. We all work from our homes and collaborate
  primarily over the Internet. We use private email and mailing
  lists to communicate back and forth; rely on private Web servers
  for statistics, plus editing and posting of TidBITS Updates; and
  transfer drafts of articles and issues to and fro during editing.
  Over the years, we've worked up various procedures for handling
  all these tasks, and although they're specific to TidBITS, many
  organizations have roughly similar needs.


**Enter AppleShare IP** -- When Apple announced AppleShare IP 5.0,
  with its combined support for HTTP, FTP, and Internet email, I
  jumped at the chance to give it a test run in part for those
  features, but also because of one fabulous new capability that
  we'd been wanting for years - standard Macintosh file sharing over
  the Internet to those running the AppleShare Client Chooser
  extension 3.7 or later, which works with System 7.5 and later and
  ships with Mac OS 8. (Accessing shared volumes over the Internet
  is easy. Open the Chooser, click the AppleShare button, click the
  Server IP Address button, enter the IP address of the AppleShare
  server in the dialog that appears, and then click the Connect
  button before proceeding as you would normally with an AppleShare
  server.)

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

  Why was this important for TidBITS? With six staff members working
  on any one file, we must pay careful attention to who has a file
  checked out and when a file is ready for someone else to edit. For
  a while, we used a NetPresenz FTP server to store files, and we
  moved files between IN and OUT folders, appending appropriate
  initials so others could figure out who had each file. This
  process was a pain. We had to type complicated pathnames, which
  were easy to screw up. When the time came to check a file back in,
  we had to either replace the file in OUT and rename it back to IN,
  or upload to IN and delete the file in OUT. Renaming and moving
  files aren't actions that most FTP clients do well.

  In contrast, the Finder is great at both moving and renaming
  files, and once we had AppleShare IP up and running, everyone on
  the staff could mount our internal file server just like any other
  AppleShare volume. On occasion, people even opened files over the
  Internet, though that was generally too slow, since we have only a
  56K connection; it might work quickly enough over a T1. Finally,
  although our system is specific enough that we don't have to do
  this often, we can use Find File to search for files on volumes
  mounted over the Internet, which is quite handy.


**Exit AppleShare IP** -- Unfortunately, AppleShare IP 5.0 had
  problems. It was a RAM pig, requiring 32 MB of RAM (it took me an
  hour to get inside our Power Mac 7100/66 to install enough more
  RAM - not an auspicious debut). AppleShare IP's interface is based
  on OpenDoc, and although that might have been politically correct
  at the time it was being developed, it made for a confusion of
  multiple administration programs. Worse, OpenDoc prevented me from
  restarting the server automatically every night, since AppleShare
  IP put up a confirmation dialog on quit. With a normal Mac
  application, the free utility Okey Dokey Pro would have been able
  to punch that button and let the restart continue. But, OpenDoc's
  buttons were invisible to Okey Dokey Pro. In addition, I was
  trying to run an unstable custom version of Apple e.g. for a
  searchable database of TidBITS articles; when it crashed, Keep It
  Up couldn't restart the computer because of this same AppleShare
  IP confirmation dialog. In short, AppleShare IP didn't play well
  with others, and in a fit of pique I deleted it and reinstalled a
  clean System Folder so I could revert back to WebSTAR, NetPresenz,
  and Personal File Sharing. (Note that I was using AppleShare IP
  5.0 - a bug fix 5.0.2 appeared shortly after I decided to make the
  switch back, and it's possible that it addressed some of my
  irritations.)

<ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/info-mac/gui/okey-dokey-pro-203.hqx>
<http://www.research.apple.com/technology/eg/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1045>
<http://www.vl-brabant.be/mac/kiu.html>


**Enter ShareWay IP** -- I might have had a revolt on my hands if
  I'd forced everyone to go back to the FTP file shuffle. Luckily,
  at about that time, Open Door Networks released ShareWay IP (now
  at version 1.1.1), a small application that acts as an IP gateway
  for Personal File Sharing or any other AppleTalk Filing Protocol
  (AFP) compliant file server (such as earlier versions of
  AppleShare or those available in Windows NT, Novell NetWare, or
  Unix AppleShare servers).

