TidBITS#528/24-Apr-00
=====================

  Want to fight back against spam? Depending on where you live, you
  may be able to sue spammers for filling up your mailbox. Brady
  Johnson begins a multi-part article about the legal reactions to
  spam in the United States. Also in this issue, Jeff Carlson
  explains how he transitioned from Emailer to Eudora, and we note
  Apple's second-quarter profits and the releases of FileMaker
  Developer 5 and REALbasic 2.1. Test your Macintosh knowledge with
  this week's quiz!

Topics:
    MailBITS/24-Apr-00
    Email Spam: The Bandwagon Plays On
    Switching from Emailer to Eudora in Leaps and Bounds

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-528.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2000/TidBITS#528_24-Apr-00.etx>

Copyright 2000 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
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   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/24-Apr-00
------------------

**Apple Announces $233 Million Profit and 2-for-1 Split** -- Last
  week, Apple Computer announced a $233 million profit for its
  second fiscal quarter of the year. Although the results contain a
  $73 million gain from continued sales of ARM Holdings, plc.,
  revenues for the quarter were up 27 percent from the same quarter
  last year, and gross margins were up to 28.2 percent. Apple moved
  over one million units, and international sales continued to
  account for just over half of Apple's total revenue. In addition,
  Apple's Board of Directors has approved a two-for-one split of
  Apple's common stock, effective 21-Jun-00. Apple's stock has been
  over $100 per share for most of the calendar year 2000; Apple's
  last stock split was in 1987. [GD]

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2000/apr/19q2results.html>


**REALbasic 2.1 Available** -- REAL Software has released
  REALbasic 2.1, an update to its popular BASIC-derived programming
  environment for the Macintosh. (See "REALbasic 2.0 Gets Real" in
  TidBITS-493_ for an overview of version 2.0.) The latest update
  provides extensive improvements for compiling REALbasic projects
  for Windows, improves both performance and database access, and
  fixes a number of bugs. Version 2.1 is a free update for
  registered users of REALbasic 2.0. REALbasic Standard Edition is
  $150; the Professional Edition is $350 and offers enhanced
  database support and the capability of compiling for Windows.
  (Volume and academic discounts are available.) You can also
  download REALbasic (2.7 MB), and it will function as a demo for 30
  days. [GD]

<http://www.realbasic.com/realbasic/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05508>


**FileMaker Developer 5 Ships** -- FileMaker Inc. has released
  FileMaker Developer 5, a collection of tools, utilities, and
  documentation enabling the creation of stand-alone databases and
  customized Web publishing solutions. FileMaker Developer 5 retains
  the capability in previous developer editions to create customized
  stand-alone database applications for Macintosh or Windows
  systems, although (as in FileMaker Pro 4.0 Developer Edition)
  these solutions lack FileMaker's database sharing capabilities.
  FileMaker Developer 5 comes with JBDC and ODBC drivers (for
  connecting to FileMaker data over a network) and documents
  FileMaker Pro 5's JBDC, ODBC, and plug-in capabilities for
  developers looking to integrate products with FileMaker Pro 5 or
  extend its features. Publishing databases to the Web using
  anything but FileMaker Pro 5's Instant Web Publishing apparently
  also qualifies you as a developer in FileMaker's eyes: FileMaker
  Developer 5 documents XML and custom database publishing
  capabilities built into every copy of FileMaker Pro 5 and
  FileMaker Pro 5 Unlimited. Excerpts regarding XML publishing are
  available for free via the Web, and hints of additions to
  FileMaker's CDML capabilities can be found in FileMaker's TechInfo
  articles if one looks very carefully. FileMaker Developer 5 is
  $500 and includes FileMaker Pro 5; owners of FileMaker Pro 4.0
  Developer Edition are eligible for a $100 rebate. [GD]

<http://www.filemaker.com/products/fmd_home.html>
<http://www.filemaker.com/xml/>


**Poll Results: TidBITS is Ten!** Almost 1,400 people participated
  in last week's poll asking when you started reading TidBITS, and
  it took a few days for me to figure out why 1993, 1994, and 1995
  were the most popular answers. Then I realized that those years
  corresponded with the heyday of my Internet Starter Kit for
  Macintosh books, which talked only a little about TidBITS but
  included it as the example of how to subscribe to a mailing list.
  For the full results, check out the poll link below. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=37>
<http://www.tidbits.com/iskm/>


