TidBITS#390/28-Jul-97
=====================

  Mac OS 8 - it's here to stay! Geoff Duncan delves into some
  subtleties of this major upgrade, and qualifies everything with a
  bit of informal usability testing with some normal Mac users. This
  issue also features the release of the Robert Hess Memorial
  Macworld Party List, and an announcement of ClarisWorks for Kids.
  Finally, Tonya takes a site-centric view of Web publishing by
  comparing Site Weaver, SiteMill, and CyberStudio Pro.

Topics:
    MailBITS/28-Jul-97
    Kicking the Tires on Mac OS 8
    Spinning the Web Part 6: Linking up with Site Managers

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-390.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#390_28-Jul-97.etx>

Copyright 1997 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/28-Jul-97
------------------

**Macworld Expo Party List** -- Ilene Hoffman
  <ileneh@mediaone.net> has posted the Robert Hess Memorial Macworld
  Events list (see TidBITS-310_ for information about the late
  Robert Hess, who started the list) for the upcoming Macworld Expo
  in Boston from August 5th to August 8th. The list will change
  through August 6th, so don't assume that it's complete now. Do
  note that many of the events and parties during Macworld Boston
  require invitations; please don't ruin it for everyone by trying
  to crash invitation-only events. If you're hosting an event, you
  can submit a form with the information about your event or send it
  directly to Ilene. [ACE]

<http://www.xensei.com/users/ileneh/partylist.html>


**Claris Works on Kids' Software** -- Claris is shipping
  ClarisWorks for Kids 1.0, a special version of ClarisWorks aimed
  at children ages five through eleven and perhaps the first Claris
  software to ship with a soundtrack. The passworded Teacher menu
  lets savvy kids or adults set preferences, the occasional alert
  message is labeled "Important Question," and the dialog box for
  opening files makes it easy to get at certain folders plus the
  many templates that ship with the product. The menu items and
  toolbar buttons are tastefully and brightly colored, and make me
  wonder wistfully why "productivity" software for grown-ups is
  usually so boring looking.

  CWFK files are compatible with ClarisWorks 4.0. The estimated
  educational retail price is $49 and there's also site license
  pricing. To run the software, you'll minimally need System 7.1, a
  68020-based Macintosh, 3,250K available RAM, a 13-inch monitor,
  and 30 MB disk space (to make CWFK speak, you must run MacinTalk,
  which requires additional RAM). A trial version is available as a
  4 MB download; as of this writing the download link on the
  ClarisWorks for Kids Web site didn't work, but I could use the FTP
  site. Claris -- 800/544-8554 -- 408/727-9054 -- <info@claris.com>
  [TJE]

<http://www.claris.com/kids/>
<ftp://ftp.claris.com/pub/USA-Macintosh/Trial_Software/
ClarisWorksForKids.bin>


Kicking the Tires on Mac OS 8
-----------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Last week's article in TidBITS-389_ gave an overview of some of
  the new capabilities and features in Mac OS 8. This article looks
  at some subtler real-world and technical details.

  To determine what I should put in this article, I watched as two
  people used Mac OS 8 for the first time on one of my machines.
  (One is a power user and de facto Mac administrator at a large,
  multi-platform company; the other uses her Mac at home for word
  processing, simple Internet use, and educational CD-ROMs). I also
  asked four other long-time Macintosh users (two of whom work in
  the computing industry, all of whom are using Mac OS 8) what they
  knew about the release and what they expected from it. These notes
  respond directly to their comments and concerns.


**System Folder Folders** -- One of the first things people
  noticed upon opening the Mac OS 8 System Folder is that it has new
  sub-folders. Just as System 7 included folders for Control Panels,
  Extensions, Fonts, Preferences, and others, Mac OS 8 creates new
  sub-folders to reduce clutter. Many, such as Help, Voices, Modem
  Scripts, and Printer Descriptions, are self-explanatory; others
  should help when third-party applications adopt them, including
  Application Support (for programs with their own system resources,
  like many Adobe and Microsoft products) and Internet Plug-Ins
  (which will hopefully serve as a repository for browser plug-ins
  and add-ons, so updating or switching browsers isn't as painful).
  There are also folders outside the System Folder, including
  Assistants (with Apple's Setup and Internet Assistants),
  Utilities, and OpenDoc's Stationery and Editors folders. The
  Scripting Additions folder has been promoted to the root level of
  the System Folder (which can confuse some scripting utilities).