<http://www.opendoor.com/shareway/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04178>

  TidBITS isn't a large organization, and where AppleShare IP was a
  painful level of overkill, ShareWay IP was ideal. Where I was hard
  pressed to satisfy AppleShare IP 5.0's 32 MB RAM requirements, I
  could duplicate its services in less than 8 MB of RAM using
  WebSTAR 1.3.2 for HTTP, NetPresenz 4.1 for FTP (it could also have
  served HTTP if I'd been even more RAM-constrained), Eudora
  Internet Mail Server 1.2 for email, and ShareWay IP Personal in
  conjunction with Personal File Sharing for Internet file sharing.

  Of these, ShareWay IP was the only newcomer to the mix, and it
  performed flawlessly. The Personal Edition works only with
  Personal File Sharing on a single machine, but as a result, its
  only control is a Start button that activates the IP gateway once
  file sharing has started. ShareWay IP assumes correctly that if
  you quit while the gateway is active (the Start button changes to
  Stop when active), it should make the gateway active again on the
  next launch.

  In short, ShareWay IP Personal Edition is dead simple. Open Door
  Networks sells two other versions that enable one Mac to act as a
  gateway for any other machine on the network that has file sharing
  active or is acting as an AFP server. ShareWay IP Standard Edition
  enables this for one other server, whereas ShareWay IP
  Professional Edition enables it for multiple other servers, plus
  adds access statistics, graphing, logging, and a sortable list of
  active connections.

<http://www2.opendoor.com/gateway/ShareWayIPPro.html>


**Minor Problems** -- In extensive use of ShareWay IP, we've run
  into no problems at all that can be traced to ShareWay IP itself.
  We have, however, had one nagging problem that seems to be related
  to Apple's AppleShare client software. When some, but not all, of
  us dismount the file server's volume, the Finder often restarts or
  hangs on their machine. It doesn't seem to affect the server at
  all, but is extremely frustrating. Keeping the server mounted over
  the Internet all the time isn't a viable option because our
  comparatively slow Internet connections mean changes on the server
  can cause slowdowns for everyone who has the server mounted.

  The only generic problem with ShareWay IP is that it has no
  security features, relying instead on the security of the servers
  for which it's acting as a gateway. That makes some sense, but
  many people turn file sharing on and allow guests full access.
  That's always a poor practice, but in a situation where ShareWay
  IP might be making that Macintosh accessible to the entire
  Internet, the ramifications can be even more serious. If you end
  up using ShareWay IP, be careful about security on the servers you
  make available to the outside world of the Internet.

  In some respects, ShareWay IP offers better security than other
  solutions, such as FTP. ShareWay IP uses a specific port number
  for connections, so an access control list in a router can block
  incoming connections to that port except for selected machines.
  Plus, since AppleShare uses two-way random number exchanges to
  encrypt passwords, they never cross the network unencrypted,
  unlike FTP.

  Also, there's no logging built into ShareWay IP Personal or
  Standard Editions, or Apple's Personal File Sharing. The File
  Sharing Monitor control panel in System 7 and the Activity Monitor
  tab in the File Sharing control panel in Mac OS 8 can tell you
  who's logged in at any given time, but if you want logging you
  need either ShareWay IP Professional or the combination of
  AppleShare IP itself and AFP Logger, also from Open Door Networks.

<http://www.opendoor.com/logger/>

  ShareWay IP includes electronic documentation in HTML format, and
  although it's rather spartan, it matches ShareWay IP's minimalist
  interface. The Personal and Standard Editions of ShareWay IP share
  the same documentation, which could prove slightly confusing to
  users of the Personal Edition.


**One Trick Ponies** -- There's no question that ShareWay IP is a
  one-trick pony. It has a single function - making AFP-compliant
  file servers accessible to Macintosh users over the Internet or
  via TCP. It uses almost no RAM, has a minimal interface, and
  doesn't appear to have any performance or stability implications
  for a server. In short, ShareWay IP is ideal for small
  organizations that need to share files over the Internet, and it's
  become an essential part of our toolbox of Internet server
  software.

