TidBITS#469/01-Mar-99
=====================

  Claris Organizer returns! If you were a fan of Claris's personal
  information manager, you'll be pleased to hear it has been
  reincarnated as the Macintosh Palm Desktop, and it's free whether
  or not you use a Palm device. Also this week, Louise Bremner
  passes on the sights, sounds, and tastes of Macworld Expo Tokyo.
  In the news, Adobe reveals Adobe GoLive 4.0, a new Web browser
  called iCab emerges, and Default Folder 3.0.1 and Aladdin
  DropStuff 5.1 appear.

Topics:
    MailBITS/01-Mar-99
    Impressions of MacTokyo 1999
    Palm Desktop Marks Return of a Familiar Organizer

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-469.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1999/TidBITS#469_01-Mar-99.etx>

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MailBITS/01-Mar-99
------------------

**Adobe Goes Live with GoLive** -- Adobe GoLive 4.0 for Macintosh
  - the eponymously renamed CyberStudio visual Web page editor and
  site management tool - ships this week; an announcement is
  expected Tuesday morning at Seybold Seminars in Boston. Adobe
  acquired GoLive, the makers of CyberStudio, in early 1999 and
  recently revealed the name change on their Web site. A Windows
  version is slated for the second quarter of 1999. The product's
  4.0 release includes hundreds of bug fixes and improvements,
  though 3.2 may have been a more appropriate revision number. The
  new version carries the ability to manage URLs embedded in
  QuickTime movies and Flash animation files and is substantially
  faster. According to posts on the independent GoLive Talk list,
  the program is also much more stable. The new version also tweaks
  and improves support for JavaScript, DHTML, Cascading Style
  Sheets, and FTP.

<http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/golive/>
<http://www.acc-inc.com/cstalk.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05234>

  Abode has published a confusing smorgasbord of upgrade pricing for
  U.S. and Canadian customers. Owners of any previous version of
  CyberStudio Pro or Personal Edition can choose an electronic
  download without printed manuals for $69; those owners or any
  registered owner of PageMill 3.0 for Mac or Windows can opt for a
  shrink-wrapped copy direct from Adobe for $99 plus shipping. Adobe
  also lists other options, including a bundle with Adobe
  ImageStyler and Adobe ImageReady. Adobe GoLive 4.0's list price
  is $299. [GF]

<http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/golive/price.html>


**Hail an iCab** -- We generally don't comment on preview releases
  of software in TidBITS, but we'll make an exception for iCab, a
  new Web browser from a German programming team led by Alexander
  Clauss and derived from a project for Atari systems. Available for
  PowerPC-based Macs, iCab features svelte system requirements,
  needing under 2 MB of disk space, less than 2 MB of RAM (with
  Virtual Memory or RAM Doubler; 4 MB without), and System 7.5 or
  higher. But that's just the beginning: iCab offers support for
  HTML 4.0, Java applets via Apple's Macintosh Runtime for Java (see
  TidBITS-467_), sound and music via QuickTime, and support for
  contextual menus and Mac OS 8.5 features like Navigation Services
  - all with sprightly performance. iCab also offers features
  missing in the gorillas of the Web browsing world, Microsoft
  Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator (see TidBITS-465_),
  including HTML error checking; a search feature that can hunt
  through local files, current Web pages, or send queries to remote
  search engines; connection logging; password and cookie
  management; and a sure-to-be-controversial image filter that can
  be used to block Web advertisements.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05282>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05255>

  iCab is a little rough around the edges - it often wraps text
  oddly, doesn't yet support JavaScript, Cascading Style Sheets, or
  browser plug-ins (so far as I can determine), seems to have
  trouble with some HTML forms, and isn't particularly stable on my
  Macs - but neither are any other Web browsers. Preview releases of
  iCab that should run through mid-April are available in German and
  (just recently) English; each is about an 800K download. The final
  version of iCab should be shareware priced at about U.S. $30. [GD]