**System Services** -- Mac OS 8 includes a significant user
  interface revision to File Sharing. The File Sharing and Users &
  Groups control panels provide a better (though still occasionally
  clutzy) interface, and the Sharing Setup and File Sharing Monitor
  control panels have been rolled into a new File Sharing control
  panel. Setting up Sharing privileges for individual folders now
  uses pop-up menus rather than checkboxes, but a rather unfortunate
  Copy button confuses the process of propagating sharing privileges
  through a folder hierarchy. (Two users thought they had to copy
  sharing privileges to the clipboard, then paste them onto
  subsequent folders.)

  Programs that use the system color picker can now use two new
  color pickers: the whimsical Crayon Picker (a big hit with dBUG,
  the local Mac user group) and an HTML Picker, which can display
  HTML expressions of colors (as three hexadecimal numbers, like
  0099FF) and be restricted to non-dithering "Web colors." If you
  press Option in any color picker, the cursor changes to an
  eyedropper that can to pick up any color displayed on your screen.

  Mac OS 8 also includes some cool under-the-hood gadgets. Text
  Encoding Converter 1.2 enables applications to convert text
  between arbitrary encoding systems (like Mac OS Roman to Windows
  Latin-1), letting special characters, diacriticals, and other text
  elements to translate correctly across systems, platforms, and
  languages. It's also the first step to providing Unicode
  conversion on the Mac, supporting the enormous Unicode 1.1 and 2.0
  character sets, plus all Mac OS script encodings, many Windows
  encodings, plus some Web and email encoding schemes.
  Unfortunately, programs must take specific advantage of these
  services; hopefully that support will become more widespread.

<http://www.unicode.org/>

  Choose About This Computer from the Finder's Apple menu, and
  you'll see an enhanced overview of memory use. Under previous
  systems, applications that used temporary memory in the System
  heap were shown using the relatively small partitions set in their
  Get Info windows, while the System heap grew ever larger. Now,
  temporary memory used by applications is shown as part of that
  application's memory partition, so you can see how much RAM
  applications like Internet Explorer are _really_ using.
  Unfortunately, the new About This Computer window confused one of
  my sample users: he wanted to know why an application was taking
  more memory than he had given it in the program's Get Info window,
  thought something was wrong, and restarted the machine.

  On the networking side, Mac OS 8 includes Open Transport 1.2,
  which offers protection from the heavily publicized Ping Of Death
  and SYN flood denial-of-service Internet attacks. Open Transport
  is the _only_ networking technology supported under Mac OS 8; you
  can't revert to classic networking even on machines that do not
  require Open Transport. Mac OS 8 also includes AppleShare
  Workstation Client 3.7.1, which can establish connections via TCP
  to AppleShare IP servers over local networks or the Internet.

  A preliminary tech note on Mac OS 8 is available from Apple. If
  you need more detailed information on OS 8 internals, it's
  helpful.

<http://devworld.apple.com/MacOS8/MacOS8/MacOS8.html>


**Cache & Carry** -- After last week's article on Mac OS 8, I
  received several messages from readers asking about Mac OS 8's
  performance on 68040-based Macs. I've been running OS 8 on a
  Quadra 650 for a few weeks, and the results have been quite good.
  System profiling utilities (like Speedometer and Norton System
  Info - MacBench wouldn't run) put the machine in the same ballpark
  as its performance under System 7.6.1. However, the machine feels
  somewhat snappier, especially switching applications and handling
  background processing.

  There's one caveat to these performance notes: disk cache makes a
  world of difference, especially in the Finder. On either a 68040-
  or PowerPC-based machine, a 128K disk cache (set via the Memory
  control panel) seemed adequate until I increased it to 512K or 1
  MB and noticed Finder responsiveness increase significantly.
  Suddenly windows opened, closed, and refreshed more quickly, and
  file intensive applications (like Web browsers) moved faster. I
  currently have my disk caches set to about 512K, but optimum
  settings will depend on your system and available RAM. Click the
  Default button in the Memory control panel for an initial setting
  for your machine, then adjust if necessary.


