Sep 96 Newsbits
Volume Number: 12
Issue Number: 9
Column Tag: Newsbits
By Will Iverson
General Magic Sets its Cap at the Internet
On July 11th, General Magic announced Presto!Mail and Presto!Link, a Web browser
and email application for Magic Cap. On August 30th, the ill-conceived PersonaLink
service will cease, hopefully bringing an end to the proprietary nature of Magic Cap.
Now that General Magic has discovered TCP/IP, PPP, POP and SMTP, we can only hope
that MagicCap fares better in the marketplace.
This is actually a great move for General Magic and the PDA market in general.
Both the Magic Cap and Newton OS featured brilliant software and hardware designs,
but they were both completely incompatible with everything else anyone owned. This
might have worked with a razor-blade strategy (sell the razor cheap, clean up on the
blades), but with such a high entry cost, few bit onto the technology. By adhering to
standards, these PDAs justify their cost without forcing users to absorb propietary
formats. With luck, this will spark a renaissance of the PDA market (and perhaps get
some return on that investment money).
General Magic: http://www.genmagic.com/
Paragraph Puts Up a VRML 2.0 Web Page
VRML enthusiasts will get a kick out of the VRML Power Friday Resource Page.
Featuring transcripts and papers from the likes of Apple, IBM, Netscape, and SGI, it
provides a great shot of the current state of the mind on this still nascent technology.
Virtual reality is the promise, and VRML seems to be the path. You’ll know that 3D is
really coming along when popular rendering programs export reasonably-sized VRML
files.
VRML Power Friday Resource Page:
http://www.paragraph.com/960703/vrml_power_friday/
VOODOO Announces a New Version
UNI SOFTWARE PLUS has announced VOODOO 1.7, featuring Macintosh Drag and Drop,
local file locking, printing of the project history, and “an assortment of other
usability and performance enhancements, as well as some minor bug fixes”.
For a product description, see “Keeping Things Straight, Orthogonally”
(MacTech Magazine 12.6 [June 1996] 61-70).
UNI SOFTWARE VOODOO:
http://www.unisoft.co.at/e/products/voodoo.html
Game Sprockets Goes Gold
On July 2nd, Apple announced the GM 1.0 version of Game Sprockets (with new
versions slated to appear any time now). This excellent package features six primary
components: NetSprocket, SoundSprocket, SpeechSprocket (speech recognition),
InputSprocket, DrawSprocket, and QuickDraw 3D RAVE (a 3D API at a lower level than
normal QuickDraw 3D). Each component provides higher-level access to these
common tasks (with the exception of QuickDraw 3D RAVE, which provides a
lower-level, performance-intensive API). DrawSprocket, for example, allows a
developer to put together quickly a double- or even triple-buffering scheme which
automatically takes advantage of any hardware support. By placing the burden of such
things as worrying about what Performa supports which hardware on the Game
Sprocket library, developers are free to concentrate on the game itself.
All of this does not come for free. The Game Sprockets are implemented as
PowerPC shared libraries only; 68K developers and players are left in the lurch.
Duplicating the functionality of the Sprockets yourself for the 68K completely
destroys the point of using the Game Sprockets. Eliminating the 68K cycle is an
excellent way to keep development costs down; it is up to the developer to decide if this
makes sense financially. Among those who have decided that this is a price worth
paying are Future Point (developing the forthcoming Warcraft 2), MacPlay, Bungie,
and Wirehead Systems.
Although they are designed for use with games, certain Game Sprockets are
decidedly useful in other applications as well. DrawSprocket is useful whenever
high-speed animation is required, and NetSprocket is an excellent tool for general
lightweight networking development.
The Game Sprockets do, however, raise the spectre of namespace collisions,
which are always possible with shared libraries. This is not to say that you will have
this problem, but rather to call attention to the inelegant, brute-force manner in
which the problem is dealt with. With such function names as
ISpElement_NewVirtualFromNeeds, it is readily apparent what library is being
called (once you figure the scheme out); but it is also rather messy. Namespaces
would presumably be a step toward resolving this, but at the time of this writing none
of the currently shipping Macintosh compilers support them.
Apropos of nothing at all, readers might like to bear in mind that Sprocket™ is a
trademark of Xplain Corporation, publishers of MacTech Magazine.
Game Sprockets (don’t try this with a monochrome monitor):
http://dev.info.apple.com/evangelism/games/games.html
Web Broadcasting Talks to FileMaker Pro...
On June 24th, Web Broadcasting announced support for FileMaker Pro 3.0, allowing
you to easily publish databases on the Web. For intranet users, this may be the ideal
way to develop client apps for inhouse production. This new version includes support
for FileMaker Pro relational and portal fields, support for Infoseek-like “Next xx”
records when performing a search, capability to mix “AND” and “OR” searches, and
the capability to capture all passed http parameters (exceedingly useful for logging
use).
Trial version of WEB FM 2.0v3:
http://macweb.com/webfm/
Current registered users of WEB FM 2.0 can download version 3 at:
http://macweb.com/webfm/airroom/live.html
...And Tango Dances With It
Hot on the heels of Web Broadcasting, EveryWare shipped Tango for FileMaker Pro 3.0
on July 1st. EveryWare emphasized the performance and drag-and-drop ease of
development for this new version of Tango/FM. Although significantly more expensive
than Web Broadcasting’s solution ($395 versus $195), Tango provides a better
upward migration path (including another EveryWare product, the Butler SQL - read
on), and appears to be more popular.