**Quiz Preview: Eject This!** It's time to take a break from polls
  and test your knowledge of the Macintosh again. The question on
  our home page this week is, "What do you hold down at startup to
  eject removable media?" You can choose from among eight answers,
  and if you submit an answer to the quiz, we'll tell you not only
  which answer is correct, but also what happens with all of the
  incorrect answers. So even if you're sure you know the answer, you
  might learn something: we certainly did while putting together the
  quiz! [ACE]

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


Email Spam: The Bandwagon Plays On
----------------------------------
  by Brady R. Johnson <brady@seanet.com>

  As the Internet has evolved to provide ever more opportunities to
  separate fools from their money, the number of people trying to do
  just that has also increased. It was not always this way. Many
  years ago when I had my first AOL account, I never received a
  single piece of unwanted email. When I last tried AOL I received
  over 20 unwanted solicitations every day, even though I never used
  the account for email.

  What happened? Can we go back to those halcyon days of yore? Can
  we stop the deluge of unsolicited commercial email, also known as
  "spam?"

  "What happened?" is an easy question to answer. More ordinary
  people began using the Internet. A few brave souls took the risk
  of using the new medium to hawk their wares and some appeared to
  become fabulously successful - though that appearance seldom
  matched the reality. Others wanted to get in on the action and get
  rich quick. Junk email was born, grew, and proliferated like a
  runaway cancer.

  Can we go back to the halcyon days of yore? No. You can't go home
  again, you can't put the genie back in the bottle, and you can't
  stop folks from trying to sell you things you don't want.

  Can we stop the deluge? We can do some things to make spam more
  tolerable. We can report spam, which requires technical know-how
  and a bit of work every each time you're targeted. We can also
  look for legislative solutions. Back in NetBITS-005_, I pointed
  out that once we turn to the government to help us deal with the
  undesirable elements on the Internet, we open the door to
  (shudder) regulation of the Internet. That is exactly what is
  happening across the U.S. with spam - it is being regulated by an
  increasing number of states, and Congress is actively considering
  enacting federal legislation to address the subject.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05032>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?nbart=04474>

  We have now entered an era where many believe it is more desirable
  to have the government tell us what we can and cannot send across
  the Internet than to deal with the problems caused by unrestricted
  Internet use.


**The Problem** -- In 1997 there were no state or federal statutes
  in the United States that specifically addressed email or Internet
  advertising. Since that time several states have enacted statutes,
  and others have established commissions to study the issue and
  make recommendations to state legislatures. On the federal level,
  the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has completed two studies on
  Internet email and marketing; these studies concluded that a
  serious problem exists and will increase with Internet use.
  Congress has considered multiple bills addressing the issue;
  although none have passed yet, it is likely only a matter of time
  before Congress presents a bill to the President for signature.
  The FTC reports are available online; see "Protecting Consumers
  Online," 21-Dec-99, and "Report to the Federal Trade Commission of
  the Ad-Hoc Working Group on Unsolicited Commercial Email," 1997.

<http://www.ftc.gov/opa/1999/9912/fiveyearreport.htm>
<http://www.cdt.org/spam/>

  The problem addressed by the FTC, Congress, and the state
  legislatures is known colloquially as "spam." It is known more
  formally as "unsolicited commercial email," or UCE. UCE generally
  takes the form of an advertisement for a service or product that
  is sent to Internet users just as flyers, coupons, and other
  solicitations are sent to regular postal customers. To spammers,
  email offers a way to target thousands or even millions of
  potential customers at virtually no cost. The spammer needs only a
  computer and an email account. With those tools, he can prepare a
  single solicitation and email it to dozens, hundreds, or thousands
  of people at a time by using a list of email addresses gathered
  from a variety of public sources, such as Usenet news and links on
  Web pages.

  As personal use of the Internet increased, so did the number of
  people using email to advertise their products and services. Many
  users didn't like receiving these solicitations, particularly
  since a large number offer things such as pornography, sexual
  aids, and other items that many people find offensive. The
  recipients then responded with torrents of complaints directed
  back to the spammers, who rapidly found their own email accounts
  filling up not with orders, but with complaints and demands to
  stop sending solicitations. Most spammers therefore began to
  conceal their own email address, instead including phone numbers
  or obfuscated links to Web sites where the user could place an
  order.