**OS 8 Utilities** -- Numerous utilities and add-ons for OS 8 are
  beginning to appear, although I'm only going to note items my
  sample users or TidBITS readers asked about.

* Trygve Isaacson has released CMM Plug-ins, a PowerPC-only $10
  shareware add-on for the Finder's contextual menus that lets users
  modify file creator types, hide and show items, play with text
  files (converting line endings and stripping HTML), and more.

<http://www.bombaydigital.com/cmms/>

* Open Door Networks has released AFP Engage! (which enables you
  to double-click AFP URLS for AppleShare IP file servers) and
  Personal LogDoor, which provides logging, activity, and AppleTalk
  capabilities for Personal Web Sharing (and Microsoft's PWS). Both
  are commercial products, but they don't require Mac OS 8 (they
  work with System 7.5 or higher).

<http://www.opendoor.com/>

* Apple has updated MacsBug and System Picker for Mac OS 8; if you
  don't know what these are, don't worry about them.

<http://devworld.apple.com/MacOS8/MacsBug.sea.hqx>
<http://devworld.apple.com/MacOS8/System-Picker.sea.hqx>


**Apple Events & AppleScript** -- The most subtle, yet pervasive,
  changes involve the Finder and AppleScript 1.1.2, the first real
  update to AppleScript in about three years. Those who use
  AppleScript to automate and customize Macintosh will find that
  AppleScript 1.1.2 fixes known bugs (like concatenating with an
  empty list and using multi-character delimiters) and adds support
  for new application types (control panel and accessory
  applications). Bigger changes lie in the System and Finder. Many
  items previously scriptable through the Finder (like sharing
  privileges) now live in scriptable control panels, and the Finder
  handles several file properties in new ways: scripts compiled
  under System 7.x using these properties will now find the word
  "obsolete" following them when they are re-opened under Mac OS 8.
  If you remove the word "obsolete", the scripts will probably work
  fine under OS 8, but won't run under earlier systems. This forces
  some script writers to maintain different source scripts for
  different versions of the Mac OS. Apple has also changed the way
  applications and processes are treated, and the Finder now
  processes Apple events in separate threads, which can create
  misleading timeout errors. Apple has posted good information about
  AppleScript with Mac OS 8; I recommend it to all AppleScript
  programmers.

<http://applescript.apple.com/applescript_overview/system8/OS8_index.html>

  The Finder also has a new event up its oversized sleeve: "rapp,"
  meaning "re-open application." This event will help programmers
  solve a problem many novice users experience: they don't realize
  that an application is still running, double-click its icon, and
  don't notice that the menubar has changed in response. The "rapp"
  event should let programs detect an attempted re-launch and
  respond appropriately (perhaps by opening an untitled window or
  presenting a dialog box). Unfortunately, a few older programs
  respond with an error, sometimes putting up a dialog saying that
  an Apple event error has occurred.

  AppleScript 1.1.2 is _not_ PowerPC native; that should come in
  AppleScript 1.2, which may be available by mid-1998.


**Let's Focus, Group!** How well did my informal group of Mac
  users understand the changes in OS 8? Pretty well overall, but
  perhaps not as well as Apple would like.

  A rose by any other name is... a rose that's had its name changed.
  Apple's Copland operating system project was to have been called
  System 8, which was "coming soon" from Apple as early as 1994. In
  August of 1996, Apple mothballed Copland and in December of 1996
  (after months of rumor and speculation) decided to acquire NeXT.
  This led to Rhapsody, the combined Apple-NeXT operating system
  project currently in development. Last March, Apple announced
  plans to release the Mac OS 7.7 update (code-named Tempo) as Mac
  OS 8, since it incorporated technologies developed for Copland,
  and sported a major user experience overhaul.

