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- Path: sparky!uunet!ukma!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!ucbvax!UCONNVM.UCONN.EDU!Sewall
- From: Sewall@UCONNVM.UCONN.EDU (Murph Sewall)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2
- Subject: Murph's VAPORWARE Column for February 1993
- Message-ID: <9301281921.AA23306@apple.com>
- Date: 28 Jan 93 07:16:52 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Distribution: world
- Organization: The Internet
- Lines: 166
-
-
- VAPORWARE
- Murphy Sewall
- From the February 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
-
- Macs and More Macs.
- Apple appears poised to grab a large share of this year's headlines by
- introducing new products practically every month. MacWorld Tokyo
- (February 10) will see the introduction of three new 68040 models (the
- Centris 610 and 650 and the Quadra 800--see last December's column), the
- true 32-bit, 25 MHz LC III (see last October's column), the Color
- Classic II (see last May's column), the first color PowerBook (the 165C
- a model 160 with a passive matrix color display), and two new personal
- LaserWriters priced to sell. The QuickDraw LW Select 300 will list for
- $819 and the 300 dpi level 1 PostScript LW Select 310 will list for
- $1,079. Around April, look for a large (14 inch display) 25 MHz compact
- Mac based on the LC III design (see last October's column). A list
- price of $2,200 is anticipated. The 14 inch Color Classic will have a
- bay for an optional CD ROM and will come with built-in support for
- 16-bit color. A 33 MHz upgrade is planned for midsummer with a 68040
- option to be added sometime in the future. Apple's first two multimedia
- workstations (codenamed Cyclone--see last July's column) will debut in
- June. These Macs will have two sets of digital signal processor (DSP)
- chips and Fast and Wide SCSI. Prices of $2,500 and $5,500 are expected.
- At least 25 developers are already writing software to take advantage of
- the DSP chips jointly developed by Storm Technology and SuperMac
- Technology. An even more powerful "media server" is expected in the
- fall. A release date for the PowerBook 185C (a 180 with an active
- matrix color display) will depend upon availability of sufficient
- quantities of the difficult to manufacture display. Apple is hoping to
- announce the 185C in midsummer and anticipates a price for a 4/80 model
- of $4,100. - MacWeek 4 and 11 January, PC Week 21 and 28 December, and
- InfoWorld 11 January
-
- IBM Multimedia.
- Rumors that former IBM employee Ross Perot will return as CEO probably
- originated at an office party that consumed a little too much bubbly,
- but sometime soon you can expect to see a PS/1 with a built-in CD ROM
- and a sound card for just under $1,800. - InfoWorld 21 December
-
- Pentium Predictions.
- You may want to wait until early next year for Intel's 3.3-volt 100 MHz
- version before dropping $4,000 to $6,000 on a Pentium workstation. This
- year's models based on a 5-volt 60 MHz design will be slowed by problems
- with heat dissipation and slower surrounding chips. Compaq is planning
- to put Pentiums in a four processor symmetric multiprocessing System Pro
- server after mid year. The price is expected be under $22,000. - PC
- Week 21 December and 11 January
-
- PowerPC or Pentium?
- As reported in December's column, NeXT has decided to abandon the
- Motorola 88110 CPU for its planned RISC workstation (see the April,
- June, and November columns). The company has yet to decide whether to
- develop for the PowerPC or the Pentium. On the one hand, NeXTStep 486,
- already well along in development, already runs on the Pentium (NeXT ran
- a demonstration at last November's Comdex). On the other hand, IBM may
- use the Mach kernel, already the basis for NeXTStep, as the microkernel
- for the PowerPC. - InfoWorld 28 December
-
- Alpha PC and Workstation.
- DEC has an Alpha PC and an Alpha Workstation ready to go when Microsoft
- finally releases Windows NT (see last March, October, and November
- columns; optimists believe that will be late this year). The
- Workstation will list for less than $10,000. The major difference
- between the two machines is the bus architecture--EISA for the PC and
- Turbochannel for the Workstation. Pricing for the PC hasn't been set,
- but DEC intends to offer it at approximately the price for a
- Pentium-based model (twice the performance at a comparable price). - PC
- Week 21 December
-
- Moderately Parallel.
- IBM will market a new line of mainframes for complex database queries
- and transaction processing. The "moderately parallel" systems will
- house between 10 and 100 CMOS CPUs of the type in the company's current
- conventional mainframes. - PC Week 4 January
-
- Superportable.
