TidBITS#399/29-Sep-97
=====================

  This week brings both death and birth - we mourn the passing of
  our friend, colleague, and Macintosh luminary Cary Lu and then
  turn around to share the details of our new publication, NetBITS
  (think of it as TidBITS on Internet steroids). Tonya explores more
  contextual menu utilities and we note updates to LetterRip and
  ListSTAR, the acquisition of Dayna by Intel, the release of
  Internet Config 1.4, the move of Macworld Boston, and Virtual PC
  1.0.1.

Topics:
    MailBITS/29-Sep-97
    Cary Lu Remembered
    The New NetBITS
    More Context on Contextual Menus

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-399.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#399_29-Sep-97.etx>

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

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
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* Hitachi Home Electronics, MP-EG1A camera -- 800/HITACHI
   New camera records 20 minutes MPEG video, 3,000 JPEGs or
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   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/29-Sep-97
------------------

**NetBITS Subscription Reminder** -- We received a great response
  to the first issue of NetBITS, sent to all current TidBITS
  subscribers (our apologies for not explaining the unusual send
  within NetBITS - we incorrectly assumed TidBITS readers would have
  read last week's TidBITS issue before receiving NetBITS on
  Friday). TidBITS subscribers will also receive the  second issue
  automatically on 02-Oct-97; after that you won't receive NetBITS
  unless you subscribe by sending email to <netbits-on@netbits.net>.
  Read on in this issue for a full explanation of NetBITS. [ACE]

<http://www.netbits.net/>


**TidBITS in Italian** -- We're happy to announce the Italian
  translation of TidBITS. The first few issues have been translated
  by coordinator Francesco Madeddu <madfra@tin.it>, and he's looking
  for volunteers to help out with translating. If you're interested
  in helping translate articles, send Francesco mail. The Italian
  translation of TidBITS is available via the Web at the URL below
  and via a mailing list, so tell friends who might be interested in
  reading TidBITS in Italian. To subscribe, send email to
  <tidbits-it-on@tidbits.com>; to unsubscribe, send email to
  <tidbits-it-off@tidbits.com>. Thanks to Francesco and our other
  volunteer translators for making TidBITS an increasingly multi-
  lingual publication. [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/lang/it/>


**Intel to Acquire Dayna Communications** -- Last week, Intel
  announced an agreement to acquire Dayna Communications, the Salt
  Lake City company that has produced popular networking and storage
  peripherals (remember the DaynaFile that read 5.25" DOS disks?)
  for Macintosh and Windows computers for over a decade. Dayna's
  product line focuses on the needs of small business and
  educational sites and will become a key part of Intel's strategy
  for the small business networking market. An Intel spokeswoman
  said that Intel and Dayna will be evaluating Dayna's entire
  product line, including Mac products, to determine the best mix of
  products for 1998. [MHA]

<http://www.intel.com/pressroom/archive/releases/NW092497.HTM>


**Easier Than Upgrading a PC** -- Connectix has released the
  Virtual PC 1.0.1 Updater, which makes Virtual PC easier to use and
  fixes a number of small problems, including setting modem speeds
  incorrectly and many game-related issues. The new version offers
  faster floppy disk access and makes it simpler to use Virtual PC
  with multiple operating systems, in addition to better support for
  Ethernet adapters and printing. Virtual PC 1.0.1 also addresses a
  problem that we missed in our review (see TidBITS-397_). Pressing
  Option while launching Virtual PC brings up a Preferences dialog
  before Virtual PC launches Windows 95; this enables you to change
  D: drive settings and other behavior that requires a reboot of the
  virtual machine. Version 1.0.1 now allows you to choose Shut Down
  inside Windows 95 and then press Option to access the same
  feature. The updater is about a 3 MB download and comes in
  different versions for Windows 3.11 and Windows 95. [GF]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04121>
<http://www.connectix.com/html/cvp_updates.html>