<http://www.icab.de/>
<http://www.icab.de/iCab_US.sit>


**Default Folder 3.0.1 Complements Nav Services** -- St. Clair
  Software's utility for enhancing Open and Save dialog boxes,
  Default Folder 3.0.1, adds support for Apple's Navigation Services
  as well as a handful of other improvements. Unlike Action Files
  (see "Action Files 1.2 Usurps Nav Services" in TidBITS-467_),
  which disables Nav Services in favor of its own interface, Default
  Folder incorporates its navigation and utility features into both
  Navigation Services and old-style Open and Save dialogs. Another
  improvement is the capability to click and hold outside an Open or
  Save dialog box to view a pop-up menu containing a list of all
  open Finder windows; selecting one opens that folder in the
  dialog. Default Folder 3.0 is $25 shareware, or $15 if you're
  upgrading a copy bought before 31-Jan-98; owners who purchased
  after 31-Jan-98 can upgrade for free. The installer is a 870K
  download. If you downloaded Default Folder 3.0, you'll want the
  3.0.1 version that fixes a few bugs discovered in the first days
  following the 3.0 release. [JLC]

<http://www.stclairsoft.com/DefaultFolder/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05279>


**Aladdin Releases DropStuff 5.1** -- Aladdin Systems last week
  released version 5.1 of their $30 shareware DropStuff utility for
  creating StuffIt 5.0 format archives, which can be expanded only
  by StuffIt Deluxe 5.0, StuffIt Expander 5.1, or by themselves if
  saved as self-extracting archives. DropStuff 5.1 includes four
  components: the DropStuff application, the Aladdin Compression
  control panel (which lets you choose between speed and size when
  compressing), the StuffIt Engine, and the StuffIt Engine
  PowerPlug. These last two also provide access to more decoders
  than are built into StuffIt Expander 5.1. DropStuff 5.1 requires
  System 7.5.3 or later and a 68020-based Mac with at least 8 MB of
  RAM. DropStuff 5.1 is a 1.2 MB download and is a free upgrade for
  DropStuff 4.5 users. People using older versions of the system
  software or who need to create StuffIt 4.0 format archives (the
  format didn't change in StuffIt 4.5) can stick with an earlier
  version or download DropStuff 4.0, which also appears to work fine
  on current systems. [ACE]

<http://www.aladdinsys.com/dropstuff/macindex.html>
<http://www.aladdinsys.com/expander/expander_mac_login.html>
<http://www.aladdinsys.com/dropstuff/dropstuff40.html>


Impressions of MacTokyo 1999
----------------------------
  by Louise Bremner <log@gol.com>

  Like last year, this year's Macworld Expo/Tokyo (a.k.a. MacTokyo)
  was smaller than those I remember from the more distant past. The
  booths were set up only in the center of one of the double halls
  of Makuhari Messe, and this time it ran for only three days.
  However, unlike last year, the show floor was packed. No empty
  aisles and few idle demonstrators this time, although I still
  wonder at exhibitors who think they can sell their products
  without having any Macs in their booths.

  The MacTokyo clientele has changed too. It used to be that you
  could easily spot the people who were going to get out of the
  train a few stops earlier, at Disneyland, but the group of young,
  fashionably dressed women I'd pegged as Mousers turned out to be
  mousers instead.


**Escaping the Crowds** -- Although I timed my arrival for after
  the opening to avoid the crowds, I found I was locked into the
  nostalgic slow-march from the station to the Messe itself, stuck
  behind the usual guy who lights up and puffs furiously as soon as
  he leaves the station to make up for the smoking time he'll lose
  in the Messe. There are now more of us who know to break away at
  the first overpass, but it's still a preferable route, especially
  since it passes the piece of "artwork" that summarized Makuhari
  Messe for me when I worked there some years ago - the Steaming
  Heap of Rubble. But it wasn't steaming this time.