  UCE is different from postal "junk mail" in one important way:
  When a seller sends a flyer, he must pay for the paper, printing,
  envelope, and postage for each item (a real cost, even considering
  the significant discounts for bulk postal mail). By contrast, when
  a spammer sends a thousand email solicitations, he pays virtually
  nothing. The recipients, however, do pay for their Internet
  accounts based either on time spent online or amount of data
  transferred. Even users with flat-rate pricing pay for spam: their
  fees are based on estimates of the resources users will consume,
  so although spam may not result in direct additional costs to the
  user, it could cause flat-rate pricing to increase across the
  board. Either way, the user pays the cost of the UCE. According to
  1998 estimates in the report to the FTC (see above), users were
  paying up to $2.00 per month just for UCE, in addition to the time
  spent replying to or deleting unwanted messages, or reporting
  abuses. Internet service providers (ISPs) were dedicating
  increasing amounts of resources and time addressing customer
  complaints. In addition, the UCE was taking up disk space on the
  ISP servers - sometimes to the point of forcing the server to shut
  down until the UCE was cleared out.


**Stamping Out Spam** -- Now that we know the problem, what can be
  done about it? In the next part of this article, we'll look at the
  myriad solutions proposed at the state and federal levels, and why
  government intervention may not be a panacea for the spam problem.


Switching from Emailer to Eudora in Leaps and Bounds
----------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  Earlier this year, I took a deep breath and changed my primary
  email application from Claris Emailer to Eudora. Normally, jumping
  from one application to another is no big deal. Most people have
  little trouble switching between Nisus Writer and Word, for
  example. However, when email is the backbone of your professional
  (and sometimes personal) life, the stakes run higher. The fact
  that the two programs' methods of storing and handling mail data
  differ widely made the jump seem more like a leap. Fortunately, a
  few outside tools and perseverance turned this email chasm into a
  minor canyon.


**Shuffling Off Emailer's Coil** -- Why did I switch, when Emailer
  is still a perfectly usable email program? Several factors
  convinced me it was time.

* Although I could continue using Emailer (as many people do),
  it's clear there's no future for the program. The last update,
  version 2.0v3, was released at the beginning of 1998, but isn't
  currently available even from Apple's servers. I'm not concerned
  that there's no support for the program, but at some point in the
  future, something in an update to the Mac OS will break Emailer.
  The Mac OS's backward compatibility with older software is
  generally astounding - and plenty of TidBITS readers use older
  programs regularly - but my email is too important for me to risk.
  Quite simply, email has become my life. I use it to communicate
  with people, yes, but it's also my unofficial to-do list and
  archive of information.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04723>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=32>

* Although there are many other email programs available (I was
  surprised at how robust Outlook Express appears to be), Eudora was
  really my only choice. In addition to its being a professional
  email client, I have direct access to help from Adam and Geoff,
  who have been using Eudora since its early days; Adam in
  particular is a well-known expert on the program, having written a
  pair of books about Eudora.

<http://www.eudora.com/>
<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/oe/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/eudora/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1147>

* I was threatened with virtual harm by all of my fellow TidBITS
  editors, who relentlessly pushed Eudora's real and imagined
  benefits. (Adam: "You need to mow your lawn? I think there's an
  <x-eudora-setting> that will do the trick.") To be fair, we rely
  on email so heavily for the basic operation of TidBITS that
  Emailer's limitations occasionally caused significant annoyances
  or liabilities for everyone else in the organization.

  Unlike upgrading to a new version of the same software, changing
  email programs required more work than I expected. On the surface,
  it's an easy task: I needed to move my existing mail to Eudora,
  and convert my address book without re-entering the addresses by
  hand. However, Emailer's method of storing both sets of data
  differs from Eudora's, and Eudora doesn't offer any method of
  converting or importing mail from other platforms. Outside help
  was required.


**Passing the Mailbag** -- The great thing about email is that
  it's a text-only medium. For the most part, a message sent from
  one email program can be read by any other email program. The
  problem lies in how the programs store and read the mail. Emailer
  stores all its messages in one large database file (with a
  companion index file that keeps track of the messages). Eudora, on
  the other hand, creates a separate file for each mailbox. Eudora
  mailboxes are plain text files; you can open them in a text editor
  or word processor and read all the messages if you want.

  To extract mail from Emailer's database, I employed the "Export -
  Eudora" AppleScript script, part of the Import/Export 3.1 package
  found at Fog City's Emailer Utilities page (Fog City is the
  original developer of Emailer). To create a new Eudora mailbox, I
  selected all messages in an Emailer folder then chose Export -
  Eudora from the AppleScript menu. This script's advantage is that
  it creates a mailbox file that can be opened immediately in
  Eudora. However, converting thousands of messages was time-
  consuming, compounded by the fact that the script had a tendency
  to lock up my machine occasionally until it timed out.

