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- Date: Sun, 27 Dec 1992 12:16:42 EST
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- From: Murph Sewall <Sewall@UCONNVM.UCONN.EDU>
- Subject: Murph's VAPORWARE Column for January 1993
- Lines: 255
-
- VAPORWARE
- Murphy Sewall
- From the January 1993 APPLE PULP
- H.U.G.E. Apple Club (E. Hartford) News Letter
- $24/year
- P.O. Box 380027
- East Hartford, CT 06138-0027
- Call the "Bit Bucket" (203) 257-9588
- Permission granted to redistribute with the above citation
-
- Feature Wars.
- PC prices can't go much lower, so IBM, Compaq, Gateway, NCR, Unisys and
- others are switching to a strategy of adding more features without
- raising prices. Coming soon: low-price systems with integrated graphics
- accelerators, faster processors, and modular upgradeability. Later this
- year, standard features may include sound cards, built-in CD ROM, and
- Ethernet. - PC Week 14 December
-
- Novell Finder.
- Apple and Novell have concluded a deal to bring the MacOS's Finder and
- file management software to NetWare and DR DOS. The agreement will
- provide NetWare users with a friendlier environment and Macintosh users
- with full access to NetWare services. Novell is vigorously denying a
- rumor that a merger with Apple is contemplated.
- - PC Week and InfoWorld 14 December
-
- Ad Hoc Wireless Networks.
- Look for a March debut of a battery powered, wireless AppleTalk
- transceiver named Grouper from Digital Ocean, an Overland Park, Kansas
- startup. The $450 wedge-shaped device can be affixed to the bottom of a
- PowerBook and will operate for about three hours. Grouper can be
- recharged with a PowerBook battery recharger. Four separate
- spread-spectrum channels can each communicate with up to fourteen other
- AppleTalk devices within a 250 foot radius. Digital Ocean says the
- signal will even penetrate steel reinforced concrete.
- - MacWeek 14 December
-
- Next Generation Disk Drives.
- Two new data storage technologies, "wet" disks and glass disks, are seen
- by drive makers as offering greater capacities, faster access speeds,
- and lower costs per megabyte. Both technologies permit the drive head
- to operate closer to the platter which allows data to be written more
- densely. A few manufacturers already offer special purpose drives using
- glass disks and Conner expects to ship a 2.5 inch wet disk for laptop
- computers to manufacturers early this year. - PC Week 14 December
-
- MacOS Add-ons.
- A Macintosh extension to simplify format translation between programs
- and operating systems will be in the hands of developers this month.
- Neither a public release date nor method of distribution has been
- decided. Easy Open, formerly known as the Translation Manager, is a
- system level implementation of the XTND technology originally developed
- by Apple's Claris subsidiary. One of the nicer features: when an
- attempt is made to open a document created by an application the user
- doesn't own, a dialog box opens with a list of all applications the user
- does own that are capable of reading (directly or through translation)
- the document. AppleScript should ship this quarter with OCE (Open
- Collaboration Environment) arriving in six to nine months.
- - MacWeek 7 and 14 December
-
- PC OS Enhancements.
- OS/2 2.1 with Windows 3.1 support should be available at retail this
- month. Beta versions of IBM's Workplase OS microkernel should be in
- developers' hands before April Fool's Day. By midyear, Microsoft will
- ship DOS 6.0 with an integrated set of menu-driven graphical utilities.
- Anti-virus, data compression, and better memory management providing
- access to an additional 200K of main memory are among the new features.
- - PC Week 14 December
-
- PowerStation in Your Lap.
- IBM is negotiating with SPARC notebook maker Tadpole Technology to
- develop the first PowerPC notebook computer. The Tadpole model will not
- wait for the energy conserving PowerPC 603. It will be based on the
- initial PowerPC 601 and run IBM's Unix variant, AIX. Introduction is
- envisioned by the first half of 1994. IBM plans to purchase a minority
- interest in Tadpole. - PC Week and InfoWorld 7 December
-
- PowerPC Acceleration.
- Apple's "A-list" developers have been seeded with NuBus boards
- containing early samples of the PowerPC. Apple's plan is to have a half
- dozen to a dozen native PowerPC applications ready to ship when the
- first PowerMac ships at year's end, but one source reports that two key
- engineers working on Apple's PowerPC development team have been hired
- away by a multimedia developer. Replacing this talent may delay Apple's
- next generation rollout - PC Week 7 December and MacWeek 14 December
-
- Longhand.
