TidBITS#568/19-Feb-01
=====================

  The Mac interface has been lauded for its accessibility - 
  unless you're disabled, in which case Macs can be completely
  inaccessible. Joe Clark examines the sad state of adaptive
  technology for the Macintosh. Also this week, Jeff Carlson
  shoehorns a second hard drive into his PowerBook; and we cover
  PowerMail 3.0.8, Conflict Catcher 8.0.8, Storyspace 2, and Google
  buying the Deja.com Usenet archive, plus, we ask how you want to
  receive TidBITS.

Topics:
    MailBITS/19-Feb-01
    New Life for an Old PowerBook Drive
    Accessibility on the Mac: Trouble in Paradise

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MailBITS/19-Feb-01
------------------

**Poll Preview: How Do You Want to Read TidBITS in Email?** We're
  considering new ways of publishing TidBITS, and we need your help.
  We published our first 99 issues via email in HyperCard, then in
  1992 switched to the text-only setext format you see in email now.
  Along the way we've added a Web edition, an individual article
  database, and most recently a handheld edition. We also
  experimented (unsuccessfully) with push technology and a channel
  based on Microsoft's defunct CDF format. We don't want to waste
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  URLs embedded in article titles. Learning the true opinions of our
  readers is important to us, so please register your vote in the
  poll form on our home page. [ACE]

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


**Conflict Catcher Updated to 8.0.8** -- Casady & Greene has
  released Conflict Catcher 8.0.8, adding support for Mac OS 9.1.
  Specifically, the new version adds Mac OS 9.1 All and Base sets,
  and updates the Clean Install System Merge for Mac OS 9.1. In
  addition, you can define a default set for use under Mac OS 9
  running in Mac OS X's Classic mode. The update is free for
  registered users of Conflict Catcher 8 and is a 1.4 MB download.
  [JLC]

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


**Eastgate Systems Releases Storyspace 2** -- Eastgate Systems,
  long-time publishers of hypertext tools and hypertext writings,
  has released Storyspace 2, a total rewrite of the company's
  innovative hypertext editor (see TidBITS-095_, an entire issue
  devoted to the program). Storyspace 2 is now PowerPC-native,
  supports drag & drop throughout the program, uses contextual
  menus, and boasts a multiple undo feature. Improved typography,
  new map views, and curved link lines make working with complex
  hypertext webs easier. Finally, customizable, template-based HTML
  support and a new Storyspace reader offer better ways to
  distribute hypertext writings to readers. Updates to Storyspace 2
  for registered users are free if you purchased after 01-Jul-00 and
  $95 otherwise; new copies cost $295. A 3.6 MB demo is available.
  [ACE]

<http://www.eastgate.com/Storyspace.html>
<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-095.html>


**PowerMail 3.0.8 Adds HTML & Authentication** -- CTM Development
  has released PowerMail 3.0.8, a notable update to their
  internationally savvy email client (see "Migrating to New Climes
  with PowerMail" in TidBITS-530_.). PowerMail 3.0.8 adds support
  for SMTP authentication (a secure way for mail servers to enable
  valid users on remote networks to send mail without opening the
  server to abuse by spammers), and can view HTML-formatted messages
  by linking to the latest version of Apple's HTML rendering engine
  under Mac OS 9.1. Apple's HTML rendering is limited, but often
  enough to get the point across, and you can choose to view a
  message as text, or in your preferred Web browser. PowerMail 3.0.8
  also supports importing and exporting email from Microsoft
  Entourage, along with numerous other small features. PowerMail
  3.0.8 requires a PowerPC-based system running Mac OS 8.5 or
  higher, and offers preliminary support for Mac OS X. PowerMail
  costs $49, and a 30-day trial version is available as a 2.6 MB
  download. [GD]

<http://www.ctmdev.com/powermail3.shtml>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05930>


**Google Acquires Deja.com Usenet Archive** -- The popular Google
  search engine and Web catalog, currently our favorite search site,
  has acquired Deja.com's Usenet Discussion Service, the archive of
  every Usenet posting since 1995. That accounts for over 500
  million messages - a terabyte of discussions. Back when it was
  called DejaNews, Deja.com initially provided just a Web-accessible
  archive of Usenet postings, but they caught portal fever and lost
  focus (and presumably a lot of money - eBay's Half.com acquired
  Deja.com's Precision Buying Service). Although it will take Google
  some time to develop the tools necessary to provide a good
  interface to all 500 million postings, they are making postings
  since August of 2000 available with a relatively sparse feature
  set. We're pleased to see Google taking over this essential
  resource - few Internet companies providing useful services have
  come close to matching Google's focus on usability, performance,
  and design restraint. [ACE]

