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First Things First Review

First Things First Review

Software Guides · 1994 · TXT
Filenamefirst-things-first-review.txt
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Year1994
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Contents
Date: Wed, 15 Jun 1994 16:20:39 -0500 (EST)
From: Mark Nutter <manutter@mozart.cc.iup.edu>
Subject: First Things First Pro - review/report

Below is my review of the calendar/reminder/project-management utilit=
y=20
First Things First Proactive, by Visionary Software.

Mark Nutter
manutter@grove.iup.edu

=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D Cut Here =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D

First Things First Proactive
Visionary Software
1820 SW Vermont, Suite A
Portland, OR 97219
Phone (503) 246 6200
FAX (503) 452-1198

Capsule summary

Schedule management/calendar software plus an integrated outliner
with surprisingly useful links to the calendar. Supports multi-user
access to calendar files, multiple calendar files  per user,
automatic reminders, project deadlines, and customizable printouts
of calendars, schedules, and outlines. Can also use Claris XTND
engine to do file import/export. Compatible with the earlier First
Things First 3.0.

Requires: System 7.0 or later, 4MB RAM (with preferably a 2MB
partition for FTF Pro), and 1.7MB of disk space.

Quick Review

Has a few flaws, but definitely on my "must have" list. Does what I
want it to do, which is to remind me when I have to do something,
and to print out neat monthly calendars and daily/weekly schedules.
I don't actually need the multi-user capabilities of this product,
but I imagine others might well appreciate them.

Thumbs down:

- Bombed on Datebook Format import. Or any of the data import
functions, for that matter. Maybe it's because I have only the free
demo version, maybe it's because I have 16 quazillion extensions
loading in at startup, but I couldn't get any file import functions
to work loading in files that I had previously exported from FTF
Pro.

- Click-arrows for changing time no longer present. One of the nice
things I liked about the original First Things First was the way
you could click on the hour, and a pair of up/down arrows would
appear.  Clicking on these arrows would change the time,
automatically setting AM/PM appropriately, as well as changing the
day, and so on. Not everyone would want to change dates and times
this way, but I preferred it, and am sorry to see this handy
feature missing from FTF Pro.

- Long startup time; nearly a full minute on a Quadra 660AV. Again,
this may or may not be due to all the extensions I load at startup
time, but even MS Word loads faster than FTF Pro!

- No balloon help. The manuals are there, of course, and like most
people I almost never use balloon help, unless the  program is new
to me. No great loss, I suppose, but it would have been a nice
touch had balloon help been there.

- No easy way to archive and purge old, completed items. My chief
complaint is that, after importing my old FTF 3.0 items, I had some
300 old, expired items, and no way, that I could find, to clean
them out.  I started the old click-and-clear method, but that got
tiresome pretty early, so I just selected "Hide Completed Items"
=66rom the Calendar menu. Didn't get rid of them, but at least I
don't have to look at them any more.

- Program must be installed on startup volume. I tried moving it to
a different volume, but then when I clicked on the floating clock
to open  up First Things First, it complained that it couldn't find
the program. Nor would it follow the alias I tried placing on my
startup volume.  I purposely partitioned my hard drive and have
more space on my non-startup partition than on my startup
partition, so I wish I could have moved the FTF Pro application
over to the partition with more space. Fortunately, I can at least
store my FTF Pro calendar files wherever I want.

- Scroll-up, Scroll-down arrows in Month view don=D5t work if day
cell is selected. When you are in the Month view, the window
displays a standard calendar-style layout, with each day's events
listed in the square for that day.  If you have more items than
will fit in that square, FTF Pro will display tiny up/down arrows
for you to click on to scroll the other items into view.
Unfortunately, if you're scrolling down, the down arrow disappears
once you reach the last item. If you click again, the entire square
will be selected, and then the arrows won't work. You have to click
on a different square to deselect the current square, and then you
can click back on the square you want and get the arrows to work
again.

- Shift-select-then-drag moves all items to the same day whether
they started on the same day or not. If you have to postpone a
project for a week, FTF Pro will let you shift-click and drag items
so that you can move multiple items at the same time. What may not
be obvious, however, is that all selected items will be moved to
the same day. Thus, if you select an entire week's worth of work
and drag it to Monday of the following week, you won't just move
everything ahead a week, you'll move everything to next Monday!
(Fortunately, there is a quick and easy way to move everything
ahead a week, even if the items are on different days.)

-+ Capture Layout command nice, but why not just automatically
remember window geometry? For a while, I had to open up my calendar
window, then click the zoom box to have it fill the screen the way
I want. After sneaking a look at the manual, however, I discovered
I could preserve the "zoomed out" look of my calendar window buy
selecting "Capture File Layout" under the Utilities menu. This
records the size and position of all windows belonging to a
particular FTF Pro file so that the next time you open that file,
those windows come up the way you had them. Very nice, but why not
make it automatic? I'd like it to just remember the size and=20
positions of all my windows, without having to tell it each time.
At the very least, this should be a option you could set under the
Preferences menu.

Thumbs Up

+ Banners are  nice. FTF Pro allows you to add
"banners"=D1arbitrarily sized text boxes that you can put anywhere on
your calendar. Put a cute quote  in the empty squares at the end of
the month, or use a banner to mark a special week. Banners have
their own font and size, which you can customize to be different
=66rom the fonts used elsewhere in your calendar.

+ Cooperates with FTF 3.0. I didn't test this, as I like the
reminders in FTF Pro much better than those in the original FTF, so
 I just turned FTF 3.0 off for the duration of this test.

+ Custom beep sound for each reminder.  My first reminder utility
would let you set a different beep sound for every reminder that
came due.  This was both fun and useful, as you could tell what
reminder was coming up even before you saw it. FTF lacked this
feature, but FTF Pro has it, and I'm  glad.

+ File-based deadlines. FTF Pro lets you store reminders in
multiple separate files, and gives you the option of assigning each
file a deadline date. If you try to schedule anything to occur
after the deadline, FTF Pro warns you, then lets you do it, if you
really insist.  Nice way to organize multiple, separate projects.

+ Files can be stored anywhere, including server volume. This
capability is handy in that you can have multiple users sharing the
same calendar, thus making it easier to schedule group meetings.

+ Free demo version. The free demo only works for 2 weeks, but that
gives a good opportunity to decide whether or not you like the
product.

+ Multi-user access of calendar info. Again, makes it easier to
consult other people's calendars and arrange group meetings. As you
might expect, there are provisions for controlling who has access
to your calendars.

+ Multiple calendar/project files. As mentioned above, FTF Pro
allows you to break your workload down into separate projects
stored in separate files. A special "linking" mechanism allows you
to view all your scheduled events on a single master calendar.

+ Nice display of overlapping events - shows conflict without
hindering your scheduling.

+ Nicely laid out QuickStart manual.

+ Quich-Resched advances items by defined increments, so items a
week apart stay a week apart even if you move them ahead a day.

+ Reminder can be associated with other (non-FTF) files so that,
for example, if it's time for you to work on the annual Report of
Redundant Reports Report, the FTF Pro reminder will not only remind
you, but will open up the file for you to work on, saving you a few
extra mouse clicks.

+ Supports graphics in outliner (though not in calendar or
reminder).

+ Versatile formatting options, both in outline view and in
calendar view.

+Hold Reminders is nice=D1put reminders on hold for a given period of
time so that they don't pop up and interrupt things while you are
doing that presentation for the Board of Directors.

Summary

This is a very nice program that does what it was designed to do.
If it wasn't for that horribly long wait when first opening up the
program, FTF Pro would be near the top of my "Must Have" list. As
it is, I give it a friendly thumbs-up, and hope to see an improved
version soon.
Home Documents Hardware Guides Mirror Rm88 Review
Mirror Rm88 Review

Mirror Rm88 Review

Hardware Guides · 1992 · TXT
Filenamemirror-rm88-review.txt
Size0.01 MB
Year1992
Downloads9
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Contents
From: Rick Russell <wrr3118@tamsun.tamu.edu>
Subject: REVIEW: Mirror RM88 Removable Cartridge Drive 
Date: Thu, 17 Sep 92 23:22:00 CDT 


DATE: 9/17/92

REVIEW: The MIRROR RM88 Removable Cartridge Drive

Configuration Tested:

A MIRROR RM88 connected to

1) Mac SE/30 8/80 and System 7.0.1 w/ TuneUp 1.1

2) Mac IIfx with 8/80 and System 7.0 w/ TuneUp 1.1, 8*24 Video Card

3) Mac IIcx with 5/40 and System 7.0.1 w/ TuneUp 1.1, System 6.0.8,
Asante Ethernet and Mac II Video, assorted bizarre and unusual
software.