  If that sounds familiar to you, consider yourself one of the
  Macintosh literati - none my informal group of Mac users could
  recite that whole story (with or without dates). The distinctions
  between Copland, System 8, Mac OS 8, Rhapsody and even the Be OS
  can be lost on users who don't pore over Macintosh magazines, Web
  sites, and mailing lists. All but one of my sample users asked me
  where "the NeXT stuff" was in Mac OS 8 (one even asked how to get
  to the Unix prompt). Another had read extensive coverage of the Be
  OS last winter and expressed disappointment Be technology didn't
  "show through." Still another had heard that nearly all control
  panels and extensions would break under Mac OS 8 (this would have
  been true of Copland) and was pleasantly surprised to learn Mac OS
  8 had a high degree of compatibility with current system
  enhancements.

  Mac OS 8's new platinum appearance can confuse users who grew up
  on System 7.x, since some interface elements can give false visual
  cues. One user wanted to know why the Finder's pop-up windows
  closed automatically ("When I open a drawer on my desk, it stays
  open until I bang my knee on it!"); another saw the wider window
  borders on most document windows and questioned "Why are all these
  windows modal - I thought Mac OS 8 was supposed to be multi-
  threaded?"

  The six Macintosh users I spoke with are not necessarily
  representative of the larger Mac community, and it's inappropriate
  to draw sweeping conclusions from their comments. For space
  reasons, I also haven't mentioned how much of Mac OS 8 they
  cruised through with little or no trouble: Web Sharing, File
  Sharing, setting up a Desktop Printer, sticky menus, spring-loaded
  folders, collapse boxes, and contextual menus. More telling is
  that the two users I directly introduced to Mac OS 8 were
  favorably impressed and plan to buy copies for their own machines.
  Despite a few rough spots in the product and Apple's presentation
  of it, Mac OS 8 is a very good thing. Let me put it this way: if
  Mac OS 8 were free, I'd recommend everyone with the requisite
  hardware get it immediately. Since it's not free, you must decide
  for yourself if it's worth the cost. It is for us.


**DealBITS Discount** -- Cyberian Outpost is offering Mac OS 8 to
  TidBITS readers for $95.95, a negotiated $2 discount off its
  regular $97.95 price.

<http://www.tidbits.com/products/mac-os.html>


Spinning the Web Part 6: Linking up with Site Managers
------------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  This ever-lengthening article series should be giving you a broad
  view of what's available for Web publishing tasks. In previous
  issues, I toured the world of Web publishing from a page-centric
  view. Last week, in TidBITS-389_, I switched to a site-centric
  approach and examined UserLand Frontier. This week, we move from
  Frontier's complexity to look at a few simpler options: SiteWeaver
  by Miracle Software, SiteMill by Adobe Systems, and CyberStudio by
  GoLive Systems.

<http://www.miracleinc.com/>
<http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/siteben.html>
<http://www.golive.com/>


**SiteWeaver** -- SiteWeaver takes a bare bones approach to site
  management. Instead of providing a kitchen sink of tools for
  cleaning up a site, it sticks to the singular task of moving items
  within a Web site without breaking relative links. The software
  minimally requires a 68020-based Macintosh running System 7 or
  later with about 5 MB of free RAM.

  SiteWeaver's main window, called Current Web Site, enables you to
  move files around the site and acts as a jumping-off point for
  working on site elements. The window displays items in an outline
  format, with different levels corresponding to different folders.
  Unfortunately, there's no way to expand or contract the outline,
  so if you have a big site you'll be doing a lot of scrolling. Once
  you locate an item in the outline, you can open it by double-
  clicking it, or load it in Netscape Navigator by Option-clicking
  it.

  SiteWeaver is handy for setting up a site's structure from
  scratch. You can add new folders or pages to the outline at any
  time; the pages can be blank or based on templates; and pages can
  come from any program you like. If you work in new pages, however,
  you must be careful to close them, because if they remain open
  while you move other items, links to those items are not modified,
  and SiteWeaver does not notify you of the problem.

  SiteWeaver can identify existing bad relative links in a site and
  provides an easy way to fix them. It has no features for working
  with external links (usually links to other Web sites). It can
  create reports that summarize all links in a site, list bad
  relative links, and note orphaned items that have no links leading
  to them.

