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- Path: menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: eric@fx.com (Eric Dietiker)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Who! What! When! Where!
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.applications
- Date: 14 May 1993 01:47:10 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 277
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1sutmu$s97@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: eric@fx.com (Eric Dietiker)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: address book, appointment book, calendar, commercial
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Who! What! When! Where! version 1.3i
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- Who! What! When! Where! (WWWW) is a personal organizer program
- containing a Directory (or phone/address book), Appointment Calendar, and
- "To Do" list. The program supports multiple users, each with his/her own
- private Directories and Appointment lists.
-
- There are a host of other related features such as an alarm clock,
- address label printing, and an auto dialer.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: The Blue Ribbon Soundworks Ltd.
- Address: North Highland Station
- PO Box 8689
- Atlanta, Georgia 30306
- USA
-
- Telephone: (404) 315-0212
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- $99.95 (US). I paid nothing, but I had to buy $100 of BRS products
- to get this deal from Creative Computing. They are now advertising WWWW for
- around $10.
-
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None. The program installs easily on a hard disk.
-
-
- INSTALLATION
-
- WWWW comes with an install program which runs the first time you
- start WWWW, configures some data file locations, and installs the "wwwwtimer"
- program if you want it. The install program edits your s:user-startup file
- to start the background timer program. Every so often, WWWW seems to get
- confused and re-run the install procedure on startup.
-
-
- WINDOWING INTERFACE
-
- The program runs in a number of windows on the Workbench. There are
- separate windows for the Directory, Calendar, Appointment List, Alarm Clock,
- To Do List, and Clock.
-
- When WWWW starts up, you are presented with the Directory window.
- It contains a scrolling list of the people in your directory, and a panel
- with the currently selected entry on the list. When this window is closed,
- a WWWW icon is placed on the WorkBench. Double-clicking on the icon
- re-opens the Directory window.
-
- Other parts of the program are available through the Directory
- window's menu. Selecting items which activate other functional parts of the
- program, such as the To Do List or the Appointment List, will cause the
- Directory window to disappear and the new window to pop up. One notable
- exception is the Calendar window, which co-exists with any of the other
- windows. In some cases, such as the To Do List, there are no menu items
- allowing movement to other windows, though you can always bring up the
- Calendar window.
-
- In general, I like the multiple window approach to the problem of a
- single program which is really an application bundle. In some cases, the
- implementation of WWWW is a little intrusive. One thing that bothers me is
- the fact that WWWW hides windows without really being told to. When I move
- from the Directory to the Appointment list, I must wait while WWWW hides the
- Directory window, then pops up the Appointment window. It is a little
- unsettling to see windows appearing and disappearing all over the screen.
- Another minor annoyance is the fact that when I select an appointment from
- the Calendar window, the Appointment window pops to the top of the window
- stack whether I want it to or not. Usually I prefer my windows to stay
- where I leave them.
-
-
- DIRECTORY
-
- As I mentioned above, the Directory window contains a scrolling list
- of a user's addresses and a panel displaying the currently selected entry.
- The list is sorted alphabetically by name. If you want your list sorted by
- last name, you must enter last name first in the Name field for the entry.
-
- The selected entry panel contains fields for name, address, home and
- work phone numbers, birthday, groups and notes. Most of these are obvious.
-
- You can use the Groups string to categorize your address list. Then
- you can have WWWW display only the entries in a certain group by performing
- a search on the list with only the group specified.
-
- If you enter the birthday of a person on your list, you can have
- WWWW notify you when that birthday occurs.
-
- Once you select the person you wish to contact, you can have WWWW
- dial the phone for you by selecting either Home or Work from one of the
- menus. You can also print an address label for that person.
-
-
- APPOINTMENTS
-
- This functionality is the real reason I bought this program. I can
- never keep track of when my wife is working, or when we are expected at
- Relative X's for dinner. We use Synchronize at work on our UNIX
- workstations to keep track of everyone's meetings; I need a program at home
- for much the same reasons. One thing I usually don't need is granularity of
- less than a day. All I want to know is what day to drive to Relative X's.
-
- Several parts of the program interact to provide the Appointment
- setting and notification functionality. They are the Appointment window,
- the Calendar window, and the background program "wwwwtimer."
-
- Appointments are entered via the Appointment window which is
- arranged much like the Directory window. To enter a new appointment, click
- on New in the window and fill in the Who, What, When, Where, Phone and Notes
- fields. The When field always defaults to the current date and time, which
- means it is always wrong.
-
- Using the menu, you can bring up the Appointment Parameters window
- and set default parameters, or parameters for a particular appointment. You
- can set the time in advance of an appointment that the program reminds you
- by selecting any of weeks, days, hours and minutes, and entering a value in
- the associated text gadgets. [Oh my God - WWWW's alarm clock just went off
- and told me to go to bed. I nearly fell out of my chair!] If you have WWWW
- remind you in advance of an appointment, it will remind you once in advance
- and once when the appointment starts. The Parameters window is also where
- you set an appointment to repeat. You are limited to once, daily, weekly,
- biweekly, monthly, and yearly.