  I arrived just after Steve Jobs' speech had started, but sorry, I
  can't report on it. From the stairs at the entrance, his head
  could be seen in stereo on the twin screens over the low wall, but
  there was no way I could squeeze closer through the crowds around
  the screens. Nor I couldn't hear anything over the noise from the
  rest of the hall. Most exhibitors with sound systems had jacked
  them up full in a vain attempt to grab attention, and someone,
  somewhere must have been using subsonics.

  Never mind - there was plenty else to see and MacWEEK.com covered
  the reportedly disappointing keynote.

<http://macweek.zdnet.com/1999/02/14/keynote.html>


**A Candy Colored Expo** -- Many of the big companies were there
  to promote Japanized versions of their products, and I did sit
  through some of the demonstrations later, when the thought of even
  an uncomfortable chair was welcome. But somehow all the new
  exciting bells and whistles failed to thrill, even those in fields
  I used to be involved in, such as DTP and graphics. The big demos
  were well attended, but afterwards most people drifted off towards
  the small booths where it was shuffling-room only and where the
  gewgaws and panoplies grabbed my attention. I found I was
  concentrating more on visual goodies than actual functionality.
  Does that mean I'm a frivolous person? If so, I wasn't alone at
  MacTokyo.

  The PR woman who later extolled the virtues of the iMac from the
  stage claimed that there are now over 130 iMac peripherals
  available in Japan. It looks like you can now buy a full set of
  matching or complementary peripherals to go with your candy-
  colored iMac, including matching baby-iMac speakers from Cozo;
  matching hubs, connectors, mice, and joysticks from a host of
  companies; nearly matching floppy disk drives (it's difficult to
  make a metal case look like plastic, but Y-E Data have almost
  managed it); matching-only-if-you're-color-blind CD-ROM cases;
  fluorescent perspex mousepads; defiantly non-matching replacement
  side panels to snap onto the round mouse; and more. The Shimamura
  Music Sound Pavilion even had chairs designed on the iMac theme,
  but only in blue, yellow, or near-white and they weren't very
  comfortable, despite the distraction of their fascinating demos.
  And there were tiny cardboard iMac construction kits for 100 yen
  ($1).

<http://www.uchishiba.co.jp/e-cozo.html>
<http://www.yedata.co.jp/english/product/eps11060.html>

  In some cases (pun deliberate), the color was right but somehow
  the implementation was wrong. The colors are certainly accurate on
  the new Microline printers, but the semi-exposed innards looked
  sordid rather than mysterious as the iMac innards do. The more
  intense shades of the Alps MD-5000i Limited Edition seem a better
  idea in comparison. And was Wacom caught unprepared? Their Limited
  Edition ArtPad came only in Bondi Blue.

  The brochure for the UniMouse had a picture of five mice in the
  regulation fruity colors, arranged in an imitation of the Yum
  poster that was pasted up all over the hall, but in fact there
  were mice in six colors on display. No, the sixth color wasn't
  Bondi Blue, but yellow. The man demonstrating them said that since
  there are six colors in the Apple logo, they made the mice in six
  colors too. Will these lemon-colored mice become collectors'
  items?


**Escaping the Candy Colors** -- After a while, I began to feel
  queasy at the sight of all that candy-colored equipment - or maybe
  it was physical queasiness from all the free candy-colored candy I
  was pacmanning, on top of the constant noise and the heat. So it
  was a welcome relief to discover someone else has considered
  shrouding the naked iMac. In honor of an upcoming Gamera movie
  sequel, the man behind the counter at The Shade Shop had made a
  rubbery monster to fit over an iMac - a sludge-colored scaly
  carapace with tail extending from the back and face protruding
  from the front, above the screen. Despite the piercing green eyes
  and an orthodontist's dream collection of teeth, he looked rather
  friendly and his two heavily clawed front paws were held palm-
  forward on either side of the screen as convenient resting places
  for the round mouse when it's not in use. The screen below the
  face was showing three views of a wire-frame model of a different
  version of this mutant creature, but I was so distracted by the
  frivolous aspects of the show I didn't realise until later that
  The Shade Shop was there to sell this 3D graphics software - not
  monsters. See their real products at:

<http://www.ex-tools.co.jp/>

  Aquazone was previewing Pinna, which puts three varieties of
  brightly colored birds on your screen, but they shot themselves in
  the collective foot by also producing a special edition of their
  virtual fish tank for the three days of the Expo, called
  iMacinfish. This generates cute little iMacs (along with short-
  tailed iMac mice and strange sessile blobs) in your choice of the
  six iMac colors, swimming around on your screen and occasionally
  turning to flash a quick cursive "Hello" at you. I'm told they
  also reproduce and die, but I didn't catch any of them at it. The
  bank of six iMacs running matching versions of iMacinfish drew all
  the attention away from the parrots, "Gouldian Finches," and "Red
  Factor Canaries" that were fluttering, roosting, nesting, and
  preening on the other side of the booth. Or maybe the plain white
  background behind the birds was just too unconvincing?

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

  It's reassuring to see that there are still innumerable small
  companies who consider it worthwhile to turn out Mac products for
  relatively small markets. Many were at the Expo: a point-of-sale
  sales-management system; connection software for NTT's DoCoMo
  portable phone, several calendar and data packages that print a
  huge variety of maps, timetables, and schedule pages for pocket
  organizers; customizable postcard and sticker print packages;
  fancy printer papers (even recycled paper); and of course,
  excesses of fonts and clip art. There was even a package of
  medical clip-art: The Nishiyama Collection Vol. 1, Infectious
  Diseases, which ought to bear the subtitle: Disgusting Skin
  Conditions. I didn't dare ask what they plan for Volume 2.

  The technician at Amulet drew a crowd as he did upgrades of
  PowerBook 2400s and G3 PowerBooks while the owners waited. My feet
  later told me I must have stood there for hours in fascination,
  watching him dismember a PowerBook 2400 within minutes, then snap
  in new memory, hard disk, G3 upgrade, and the English keyboard
  that the PowerBook 2400 ought to have had from the start. Mind
  you, 17,800 yen ($150) seems excessive for a keyboard panel that
  merely lacks the Kana screen-printing and the unnecessary
  conversion keys on either side of the too-short space bar. Plus-Yu
  were selling them slightly cheaper, and in some of the candy-
  colors too.

  Two questions. Does the PowerBook 2400 really run so hot that it
  needs a fan-cooled cooling plate to rest upon? Even if it's a very
  attractive cooling plate that I don't doubt will soon appear in
  candy colors? And why has no one has produced a combination
  printer / scanner / fax / copier for the Mac market in Japan?


**Little Energy Left in Games?** I was surprised to see little
  interest in heavy-duty games. There were demos of Tomb Raider and
  a couple other packages running, and a few people did stop and
  play with them for a while, but then they moved on. I thought that
  the impressive rendering enabled by the speed of the G3 would have
  been more seductive, both to game writers and to game players, but
  maybe there's truth in those reports I've seen on TV that Japanese
  gamers are moving away from domestic game machines and towards the
  arcades. I didn't watch for long, but it seemed that Osaka Ennichi
  was more popular. It's not new, but maybe it's more nostalgic for
  Japanese gamers - it emulates five games of skill that are (or
  used to be) common at temple festivals, such as goldfish-skimming
  and frog racing.

  There were a few more 500 yen ($4) games and distractions on sale,
  including a Talking Dragon which appears to be a localized
  variation of Talking Moose, but speaking Osaka-ben - the Osaka
  dialect that Tokyoites find so funny. They didn't have a demo
  running, and I managed to overcome the impulse to buy it, just to
  see what it's like.


**Escaping the Crowds Again** -- I left an hour or so before the
  show closed for the day, planning to drop in on the Macintosh
  Museum I'd seen advertised in the neighboring Convention Center,
  but there was a long line of people who had clearly had the same
  idea. However, that meant I could speed walk to the station before
  the crush hour started and I had enough room on the train to read
  on the way back to Tokyo. That's definitely worth remembering for
  next year.