**Internet Config 1.4 Released** -- Peter N Lewis and Quinn have
  released version 1.4 of Internet Config, the public domain
  solution for centralizing Internet preferences such as email
  server, Web home page, download folder, and much more. Many
  Internet applications rely on Internet Config, including
  NewsWatcher, Anarchie, Fetch, and Internet Explorer. Internet
  Config 1.4 offers significant reliability improvements over
  previous versions, along with a few new features, including
  support within the Internet Config application for routing Get URL
  Apple events, default preferences within the Internet Config
  extension, sanity checks on preferences, and an internal backup of
  the preferences so it can revert to that backup in the event of
  corruption. Internet Config is a 161K download. [ACE]

<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/select/internet-config.hqx>


**Mailing List Managers Updated** -- The two major commercial
  mailing list manager programs, StarNine's ListSTAR and FogCity's
  LetterRip, have both been updated recently. New features in
  ListSTAR 1.2 provide improved templates for setting up new email
  services and internal changes that improve performance by reducing
  the number of DNS lookups when sending mail on machines using Open
  Transport. The ListSTAR update is a 3.3 MB download for either the
  POP or SMTP versions of ListSTAR. FogCity's LetterRip 2.0.1 is a
  maintenance release with a few welcome feature additions,
  including the capability to disable list headers for a list and
  support for Maxum's PageSentry server monitoring software.
  LetterRip 2.0.1 is a 2.7 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.starnine.com/liststar/liststarupdates.html>
<http://www.fogcity.com/lr_download.html>
<http://www.maxum.com/PageSentry/>


**Macworld Big Apple** -- IDG Expo Management, formed with the
  recent acquisition of MHA Event Management, has announced that
  future east coast Macworld Expos will be held in New York City
  rather than in Boston, as has happened since 1984. The first
  Macworld Expo in New York will take place at the Jacob K. Javits
  Convention Center on Manhattan's west side, running from 08-Jul-98
  to 10-Jul-98 (the Macworld Expo Professional Conference Program
  will run from 06-Jul-98 to 08-Jul-98). According to the Boston
  Globe, the move comes in response to New York City being a bigger
  Macintosh market, and due to feedback from vendors and show goers
  for whom the dual-site show in Boston was a logistical nightmare.
  [MHA]

<http://www.mha.com/idgexpos/pr/pr_mwny.html>
<http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe/globehtml/261/
MacWorld_Expo_to_leave_Boston.htm>


Cary Lu Remembered
------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  There is little more difficult than to write about a close friend
  who has died. The words come slowly, and in clumps, with little
  sense of the whole. And yet, memories and stories surge beneath
  the surface, along with all sorts of often conflicting feelings.
  Bear with me as I try to explain what Cary Lu, who died 23-Sep-97
  of cancer, meant to me and to so many others both in and out of
  the Mac community.

  Those in the Mac community remember Cary as a contributing editor
  to Macworld and as author of The Apple Macintosh Book, one of the
  first Macintosh books. But, many people author popular books and
  write regularly for Macintosh magazines. Those descriptions don't
  do justice to Cary's depth and breadth.

  Tonya and I met Cary at a meeting of dBUG, the Seattle Macintosh
  Users Group. The Quadras had just been released, and Cary relayed
  the complete technical details to a rapt audience. He was often
  interrupted by his then two-year-old son, Nathaniel, and even Cary
  couldn't answer detailed questions about new Macs and deal with a
  toddler; luckily a friend of Tonya's from Microsoft volunteered to
  watch Nathaniel, and the meeting proceeded uninterrupted.

  Tonya and I bumped into Cary occasionally after that, but since he
  didn't do much online, we moved in different circles. At Macworld
  Expos, though, members of the press tend to meet, and after seeing
  Cary in Boston and San Francisco several times, we began meeting
  in our hometown of Seattle as well.

  That was the start of our friendship, at first restricted to
  computer industry topics. Then Cary invited Geoff Duncan and me to
  drive with him and another friend to Comdex PacRim in Vancouver,
  Canada. We went along, only realizing later that much of Cary's
  motivation was to have dinner at a specific restaurant (though,
  interestingly given his proximity to Seattle, Cary said he'd never
  tasted beer or coffee, the smell being too much for him) and to
  visit used CD stores in his ongoing hunt for rare imports of
  classical music to add to his thousand-CD collection.