  In summary, SiteWeaver provides a simple set of handy features,
  and it does not lock you into using any particular HTML editor.
  (As you'll see, many of the more sophisticated packages lock you
  into - or at least strongly encourage you to use - a particular
  editor.) Regrettably, though, Miracle Software is charging too
  much for SiteWeaver. If you own World Wide Web Weaver (reviewed in
  TidBITS-385_), SiteWeaver costs $59. If you don't, prices range
  from $109 to $139. For those prices, I'd expect more features for
  manipulating the site outline, professionally edited documentation
  and dialog boxes, and more features (such as FTP or remote link
  checking). Miracle Software plans to release SiteWeaver upgrades;
  perhaps Miracle will price these versions more appropriately,
  given the competition.


**SiteMill** -- In terms of features, Adobe SiteMill 2.0 picks up
  where SiteWeaver leaves off, though it lacks the ability to create
  new pages, so you cannot quickly build a site's skeleton in
  SiteMill. Like SiteWeaver, SiteMill displays a site in a Finder-
  like outline view. Unlike SiteWeaver, SiteMill offers conveniences
  for working with the outline: the outline can expand or contract
  to reveal and hide folder contents; items can be sorted by name,
  kind, date, and so on; and - if you sort by name - you can quickly
  move to items beginning with a certain letter by typing that
  letter. As in SiteWeaver, you can open a file by double-clicking
  it, and you can Option-click to open a file in your preferred Web
  browser (SiteWeaver is limited to Netscape Navigator).

  Along with the Site view window, SiteMill also offers an External
  URLs window that lists all external URLs. There's a command for
  verifying them (thankfully in the background), and you can update
  a changed external link once and then SiteMill will change it
  throughout the site. SiteMill can also identify problematic
  relative links in a site and help you fix them.

  SiteMill can operate as an FTP client, making it possible to
  upload a completed site to a remote Web server. You must set up
  your exact path in SiteMill's preferences - there's no way to
  first connect to the server, see where you are, and then upload.
  This streamlines operations once everything is set up and working
  correctly, but it's hard to troubleshoot and options like
  Synchronize are a little scary. (Synchronize modifies a directory
  on a server so that it exactly matches a folder on your desktop,
  complete with deleting files that don't match those in the
  folder.) There's an option for uploading only files that have
  changed, but there is no download option. In my testing, I've been
  unable to make SiteMill upload to any of three different server
  programs. Given the troubleshooting and testing I've done, I
  suspect the problem may be local to my machine, but I suggest
  making sure SiteMill works with your FTP server before buying,
  especially if your server is not mainstream.

  Unless you upgrade from SiteMill 1.0 (a free upgrade) the only way
  to get SiteMill is as a component of the PageMill 2.01 package.
  Not surprisingly, SiteMill picks PageMill as its HTML editor of
  choice. For example, SiteMill automatically incorporates changes
  made to PageMill documents, but changes made in other HTML editors
  require that you reload the site, a process that would grow
  tedious if done frequently. As another example of SiteMill's
  synergy with PageMill, dragging an item from SiteMill's Site view
  window to a PageMill document creates a link from the document to
  the item. If you use PageMill for basic layout, but then tweak
  files elsewhere, you must tread carefully in SiteMill, because
  some actions will trigger PageMill to examine and potentially
  alter the HTML in those files.

  Adobe continues to emphasize Adobe Acrobat's PDF as a file format
  - SiteMill lists Acrobat files as site resources and can work with
  links in Acrobat documents. Adobe recommends optimizing Acrobat
  3.0 files after working with them in SiteMill; SiteMill cannot
  perform this function automatically.

  SiteMill's Find and Replace, though functional, is limited. It
  lacks wild card options, and doesn't offer a technique for
  replacing in only a portion of a site or to approve individual
  replacements.

  SiteMill requires (minimally) a 68020-based Mac running System 7.1
  with at least 2.5 MB free RAM and a 4-bit monitor. For "best
  performance" the requirements increase to 68040-based Mac running
  System 7.5 with 3.5 MB free RAM.