Palm Desktop Marks Return of a Familiar Organizer
-------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  A few years ago, I realized it was time to abandon my tangled mess
  of scribbled and photocopied papers that formed my personal
  information management (PIM) system. I had tried using Now Contact
  and Now Up-to-Date, but never developed the same enthusiasm about
  them as many of my friends. Then I discovered Claris Organizer: it
  had a sharp interface, combined addresses with a calendar and
  to-do list, and printed the information on sheets that fit the
  small three-ring binder I used as a poor-man's Day-Timer. For a
  while, I was a happy, more organized man.

  When I decided to buy a PalmPilot, where I could store the same
  information in a pocket-sized handheld device, I faced the same
  dilemma as all Macintosh-using PalmPilot owners: the device worked
  with either Pilot Desktop 1.0, an ugly Windows port, or Now
  Contact/Up-to-Date, using the buggy Now Sync. I briefly
  entertained romantic notions of learning AppleScript to somehow
  share the Pilot Desktop information, but reality intruded and I
  abandoned Claris Organizer.

  Until now. Although Pilot Desktop never advanced beyond version
  1.0, a funny thing happened in Cupertino. In the middle of last
  year, after Apple reabsorbed Claris and killed everything but
  FileMaker and ClarisWorks (now AppleWorks), Organizer was sold to
  Palm Computing. Not only was an improved Macintosh Palm desktop
  application on its way, it was going to be based on my old
  favorite! After long months of waiting, Macintosh Palm Desktop 2.1
  has been released. Not only can most Mac owners of Palm handhelds
  take advantage of a modern PIM that synchronizes easily with their
  Palm data, but Organizer users have the assurance that their
  Claris software continues to survive (something Emailer users
  still can't claim).

<http://www.palm.com/macintosh/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04684>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04874>


**A Good Price for Everyone** -- The Palm Desktop software is
  available now as a free download from Palm's Web site (with
  additional server support from Apple) in three binhexed portions:
  the Palm MacPac v2 Installer (12.6 MB), Documentation (2 MB), and
  Palm Extras (24.3 MB). You only need the MacPac Installer to use
  the software, but there are plenty of goodies in the Palm Extras
  to warrant the lengthy download (see below).

<http://www.palm.com/custsupp/downloads/macpacv2.html>
<ftp://ftp.3com.com/PUB/palm/custsupp/>

  Palm has decided to offer the software free to any takers, whether
  you own a Palm device or not. The only restriction is that Palm
  will provide support only to users with a valid serial number from
  the back of a Palm handheld. Obviously, they would prefer that
  users support them financially by purchasing Palm devices, but
  there are other benefits to be gained by offering the software
  free. In addition to a potentially larger user base, people who
  buy Palm devices later will find that their data is already set
  for immediate synchronization.

  Palm Desktop is also available in stores on CD-ROM, which also
  includes a printed Getting Started Guide and the adapter required
  to connect the HotSync cable's serial connector to your Mac's
  serial port, for $15. The adapter is also available by itself for
  $6 if you've just bought a Palm device and choose to download the
  software over the Internet.


**What's New for Organizer Users** -- Overall, most longtime
  Organizer users may not notice many changes, since much of the
  updating has centered around adding Palm device compatibility. The
  Instant Palm Desktop menu, formerly Instant Organizer, now works
  reliably instead of being an almost guaranteed way to crash your
  Mac. The Instant Palm Desktop menu appears at the right side of
  the Mac's menu bar, and you can use it to view tasks, today's
  appointments, and frequently used phone numbers, or to find and
  create records without launching the Palm Desktop application.
  Palm Desktop also provides Mac OS 8.5.1 compatibility and fixes a
  few bugs (including menu redraw problems).

  Another major change is that Palm Desktop now runs only on
  PowerPC-based machines. Although Macs generally have more
  longevity than other computers, Apple hasn't shipped a 68K-based
  system since late 1996, and according to sources at Palm
  Computing, the program would still be in development in order to
  make it backward-compatible with 68K-based Macs.