PRICING

The advertised price for the drive was $647, with one cartridge. I
purchased the drive with an extra cartridge and two-day UPS shipping
for a total of $767.50. MIRROR sells individual 88MB cartridges for
$99 apiece. I seem to recall that standard ground shipping (~6 working
days) cost $12.50, two-day cost $19.50, and next-day cost $36.50 or
so.

These prices were current in February 1992.

PACKING LIST

- the main unit (88MB SQ5110 drive mechanism)

- two cartridges (one came with the drive,
  I purchased the other for $99)

- a SCSI Mac-to-Peripheral cable (25 pin to 50 pin)

- a standard gray terminator

- a standard 3-prong power cord

- installation/operation manual

- two disks with formatting, and backup software

WARRANTY

MIRROR warrants their hard drive mechanisms for two years after date
of purchase. The cartridge media is warranted for 90 days after date
of purchase.

PACKAGING

The drive came on time in a relatively well-padded box. The foam
inserts fit the drive well, although they looked rather flimsy (they
were actually foam glued to cardboard inserts). The extra cartridges
and other paraphernalia were in the box too. There was no shipping
damage of any kind.

PHYSICAL MECHANISM

The main mechanism was a standard zero-foot-print drive with a
push-button SCSI ID setter, two SCSI ports, two three-prong power
outlets, a standard roller-type on-off switch, and a screw-in fuse.
All switches, plugs and outlets were mounted on the rear panel.

The case had large rubber bumpers on the bottom, and was made of metal
on all of four of the 'flat' sides (sides, top and bottom). The front
panel was plastic, with power and access LEDs and the standard Syquest
eject buttons and levers. The drive did have a good (but loud) cooling
fan, with vents on the bottom of the drive.

I placed the drive under an SE/30 and under three other drives (two
HDs and a CD-ROM); it seemed to bear weight placed on top with no
problem. It stands slightly lower than an Apple HD SC hard drive case.
I wouldn't recommend piling several drives *and* a Mac on top of it,
since it didn't look that sturdy.

A MacUser review says that internally, the drive mechanism is shielded
from the power supply by a metal sheet. I had no opportunity (or
desire!) to open the drive and examine the internal construction.

INSTALLATION, SOFTWARE and DOCUMENTATION

Installation was easy, if not well explained. The manual shipped with
the drive was designed for all MIRROR hard drive products; the
'standard' installation instructions had notes and advisories for
removable drive users. Fortunately, installation was trivial. Plug-in
was standard, and the drive exhibited no termination or SCSI ID
problems when installed normally as SCSI device 6.

The MediaManager 2.22 drive software was a bit clunky, but easy to
use. The software used modal dialogs exclusively, and it didn't switch
under Multifinder or System 7 (probably a good thing for a drive
formatter). There was internal help (hold down the option key and move
the cursor to see help for each on-screen region), but it was not as
seamless as balloon help. It seemed to have the full requisite of
features (multiple partitions, password protection, etc); I had no
need for these features. The formatter software and accompanying
utilities seemed to work the same under System 6 and System 7.

Very little information was provided for removable users exclusively;
in particular, there was no information on handling the cartridges and
how to store them. They seemed to respond well to common sense
treatment. Just remember that there's a full blown hard drive platter
in there, and treat it with respect!

The software came with a formatter utility, a backup utility, a
control-panel mounter utility, and an automounting INIT for removable
users. The formatter tried to automatically install the automounter
for me; under System 7 it put the INIT in the System folder, not the
Extensions folder. This was corrected manually, and it probably
doesn't make any difference for the automounter's operation. The
control panel is designed primarily for mounting partitions, but it
can be used to mount dismounted cartridges. I had no occasion to use
the mounter utility or the backup utility; both were pretty modal and
had the same interface as the formatting software. MIRROR claims that
all of its software is VM and 32-bit addressing compatible; I had no
need to try either. Note that you cannot get VM on the catridge drive
unless you put your system folder on the cartridge drive and boot from
it. Of course, this makes your cartridge non-removable!

The first cartridge in the package came with 15 MB of shareware and
demo software. Most of the software (except for Disinfectant and
SCSIProbe) were old versions, and I would not recommend that their
free software be used on most new Macs. I trashed almost all of it,
but then it was free.

GENERAL DRIVE BEHAVIOR

The great thing about the Syquest removables is that they act just
like standard fixed hard drives. When I added the drive, I instantly
had 83MB of storage available (about 10MB more than a standard Quantum
80). In order to use System 7 file sharing with the drive, I had to
make sure the cartridge was in the drive when file sharing was
started, and the cartridge could not be ejected (i.e. put away) until
file sharing was turned off. With file sharing turned off, the
cartridges could be put away and re-mounted just like floppy disks.

The drive was fairly loud while operating; it made frequent noises
during access. It reminded me of the old 20MB internal drives on the
Mac SE. The cooling fan was fairly loud as fans go; it was about as
loud as my SE/30. The noise did not appear to be related to any
mechanical problem; to date the drive has had no mechanical problems.

Drive speed was about the same as a Quantum 80 MB drive (e.g. an Apple
80 MB HD SC). I ran Diskbasher 1.1 on the cartridge drive and an
internal Quantum 80 MB hard drive, both on a Mac IIfx, and the
Diskbasher tests indicated that the cartridge drive was slightly
faster than the 80MB internal. I have no better way of quantifying the
drive speed. In real-world use (games, spreadsheets, word processing,
disk optimizing) the drive seemed to be slightly slower than a Quantum
80, but still fast enough for primary storage use. I set up a system
folder (6.0.5 and 7.0) on the cartridge drive and it worked just fine;
the removable media seems fine for both backup and primary storage.
Perhaps there is a perceived slowness when using the Syquest because
it chirps on every drive access, like the old hard drives in the Mac
SEs.

There were really only two weaknesses in the Syquest mechanism. The
first was the media. The Syquest cartridges are removable hard drive
platters, and they appear to be very fragile. I was very careful with
my cartridges and only stored them in their original padded cases; to
date I have had no problem with the media. Nevertheless, the
cartridges should not be treated like floppy disks or CDs under any
circumstances. Dropping them or stepping on them is probably a
sentence of death for the data on the disk, and it's very likely that
the disk will be rendered totally unusable and unrecoverable. My
policy is that a Syquest disk should always reside in one of two
places: inside the mechanism, or inside its original plastic case in a
closed drawer.

The second weakness in the Syquest design is cartridge insertion and
ejection. When the cartridge is inserted, a lever flips over and a
button pops out, and the cartridge 'spins up' to full speed. There is
no automatic ejection; to eject the disk, one must press the button,
wait for the disk to spin to a stop (~10 secs), and reset the ejection
lever.The lever which ejects the cartridge requires a good bit of
effort to flip over, which came as a surprise the first time I tried
it. The whole process is several steps, and it seems to me that there
is ample opportunity to screw up while messing with the delicate
cartridge. Fortunately, I haven't screwed up yet. The manual warns
that turning off the drive mechanism *before* ejecting the disk is
very bad. With the power off, the disk 'braking' mechanism is
disabled, and the disk could take 60 seconds or more to spin to a
stop. Obviously, if you do not know this important tidbit, you could
eject the disk while it is still spinning, possibly (probably?)
damaging the disk. Also note that inserting a damaged disk into the
mechanism may damage the mechanism. The watchwords seem to be 'take
care'.

Outside of those minor complaints, I have been very pleased with the
MIRROR 88MB removable. It has worked exactly as advertised, by
providing 83MB of formatted, fast, effective storage, at a relatively
good price ($99 per cartridge, about $1.20 per megabyte). Heck, I used
to pay more for high density disk storage back when they were $20 per
box. If I had a more professional drive formatter, like Silverlining
or Disk Manager Mac, I would probably use it, but for now Mirror's own
MediaManager does the job just fine.

MIRROR is a solid company, and while I do not anticipate hardware
problems with the drive (it's worked faultlessly to date), it is good
to know that MIRROR is there if I need them. During the sale, the
MIRROR salespeople seemed knowledgeable, and they were able to answer
all my technical questions (about VM, system 7, reliability, etc).