  Although my impression of SiteMill is mixed - for every new good
  feature, I've thought of at least one way it could be better - the
  fact remains that PageMill users should find SiteMill a handy way
  to manage their sites, certainly better than SiteMill 1.x or
  managing them by hand. However, If you already use other site
  management tools, I'm not convinced that the PageMill/SiteMill
  package represents a compelling solution. If you can't decide
  between PageMill and its closest pre-SiteMill 2.0 competitors
  (Claris Home Page and Symantec Visual Page; see TidBITS-386_), or
  if you are teetering between PageMill and other software that
  includes site management options (such as CyberStudio), the fact
  that PageMill 2.01 lists for $149, but is commonly available for
  under $100, may tip the scales in PageMill's favor.


**CyberStudio** -- That said, it's time to revisit CyberStudio.
  The $349/$149 (suggested retail price/academic) CyberStudio
  integrates text-based and visually oriented tools for composing
  Web pages with site management tools (for a look at its page
  composition features, see TidBITS-387_). Like SiteMill, which
  prefers that you use PageMill, you wouldn't buy CyberStudio for
  site management alone - you'd buy it if you plan to use
  CyberStudio for the majority of your page development.

  CyberStudio forces you to surrender control over the directory
  structure of the final site. When CyberStudio "renders" a site, it
  creates a site folder containing a default page, plus a Pages
  folder for other pages and a Media folder for other site
  resources.

  CyberStudio displays a site in several views; the one that best
  parallels the view in SiteMill is the tabbed Project View, which
  has different tabs for different resource types: pages, media,
  URLs, and so on. You can group items in mock folders in these
  views (which expand and contract, much like Finder outlines), and
  items can be renamed without harming relative links. The URL view
  stores full URLs, and if you modify a URL stored there, all such
  URLs in the site can update automatically. Unfortunately,
  CyberStudio lacks a feature for checking external links. Further,
  although CyberStudio can import a site, the process for adding
  external URLs to the URLs tab is cumbersome and by no means
  automatic. Other views offer a look at a site's hierarchy, with
  the ability to drill down on any one page and look in detail at
  resources linking to and from it.

  CyberStudio has a built-in FTP feature, and though it didn't work
  with NetPresenz (an FTP server from Stairways Software), it did
  work generally for me, and let me move around in a server's
  directory structure as well as download files. CyberStudio lacks
  automation for uploading only changed files or for synchronizing
  directories - in fact, to upload, you must drag in items from the
  Finder, a fact that renders the FTP feature more show than
  substance.

  Like SiteMill, CyberStudio has a site-wide Find-and-Replace that
  misses the boat. In CyberStudio's case, the feature runs extremely
  slowly on my Power Mac 7600 and lacks wildcard searching. Another
  feature found in CyberStudio (and one that PageMill lacks) is the
  ability to label files (for example, you might label them to
  indicate if they're ready to be published).


**Summing Up** -- In the end, SiteMill brings to PageMill a
  stronger set of site management features than CyberStudio offers,
  but neither program's site management features are must-haves.
  SiteMill works best in conjunction with PageMill (which isn't my
  favorite HTML editor) and CyberStudio's site-related features need
  fleshing out. Even so, both these products have much to offer. As
  I noted earlier in this series, if you live in the Adobe milieu,
  you'll find PageMill especially easy to work with, and now that it
  includes SiteMill you get a lot of bang for the buck. If
  CyberStudio's marriage of text and visual tools appeals to you,
  you'll find plenty of useful features, with the bonus of some help
  with site organization, help that - if you wish - you can easily
  work around, thus maintaining a site's structure independently
  from what CyberStudio thinks is happening. Next week, space
  permitting, I'll examine a few more applications that fall under
  the umbrella of site management, and then we'll take a few weeks
  off to make room for Macworld Expo coverage before finishing with
  a look at handy Web publishing utilities.


**DealBITS Discount** -- We've arranged for Cyberian Outpost to
  offer TidBITS readers PageMill 2.01 (which includes SiteMill 2.0)
  for $97.95, a $2 discount off Cyberian's regular $99.95 price.
  We've also negotiated a $295.95 price for CyberStudio, $2 off
  Cyberian's regular $297.95 price.

<http://www.tidbits.com/products/page-mill.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/products/cyberstudio.html>


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