- Hewlett-Packard hopes to inaugurate the next generation of small
- computers with the HP XN, a three pound unit that will have Windows
- along with Word and Excel for Windows in ROM. Sources say the VGA
- display uses new technology that will not require a backlight. The CPU
- of the under $2,500 HP XN will be a 3.3-volt 386SXL; 2 MBytes or RAM and
- a 40 MByte hard drive will be standard. - PC Week 11 January
-
- Notebook Workstation.
- Tadpole Technology is expected to ship a 40 MHz Cypress Sparc 2-based
- notebook this month that runs at 24 MIPS and 4 MFLOPS (or 24 SPECMarks).
- The 640 by 480 active matrix color display supports 256 colors from a
- palette of 4,096 colors. The external RGB can support monitors of 1,024
- by 768 and 1,152 by 900 as well as 640 by 480. An entry level 16 MByte
- system with a 250 MByte hard disk will list for $10,950. The initial
- operating system will be Solaris 1.0.1. Solaris 2.1 is expected at no
- additional charge within 90 days. - InfoWorld 28 December
-
- Apple-Novell Partnership.
- More details are emerging about products forthcoming from the cross
- licensing deal between Apple and Novell (see last month's column). A
- Mac version of IPX is in alpha test with an SDK expected in April. Look
- for peer to peer connections between Mac, DOS, and Windows environments.
- Novell also will support Apple's Open Collaboration Environment (OCE),
- QuickTime, and Apple Events. - PC Week 28 December
-
- Not So Solid Bedrock.
- Apple's strategy of relying on Symantec's Bedrock for cross-platform
- development (see last August's column) appears to be crumbling as
- Symantec's project manager and head of development have left the company
- and several Bedrock developers have been laid off. - InfoWorld 11
- January
-
- Diskless Macintosh.
- Apple demonstrated a Network Startup utility for the Macintosh in San
- Francisco last month. The utility, which has not yet been incorporated
- in a product, will allow networked Macintoshes to startup from a common
- System Folder and give managers greater control over the configuration
- of stations in a laboratory setting. The Mac Classic and subsequent
- models already have the ROM code necessary to startup without a hard
- drive or floppy disk. Older Macs will need a special System extension
- in order to start from a Network Startup server. - MacWeek 11 January
-
- Competition for Apple's (and Sharp's) Newton.
- Apple's Newton demonstration at Winter Comdex last month came the day
- after Casio Computer Co. and Tandy Corp. demonstrated a similar
- hand-held computer code-named Zoomer that will compete directly with
- Newton. Zoomer, dubbed a personal information processor, will be
- shipped this summer, and Tandy chairman John V. Roach said it would cost
- "a lot closer to $500 than $1,000." -- Patrick M. Reilly on Prodigy 11
- January
-
- More Printers for Windows.
- Apple plans to release a Windows 3.1 "Printer Enhancement Kit" that
- provides drivers for Apple's LaserWriters and, possibly, the
- StyleWriters as well. - PC Week 28 December
-
- In the Pink.
- The IBM-Apple joint venture, Taligent Inc., expects to deliver its first
- operating system next year. When it was formed nine months ago as the
- cornerstone of a wide-ranging alliance between Apple and IBM, Taligent
- predicted delivery in 1995. Several leading applications suppliers,
- including WordPerfect Corp., have agreed to write programs for
- Taligent's operating system. - Wall Street Journal 12 January
-
- Betaware.
- Computer Associates' Cricket Draw III 2.0 ($249) which takes advantage
- of Apple's System 7 is expected to ship in March. DeltaPoint's
- Freezeframe ($249) for the Mac which provides a set of integrated
- graphic utilities including translation, screen capture, viewing and
- printing should ship before July. BrushStrokes and Retrieve in Claris's
- Clear Choice line (see last December's column) are expected this month.
- OS/2 2.1 with support for Windows 3.1 was expected by the end of 1992.
- IBM officials now indicate final release is slated for March. The
- latest beta of Microsoft's DOS 6.0 is said to offer to remove any copies
- of OS/2 it finds in order to "save disk space." General Magic's
- Personal Intelligent Communicator (see the October 1991 and January 1992
- columns) should finally be announced this month ($700). Apple's OCE
- (Open Collaboration Environment) will begin beta this month with a May
- shipping date in mind, but don't look for QuickDraw GX until the second
- half of the year. A Claris executive was overheard saying he'd bet the
- company's reputation on MacWrite Pro finally shipping in March--only he
- didn't say of what year. - PC Week 28 December, and PC Week,
- InfoWorld. and MacWeek 11 January
-