- Lexicus of Palo Alto plans to release handwriting recognition software
- for PenPoint and PenWindows computers in March. Lexicus's Longhand uses
- pattern matching algorithms and a 25,000 word dictionary to interpret
- users' cursive and printed handwriting. The program will work with most
- applications running on pen-based hardware. - PC Week 7 December
-
- Full-Screen, Full-Motion.
- Radius's $3,999 (specially reduced from $4,000) DigitalMedia Studio
- should ship by March. The new product is based on the company's
- VideoVision with the addition of a C-Cube Microsystems video compression
- chip. The DigitalMedia system will deliver 30 frames per second at 640
- by 480 (NTSC) or 768 by 576 (PAL). - MacWeek 14 December
-
- Faster Vaporware.
- Even though DEC's desktop Alpha operating system (Windows NT) remains
- vaporware (and Microsoft is the company that knows vaporware best),
- manufacturing efficiencies are expected to make it possible to introduce
- a 200 MHz version of the CPU early in the year, six months ahead of the
- original schedule. DEC expects to double the performance of Alpha by
- spring 1994. - PC Week 7 December
-
- Pentium Specific Applications.
- By the time DEC has an operating system for its Alpha PC, Intel's
- Pentium may be too entrenched in the marketplace to overtake. When the
- Pentium (nee i586) ships (within 90 days), Intel expects software
- developers, including Microsoft, Lotus, and Borland, to be ready with as
- many 25 applications compiled to take advantage of the CPU's superscalar
- design. Initial Pentium CPUs will cost manufacturers $850 each; early
- systems are expected to retail for $5,000 and up.
- - PC Week 23 November and InfoWorld 30 November
-
- Image Server.
- Apple's Enterprise Systems Division is working on a Multimedia server
- that will use intelligent agents to retrieve graphics and text based on
- relatively unstructured user descriptions. The product is not expected
- to ship before the end of the year at the earliest. Radius's Macless
- image server probably will beat Apple's to the market. Radius's SCSI 2
- compatible four NuBus slot box will contain a digital signal processor
- and one or more Radius Rockets. The box won't require a Mac to run
- because Radius has licensed enough of Apple's ROM code to market a
- server that doesn't require a Macintosh.
- - MacWeek 23 November and 7 December
-
- Visual C++.
- Microsoft's C 8.0, which will be marketed as Visual C++, should go beta
- this month. The completely rewritten version with an integrated
- development environment is optimized for both code size and speed under
- Windows. - InfoWorld 30 November
-
- Wowing Them at MacWorld.
- Fractal Design's Painter 2.0, a program that lets computer users
- simulate oil paint, pastels, and water colors on a variety of canvases
- and papers, will ship for the Macintosh at January's MacWorld and for
- Windows in February. The upgrade for owners of the first versions of
- the $399 package will be $79, and upgrades will be free for users who
- purchased after November 1. Silicon Beach will be showing SuperPaint
- 3.5 at MacWorld as well. - InfoWorld 7 and 14 December
-
- Wowing Them and Confusing Them.
- Improv for Windows 2.0 is still scheduled for release this spring. Beta
- testers report that the powerful, next generation spreadsheet is easier
- to use than version 1.0 on the NeXT, but its complexity is still
- sometimes baffling. As an example, "spreadsheet" only loosely describes
- software that can construct twelve dimensional worksheets.
- - PC Week 30 November
-
- Accelerated Windows Printing.
- Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard will ship a graphics devices interface
- (GDI) cartridge for LaserJet printers during the first quarter. The
- Windows Printing System will require a megabyte or RAM and be priced in
- the "low hundreds of dollars." The initial version will not support the
- recently released LaserJet IV printers. - InfoWorld 30 November
-
- Falling Color Printing Prices.
- Tektronix's new 300 dots per inch thermal wax color printers will ship
- this month starting at a lists price of $3,695. The Phaser 200e with
- PostScript Level 2 and HP-GL page description has 17 fonts in ROM and
- prints two pages a minute. Parallel, serial, and AppleTalk are
- standard, TCP/IP and DECnet interfaces are optional.
- - InfoWorld 14 December
-
- New Apple Printers.
- Three new printers for the Macintosh will be introduced at MacWorld.
