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- Usenet Mac Digest Sunday, January 1, 1989 Volume 5 : Issue 1
-
- From: alexis@ccnysci.UUCP (Alexis Rosen)
- Subject: Macintosh Business Conference & Expo- a somewhat belated review
- Date: 23 Dec 88 08:03:40 GMT
- Organization: City College of New York
-
- Five weeks ago I attended the Mac Business Conference & Expo in Anaheim.
- I haven't seen anything about this show on the net so I though I'd post
- my own review.
-
- The show was very different from MacWorld Expos. Fewer people, fewer
- exhibitors. The Party Line is that those fewer people were 'quality'
- people. Maybe they were. There were more suits, fewer t-shirts. More
- marketing types, fewer hackers. The tone of the show was every bit as
- businesslike as the name would suggest.
-
- My initial impression was that the show was dead, an absolute disaster.
- After more thought, though, I remembered the first MacWorld shows. There
- weren't too many people there either. So I hope that by next year (the
- next MBC&E show is in April, in New York) they will pick up their
- attendance figures and get a slightly more lively show. There are
- certainly many advantages over the MacWorld zoo. The convention
- organizers treated their exhibitors, speakers, and attendees with
- respect. This is a marked change from the Mitch Hall treat-'em-like-
- animals attitude.
-
- One other major difference between the two shows is the series of half-
- and full-day conferences run concurrently with the MBC&E. They were
- well-run and well-received. I talked to a number of people who attended
- and they were all glad to have been there.
-
-
- There were no really major new products on display, but some recently
- released (or recently announced) programs generated a lot of interest.
- The following are some of my favorites:
-
- 1) Timbuktu and Timbuktu Remote, from Farallon Computing
-
- This is a very elegant piece of software. It allows any Mac on a
- network to show exactly what any other Mac is doing and control the
- remote Macintosh. It will do the intelligent thing when dealing with
- screens that are larger, smaller, or have a different number of bits per
- pixel than your own. The Remote version is optimized for use with a
- modem. There are a variety of security options- you can allow others to
- control your machine, you can let them view it without any control, or
- you can lock them out entirely.
-
- There are many uses for this kind of product. I will be using it in my
- consulting business, to avoid the expense of trips to my clients' sites
- every time they have a support question. I can have them set up Timbuktu
- on the offending machine, and watch what they are doing via modem. In
- many cases, I won't have to go on-site to solve the difficulty. This is
- especially useful when my clients are in a different state. One
- round-trip ticket saved (not to mention travel time saved) will fully
- pay for the cost of the software and a pair of modems to run it on!
-
- Local user support in a corporate environment will also be much easier
- with this product, for the same reason. Computer workshops will find
- some instruction much easier- you can look at the screen in front of you
- and see the teacher do what he is discussing, rather than squint at a
- poorly-focused projection on a screen thirty feet away.
-
- Timbuktu is also good for other tasks. If you want to share a modem
- these days, there are a variety of modem servers on the market. But many
- more expensive, less common peripherals cannot yet be shared in that
- way. For example, you can't yet serve a 3270-style mainframe connection
- (such as the MacIrma boards) over an AppleTalk network. But if you have
- a dozen or twenty people, each of whom needs occasional access for file
- transfer (or other tasks), you can set up one Mac with the board and
- have it run Timbuktu. Then anyone who wants to connect to the mainframe
- can take control of that mac and use it to talk to the mainframe. This
- same approach will work with nearly any expensive, non-shareable
- peripheral. It's a little less automatic and elegant than a dedicated
- peripheral server, but it works well, and it exists now.
-
-
- 2) Perfect Timing, from Imagine Software
-
- I have mentioned this product in the past. It is much closer to
- completion now, and should be ready to ship at the next MacWorld. It is
- a well- designed multi-user calendar and scheduling system. It runs on
- any AppleTalk network, and it doesn't need any other software (like
- Tops).
-
- Imagine was the distributor, until a month ago, of Smart Alarms, an
- invaluable DA/Init. Now that they have Perfect Timing, Smart Alarms is
- being marketed by Jam Software.
-
- For more information on Perfect Timing, look in the net archives for
- my second MacWorld Expo review.
-
-
- 3) QuickMail to Unix Mail bridge, from StarNine
-
- This wasn't really a major hit, but it's highly interesting to many
- people on the net... This is a genuine working mail bridge. It works
- nicely, and does what you would expect. It was shown running on A/UX and
- will also run on Suns. There isn't much else to say about it... Starnine
- has a usenet address; inquiries can go to uunet!starnine!mcgee. By the
- way, the node 'starnine' is a Mac II running A/UX.
-
-
- 4) Oracle for the Macintosh, from Oracle
-
- I was very skeptical when I first heard about this program. Running
- a relational DBMS through HyperCard seemed a little silly to me. I have
- since changed my mind. Oracle will definitely NOT be for everybody, but
- it's perfect for a variety of EIS systems. If corporate MIS takes off
- the blinders for just long enough to see it in action, they'll be sold.
-
- The Oracle HyperCard interface's strength is in consolidating lots
- of information from a variety of (computer) sources, using SQL, to
- produce a few facts which are really important. It would be less useful
- for presenting massive amounts of data, since HyperCard itself is not
- suited to that too well.
-
- In addition to the impressive HyperCard interface, there is a report
- generator, a C subroutine library, a single-user database engine, and
- some other stuff as well.
-
- Since the show I have been waiting to hear that Oracle shipped. As
- of Early December, they still have not. I don't know why they've slipped
- so badly, but that's nothing new in the Mac market. I hope they get it
- out soon. (The latest word is that they will ship Dec. 29. We'll see.)
-
- And now, my award for least exciting product of the century: the
- Macintosh IIx. There was one of these sickly excuses for an innovation
- in the Apple booth. Nobody noticed.
-
- The award for worst speaker goes to Allen Loren, Apple's president. His
- Keynote session was the only one to fill the majority of the seats in
- the main hall, and it was really very bad. He was utterly uninspiring
- and said very little. In fact the only thing I came away with was the
- conviction that he had absolutely no technological vision whatsoever. In
- fact, I know he's not nearly as bad as that... but you wouldn't know it
- from his speech.
-
- The award for best party goes to Fred Davis at MacUser. For the little
- one after the big one. Not too loud, not too crazy, not too many people,
- but the right ones. After the first day, who's got the energy to shout
- at the top of his lungs just to be heard? And who wants to make like a
- Sherman tank just to get to the food before it's gone?
-
- --
- Alexis Rosen
- alexis@ccnysci.{UUCP,BITNET}
- ------------------------------