Tango for FileMaker Pro 3.0:
http://www.everyware.com/tangofm/
Butler SQL 2.0
EveryWare announced on May 13th Butler SQL 2.0, which now supports TCP/IP, Alter
Table statements, ODBC AppleScript, default ODBC and DAL stored procedures, and
tracing ODBC commands from client applications. Butler SQL now comes bundled with
Sterling Software’s CLEAR:Access, a drag-and-drop SQL reporting tool. EveryWare
claims that ODBC support gives users a three to four times speed improvement over
version 1.5. The product includes four toolkits to access the database, including a
C/C++ framework, an AppleScript package (which actually supports any OSA
language, despite the name), an XCMD toolkit, and FirstClass integration.
Butler:
http://www.everyware.com/WWW_info_pages/Butler/Butler_SQL.html
Nisus Revives QUED/M with 3.0
Nisus is back with QUED/M 3.0, which boasts features such as unlimited undo and
redo, syntax coloring, GREP, noncontiguous selections, and “Macro Programming
Dialect” (users of the Nisus Writer word processor will know what this is). It
includes macros for HTML authoring, and a builder which allows you to add macros
directly to the menu structure. It is now PowerPC-native, supports Apple Drag and
Drop, and supports both Symantec and Metrowerks development tools. Perhaps most
interestingly, it supports “text folding”, allowing a user to treat code as an outline,
collapsing and expanding comments and loops (a feature supported for years by
Frontier). In addition, it comes with Celestin Company’s Apprentice 4 source code CD.
All this for only $69. Can you say “price war”?
QUED/M information and free demo:
http://www.nisus-soft.com/QUED_M.html
VIP BASIC 2.0
Mainstay announced on May 8th the arrival of a new version of their BASIC tools. The
Macintosh has long lacked a competitor to Visual Basic on the PC, and Mainstay looks to
be positioning VIP BASIC 2.0 as such a product (to judge by their advertising).
Featuring a forms-based visual development tool, Mainstay claims that users can
export at any time to straight C (fully compatible with Metrowerks CodeWarrior) for
the fastest possible executables. The tool includes a very small database which allows
up to 32K of data; for larger databases, the user is required to purchase a separate
VIP-BASIC Database Manager product. VIP-BASIC allows direct access to the
Macintosh Toolbox, includes a framework, and generates PowerPC-native applications.
Mainstay VIP BASIC:
http://www.mstay.com/product_page.html
Tenon Revs MachTen: Price Subtraction, Ada Addition
The folks at Tenon have been busy developing software, and are getting much more
aggressive with their marketing to boot. MachTen is a full-featured BSD UNIX for
Macintosh; unlike Linux, however, it doesn’t take over your computer in the process.
Rather, much like SoftWindows, it runs in a window on your Macintosh. The
applications which run inside this shell are fully protected and preemptive. As of June
14th, the package includes NCSA httpd, DNS, POP3, IP forwarding, a complete
UNIX-based C/C++ development, a high-performance X server, a complete X11R6
client development environment, and a Motif toolkit. The application is fully
Macintosh-savvy, and supports mounting AppleShare volumes under NFS. As if that
weren’t enough, a bundled version of BBEdit is included.
In addition, on June 24th, Tenon announced the availability of GNAT-Ada. Using
the gcc back-end, combined with the GNAT-Ada front-end, Tenon has brought Ada 95 to
the Macintosh and Power Macintosh. While not complete as of this writing, the package
is available as a free update.
Both the 68K and PowerPC versions of MachTen are available now at a suggested
price of $695 ($495 for the “personal” 68K version).
Tenon MachTen: http://www.tenon.com/
GNAT-Ada: http://gnat-mac.com/macada/
Blaze Tech Debugs Apple’s Debugging Course
Blaze Technology’s Malcolm Teas has just finished a revision of Apple Developer
University’s course called “Debugging Skills and Strategies”. This revision provides
a much needed update, to address PowerPC debugging and new debugging tools. If you
are interested in learning more about low-level debugging, including such valuable
tidbits as low-level knowledge of memory layouts, stack frames, and cross-fragment
calls, you should absolutely check this one out. To cover the additional material, the
class has been expanded to four days instead of the earlier three.
Apple Developer University: http://dev.info.apple.com/du.html
Blaze Technology: http://www.btech.com/
Altura Announces QuickHelp 4.0
Altura announced QuickHelp 4.0 on July 1, a tool for electronic indexed documentation.
QuickHelp 4.0 adds support for the Windows95 version of WinHelp, including
compatibility with Microsoft WinHelp 4.0 source.
Altura: http://www.altura.com
Quick Off the Mark
On July 2, Kelly Rowan Mark was born, at 8 lbs., 3 oz. Dave Mark, the proud poppa,
announces that the beautiful baby girl and mother are both doing fine. While MacTech Magazine does not recommend the use of tobacco products, a round of virtual cigars is
certainly appropriate. Rumor has it the young lass takes after her dad and is already
babbling PowerPC opcodes as she naps.