Having had some experience with Macintoshes in different system
configurations, I think I am qualified to recommend the MIRROR RM88 to
anyone who needs a large amount of storage in medium-sized chunks. For
people who work with data files less than 80MB, and who do not require
lightning-fast storage, the MIRROR (or a similar Syquest-based 88MB
removable drive) should serve well. The closest competition is the
IOMEGA Bernoulli 90MB removable drive, with a base cost about $150
more and a cartridge cost of about $30 more.

Review by William R. Russell, Jr.
          wrr3118@tamsun.tamu.edu
Home Documents Hardware Guides Linelink 144E Modem Review
Linelink 144E Modem Review

Linelink 144E Modem Review

Filenamelinelink-144e-modem-review.txt
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Downloads8
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Contents
Subject: Mini-review of $99 LineLink 144e Modem
Date: Fri, 17 Sep 93 15:39:28 -0400
From: MacFarland Hale <MacFarland.Hale@heckle.mitre.org>

OK, here's the mini-review I promised.  Hope it's of use to some of you.
Perhaps if I can get the couple of questions I ask below answered I can write a
more complete review (is TidBITS interested Adam and Tonya?).

Warning!  I'm no modem expert!  Just a somewhat well-informed modem user - I
know just enough to be dangerous.  :-)

.........................................................................
  MacFarland Hale                machale@mitre.org
  The MITRE Corporation          (617) 271-3703, FAX (617) 271-2352
  202 Burlington Road, MS K331   "All opinions are my own - but feel
  Bedford, MA  01730-1420  USA      free to share them if you like..."
.........................................................................

The LineLink 144e modem is being sold by MacWareHouse for $99 (plus $3
overnight shipping, at least in the US).  Their number is 1-800-ALL-MACS
(international 1-908-370-4779).  The part number is BND 0249.  The following is
a mini-review based on a couple nights use.  I reserve the right to make errors
and glaring omissions whenever I feel like it.  :-)  One thing to note up
front is that MacWareHouse is NOT offering a 30 day money back guarantee, but
does provide a 90 day warranty.

The LineLink 144e is made by Technology Concepts, Inc. (TCI) which is a
subsidiary or division or something of Prometheus who is better known in the
modem world.  TCI's number is 1-800-477-3473 or 1-503-692-9600.  The modem's
specs, according to a data sheet I got directly from TCI are as follows:

Physical characteristics:  External modem
Data speeds:  300 bps/CCITT V.21 and Bell 103; 1200 bps/CCITT V.22 and Bell
212A; 2400 bps/CCITT V.22bis; 9600 bps/CCITT V.32; 14400 bps/CCITT V.32bis
Data compression:  CCITT V.42bis; MNP-5 for 2:1
Error correction: CCITT V.42 (LAP-M); MNP 1-4
Operation:  Full or half duplex
Dialing:  Rotary or touch-tone compatible
Data commands:  Hayes AT command set
Phone connectors:  Two RJ11C/RJ13 phone jacks
Requirements:  Mac Plus or higher, System 6.0.4 or higher, System 7 savvy
Package includes:  MAcKNOWLEDGE (I received version 1.06MW), Macintosh hardware
flow control cable, coupons for on-line services (I received a standard freebie
startup kit for CompuServe only)

Technical support is being provided by MacWareHouse (1-800-925-6227), which
concerns me a little since the sales folks, at least, didn't have most of the
above specs available.  In fairness, though, I didn't call the tech support
number at all so they may (or may not) be good.

In addition, MacWareHouse is including a free copy of Accu-Weather (Software
Toolworks, Inc.) which appears to use a subscription dial-in account to produce
full weather maps on screen.  It looks like it may be interesting, but I
haven't had time to play with it yet.

As shipped, the modem doesn't do faxes, but TCI sells MaxFax software for
$29.95 (and MacWareHouse will soon too) which allows fax operation with the
modem.  When I type the Hayes command ATI4, one of the configuration
settings it returns is "SRFAX", so it does appear to be just a software issue.
I'd GUESS that FaxSTF would work with it too, but be warned that I have no
direct experience with fax modems.  I have not bought any fax software so I
can't verify the modem's fax performance.

OK, I said "mini-review" and here it is:  it works for me!
I have an LCIII and live in a 2.5 year old home about 30 miles north of Boston,
so I probably have decent phone lines (at least noise does not seem to be a
problem so far).  I just plugged it in and went with it.  The MAcKNOWLEDGE
software (I really hate the way they capitalize that) has an "auto-configure"
mode which I used to set things up.  I then copied the initialization string it
created into ZTerm and MacLayers for testing, and it all flies quite smoothly.
I've barely used MAcKNOWLEDGE beyond that, so I won't give you any comments on
it except to say that the copy I got had no printed manual (an electronic one
was provided), and apparently it can not save custom scripts.  The modem itself
did come with a printed manual, which is sparse but probably sufficient for
those who've used modems before.  It has a short table summary of a buncha AT
commands that I've found useful, but I'm not sure it's complete.  It has no
information describing which registers are for what.  (Question:  is there a
full, descriptive list of AT commands and registers available on-line
somewhere?)

I've been using the modem with MacLayers a bit and everything zips along with 3
or 4 windows open simultaneously.  I've tried using ZTerm to transfer a few
files with Zmodem and it seems to work fine.  The transfer progress box ZTerm
displays only shows about 1900 cps, but I don't know how ZTerm measures
transfer speed.  A 750K file took about 7 minutes to transfer.  I'd really
like to get my hands on something that can MEASURE the transfer speed of the
modem in a realistic way.  I asked the list, but no replies - if you have an
idea please let me know!  I'm not a modem expert, so I'll take any advice on
how to test this beast.  AS TIME PERMITS, I'll perform tests that you folks
suggest and post the results.

OK, there's been a bunch of talk (mostly questions) about this modem on the
lists (MAC-L and Info-Mac) - hope this was useful.  Overall, I recommend the
modem.  The price is worth the risk of no 30 day MBG, especially now that you
know at least one person got it to work!
Home Documents Hardware Guides Quadra630 Tv Video Review
Quadra630 Tv Video Review

Quadra630 Tv Video Review

Hardware Guides · 1994 · TXT
Filenamequadra630-tv-video-review.txt
Size0.01 MB
Year1994
Downloads6
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Contents
Date: Thu, 15 Sep 1994 20:36:58 -0400 (EDT)
From: Andrew Sinclair-Day <sinclair@pcnet.com>
Subject: Quadra 630 TV/Video review

  I recently purchased the Apple TV/Video System for the Quadra 630 
and thought I'd share my experiences with it, this should also apply 
to the Preforma and LC models. Before buying the Quadra 630 and the 
video system, I owned a Quadra 660av and will make some comparisons 
between the two.

  WHAT YOU GET for $249.
           A Manual (clear and well written).
           1 Disk with the Apple Video Player extension & application.
           1 CD-ROM with Avid VideoShop 2.0 and upgrade coupon to 3.0 
           1 Screw.
           1 Remote control w/ battery (cool!).
           1 Cable/Antenna Tuner Card.
           1 AV Card w/S-Video IN, Composite Video IN,Stereo Sound IN 
           1 Warranty Card.
 
   INSTALLATION was very simple and took about 5 minutes and involved 
removing the back plate on the Q630, removing 2 screws, and sliding 
the motherboard out. The AV card goes in the Video slot on the mother 
board and installs in seconds, it is secured by the screw that came in
the box. The motherboard is slid back in the case and fastened by the
2 screws. Next to the monitor port are 2 screws on a rectangular 
plate which must be removed, the plate comes off and inside is a 
ribbon cable that attaches to the Tuner card. The card is slid in the 
hole and secured by the 2 screws. At this point you attach your cable 
TV or antenna cable to to the card and put the back plate on.  Now 
hook up all the other cables and install the software. If you have a 
VCR or Camcorder you can hook it up to the AV card.

   THE REMOTE CONTROL will turn the Qaudra 630 on/off, mute the sound,
change channels, adjust the volume, turn the video software on/off, 
toggle the video display size, and has controls for the internal 
CD-ROM allowing you to play, stop, eject, pause, forward and reverse 
tracks on audio CD's.  It's very small and light, about 2"x3"x 1/4", 
and is a Sony remote (model RMC-A1). If you have a Sony TV w/ remote 
in the same room as the Quadra 630, you may run into problems as it 
emits the same infrared signals as the Apple remote. If you turn off 
your TV, you can also turn off  your Mac or if you use the remote to 
turn the Mac on you will also turn your TV on.  However there is an 
option to disable the Apple remote, and you can always use the 
keyboard or mouse to do everything.