<http://www.fogcity.com/em_utilities2.0.html>

  Still, the process worked reliably, and it also gave me a chance
  to sort through my Emailer folders and determine which messages
  needed to go to Eudora or be stored as a long-term archive.
  Getting the new mailboxes into Eudora was simply a matter of
  moving the files into the Mail Folder located in the Eudora folder
  in the System folder, then launching Eudora.


**Nicknames for Everyone** -- Converting my email addresses was
  more of a one-shot event, though it required some initial setup.
  Although Emailer includes a command to export addresses to a
  tab-delimited file, getting them into Eudora is another matter.
  AppleScript again made my day. I consulted the eMailman Conversion
  page on the Web (which contains a variety of resources for
  converting between email programs - highly recommended) and found
  the script Emailer2Eudora, by Diana Cassady of VivaLaData.

<http://www.emailman.com/conversion/>
<http://www.vivaladata.com/>

  Before running Emailer2Eudora, you need to download and install
  two other AppleScript components: the shareware Acme Script
  Widgets by Acme Technologies, and File I/O, available at
  ScriptWeb. These go into the Scripting Additions folder in your
  Extensions folder.

<http://www.acmetech.com/>
<http://www.scriptweb.com/>

  With the pieces in place, I exported my Emailer addresses to a
  tab-delimited text file and dropped the file onto the
  Emailer2Eudora program icon in the Finder. One problem I
  encountered at this stage turned out to be helpful: some of my
  addresses included older entries with garbled addresses, which
  caused Eudora to display a dialog box during the import process.
  To remove them after importing, I only had to scroll through the
  Address Book list in Eudora and delete the offending records.

  The only other annoyance I ran into was that the nickname portion
  of each address, which is created based on the Name field in
  Emailer, ended up inverted. So, Geoff Duncan's nickname became
  "Duncan, Geoff." I'm sure there's an easy way to reverse these in
  the Eudora Nicknames file (which is just a text file, like
  everything else in Eudora) using a text editor and a good grep
  search, but I've coped by manually changing the nicknames as I
  come across them.


**Miscellaneous Adjustments** -- With my mail and addresses safely
  switched over, I was able to start adjusting to Eudora on a day-
  to-day basis. I had become used to Emailer's split-pane interface,
  which lists folders in the left pane and messages in the right
  pane. I like being able to access folders visually, so in Eudora
  I've displayed the Mailboxes window in a long column on the left
  side of my screen, with my In box to its immediate right.

  However, I've never liked the split-pane approach to viewing
  messages, so my In box is strictly a window containing a standard
  tabular summary of messages; I prefer to open a message in its own
  window. The exception is when I'm searching through other
  mailboxes, where viewing the body of a message in a bottom pane
  makes it easier to scan.

  Another adjustment required changing the way new messages are
  listed in the In box. In Emailer, my new mail appeared at the top
  of the list; Eudora's default is to list them at the bottom. Since
  I already feel like I'm buried under the weight of my email
  sometimes, I Option-clicked the Date column header to reorder the
  messages like Emailer (Option-clicking a mailbox's column header
  in Eudora sorts the contents of that mailbox in descending rather
  than ascending order).

  And, although I generally dislike toolbars, being able to
  customize Eudora's toolbar has enabled me to create buttons that
  provide quick access to a handful of mailboxes and commands (such
  as the Settings dialog box and toggles for marking messages read
  and unread).

  Overall, I haven't regretted the switch from Emailer: my mail is
  still easily accessible and I'm able to communicate as well as or
  better than before. There are several things about Eudora, though,
  that have truly streamlined or improved the way I work with email.


**Breaking Up the Post Office** -- At the top of the list is the
  way Eudora stores mail data. Emailer 2.0's single-file mail
  database was superior to Emailer 1.0's method of storing each
  message as a separate file, but it ended up being a large bull in
  a small china shop. Synchronizing Emailer's mail database to
  another computer or backing it up to DAT tape meant copying my
  entire 87 MB mail database, even if only a single message had
  changed. In Eudora, only changed mailboxes are copied, speeding up
  the process.

  Emailer 2.0's single mail database file made searching faster than
  Emailer 1.0, but still didn't pass my coffee test when searching
  through all folders: I could start a search, go make coffee, and
  view the results (hopefully) by the time I returned. In Eudora,
  searches are blindingly fast, despite the fact that Eudora uses
  plain text files for storage and doesn't index the contents! I'm
  still amazed when it takes less than a minute to search through
  all of my active mailboxes.