<http://www.google.com/press/pressrel/pressrelease48.html>
<http://groups.google.com/>


**Best Book Bytes** -- We're lousy at blowing our own horns, but
  we thought we'd mention several books written by TidBITS staff
  members garnered prizes in MyMac.com's third annual Book Bytes
  Awards. Contributing Editor Matt Neuburg's REALbasic: The
  Definitive Guide was selected as Best Programming Book, while Adam
  Engst's Crossing Platforms: A Macintosh-Windows Phrasebook (co-
  authored with David Pogue) was selected as the Best Mac-Win Book
  under $30. Not to be outdone, Managing Editor Jeff Carlson pulled
  in two awards: one for his Palm Organizers Visual QuickStart Guide
  and another for Real World Adobe Golive 4, which he co-authored
  with TidBITS contributor (and former NetBITS editor) Glenn
  Fleishman. (They recently published an updated edition for GoLive
  5.) These books and others by the TidBITS staff are linked from
  our BookBITS page. [GD]

<http://www.mymac.com/book_bytes/thirdawards_12.8.00.shtml>
<http://www.tidbits.com/bookbits/staff.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05712>


New Life for an Old PowerBook Drive
-----------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  Late last year, I pulled the original 4.5 GB hard drive from my
  PowerBook G3 (Bronze Keyboard) and replaced it with an inexpensive
  12 GB drive. Not only did this give me more room for my data, it
  enabled me to store more than a gigabyte of MP3 files from my
  music collection. However, this meant that my perfectly usable 4.5
  GB drive ended up in a drawer. I've had no complaints about my new
  drive, but in the back of my mind I regretted that the old one was
  sitting unused.

  At the last Macworld Expo, I found a way to press that drive back
  into service: the Xcaret Pro Expansion Bay Hard Drive Kit by Mac
  Components Engineered (MCE). This $150 kit lets you place a 12.7
  mm (or shorter) IDE hard drive into an enclosure that fits into
  the expansion bay of a PowerBook G3 (MCE sells kits for the 1999
  and 2000 PowerBook models, as well as the 1998 model, which has a
  different-sized bay). The company offers enclosures with hard
  drives already installed, but I was more interested in the
  enclosure kit itself to give my 4.5 GB drive a new life.

<http://www.mcetech.com/xpebhd.html>


**Drive Me Crazy** -- Since I've swapped out dozens of PowerBook
  drives in my time, I figured that installing my old drive into the
  enclosure would be no sweat. And, in fact, it may have been
  simpler had I not tried to follow MCE's instructions step-by-step.
  Amazingly, there are no photos accompanying the steps: even
  grainy, oft-photocopied pictures would have helped enormously. I
  suspect that the documentation problem arises from a recent
  redesign of MCE's drive enclosures. The Xcaret Pro 99/2000 Drive,
  which fits my machine, is shown in a second user manual as a wider
  enclosure that resembles the PowerBook's CD-ROM module; the one I
  received is narrower and shaped more like a battery.

  The biggest problem I ran into was with the copper connecting
  ribbon, which apparently needs to be bent in order to fit the
  drive into the carrier. It was initially stiff, and required that
  I bend it backward so that the kit's drive connector (a thin green
  circuit board that bridges the black plastic connector and the
  connector that fits into the bay's internal slot) is turned 180
  degrees. The drive also needs to be pushed a bit toward the center
  of the enclosure for it to fit, so the ribbon now looks more like
  a partially furled flag than a smooth sheet. These contortions
  aren't mentioned in the documentation, and I finally ended up
  carefully nudging it into place and hoping for the best.

  With the drive circuitry connected, I needed to secure it into a
  silver kit base that holds the drive steady within the enclosure.
  Fortunately, it fits only one way in its designated space, but
  this was where I ran into screw problems. The kit contents lists 4
  silver bevel head screws, 2 silver (or brown) round head tapping
  screws, and 2 black flat head screws. In my kit, I received 4
  silver flat head screws, and 9 black flat head screws. The black
  screws hold the kit base in place, and also secure the outside
  enclosure, so the silver screws must be used to hold the hard
  drive in the kit base. However, the silver screws were too thin to
  thread into the hard drive's screw holes; I used one to at least
  try to keep the drive from sliding in the kit base, which seems to
  be working, but the other screws wouldn't stay put and rattled
  inside the enclosure.