   SOUND from the Tuner or AV card is passed through the Q630, like it
is with the CD-ROM, so it's not limited to 22MHz 8bit stereo unless 
you are recording the sound or are using the internal speaker on the 
Q630. I recommend getting external stereo speakers or hooking the Q630
up to your stereo system.  What I really like about the sound on the 
Q630 is the ability to have 3 different sound levels, one for the CD 
Audio, one for the TV/AV cards, one for all system sounds.  Setting 
these sound levels is done through the sound control panel under 
volumes. So if you are listening to a CD  at a loud volume and the Mac
makes a system sound it won't blast you out of your seat. All three 
sound levels can  be active at the same time, meaning a CD can be 
playing, the Mac can be making noise,  and watch TV. I have the TV and
CD volumes set high and the system volume kept low.  When I had the 
Quadra 660av there was no control over this, so if  you were listening
to a CD at a loud volume and the system beeped you were blasted by 
that beep. No More. ;-)

   APPLE VIDEO PLAYER software allows you to watch TV, view video from
a VCR or camcorder , capture still frames and record QuickTime 
movies. 
  The Channel Setup option is very straight forward. Here you choose 
what type of signal you are going to be using (antenna, cable, HRC 
cable), then choose the auto add option, this will scan your cable and
add all channels that have a signal, including scrambled channels. 
You can then go and remove any scrambled channels if  you want.  A 
nice feature is the ability to give each channel a name, for instance 
channel 31 can be named CNN. Channels can also be assigned passwords 
to eliminate children (or adults) from watching stuff they shouldn't, 
but removing the channel preferences file circumvents this.
  TV Reminders allows the Video Player software to remind you when 
certain programs are on. It will even turn the the TV tuner on , or 
give you a reminder 5 minutes before the program is due to air. 
  The Control Window is where everything can be fine tuned. The video 
source can be selected (TV, Video, S-Video). Brightness, sharpness and
tint adjusted. Sound sources selected (Mono, SAP, Stereo) as well as 
balance, bass and treble. Closed captioning is also supported (Off, 
CC1, CC2, Text1, Text2) in windows 320x240 and larger. 
Capture options include freeze frame, save still image, and movie 
capture. If using the Apple Video software to capture QuickTime 
movies, there are only three compression settings (None, Normal, and 
Most). Also the video input standard can be set (NTSC, PAL, SECAM). 

  The video viewing size can be anywhere from 160x120  to 640x480, and
is always in 16bit color regardless of what bit depth your monitor is
set to. With the Quadra 660av, the monitor had to be set to a depth 
of 256 colors or less in order to view video, while with the Quadra 
630 you can be in thousands of colors and still view video. The 
quality of the video display is also better on the Quadra 630. The 
Quadra 660av displayed it's video on the monitor in an RGB signal, 
while on the Quadra 630 it is displayed in a YUV signal which is what 
your TV uses. The result is a crisper, cleaner image with less color 
bleading. The quality of the image once it is above 320x240 in size, 
employes a scheme called pixel doubling, meaning that every 1x1 pixel 
now becomes a 2x2 pixel area. The result is a coarser image, but it's 
really not that bad, especially if you are a few feet away from the 
monitor. The Pixel doubling scheme is much better on the Quadra 630 
than it was the Quadra 660av. 

 Video capture frame rates using the Apple Video Player are 17fps at 
160x120 and 12fps at 320x240 with sound (there is no option to disable
the sound, you can mute it though) and it is caputered to the 
hardrive with no option to capture to RAM. I haven't used VideoShop 
for capturing yet, but it should be about the same rates for capturing
to the hardrive, though it does allow capturing to RAM and the 
ability to disable sound thereby increasing the frame rate.  
  When I use Premiere 4.0 to capture video, I set the image size to 
320x240 and the capture frame rate to 5fps with no sound. My VCR (JVC 
HR-D820U) can play back video in slow motion at 5 frames per second 
and this is what I capture. I then set the playback rate to 600% and 
make the movie and it comes out to 30fps. Then I go back and record 
the sound and insert it and re-record the movie. This is the only way 
I know of to capture 30fps quicktime in a decient size window without 
investing an arm and leg in additional hardware.

   I am very pleased with the Quadra 630 and the Apple TV/Video 
System, much more so than I was with the Quadra 660av. I would 
recomend the TV/Video System to anyone who wants to get started in 
Quicktime, or likes to watch TV, especially while getting work done. 
;-)


Andrew Sinclair-Day  |  The Rock Garden      |  Between the brain that plans
Sinclair@PCNET.COM   |  982 State Street     |  and the hand that builds,
AndrewSD@EWORLD.COM  |  New Haven, CT. 06511 |  there must be a mediator.
Home Documents Hardware Guides Zip Drive Vs Ez 135
Zip Drive Vs Ez 135

Zip Drive Vs Ez 135

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Contents
From: florin@quartz.geology.utoronto.ca (F. Neumann)
Subject: Comparison of Zip and EZ-135 drives

This is the second (and hopefully the last!) revision of my comparison of the
Zip and EZ drives. I corrected a very confusing typo (thanks to Dan Hoefferth
for pointing it out) and I removed the rumour about Zips causing problems with
internal CD-ROM drives. (I've had many messages from people working with such
configurations telling me they had encountered no problems whatsoever.)


Zip vs. EZ-135: A Comparison
============================

version 1.1

This is a comparison of two low-capacity low-cost mass storage devices,
Iomega's Zip drive and SyQuest's EZ-135 drive. The comparison is based on
opionions of users of both drives sent to me by e-mail, and also on some
information pulled from www pages. It was compiled by Florin Neumann
<florin@quartz.geology.utoronto.ca>.

This file is formatted as setext. It can be read with any text editor,
but a setext-compatible browser, such as Akif Eyler's EasyView, is
required for full benefits of the setext format.


Summary
-------

If ease of use, portability, cross-platform communication, and
availability are important, then Zip would be the better choice.

If speed, cartridge capacity, and flexibility in integration with other
SCSI devices are important, and if you're willing to put up with
waiting for back-ordered cartridges, and if megabyte/$ is important to
you, then the EZ would be the better choice.

Putting it in another way, if I had a PowerBook or a low-end system,
and/or I wanted the user-friendliest drive, and/or I wanted to make
sure that I could exchange data with more people, then I'd get a Zip.
But if I had a higher-end system, with several devices on the SCSI bus
and I wanted to keep all my options open as to how to id them, and if I
really cared about speed and capacity, but I didn't mind having to go
through a convoluted ritual each time I swapped a disk, then I'd get
the EZ.


Personal Opinion
----------------

After reading all the opinions sent to me, and after trying out both
drives at a local dealer, I decided on the Zip drive. The main reasons
were:

(a) price (the drive is cca. US$20 cheaper; the cartridges cca. US$5
    cheaper);

(b) availability (no dealer I contacted had EZ cartridges in stock; I had
    no real trouble finding Zip cartridges);

(c) convenience (mounting/dismounting a disk on the EZ is a real hassle
    compared to the Zip, which behaves just like a floppy).

(d) better software driver (not only it uses less memory, but it is also
    present as an application, which allows for mounting the disks even
    when the Mac is booted with extensions off).

As to the Zip's shortcomings, this is what I think:

(1) Capacity (96M vs 126 of the EZ). Sure, larger disks would be nice,
    but one can't have everything.

(2) Speed. Doesn't bother me; I intend to use it mainly as a back-up
    device, but it can be used as boot device or to run applications.

(3) SCSI ID. No problem. All my other external SCSI devices can by set to
    any SCSI ID, so it doesn't matter (SCSI ID numbers have no connexion
    to physical position on the SCSI bus).

(4) No ON/OFF switch. Couldn't care less. I use a power centre for my Mac
    and external drives anyway.


Comparison
==========

Technology
----------

EZ  Hard disk technology. Re-engineered Winchester-type SyQuest
    mechanism.

ZIP Combination of flexible and hard disk technology. Does not use
    Iomega's proprietary Bernoulli technology.


Compatibility with Other Formats
--------------------------------

Both the EZ and the Zip read/write only their own formats. They are
not compatible with anything else. The EZ cartridge looks like a SyQuest
270 cartridge, but it can't be read in a SyQuest 270, and the EZ can't
read SyQuest 270 cartridges.