  As we became better friends, more details spilled out. Cary had a
  bachelor's degree in physics from Berkeley, and a Ph.D. in vision
  research from Cal Tech. He was at Bell Labs around the time Unix
  was invented, developed short films for Sesame Street, worked for
  the Children's Television Workshop, and was on the team that came
  up with the Nova television series. He also worked on technology
  education issues for the governments of Australia, Algeria, and
  Kenya. He'd done so much, and in talking with him after he was
  diagnosed with terminal cancer at age 51, he felt he'd lived a
  full life.

  What he did regret was that he wouldn't see his children, Meredith
  and Nathaniel, now ten and seven, grow up. Cary was perhaps the
  most doggedly practical person I've ever met, and he loved
  children. When Tonya and I were discussing the arguments behind
  having children, I came up with the brilliant idea of asking
  Cary's opinion. "After all," I thought, "Cary will certainly have
  come up with the quintessential rational argument for having
  children." So I called him and posed the question - Cary always
  had time to talk. Without the slightest hesitation, he laughed and
  said that there was no rational argument for children and that you
  simply had to want them. Although not the answer I expected, it
  was a perfect example of Cary's ability to distill the essence of
  a situation.

  Cary deserves credit for two extremely cogent pieces of thinking
  in regard to hotly debated issues in the computer world. First, in
  his position of helping decide the computer policies of his
  daughter's elementary school, he noted that it made little
  difference what platform a child used in third grade because the
  industry moved so quickly that all computers would be completely
  different by the time that third grader reached college. Second,
  in regard to the age-old question of what computer platform should
  you buy, Cary commented accurately that it should be the platform
  used by your closest technical friend, the kind of person you
  could call on a Saturday night if you had a problem.

  (Cary also told the story of how, many years ago, an annoying
  neighbor who'd heard that he was a computer expert wanted
  confirmation of her choice of an Apple II computer. He said that
  it sounded like an excellent choice, not telling her that his
  answer was based on the fact that he knew nothing about the Apple
  II and thus couldn't be rooked into a lifetime of tech support.)

  Although he ducked that particular neighbor, Cary did more to help
  other individuals with computers than any ten people I could name.
  Growing up in the 50s and 60s, he had become proficient with
  electronics and excelled at fixing electronics of all sorts for
  friends and acquaintances. Once, while soldering a bad connection
  in my PowerBook 100, he asked if I had done electronics as a kid,
  sounding slightly confused about how someone could get into
  computers to my level without a knowledge of electronics. I
  replied that I'd grown up on a farm and had spent my summers
  instead fixing farm machinery, for which hammers were more useful
  than soldering irons.

  Cary's skill with malfunctioning electronics also aided him in one
  of his favorite pastimes - buying and selling old and used
  computer equipment. His goal was to acquire all the hardware he
  wanted without paying a cent in the end, and during our last trip
  to Boeing Surplus (where you can buy Boeing's old and extra
  stuff), Cary commented that he'd come out even in 1996, spending
  just a little less than he made from selling old equipment. The
  stories abounded, such as the time he bought a bunch of old
  monochrome two-page displays, fixed most of them and used others
  as parts, and resold them, but not before his wife Ellen
  complained about them taking up the entire garage floor. He also
  once put together a 486-based PC clone using spare parts and stuff
  friends gave him, spending only $1 on a clock crystal chip.

  Although he seldom bought new computers (he worked on a used IIfx
  for a long time and only recently upgraded to a used Power Mac
  8100), Cary delighted in finding great deals. He once bought an
  Ethernet card at a scratch-and-dent sale for $7, after the
  salesperson asked him what he would pay. That was his favorite
  deal until the time he bought a pallet of stuff at an auction to
  get a broken stereomicroscope for his kids. He knew he could fix
  the microscope, and it was well worth the $35 he paid for the
  whole pallet. As he dug through the rest of the detritus, though,
  he discovered about 50 power cords and a pair of sealed boxes with
  DEC written on them - those boxes contained a pair of 2 GB SCSI
  drives. A friend at DEC helped him get the necessary hardware
  upgrade so they worked with Macs.