  The current version of ShareWay IP is 1.1. ShareWay IP Personal
  Edition is available directly from Open Door Networks for $79 ($69
  educational). The Standard Edition is $249 ($179 educational), and
  the Professional Edition costs $479 ($349 educational). In
  comparison, AppleShare IP costs range from more than $800 for a
  5-user license up to about $2,000 for an unlimited-user license.
  Ten-day evaluation copies of all versions of ShareWay IP are
  available, as are volume discounts for the Personal and Standard
  Editions.


USB and You
-----------
  by Jerry Kindall <kindall@manual.com>

  With the announcement of the iMac we started hearing a totally new
  abbreviation in the Macintosh world - USB. Gone were our familiar
  ADB ports and modem ports and printer ports, not to mention SCSI.
  Why is Apple moving to USB? What was wrong with serial ports and
  what's good about USB ports?

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


**What Is USB?** USB stands for "Universal Serial Bus" and is a
  special kind of serial port that's growing in popularity in the
  Windows world. Most late-model PCs have at least one USB port, and
  Windows 98 introduces plug-and-play support for devices attached
  to the USB port. (Bill Gates's widely reported COMDEX crash
  occurred as he was connecting a USB scanner to a PC running
  Windows 98. But that's no worse than how Windows plug-and-play
  often works.)

  USB is intended to replace all the various types of low-to-medium-
  speed data ports hanging off the back of a PC (although most
  current PCs with USB also have at least some of the old-style
  ports). This includes not only the serial ports but also keyboard
  ports, mouse ports (which, on a PC, are basically another serial
  port), and parallel ports. Keep in mind that on a PC, the parallel
  port is used not just for printers but also for other devices such
  as Zip drives, tape drives, scanners, and even some modems.

  Given that USB is intended to replace the parallel port as well as
  lower-speed serial ports, and to do it all at once, it's pretty
  speedy. USB devices can talk to the computer at two speeds: 1.5
  Mbps or 12 Mbps (that's millions of bits per second, and remember,
  there are 8 bits per byte if you want to translate to bytes per
  second). In comparison, the Mac's serial ports max out at 230.4
  Kbps, and ADB at just over 1 Kbps. Devices like keyboards and mice
  will use the slower speed; devices like Zip drives, printers, and
  scanners will use the faster speed. Both speeds can be connected
  to a single USB bus.

  Ah, the bus. The term conjures images of the Apple Desktop Bus
  (ADB), Apple's standard way of connecting input devices to the
  computer, with its easy daisy-chaining. USB doesn't support daisy-
  chaining in the same way. Each USB port can host one and only one
  peripheral. However, that peripheral can be a device called a
  _hub_, which provides additional USB ports for more devices. Up to
  127 devices can be connected to a single USB port using a
  collection of hubs. (Theoretically, a device could incorporate a
  "single-port hub" for daisy-chaining, but this isn't likely in the
  price-conscious PC market.)

  Like ADB devices, USB devices can draw power directly from the
  bus, within limits. If you have many power-hungry USB devices,
  you'll want a powered hub to provide current for them. (The
  serious power hogs - things with moving parts and motors, like
  printers and scanners - will have their own power supplies and
  won't rely on the USB for power.)


**USB Devices** -- What kinds of devices will be available? Input
  devices, obviously: keyboards, mice, graphic tablets, joysticks,
  and so on. Anything that typically hangs off a PC parallel port is
  also fair game, which means we'll probably see USB Zip drives and
  other relatively slow mass storage devices (in fact, Imation and
  Panasonic have already announced a USB version of their LS-120
  SuperDisk drive, which reads both 120 MB and 1.44 MB disks). Other
  USB candidates include tape drives, scanners, digital still
  cameras, modems, and printers. Newer Technology has also announced
  plans to create a USB-based floppy drive, specifically for the
  iMac. Many cable modems and ADSL adapters operate within the
  bandwidth of USB, so we might see those kinds of devices as well.
  The 12 Mbps variant of USB is faster than standard 10 Mbps
  Ethernet.