One respondent mentioned that Compaq is poised to come out with a drive
that will read 1.44M floppies, as well as a new 100M format, but he
oubted that this new drive would become available for the Macintosh.


Reliability
-----------

Both drives seem to be very reliable. I haven't had a single bad report
on either of them; but it's early days yet...

EZ  Based on the SyQuest technology, which has a known track-record;
    in general it is fairly reliable as a back-up and temporary storage
    device, but not as a primary storage device.

ZIP Based on new mechanism, without a known track-record. However,
    Iomega is known as a reputable company, and its Bernoulli drives
    are considered to be technically excellent (but use different
    technology).


Availability
------------

EZ  Drive available by mail order and from dealers. Cartridges more
    difficult to come by, only by mail order or from selected dealers.
    Back-ordered at every dealer I checked with.

ZIP Drive available by mail order, from dealers, and from computer
    superstores. Cartridges readily available from the same sources.


Comparative Cost
----------------

DRIVES      EZ is $20-$50 more expensive than the Zip, depending on source.

CARTRIDGES  EZ cartridges are $4-$8 more expensive than Zip cartridges,
            again depending on source. In megabyte/$, EZ cartridges are
            about 120% more cost-effective than the Zips.


Speed and Capacity
------------------

CARTRIDGES  EZs format to 126M; Zips format to 96M.

DRIVE       EZ av. access time is 13ms; Zip av. access time is 30ms; in
            practice the EZ is 50% to 80% faster.


Size
----

DRIVE       EZ is bulkier and heavier than the Zip, and can only be used
            in horizontal position. Both use external power sources, which
            are pretty heavy themselves.

CARTRIDGES  Both are 3.5'' diameter cartridges. EZs are about 4 times
            thicker and somewhat heavier.


On/Off Switching
----------------

EZ  Has on/off switch.

ZIP Doesn't have on/off switch; is on as soon as the power source is
    plugged in.


SCSI Cable
----------

EZ  Has standard 50-pin SCSI connector. Can be connected to the Mac with
    the usual 25-to-50-pin SCSI cable, or to other SCSI devices via
    50-to-50-pin SCSI cable.

ZIP Has non-standard 25-pin SCSI connector. Can be connected to the
    Mac with a 25-to-25-pin SCSI cable (supplied). Requires 25-to-50-pin
    SCSI cable (like the one used to connect the Mac to the SCSI chain)
    to connect to other SCSI devices.


SCSI ID
-------

EZ  Can choose any legal SCSI ID number, but ID button is flimsy and
    hard to reach.

ZIP Can only choose between IDs 5 and 6, but ID button is easy to use.



Swapping Cartridges
-------------------

EZ  Inconvenient. Behaves like a standard SyQuest drive. Have to
    dismount, spin down, and manually eject the cartridge.

ZIP Convenient. Behaves like a floppy. Drag to trash and it ejects
    automatically; likewise upon shutting down the Mac.


Software Driver
---------------

EZ  Rather poorly designed.

ZIP Well designed. "Guest" option allows installation of driver in
    RAM for temporary use on other Macs than the owner's. It also 
    allows for the mounting of ther disk even if the Mac was booted
    with extensions off. (Something Apple should imitate for their 
    CD-ROM drives, which can't be mounted whent the Mac is booted 
    with extensions off.)


Bundled software
----------------

EZ  Not good, except Silverlining Lite, included on EZs ordered from
    La Cie.

ZIP Mediocre.


Use as a Boot Device
--------------------

Both can be used as start-up disks.


Customer base
-------------

Zip has wider customer base than the EZ, but it has been out half a year
earlier. It has caused more of an impact in the Mac market than the PC
market, but I've seen some local PC dealers offering Zips; I have seen
none offering EZs.

Also PowerComputing is offering as an option internal Zip drives with
their PowerMac clones.


Cross-platform communication
----------------------------

EZ  ?

ZIP Can read PC-formatted Zip cartridges with PC Exchange, although
    Access PC may be more reliable.


Rumours
-------

(I had no way to check these, so I put them in as I received them.)

EZ  "EZ 135 platters are Syquest 270 platters that failed the quality
    checks on one side of the platter"


WWW Information Sources
-----------------------

*  MacWeek Zip Review

http://www.zdnet.com/~macweek/mw_041795/rev1.html

*  MacWeek EZ Review

http://www.zdnet.com/~macweek/mw_09-04-95/rev2.html

*  Zip Technical Specifications

http://www.iomega.com/zspecs.htm

*  EZ Technical Specifications

http://www.syquest.com/syquest/ezspecs.htm

*  Zip Propaganda

http://www.iomega.com/zipdrv.htm

*  EZ Propaganda

http://www.syquest.com/syquest/corp3.htm

*  Unofficial Zip Drive FAQ

http://cnct.com/home/steveg/zipfaq16.html

*  Unofficial SyQuest FAQ

http://www2.csn.net/~kassj/SyQuest.html

*  Unofficial Iomega Page

http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~jwu/iomega.html


Acknowledgment
--------------

The comparison is based on information received from the following
Info-Mac subscribers (many thanks, folks!).

     Chris Eliot
     David Croze
     David J. Swift
     Dean Johnson
     Fred J. Berg
     George McClelland
     Greg Delisle
     Greg Vaughn
     Hugh Vidos
     Jim Hill
     Jimmy Wu
     Larry Pickett
     Michael B. Dixon
     Michael Peirce
     Moshe Sadofsky
     Pat Ullmann
     Patrick Atherton
     Sanjay Mathur
     Shih-Tung Ngiam
     Stephen Bennett
     Tim Lewallen
     Dan Hoefferth
_________________________________________________________________________

-- 
  Florin Neumann
  florin@quartz.geology.utoronto.ca
Home Documents Hardware Guides Quadra630 Review
Quadra630 Review

Quadra630 Review

Hardware Guides · 1994 · TXT
Filenamequadra630-review.txt
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Year1994
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Contents
Date: Fri, 30 Sep 1994 08:09:54 -0400 (EDT)
From: Andrew Sinclair-Day <sinclair@pcnet.com>
Subject: Quadra 630 Review

           A review of the Macintosh Quadra 630

  In August of 1994 Apple Computer Inc. released a new line of their 
popular Macintosh computer. The models introduced are the Quadra 630, 
LC630, Performa 630, Performa 630CD, Performa 635, Performa 636, and 
the Performa 636CD. All the models are similar, such as case design, 
hard drive capacity, and ports, but there are some differences. The 
Quadra 630 is the only model to have a full MC68040 with the floating 
Point Unit(FPU) for math intensive tasks and is geared towards 
businesses. The LC is for the educational market and the Performa 
models are for the consumer channels and come in many different 
configurations. This review will focus on the Quadra 630, but should 
also apply in part to the LC and Performa models.

What you get for $1189 (street)
     1 Quadra 630 with 4megs Ram, 250meg IDE Hard Drive, 1.44mb floppy
     1 Apple Desktop Mouse II
     2 Power Cables (why 2?)
     System 7.12P or System 7.5 (depending on when purchased)
     2 Manuals (Getting Started, Macintosh Reference)
     1 Apple Resource Guide
     1 Warranty registration card
     System Disks
     EWorld software installed on the hard drive
     
The Specs
  The Quadra 630 is powered by a Motorola MC68040 with FPU running at 
33MHz (a tad slower than the Quadra 950), according to Apple it is a 
33/66MHz chip. What this 33/66 marketing gimmick means is that the 
internal sync clock is running at 66MHz and the system bus is running 
at 33MHz. This new terminology has caused allot of confusion, one 
salesman at a local computer superstore swore that it was a 66MHz 
machine and you could switch between the 2 speeds (really!!) . Not so.
 

  4MB DRAM on the motherboard.
  1 72-pin DRAM SIMM socket (80ns or faster, up to 32MB).
  1MB ROM.
  1MB video memory (not expandable).
  1 LC compatible  PDS slot.
  1 Communication slot for modem or Ethernet card.
  1 Video slot with DVA for a video input card.
  1 internal port for a TV tuner card.
  1 internal 250MB IDE Hard Drive.
  Energy Star compliant
  The ports on the rear of the unit include an ADB port, two serial 
ports, monitor port, SCSI port, 8bit mono sound input and 8bit stereo 
output ports. The motherboard slides out the rear of the unit, making 
upgrades very easy. The front of the unit has the SuperDrive, space 
for an internal CD-ROM, and three new features. These features are 
Up/Down volume buttons, a Headphone jack and an infrared sensor (for 
Sony remotes). An internal Power Supply will take line voltages from 
100-240 volts AC. Power consumption of the Quadra 630 is 45 watts. The
case design is unique in that it is made up of 5 stylish plastic 
panels that snap on a solid metal frame, the Q630 weighs in at 17 lbs.
 (7.7 kg) and measures 12.6S x 16.5S x 4.3S.  