  Cary's friends were a major part of his life, and he had many from
  his various careers, something that few of us realized until his
  cancer worsened in the last few months. Suddenly, lots of people
  wanted to come visit him, both when he was in the hospital for
  treatments and after, and almost every time we visited him, other
  friends were there as well.

  Cary's cancer, which was diagnosed just after Macworld San
  Francisco in January of 1997, had first evidenced itself as back
  pain when he sat down, and Tonya and I ate a standing lunch with
  him toward the end of that Macworld. A week later, an MRI scan
  revealed the tumor in a vertebrae that was causing the pain. From
  then, the news continued to worsen, though for a while Cary showed
  few symptoms other than the results of the radiation and
  chemotherapy. We spent more time than usual with him after that,
  and became far closer friends than would have happened had he
  remained healthy.

  Others have experienced the same deepening of friendships with
  Cary, and we and a number of other friends have collaborated to
  create a Web site to hold thoughts and remembrances from anyone
  whose life Cary touched. We hope that we can all use the site to
  express better who Cary was and what he meant to us. More
  important, we are archiving everything to give to Cary's wife
  Ellen and his children for when they're older. Nathaniel and
  Meredith will not have Cary in their lives as they continue to
  grow up, but they'll be able to read how he was a part of so many
  other lives.

  The site has already had tens of thousands of visitors, and
  submissions continue to come in from people who've known Cary. I
  encourage you to visit the site, read what others have written,
  and, if you have anything to share, to send it to <carylu-
  remembered@tidbits.com>.

<http://www.tidbits.com/carylu/>

  We are all the poorer with the loss of Cary. I will miss his
  knowledge, skill, precision, and fanatical pickiness (he was
  enthusiastic about very few products, and only recently admitted
  to the overall utility of the Internet). I will also miss his
  subtle wit, represented so drily in his writing that those who
  didn't know him often failed to see the humor. And finally, I will
  honor his memory as a friend and role model, for there was great
  good in Cary to emulate. I wish the same could be said of more of
  us.


The New NetBITS
---------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Now that you've seen the first issue, I want to tell you more
  about NetBITS, our new publication. TidBITS began as a newsletter
  focusing primarily on Macintosh issues, and over the years, we
  began covering more Internet topics. Even though our Internet
  coverage has generally been Macintosh-related, such as Tonya's
  extensive reviews of HTML authoring tools, we've had internal
  debates over the ideal ratio of Macintosh to Internet information.
  At times we considered separating the Macintosh and Internet
  content, but were always dissuaded by the amount of work it takes
  to put out one weekly publication, much less two.

  Enter Glenn Fleishman <glenn@netbits.net>. Glenn's an old friend
  of ours, and was an early contributor to TidBITS, before he
  relocated to Seattle and moved beyond being an email acquaintance.
  Glenn's experience is far-ranging, starting with the Kodak Center
  for Creative Imaging, after which he worked as the managing editor
  for Open House, a book-packaging firm in Seattle that has created
  numerous books for Peachpit Press. Back in 1994, Glenn left Open
  House to found Point of Presence Company (POPCO), one of the first
  Web hosting companies. When we were without a dedicated Internet
  connection for nine months (thanks to US West's incompetence),
  Glenn volunteered to host TidBITS's Web and mailing list servers
  on POPCO's T1 connection. During that time, Glenn also started and
  moderated the popular Internet Marketing Discussion List. Then, in
  late 1996, Glenn sold POPCO and spent six months as Catalog
  Manager for Internet bookseller Amazon.com. Eventually, the pace
  of the fastest-growing startup of all-time (after Microsoft) got
  to him, and he left to pursue slightly less frenetic activity.