- The LaserWriter Pro ($2,399 and $2,999) uses the same technology as HP's
- LaserJet IV. The Apple Color Printer (around $2,600) is based on
- Canon's BJP-C80 bubble-jet printing engine and has a 360 dots per inch
- resolution. The Apple Color Printer has no processor or internal RAM
- and no AppleTalk interface--networking will be handled by a software
- spooler, Grayshare, that will be bundled with the printer. The two page
- per minute StyleWriter II will have the same price as its slower
- predecessor. - MacWeek 23 November and InfoWorld 30 November
-
- New Network Management Utilities.
- Utility maker Symantec plans to ship a half dozen network oriented
- utilities by fall. Norton Desktop optimized for Windows for Workgroups
- is already in beta test. A full-blown network management package with
- built in security, automatic software distribution, and performance
- monitoring is due in the third quarter. - PC Week 14 December
-
- XYWrite for Windows.
- Technology Group, the Baltimore company that bought XYQuest and N.B.
- Informatics, plans to ship a Windows version of XYWrite in March (maybe
- later) that will provide an upgrade path for Signature (the IBM version
- of XYWrite that was cancelled at the last minute--see the January,
- March, and October 1991 columns) and Nota Bene as well as XYWrite.
- XYWrite 4.0 for DOS will be available much earlier, probably before
- March. - PC Week 30 November and InfoWorld 14 December
-
- Mouseless.
- SuperMac Technologies will introduce 17 and 20 inch sizes of its
- SmartTouch monitors at MacWorld. At $3,000 to $5,000, the monitors are
- seen as ideal for kiosk applications rather than for desktops.
- - InfoWorld 14 December
-
- Getting Squeezed.
- Now Utilities is about to announce its own entry (Compress Express) into
- the increasingly crowded compression utilities market. The market for
- compression has become so active that Apple is studying the possibility
- of integrating file compression into the Macintosh operating system.
- - MacWeek 7 December
-
- Energy Savers.
- IBM demonstrated an energy efficient desktop computer with a recyclable
- case at last November's Comdex. The 25/50 MHz 486SLC2 prototype
- requires only 50 watts in active mode and a scant 16 watts in sleep
- mode. Electricity costs could be a low as one-tenth that of current
- desktop computers. IBM expects to begin shipping the Energy Desktop
- within a few weeks. The CPU is only 12 by 12 by 2.5 inches and can be
- wall mounted. The prototype had an active matrix flat panel color
- display. - PC Week and InfoWorld 23 November
-
- 20 Hour Notebook Battery.
- Early this year, AER Energy Resources will offer a six pound external
- battery for Apple's PowerBook line. Fully charged, the $649 zinc-air
- battery should keep the Macintosh notebooks running for slightly more
- than 20 hours of typical use. - MacWeek 23 November
-
- More Hobbit RISC Systems.
- NEC and Toshiba have both promised to develop pen-based systems using
- AT&T's Hobbit RISC processor (see last August and December columns).
- NEC will serve as a second manufacturing source for the processor and
- Word Perfect has announced plans to write applications for the devices.
- - PC Week 23 November
-
- Developer Raiding.
- Microsoft hopes to attract as many as 500 developers to this month's
- Microsoft Windows Programming Conference for Macintosh Developers.
- Microsoft is readying a Windows-based development tool code-named Altar
- that designs programs to run in both Windows and Macintosh environments.
- Altar will compete with Apple and Symantec's Bedrock (see last August's
- column). - PC Week 23 November
-
- Late.
- Getting the bugs out of Notes 3.0's dozen major new features continues
- to delay the release date. After missing summer and fourth quarter 1992
- dates, Lotus hopes to ship in March. Lotus still expects Notes to be
- one of the first applications to ship for Windows NT (Microsoft seems
- determined to delay NT long enough to make that possible). In fact, two
- new versions of DOS Windows (including Windows for Workgroups 4.0)
- probably will ship before NT. Word Perfect Office 4.0 (see last
- November's column) will be late, but perhaps will ship not too far into
- the second quarter. Word Perfect anticipates shipping Presentations 2.0
- for Windows next month. dBase for Windows surely won't make it in the
- first half of the year and some observers do not expect the program to
- ship anytime this year.
- - InfoWorld 23 November and 14 December and PC Week 23 and 30 November
-
- /s Murph Sewall <Sewall@UConnVM.UConn.Edu>
-