SET-UP
   Setting up the Quadra 630 was straightforward, take the computer 
out of the box, attach the power cable, keyboard, mouse and monitor 
and turn it on. The system software as well as E-world comes 
pre-installed on the hard drive, though the system software also comes
on floppy disks. The Quadra 630 came with System 7.12P and a coupon 
for a TfreeU ($10 shipping) copy of System 7.5. Quadra 630Us shipping 
now should have System 7.5 installed. I did encounter one problem 
setting the Mac up, and that was when I installed Ram Doubler 1.5 
(more on that later). 
   I have just installed System 7.5 and it runs much faster than 
System 7.12P, though in itUs basic configuration it uses 2.5MB of ram.
 

THE IDE HARD DRIVE
    IDE stands for Intelligent Drive Electronics, and the Quadra 630 
is the first desktop Macintosh to use this technology though it has 
been used for years on DOS computers. The internal IDE drive is 250MB 
in size and has an access time of around 15ms (my old Quadra 660avUs 
internal drive had an 18ms access time). There are two hard drive 
formatters included on the Disk Tools floppy, Apple HD SC Setup for 
SCSI drives, and Internal HD Format for IDE drives. The IDE formatting
software works much like itUs SCSI counterparts, though partitioning 
is not available. I have only run across two programs that do not work
with the IDE drive, one being SCSI evaluator (still works with SCSI 
drives that are hooked up), and Mac Bench 1.1 (when it preforms tests 
on the internal HD it freezes).  I have heard of some programs that 
format or test SCSI drives which will not work with the IDE HD, but 
this seems obvious. Those worried about seeing an IDE drive on a 
Macintosh need not worry, it works fine and youUll not even notice 
that itUs IDE. 
   I have an APS 105MB Syquest hooked up to the external SCSI 
connector and it works flawlessly, and IUd swear itUs now quicker than
when on the Quadra 660av. 

SOUND
   Sound input through the sound-in jack is limited to 8bit 22KHz 
mono. Sound output is 8bit 22KHz stereo. If you have an internal 
CD-ROM or TV/Video System, then the sound is passed through and up to 
16bit 44KHz stereo sound output is available. Also with the TV/Video 
system you can record Quicktime movies with stereo sound. A nice 
feature if you have the Apple TV/Video System and the internal CD300i+
is that you can have 3 different volumes levels, one for the CD, 
another for the TV, and one for system sounds. 

VIDEO
   The 1MB of internal video DRAM is capable of supporting monitors up
to 16inches (832x624) at a depth of 8bits (256 colors). At 640x480 it
can display up to a 16bit depth (thousands of colors). The Video DRAM
is not expandable, so if you require a larger monitor or a 24bit 
(millions of colors) display, a PDS video card is required. The speed 
of the display is slightly faster than  the Quadra 605. According to 
SpeedOMeter though, the Quadra 630Us display is  faster than the 
Quadra 660av, though I have my doubts about this. Ram Doubler will 
degrade the video performance by up to 34% depending on what bit depth
is selected.

MISCELLANEOUS FEATURES
   Energy Star compliance is a feature that I have longed for. Using 
the CPU Energy Saver control panel, the idle time before the machine 
shuts itself off can be set, anywhere from 15 minutes to twelve hours.
Also specific times and dates can be set as well for the shut off. 
The control panel can also be set so that it will not shut down if the
modem is going,the busy cursor is on or a sound is playing . Another 
control panel, Auto Power On/Off can be used to turn the computer on 
at specific times and dates, or if there has been a power failure it 
can turn the mac on again. 
   An infrared remote can be used to turn the mac on/off and adjust 
the volume. Any Sony TV remote should work. If you have the TV/Video 
system the remote can be used to control the CD, change channels, 
adjust the volume, mute, run and quit the video software.  
    The Video slot has a provision for a DVA connector if you are 
using the Apple Video System. DVA (Digital Video Analog Audio) is 
similar to the DAV slot on AV Macs, the difference being with the 
sound. Nothing at the moment is  available for the DVA connector, but 
IUm sure cards will come out offering features such as MPEG playback, 
and full screen full motion video recording and output at or near 
broadcast levels. 

UPGRADE OPTIONS
   Apple Express modem card $199
This fax/modem card is based on AppleUs Express modem and supports 
speeds up to 14.4bps and fits in the communication slot.

   Apple Video System $149
The Video System card plugs into the video slot and provides composite
video-in, S-VHS video-in, and stereo sound-in. It can be used to 
capture still images or QuickTime movies. Also included is AvidUs 
Videoshop 2.03 software on CD-ROM. 

   Apple TV/Video System $249
This is a two card package and includes the Video System card as well 
as a cable/TV tuner card and an infrared remote control. The tuner 
card plugs into a special ribbon connector near the top of the Quadra 
630Us case. Also included is AvidUs Videoshop 2.03 software on CD-ROM.
 

   Apple Presentation System $299
The presentation system is a small box that plugs into the monitor 
port, allowing output to a TV or VCR. Other features include video 
mirroring, PAL & NTSC output, composite and S-VHS output connectors.

   Apple Ethernet card $99
There are two types of Ethernet cards available. 10BASE T (twisted 
pair) and 10BASE 2 (thin coaxial). Either of these two cards go into 
the communications slot.

   Apple PPC upgrade daughter board $n/a
This card will supposedly offer a 66Mhz PPC 601 processor in a 
daughter card which plugs into the 68040 socket. The 68040 plugs into 
the PPC card, and you can switch between the two processors (not on 
the fly).  It will require System 7.5 . No price has been set ($599 is
what I hear), or release date (October?).

   MPEG Card $n/a
This fall an MPEG playback card is slated to come out for the Quadra 
630. It will supposedly offer 24bit video, CD-i compatibility, as well
as MPEG support. It will plug into the PDS slot and Video/DVA slot( 
if you have the Video System, there is a DVA pass through connector on
the card). Price, probably in the $300 range. 

SHORTCOMINGS & PROBLEMS
   I like to Quadra 630 but there are a few shortcomings and I had a 
problem with Ram Doubler. It seems that when I installed the Ram 
Doubler 1.5 software, it trashed my finder, causing the Quadra 630 not
to boot up. The solution was to boot up with the Disk Tools floppy 
and drag the Finder and System suitcase to the trash, and then 
re-install the system software. I re-installed Ram Doubler 1.51( the 
latest update) and it works fine (sort of) with no noticeable slowdown
of the CPU, FPU or disk, though it does degrade video performance by 
as much as 34%!!!  This could be due to the video DRAM being similar 
to the conventional memory. 
   I would have liked to see two DRAM SIMM sockets on the 
motherboard, there is defiantly room for two, hopefully a SIMM doubler
or stacker will come out to solve this. (Apparently some Quadra 630Us
have started to appear with an extra SIMM socket, this extra socket 
is for the video DRAM, as there is none on the motherboard on these 
models. The beta units did have this extra video  SIMM socket, but the
unit I have does not. )
   The limitations of the 1MB of internal video memory, while the itUs
adequate for a 14S display in thousands of colors, any larger display
is only 256 colors and only up to 832x624. A larger display will 
require a video card in the PDS slot. 
   The 8bit mono sound input really bothers me, granted I can get 8bit
stereo sound-in but only with the addition of the TV/Video card. I 
would have paid an extra $50-$100 for 16bit sound. 
   Overall I am quite pleased with the Quadra 630 despite the few 
shortcomings. All the software I had on my old system works fine and I
have not had any real compatibility issues besides Ram Doubler. 
Compared with the  Quadra 660av which I owned before this, the Quadra 
630 out preforms it and is very STABLE.