  Although there will undoubtedly be USB Zip drives (or similar
  cartridge-type drives like the LS-120), don't expect decent
  performance from hard disks attached to the USB. Though a USB Zip
  drive will probably be faster than the PC parallel port version,
  and more than adequate for the kind of exercise a consumer is
  likely to give such a peripheral, SCSI is still faster. Even the
  slowest version of SCSI has a raw throughput of 5 MB per second,
  more than 3 times faster than USB, and the newer Ultra/Wide SCSI
  III can reach 40 MB per second. For hard disks and digital video
  cameras, you'll still want SCSI, or the ultra-high-speed serial
  port dubbed FireWire, which is yet another topic.


**USB and the Mac** -- How do Mac users benefit from USB? The
  obvious answer is that we can tap into the competitive jungle that
  is the PC marketplace. Before long, you'll be able to buy $15
  keyboards just like your PC-using friends. (Of course, they'll be
  PC keyboards, but they'll work on your Mac.) Each USB device
  identifies itself through a generic "type" ("I'm a keyboard," "I'm
  a mouse," "I'm a Reality Distortion Field generator"), and a
  USB-compatible Mac will have a USB Manager with built-in drivers
  that let it talk to many devices in at least a minimal way. You'll
  need Mac-specific drivers to take full advantage of many
  peripherals, but it's a lot cheaper for manufacturers to create an
  extra piece of software than to make both a parallel port and a
  SCSI version of a removable-media disk drive for different
  markets. PC Cards work in much the same way now - the standard PC
  Card modem drivers work with almost any PC Card modem, but more
  specialized PC Cards require custom drivers. A few manufacturers
  have already announced Mac support for their USB peripherals. If
  the iMac takes off as retailers expect it to, many more
  manufacturers should follow suit.

  USB has faced an uphill battle in the Windows world because of
  drivers. One of the primary reasons for the success of Windows
  over the years is that Microsoft includes a vast collection of
  drivers for different hardware devices with Windows itself,
  reducing installation difficulty and conflicts. However, since USB
  came out after Windows 95, drivers have all been provided by the
  individual USB peripheral developers, resulting in chaos. The
  just-released Windows 98 includes better USB support, so there's
  hope that the field will settle down. Apple's strategy of
  including drivers for common types of USB devices may make USB far
  more coherent on the Mac.

  The iMac's keyboard, by the way, has a built-in two-port hub, so
  you can attach one additional device besides the mouse. The iMac
  itself has two independent USB ports (each with its own 12 Mbps
  bandwidth), which means that the stock iMac supports two
  additional USB peripherals (along with a mouse and keyboard), one
  connected directly to the computer and the second connected to the
  keyboard. If you need more USB ports, 4-port hubs run about $100
  right now, but some observers expect them to fall to the $50 range
  as USB catches on, much as happened with Ethernet hubs.

  Along with Newer Technology's announced plans to create a USB-to-
  serial converter, the rumor mill is hinting that at least one
  manufacturer will introduce a USB peripheral that will provide
  "old-style" Mac serial, ADB, and (really slow) SCSI ports, so
  users who move to an iMac from an older Mac can take at least
  their old printers and modems with them and hook up their old hard
  disks long enough to copy all their data over. An iMac with such
  an adapter and an ADB credit-card reader and barcode scanner would
  make a groovy-looking point-of-sale terminal (at least until there
  are Mac-compatible USB versions of these peripherals). Though it's
  never a good idea to put faith in rumors, this seems like an
  obvious product, if it can be produced at a reasonable price.
  Don't expect total software compatibility, though, as some
  software products unreasonably assume that no characteristics of
  serial ports ever change.

  You can find out more about USB from a Web site operated by a USB
  industry consortium, and see what kinds of peripherals are
  available by visiting USB Stuff, a retailer of USB peripherals.
  Finally, MacInTouch has collected a variety of bits of information
  about USB contributed by readers.

<http://www.usb.org/>
<http://www.usbstuff.com/>
<http://www.macintouch.com/usb.html>


  [This article is reprinted and updated with permission from MWJ,
  the Weekly Journal for Serious Macintosh Users. If you can't get
  enough insightful Macintosh news, sign up for a free, no-
  obligation, two-issue trial subscription to MWJ, or download some
  of the free sample articles. For more information, see the MWJ Web
  site.]

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


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