  After taking time to smell the roses in his back yard, Glenn
  proposed the idea of NetBITS, a TidBITS-like publication that
  treats the Internet like a platform. Since we'd wanted to do
  something like this for a long time, we jumped at the chance. Over
  the years, Glenn has written for a wide range of publications
  about Internet issues, and he has Unix system administration
  experience that the rest of us lack. Glenn's idea was that he
  would act as editor in chief for NetBITS and we'd take advantage
  of the technological and editorial infrastructure we've built up
  with TidBITS.

  We've spent the last month scaling what we do to another
  publication and talking about what works in TidBITS and what we'd
  like to change. NetBITS will strongly resemble TidBITS in style,
  look, tone, and professionalism, but gradually evolve its own
  identity. For instance, NetBITS has a Q&A section and an explicit
  area for letters to the editor. Sometimes we receive great letters
  that we can't figure out how to weave into an issue of TidBITS; we
  hope the letters section in NetBITS will alleviate that problem
  and help disseminate useful information from readers.

  Overall, our goal with NetBITS is to cover issues of interest to
  people who spend a reasonable part of their waking hours online at
  work or at home and want to know how to do what they do more
  easily, more efficiently - or how to do it at all. We're going to
  cover the conceptual part of the Net (how things work) as well as
  the practical (how to use it better). Although NetBITS will have
  some Macintosh-specific content, it will also include Internet
  information for those using Unix, Windows 95, and other operating
  systems. Like TidBITS, NetBITS will be financially supported
  primarily by corporate sponsors, but we also hope to experiment
  with some alternative financing methods that could prove
  interesting. For instance, we offer low-priced classified ads for
  those looking to reach an audience but not able to be a marquee
  sponsor.

  Some of the articles we have planned for our first few issues
  include an examination of how the legal system interacts with the
  Internet, an overview of ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line,
  a new high-speed way to access the Internet); a tips and tricks
  article about Eudora covering both the Mac and Windows versions;
  and a review of the @Home Internet cable network.

  To answer the inevitable question, no, we have no plans to cease
  publication of TidBITS. In fact, TidBITS may contain even _more_
  Macintosh news as some of our Internet articles move to NetBITS.
  On occasion we may run an article in both publications if we
  consider it sufficiently important. Simply put, NetBITS is not a
  replacement for TidBITS; as long as the Macintosh industry remains
  strong and TidBITS can support itself financially, we'll keep
  writing about our preferred computer platform.

  Our current plans call for NetBITS to be published every Thursday
  night, which means issues should arrive in your mailbox Friday. We
  are sending the first two issues of NetBITS to the full TidBITS
  mailing list to introduce it; after that you'll need to subscribe
  by sending email to <netbits-on@netbits.net> (for the setext
  version, like TidBITS is now) or <netbits-html-on@netbits.net>
  (for the HTML version; make sure your email program can interpret
  HTML mail, as can Netscape Navigator 3.0 and Netscape Communicator
  4.0, though Eudora's HTML support isn't currently up to snuff).
  You can also subscribe or read issues on the NetBITS Web site at:

<http://www.netbits.net/>

  If you use the Internet heavily and want to make better use of it,
  if you're fascinated by the technological and sociological
  implications of the Internet, or if you simply want to figure out
  what all the fuss is about, subscribe to NetBITS and tell your
  friends. It's free, it's easy, and we hope to make it the most
  useful Internet publication you'll find online.


More Context on Contextual Menus
--------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  In TidBITS-398_, I wrote about how to use and customize contextual
  menus under Mac OS 8. This week, I want to follow up on that
  article by noting a utility that offers contextual menus under
  System 7 (and acts as a CM plug-in for Mac OS 8), look at a few
  additional CM plug-ins, and agree with readers who noted that
  one-handed use of CM menus is also possible with a multi-button
  mouse.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04154>

  Most people writing in about multi-button mice noted their
  standard use under other operating systems (such as Windows) and
  their utility when running PC emulation software. Based on the
  email, many TidBITS readers are enamored with Kensington's input
  devices. For instance, Ross Yahnke <rcyahnke@doit.wisc.edu> wrote:

  One thing I'd like to mention about contextual menus is that -
  along with Virtual PC - they provide a good excuse to buy a multi-
  button mouse. I just got Kensington's Thinking Mouse, a four-
  button mouse, and as in Windows, have assigned the right button to
  do contextual menus. It makes using contextual menus much more
  transparent; I'm figuring it won't be long before Apple ships
  two-button mice.