   If you are interested in a review of the Apple TV/Video System for 
the Quadra 630, it can be found at:  
gopher://sumex-aim.stanford.edu/info-mac/info/hdwr/quadra630-tv-video-
review.txt

Andrew Sinclair-Day  |  The Rock Garden      |  Between the brain that plans
Sinclair@PCNET.COM   |  982 State Street     |  and the hand that builds,
AndrewSD@EWORLD.COM  |  New Haven, CT. 06511 |  there must be a mediator.
Home Documents Software Guides Macwrite Pro 15 Review
Macwrite Pro 15 Review

Macwrite Pro 15 Review

Software Guides · 1994 · TXT
Filenamemacwrite-pro-15-review.txt
Size0.03 MB
Year1994
Downloads7
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Contents
Date: Wed, 27 Apr 1994 01:36:40 -0500 (CDT)
From: "William M. Porter" <WMPORTER@Jetson.UH.EDU>
Subject: MacWrite Pro 1.5 review (text file)

This is a text file explaining why a rational person (well, most of the
time) with heavy-duty word processing needs finally abandoned Microsoft
Word and embraced MacWrite Pro--and why that same person feels that he
has made a step UP. If you are curious about MacWrite Pro, you may find
this text document helpful. This is in some ways an update of the
comparison of Word and MacWrite Pro that I posted in the Archives a year
ago, when I was still somewhat ambivalent about MacWrite Pro. 

Will Porter / University of Houston

---- Cut  here: what follows is for the Archives, not the Digest -----

What follows is a long e-letter I wrote on April 25, 1994, to my
friend Paul in Boston, who knows that a couple of months I gave up
on Microsoft Word and began to use MacWrite Pro as my primary word
processor--indeed, as virtually my only word processor. Paul knows
that a few years ago I was very enthusiastic about Word and wrote
to ask my opinion about MacWrite Pro. Here is my response. In a way
this updates a document I wrote comparing MacWrite Pro and Word in
April 1993 and uploaded last year.

Let me make two things clear up front. First, I do not hate
Microsoft Word. I have used it since 1985, constantly. I've written
three books in it and started a fourth. I have urged folks to buy
it in the past. I have written minimanuals explaining its use for
the benefit of my colleagues at the University of Houston. It is a
fine piece of work, no doubt about it. I liked the PC counterpart
somewhat better, but let's not get started on that.

Second, I do not work for Claris, not even as a beta-tester, nor do
I own stock in the company. I do this only because (a) I think
others might find this useful and (b) I obviously have too much
time on my hands.

This document was written in MacWrite Pro 1.5.

Will Porter / Houston, Texas
wmporter@jetson.uh.edu (Internet)
75430,1351 (Compuserve)

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Paul,

Here are some tips concerning MacWrite Pro version 1.5. I have used
MacWrite Pro for over a year now, and around Christmas 1993 (even
before I got version 1.5) I finally began to regard it as my
primary word processor. I now regard it as virtually my only word
processor. Weeks go by now in which I do not launch Word. I will
read the press releases when Word/Mac ver. 6 comes out. I'm betting
on Spring 1995, although Microsoft swears it'll be out this summer.
I think they have their fingers crossed behind their backs as they
say it, but actually I don't give a darn if it comes out next week.
Right now, unless it will write my papers FOR me, I doubt that I
will shell out another $100 or so for an upgrade that will
immediately lay claim to several megabytes of RAM and something on
the order of 15Mb of disk space. What a dinosaur! 

In the rambling essay that follows, I update my "MacWrite Pros and
Cons" essay of twelve months ago. First, I discuss MacWrite Pro's
weaknesses (most of which are more apparent than real); then I
enumerate MacWrite Pro's strengths or what I like about it; and
finally, I give you a few tips on how to use it, tailored to the
prejudices of a long-time user of Word. 

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I. Cons

There were lots of things that I missed from Word when I began to
use MacWrite Pro heavily: a non-page-layout "Normal" view; the
Ribbon; Word's glossaries; the ability to apply so many commands
from the keyboard; and the ability to edit the menus and assign
keystrokes to almost any command. I have gotten used to all of
these things, surprisingly quickly. I hardly miss Word's Normal
view at all. The ability to assign keystrokes to commands and/or
edit menus is less important if the interface of the program is so
well designed already that there are not many improvements or
changes needed. 

Word's glossaries have been replaced by three things: the glossary
functions of both Thunder 7 and Riccardo Ettore's "TypeIt4Me"
shareware program, and by MacWrite Pro's Insert file command. I
like TypeIt4Me, in fact, even better than Word's glossaries now. I
occasionally miss the fact that Word's glossaries include
formatting, but in general TypeIt4Me's glossaries are much easier
to use. 

Word's Ribbon and Ruler are adequately replaced by MacWrite Pro's
palettes, which in many ways are more intelligently laid out.
(There are so many little quirks involved in the use of Word's
Ribbon and Ruler. Using the Ruler's styles list to create a new
style or modify an old one is easy once you've figured out how to
do it, but who ever figured this out on his own?) 

I don't miss Word's outliner. It stunk. I was for a while one of
its very few defenders, but in all honesty I have to admit that I
almost never used it myself. ClarisWorks 2.x has an outliner, I
understand, but I haven't used it. Joan needs an outliner
occasionally, and I am wondering if upgrading to ClarisWorks 2 (we
have version 1) would be useful to her. 

I cannot honestly say that I miss Word's indexing tool, although I
have an occasional need for such a tool, and MacWrite Pro does not
provide one. However, one of the main things I have come to
appreciate about MacWrite Pro is that it is not attempting to do
everything. It is a great word processor, with many advanced
functions. For writing books, it is inadequate in some respects.
But I do not spend most of my time writing books. (MacWrite Pro 1.5
has a table of contents feature, but I have not used it.) 

There are exactly three things I do not like about MacWrite Pro:

1. It is easier to move the insertion point around from the
keyboard in Word. I regret that MacWrite Pro didn't take advantage
of the numeric keypad the way Word does: the arrow keys are so
awkwardly placed. (This complaint was remedied with QuicKeys
aliases.) I miss being able to move by sentences (i.e. to jump from
one period to the next period). I really do not like what MacWrite
Pro does when you are selecting text from the keyboard and you
overshoot your target. When you do this in Word or for that matter
in FileMaker Pro, you can pull the selection back a word or a few
characters as needed. But if you try to do this in MacWrite Pro,
instead of pulling the selection back, you start expanding it at
the other end. This is just stupid. This could only be useful to
somebody who wants to select text from the middle of the target
string. 

2. MacWrite Pro's Define Styles dialog needs an "Okay" or "Define"
button. After you edit a style's formatting, you just click on
inert white space somewhere. Somebody on Claris's normally
brilliant interface team was out sick on the day this dialog was
finished. 

3. Word offers more control over footnotes, note superscripts, and
paragraph formatting of notes. I can live with MacWrite Pro's
limitations here, but I miss Word's flexibility. 

That is it. Really. Okay, I might mention one more thing which is
not very important to me. Overall, Word's table features are
superior. I miss the way that Word's tables knew that I would
probably want the text in row 4, column 1, to be formatted the same
way the text in row 3 of the same column was formatted. Adding
another row to a column seems to challenge MacWrite Pro, which
responds a bit reluctantly. My work does not involve lots of long
tables, but if it did, this might be a factor weighing heavily in
favor of Word. On the other hand, small tables are easier to create
in MacWrite Pro and much easier to edit. Word's three-level ruler
seems to confuse a lot of people. In MacWrite Pro, you can change
the width of a column in a table by--get this--just dragging the
column separator! Why didn't Bill Gates think of that? You can
merge cells easily too, for some neat effects. My suspicion is that
90% of the users out there will find MacWrite Pro's tables actually
better implemented and easier to use. The other 10% who need real
table power will prefer Word or WordPerfect, and with good reason. 

There are a few things that I miss in MacWrite Pro. Occasionally I
would like to be able to number a group of lines automatically. I
can work around this pretty easily however with a section that has
two columns, one of which is very narrow. In fact, such an approach
gives me considerably more flexibility than Word's auto-numbering
scheme. And of course I can view the line numbers on the page as I
work (unlike Word). 

I miss Word's "hidden text" character format, because it made it
possible for me to create footnotes whose reference numbers were
not visible. (I used this all the time in Latin texts that I
annotate for my students.) This is admittedly a very specialized
need. 

There is nothing in MacWrite Pro to correspond to Word's "first
page special" section format. You can indicate in a MacWrite Pro
section that you want a title page, but what that means is that
headers and footers will not print on that page at all. 

This last complaint, however, is instructive. At first, this lack
of separate headers and footers for "title pages" struck me as a
terrible failing of MacWrite Pro. I soon learned however how to
compensate for this lack using one of MacWrite Pro's real
strengths: text frames. You simply set up a text frame on page 1 of
a section, and place into it whatever header or footer text you
want. I am so used to this now that I actually prefer it. 