  Having multiple mailbox files also makes archiving old mail much
  easier. In Emailer, I'd set aside a block of time to run the
  "Export - Eudora" script on folders I wanted to archive, then
  delete those messages. Now, archiving a mailbox is as simple as
  quitting Eudora, moving the mailbox file to another location, and
  launching Eudora again. And since Eudora is fully Alias Manager-
  savvy, I can still have quick access to my archives without adding
  to the burden of the mail files in my Eudora Folder. If I put an
  alias to the archive in with the rest of the mailboxes, I've added
  only an entry in my Mailbox and Transfer menus.


**I Respect Your Style** -- I'll grudgingly admit that Eudora's
  capability to display styled email and inline images has been
  useful on occasion. As more email clients let their owners apply
  text styles like bold and italics (not to mention other HTML-based
  formatting), I'm glad that Eudora formats it properly so I don't
  have to wade through the HTML tags as I did in Emailer.

  Even better, I can set Eudora to ignore specific styles in the
  Styled Text settings panel. I don't mind the occasional bold or
  underlined word, but I'd rather not put up with email that uses
  huge font sizes or ugly fonts - so I just told Eudora to ignore
  font and size styles in incoming messages.

  Except on rare occasions (such as when I'm sending an inline image
  to someone whom I know also uses Eudora), I avoid sending styled
  mail entirely. Eudora helps my in my quest to keep my mail free of
  styles by asking if I want to send mail as plain text when I queue
  a message containing some sort of styles. And by selecting "Send
  plain text mail only" and the "Ask me each time" checkbox in the
  Styled Mail settings panel, Eudora's prompt when I queue a message
  with styled text comes up with Plain Only as the default so I can
  just hit Return to strip any styles automatically.


**Added Touches** -- Other details make Eudora a joy to use. I
  constantly Option-click portions of messages in their mailbox
  listing, which groups similar messages. For example, Option-
  clicking the sender field of a message summary in my TidBITS Talk
  mailbox groups and highlights all messages from that person. The
  same works for grouping subjects as well, of course, but it's not
  necessary in mailboxes that hold mailing lists, since for those I
  just use the Group Subjects option in the Special menu's
  hierarchical Sort submenu.

  And although I don't use the feature often, scheduling outgoing
  messages has been helpful. If I've written a sane reply to a
  heated piece of flame mail, I can set the message to go out at the
  end of the day (or even the middle of the night) when my recipient
  hopefully has a cooler head.


**What's Missing from Eudora** -- I'm sticking with Eudora, no
  doubt about it, but several things continue to bug me. My number
  one wish list item is to be able to file messages using the
  keyboard. In Emailer, all you have to do is highlight a message,
  press Command-Option-F, then begin typing the name of the folder
  where you want the mail to be filed and hit Return. Eudora, on the
  other hand, is annoyingly menu- and mouse-dependent in this
  respect, requiring a trip to the Transfer menu (or to a toolbar
  button) to file each message. Although I'm sure workarounds could
  be built using utilities like OneClick or QuicKeys, an easier way
  to file mail without moving my fingers from the keyboard would be
  a welcome future feature.

  Then there are smaller items that I bump against every day. I do
  more mail filtering now (though I can't tell if that's because
  Eudora's filters seem more flexible than Emailer's Mail Actions,
  or if it's because I'm more savvy about filtering my mail), and so
  I like Eudora's Filter Report window that tells me where filtered
  mail has been automatically filed. Eudora 4.3 added the capability
  to double-click the mailbox name in a filter report to open that
  mailbox, which is a nice touch. However, the window pops to the
  front after it's been updated, which is most annoying. When I'm in
  the middle of typing a new message and get an error telling me I
  can't enter text in the Filter Report window; swearing ensues.

  For that matter, if I'm anywhere in the program and accidentally
  start typing in a window where new text isn't allowed (like an
  incoming message that doesn't have the editing pencil icon
  clicked), Eudora pops up a dialog box. I have to stop, click the
  OK button to dismiss the box, then return. A simple error beep
  would suffice.


**Jumping for Joy** -- I had expected a much more difficult time
  making the leap from Emailer to Eudora, though that was probably
  due to my overall reliance on email. Now that I'm becoming an
  entrenched Eudora user, will I ever be tempted to jump again to
  another program? For the near future, I don't think so. Eudora
  truly is the professional's choice of email programs. And besides,
  I think the other TidBITS editors would sooner nail my feet to the
  floor if it resulted in the loss of features we've come to expect
  in our internal email.



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