<http://www.kensington.com/products/>


**Adding Menus to 68K Macs, System 7** -- Covering a collection of
  utilities in TidBITS usually prompts readers to write in about a
  wide-ranging collection of other programs that we left out. In
  this case, almost all comments noted only a few favorites. In
  particular, I left out Mark Aiken's $15 shareware PowerMenu 2.0.1,
  which provides menu commands to PowerPC-based Macs using Mac OS
  8's Contextual Menus, and - using a different technique than Mac
  OS 8 - provides its own contextual menus (which only display
  PowerMenu commands) on Macs running System 7.1 or later and to
  68040-based machines running Mac OS 8.

  PowerMenu primarily speeds up opening files, launching
  applications, and organizing the desktop. For instance, it enables
  you to open selected items in any running application or any
  application you've added to its Quick Launch option (for example,
  I added Word 5 so I can consistently use it in favor of Word 6,
  which I use only occasionally). Another set of commands makes it
  easy to copy or alias items into appropriate Finder folders
  (though there's no move option). The Read Me file has useful
  directions, and the download is 333K.

<http://www.kagi.com/authors/marka/pm.html>


**Another Wonderful Utility** -- The vast majority of the comments
  concerned Eric de la Musse's freeware CMTools 3.0. This utility
  adds many optional commands to Mac OS 8's Contextual Menus that
  (like PowerMenu) genuinely ease working in the Finder. For
  example, if you're like me, active documents accumulate on the
  desktop and are eventually filed in folders nested down several
  levels. Though Mac OS 8's spring-loaded folders simplify moving
  items into folders, CMTools's customizable Copy to and Move to
  commands seem even simpler.

  CMTools has other goodies as well, including Compress and
  Decompress options, though these require you to make aliases to
  your compression software and place them in the CMTools
  Configuration folder; whereas Chris DeSalvo's $5 Compression
  plug-in (which I noted last week) just works with no special
  attention. Similar to PowerMenu, an Open Using command enables you
  to open files in a desired application. There's also a Lock/Unlock
  option, and commands for setting a file's creator and type
  attributes. Also like PowerMenu, CMTools requires more setup than
  most CM plug-ins, but the setup gives you a great deal of
  flexibility, and Eric has provided clear directions (translated
  from French to English by Turagd Aleahmad). According to the
  ReadMe, CMTools doesn't work with QuicKeys Toolbox; however, users
  of the PowerPC version of QuicKeys 3.5.2 no longer require
  QuicKeys Toolbox, a fine point that seems to be often missed.

<http://plaza.v-wave.com/aaaj/CMT.html>
<http://www.mycds.com/staff/desalvo/shareware.html>


**One More to Download** -- Last week, I praised Look Mom, No
  Hands! for its wonderful ability to pop up a contextual menu
  without a keyboard shortcut. In so distinguishing Look Mom, No
  Hands!, I left out  FinderPop, an optional $7 "pintware" from
  Turlough O'Connor, which offers the same feature. FinderPop (a
  120K download) is a nicely designed control panel that enables you
  to customize contextual menu appearance (font, size, and more) and
  adds commands that quickly bring to the front any window open on
  the desktop, open any mounted volume, or switch to any active
  application.

<http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Bay/2573/>
<http://www.toolsandtoys.com/ToolsAndToys/Home/>


**Late Breaking News** -- Finally, in recent contextual menu news,
  John Moe has released the freeware IADD, which enables you to turn
  off Apple's Internet Address Detectors (IAD) in any application
  that you like, thus avoiding conflicts between those applications
  and IAD.

<http://www.luminet.net/~dmoe/iadd.sit.hqx>


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