**Think Sync** -- If you're a Palm device owner, you'll discover
  that there's more to this update than just the ability to share
  your handheld data with your desktop. The entire synchronization
  architecture has been rewritten, enabling third-party developers
  to write conduits that use your data with their applications. For
  example, Mac users can finally take advantage of the Palm OS's
  built-in Mail and Expense applications. Shana's Informed Palm
  Expense Creator takes your expense data and formats it into a
  variety of existing forms; Actual Software's MultiMail Pro Conduit
  lets your share email from Eudora or Eudora Lite (Emailer and
  Outlook Express support is coming soon) with either Mail or
  Actual's MultiMail Pro email client. Demonstration versions of
  each conduit are included in the Palm Extras, along with DataViz's
  Documents to Go (which lets you view Word and Excel documents on
  your Palm handheld).

<http://www.shana.com/>
<http://www.actualsoft.com/>
<http://www.dataviz.com/>

  Palm III and Palm V owners can also take advantage of faster
  HotSync operations, thanks to a new software library that resides
  in the Palm OS. Transfers of up to 115 Kbps are now possible,
  compared to a maximum of 56 Kbps for Windows users.

  The new HotSync Manager does more than just oversee the HotSync
  process. To install a program onto your handheld, simply drop the
  file onto the HotSync Manager icon. From here you also control the
  configurations for multiple Palm users. My only complaint so far
  is that the interface would be better if the Install, Users, and
  Conduit Settings features were available in one tabbed window,
  rather than requiring repeated trips to the menu bar.


**Dreaming of Beaming** -- One surprise not enjoyed during Palm
  Desktop's public beta phase is infrared support for performing
  HotSync operations. Owners of the original Bondi Blue iMacs now
  have something to point at their IR port. By installing a
  collection of four libraries that live in your Extensions folder,
  plus four libraries on the handheld, you can HotSync without
  lifting a single cable. I've found this especially handy when I'm
  working on my PowerBook outside the office, when my Ricochet modem
  normally occupies the serial port (see "Tied Down No More: the
  Ricochet Wireless Modem" in TidBITS-366_). Florent Pillet's
  utility Palm Buddy is already equipped to handle IR transfers,
  which means you can perform full backups of your data without
  wires.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00733>
<http://perso.wanadoo.fr/fpillet/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04944>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05152>


**Open AppleScript Access** -- Unlike the closed-off Pilot Desktop
  1.0, the new software is scriptable, with a handful of scripts
  included in Palm Extras. Annoying VCard enclosures (".vcf") can be
  automatically turned into new contact records. If you want to send
  someone's contact information via email, running the Mail Contact
  Info script from within Palm Desktop grabs the data and pastes it
  into a new message in your email program. Palm also included a
  PowerBook Setup Script for making it easy to toggle HotSync serial
  monitoring on PowerBook G3 Series machines, though I have to admit
  that I haven't had any difficulties with my PowerBook G3.

  Apple's AppleScript group is reportedly enthusiastic about Palm
  Desktop and plans to offer additional scripts at their site.
  Scripts written for Claris Organizer are also available.

<http://www.apple.com/applescript/>
<http://www-sal.cs.uiuc.edu/~jjones/COscripts.html>


**A More Advanced Organizer** -- For some Palm device users, just
  being able to HotSync reliably will be a boon, while others will
  appreciate the ability to run third-party conduits and synchronize
  via infrared. PalmPilot users who have suffered with Pilot Desktop
  1.0 for three years will be happy to find that Palm Desktop is now
  a modern PIM with the features that Claris Organizer users have
  enjoyed the entire time. In an upcoming issue of TidBITS, I'll go
  into more detail about how Palm Desktop works with your important
  data, and how Palm device owners can overcome a little interface
  shock to access advanced features not found in the Windows Palm
  Desktop.
 
  $$
 
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