Another example of using a strength of the program to overcome a
weakness. As I said, long tables are not MacWrite Pro's forte.
Actually, no table can be very long in MacWrite Pro: a table is a
type of frame in MacWrite Pro, and no frame can straddle a page
break, so no table can be more than one page long. This can be
somewhat inconvenient: it means that you have to regard tables more
or less as graphic elements, rather than as continuations of your
body text.

Now Joan's paralegal had been using Word's tables to create
summaries of documents and these were often more than one page
long. I discovered a work-around that takes advantage of MacWrite
Pro's superior section formatting. In MacWrite Pro, the columns in
a multi-column section do not have to be the same width as they do
in Word. Furthermore, there is in MacWrite Pro a "column break"
character that you can use to force text in column 1 (say) of a
three-column section to stop and jump up to the top of column 2. (I
often wanted to do this in Word and couldn't, except clumsily, by
inserting Returns.) With these features in mind, I came upon the
idea of creating many short sections (each starting "next line"
rather than "next page") with multiple columns of varying widths,
and using these column breaks to move from column to column
(instead of tabs, as in a table). I haven't created a ten-page
document this way, and I fear that if I did it would be an
inordinately large file for all the formatting involved, but it
seems to work fineQin some respects, better than using tables. 

In general, I have decided that MacWrite Pro deserves the name
"pro" if you allow it to compete only in the word processing
category, and do not require it to compete in the category of
book-processing, which it is not designed for. (You may remember
that Word back in version 3 or so began to call itself a "document
processor" rather than word processor.) I have to say, however,
that Word's book or document-processing skills are not all that
great either--or all that necessary. University of Nebraska Press
did not set the pages of my book from my Word files, as of course I
did not expect them to. And if you *were* actually going to do page
layout for a book, well, using a page-layout program rather than a
"document processor" might be advisable. The only considerable
advantage I can see to Word is its indexing function, and I am not
planning to have need of that again any time soon. AND Mike Steiner
on the development team for MacWrite Pro at Claris is working on an
AppleScript script that will index MacWrite Pro documents.


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II. MacWrite Pro's strengths, or what I like about it

Lots. Really. I like this program a lot. It is fun to use, most of
the time. It reminds me of what I liked about the Macintosh when I
used one for the first time in 1985--when I wrote my first paper
(an article on Horace) in MacWrite (version 4, I think). I feel
like MacWrite Pro gets in my way much less than Word did. Using
Word was like flying a commercial jetliner, while using MacWrite
Pro is like driving a sportscar. If you need to move 150 people
cross country, you need the jetliner. And flying a jetliner does
give you a sense of power. My word processor's bigger than your
word processor! But for ordinary running about, the sportscar is
both more fun and more efficient. And if you get into the Zen of
the thing, you can also begin to sense that MacWrite Pro's
intelligence is a kind of power, but a more subtle, civilized kind.
Sure, you can't expect to do color separations, create a
fully-functioning spreadsheet with graphs, or compose music in
MacWrite Pro. But if you want to kern a couple of letters, you have
no alternative. Neither Word nor WordPerfect offers true kerning.
To me it boils down to how much you care about text. 

I like working in any number of reduced views. I work at 80% a lot.
If my default font is Palatino 12, the type onscreen is quite
legible, and I can view over two-thirds of a page. I have to go
down to 70% or so to view an entire page on screen at once. 

MacWrite Pro's frames are infinitely easier to work with than
Word's and I use them all the time, especially the text frames.
Placement, editing, text-wraparound, and the rest--MacWrite Pro
beats the heck out of Word in this department. Today I created a
piece of stationery for printing 30 small Avery labels. Every label
was a frame: there was no actual text in the document at all. The
document had one, three-column section, and there were ten
label-sized frames in each column of the page. Doing this in Word
would have been a nightmare. 

MacWrite Pro's "variables" are more flexible and much easier to use
than Word's glossaries for page number, date, time, &c. It is easy
in MacWrite Pro, for example, to have a footer showing the page
numbers in this format: "Page x of y" where "y" is the total number
of pages in the document. MacWrite Pro has a variable that shows
you the last time a document was modified, which I am now making
heavy use of. Variables are a good example of the intelligence of
MacWrite Pro's interface. Word's variables are glossaries. To view
the date glossary options, you have no choice but to go into the
glossary list and scroll through them. They are numerous, to be
sure, but also somewhat bewildering, and they are in a list with
the glossaries for times, pages, versions, and several other
things.

MacWrite Pro's variable options appear to be less numerous than
Word's but only because they are so unobtrusively provided for you.
You get to them in the Edit menu via the "Insert variable" pop-out.
Date is one of the options. Normally you just pull over to "date"
and MacWrite Pro inserts the date, formatted as you have previously
specified in your Preferences file. However, you can override the
default format by holding down the Option key while you pull down
to this command (or while you type the keyboard command). This
brings up a little dialog that has three options for you to choose
among:

  Format: 4/25/94 or April 25, 1994, &c.
  Order (for 4/25/94 format): mm/dd/yy, dd/mm/yy, yy/mm/dd
  Update: never, always, when modified, next open

All in all, this produces TWENTY-EIGHT permutations. And Word? Word
has exactly seven date glossaries. Hmmm. 

Text handling? Forget the competition. MacWrite Pro offers
letterspace justification. It doesn't kick in always or
immediately, but it kicks in when its needed. For working with
narrow columns of text especially, this is imperative. In a narrow
column of justified text, Word will leave a gap at the end of a
line that contains a single word MacWrite Pro on the other hand
will distribute the slack among the characters within that single
line. 

MacWrite Pro's kerning and character space options are without
parallel. This is admittedly a somewhat esoteric feature. But I
absolutely love it. It's what attracted me to MacWrite Pro
initially more than anything else. 

Character styles are useful, although it has taken me some time to
understand how and why, and I haven't quite mastered them yet. One
use I make however is this: I create two character styles called
"Default" and "Latin." Latin is exactly like Default (say, Times
12) except that Latin has the Language attribute "None." When I
start to type some Latin, I just type Option-Command-2 to switch to
the Latin character style--and then MacWrite Pro's spelling checker
does not beep at me after every word. When I'm done with the Latin
text, typing Option-Command-1 puts me back into my default, which
has the Language attribute "U.S. English" and thus invites
spell-checking. 

MacWrite Pro's autosave and automatic backup options are excellent,
superior to Word's. 

Printing? How about back-to-font printing--something Word should
have gotten around to years ago, but hasn't yet. Also you can
collate pages if you print multiple copies of the same document. 

(One weakness of MacWrite Pro here: You cannot specify that it
print an individual section of a multi-section document. You cannot
print just the current selection, either. However you can SAVE the
current selection, which you cannot in Word. This is a toss-up.) 

Finally, I very much like the fact that MacWrite Pro is fully
scriptable. AppleScript and OSA are clearly the way of the future.
Big applications like WordPerfect and Word that do everything you
can imagine wanting to do with your computer and some things you
cannot, are the way of the past. I think this "bigger is better"
neurosis goes back to WordPerfect for DOS. DOS was such a pain to
deal with that the average user was abjectly grateful for a program
that did things like file management, printing envelopes and
labels, and so on. But that was then and this is now. With any
luck, Microsoft's domination of the Mac word processing market will
end with Word 6. Power Mac users are already checking out
WordPerfect, which has the only nativized Power Mac word processor
on the market. But WordPerfect 3 clearly is NOT "it." MacWrite Pro
maythe thing I like about MacWrite Pro most of all is its graceful
self-confidence, its lack of pretension or ostentation. This may be
a marketing weakness, I am afraid. MacWrite Pro could add a few
feature without selling its soul, but it could not start touting
those features the way Word and WordPerfect do. MacWrite Pro's
greatest strength is precisely that it does NOT rub your nose in
all its power. It is there to serve you, not to challenge you.
People who look to their word processor to provide life's next big
challenge need to get outdoors more.


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III. Getting started with MacWrite Pro

Set this aside until you own MacWrite Pro, then look here first. In
general, MacWrite Pro is so splendidly designed that it explains
itself. However, like native English-speakers learning Latin, users
of Word coming to MacWrite Pro may encounter problems that arise
from the traumas of their earlier experience. 

The first thing to do when you start using MacWrite Pro is edit the
"MacWrite Pro Options" document. This is the default document that
appears when you use the "New" command to create a new document.
Various defaults--document margins, default styles, even options
conc…

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