-
- Once the appointment is entered, it shows up in the Calendar
- window. The Calendar window can display either Appointments or To Do
- items. The month and year are displayed in the upper left corner. Clicking
- on the month brings up a pop-up menu from which you can select another
- month. Clicking on the year activates a text gadget; you can edit this to
- change the year.
-
- Clicking on the Calendar display on a day which has an appointment
- brings up a list of the appointments for that day. The list contains
- the Who field and the time of the appointment. You can configure the
- calendar so that selecting an item from this list either selects, moves, or
- copies an appointment. You can also have it create an appointment when you
- click on a day. When you select or create an appointment the Appointment
- window is brought to the front of the screen with the selected appointment
- or a newly created appointment. When you move or copy an appointment, a box
- appears around the entry, and you can then drag it to the correct day and
- drop it. I don't know how you could move it from one month (today) to the
- next (tomorrow).
-
- Once you've created an appointment, the background timer program
- starts monitoring it. When the appointment comes up a window comes up to
- the front reminding you of the appointment. This window will override your
- (well, my) screen blanker until you acknowledge it. The program will also
- speak to you, play a sound effect (some are provided), ring a bell, flash
- the screen, and run and ARexx script when your appointment comes up.
-
-
- THINGS TO DO
-
- The Things To Do window consists of a list of "To Dos" and a small
- panel with the currently selected item. An item has a What and a When
- field. There are buttons to create a new entry, delete the selected entry,
- and put a check-mark by the selected entry.
-
- A Thing To Do will be carried forward until you check-mark it and
- use the Update menu item to clear out the old To Dos.
-
-
- ALARM CLOCK
-
- In the Alarm Clock window you can set a simple alarm to go off at
- some future time. There is a What field you can use to remind yourself of
- why you set the alarm.
-
-
- CLOCK DISPLAY
-
- You can have WWWW display a clock with the current date and time if
- you wish. The clock displays on the title bar of an iconified window, much
- like the standard WorkBench 2.1 clock in digital mode.
-
-
- PRINTING
-
- You can print phone numbers, your entire directory, appointments,
- things to do, address labels, and a monthly calendar. The output is either
- Draft or Letter quality, depending on how you've set your Printer
- Preferences.
-
-
- LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- I like the easy access to entries in the directory and the ability to
- group entries (and thus limit the size of the scrolling list). I like the
- small touches that show a lot of thought went into the program; for example,
- the act that you can select a person in your Directory, then bring up the
- Appointment window containing only your appointments with that person.
-
- I dislike the somewhat quirky window scheme, and the flat,
- "Workbench 1.3-like" interface.
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- I've recently downloaded a copy of the OnTheBall ("OTB") demo. This
- program looks great and has a few features missing from WWWW. It displays a
- small calendar on the WorkBench, through which you access your appointments
- for a specific day. The program uses only one other window for all its
- functionality. There is a row of buttons at the bottom of the window you
- use to select between Appointments, Addressbook, To-Do List, and NotePad
- (not in WWWW). You can also display a calendar for the currently selected
- week, month or year, and print any of these. There are more options for
- repeating appointments, such as repeating on selected days of the week. The
- calendars print in graphics mode using CG fonts, so they look beautiful. I
- wish my word processor could do as well!
-
- Some things in WWWW missing in OTB are the ability to have multiple
- users, the great variety of notification methods, and the ability to use the
- mouse to copy and move appointments. This last is important to me when I
- enter a month's worth of my wife's work days. To be fair, I haven't done a
- full evaluation of OTB, or even seen the manual. There are probably a lot of
- other features I am unaware of.
-
-
- BUGS
-
- The displayed clock is often wrong for periods of time. I haven't
- checked to see whether this affects the timeliness of the notification.
-
- When I click on an appointment in the Calendar window, the
- appointment pops up. After it disappears, my screen is corrupted along the
- borders of where the window was.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- When I last spoke to Blue Ribbon, before I bought WWWW, the person I
- spoke to said they had sold out of all their stock, and weren't sure whether
- they were going to continue manufacturing or enhancing the program.
- However, she assured me they would continue *supporting* the program. I
- haven't called with the clock problem mentioned above to see just what
- support they'll provide.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- Though it shows its age in the flat and quirky user interface, Who!
- What! When! Where! is a good personal organizer program. It has features,
- such as multi-user support and drag-and-drop appointment moving, that are
- probably not available elsewhere in the Amiga market. If you can live with
- the idiosyncrasies I described above, and don't care that the program may
- never be upgraded, I think you'll find it worth owning.
-
- On the other hand, make sure you check out OnTheBall, which looks
- quite cool.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
- This review is Copyright 1993 by Eric Dietiker. All rights reserved.
- It may be freely distributed as long as it is distributed unmodified.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Eric Dietiker ...!ames!fxgrp!eric eric@fx.com
- FXD/Telerate, Palo Alto, CA (415) 858-7770 x209
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
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-