  Luckily, there aren't that many parts to deal with, so if you've
  already taken a hard drive out of a PowerBook, you should have
  little difficulty figuring out how to make them work. Still, I've
  been doing this for years and spent nearly an hour trying to
  figure out the mechanics.


**Hard Driving** -- Fortunately, things improved considerably once
  the enclosure was assembled. I initially shut down the PowerBook,
  inserted the drive into the right expansion bay (my PowerBook G3
  (Bronze Keyboard) has both right and left bays; the left is only
  for the battery; see below), then powered the computer back up.
  The disk icon popped onto the desktop as if it were built-in. I
  used Apple's Drive Setup to initialize it, and within minutes I
  was faced with 4.5 GB of freshly minted storage space. To
  inaugurate the drive's new lease on life, I quickly copied over
  1.2 GB of MP3 files.

  In almost every respect, the drive operates as if it's an internal
  mechanism. It uses the Energy Saver control panel's settings to
  spin down when not in use and has no trouble sleeping when I put
  the PowerBook to sleep. To eject it in favor of an extra battery
  or CD-ROM drive, I only need to make sure no application is
  currently using data from the drive, then put it away (by typing
  Command-Y, dragging the icon to the Trash, or selecting Put Away
  from the File menu), and pop the Xcaret module out using the
  PowerBook's ejection lever. When I return the Xcaret to the bay,
  the drive appears after a couple of seconds.

  Having two hard drives running simultaneously impacts my battery
  life, but not as much as I expected. To test this, I listened to
  music using iTunes from the drive continuously while working until
  I got a battery warning. After charging the battery overnight, I
  ran without the Xcaret loaded. The difference in this (highly
  unscientific) test was about half an hour of extra usage time when
  not using the Xcaret, which is completely acceptable for my uses.
  I would imagine that using it as normal storage (versus reading
  from it continuously), would improve the battery performance.


**Running Mac OS X** -- I ordered the Mac OS X Public Beta when it
  was first available, but never got around to installing it on my
  PowerBook because it's my main machine, and I don't have any other
  computers that will run it. So despite my curiosity to play with
  Mac OS X, I didn't have the time or desire to run a beta operating
  system on a daily basis.

  With an expansion bay hard drive available, I finally had an
  opportunity to play with Mac OS X. Installing it, however, was
  trickier than I thought, through no fault of the Xcaret drive. The
  Mac OS X Beta must be installed from the CD as a startup drive. My
  initial thought was to use the CD-ROM in the right bay, and the
  Xcaret in the left bay, with power supplied by the AC adapter. The
  Xcaret _seems_ to fit into the left bay but was a very tight fit,
  and I didn't want to risk forcing it and possibly damaging my
  PowerBook. Good thing too: although the original 1998 PowerBook G3
  Series can accept devices in both bays, my 1999 Bronze Keyboard
  model uses the left bay for batteries only. That day's lesson
  became: check Apple's Tech Info Library (or your manual) before
  forcing anything.

<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n58329>

  This meant that I couldn't have both the CD-ROM and expansion bay
  drive installed at the same time. Borrowing a colleague's USB
  CD-RW drive proved fruitless as well, since the computer couldn't
  be started up by the external device. I had reached my last
  resort.

  With a full backup of my data in hand (I've learned my lesson: see
  "DriveSavers to the Rescue" in TidBITS-495_ to learn why I back up
  my data every night), I pulled the 12 GB drive out of my PowerBook
  and swapped in the 4.5 GB drive that was in the Xcaret enclosure.
  I was then able to use the CD-ROM module to install Mac OS X, then
  swap the drives back into their respective places.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05530>

  Now, I can start up the machine in Mac OS X by using the System
  Disk control panel (located on the expansion bay drive) to specify
  Mac OS X as the active system, then restarting the machine. When
  I'm done, I can restart under Mac OS 9 running on the internal 12
  GB drive.


**Hard Driven** -- Although it sounds like it was a rough road to
  add 4.5 GB of storage space to my PowerBook, the worst was short-
  lived and is now over. I've used the Xcaret module frequently with
  no problems whatsoever, and I'm happy to have pressed a perfectly
  functional piece of hardware back into service.


Accessibility on the Mac: Trouble in Paradise
---------------------------------------------
  by Joe Clark <joeclark@joeclark.org>

  By now, Mac users are mature enough to admit that the Macintosh
  isn't better than Windows in _every_ respect. I go back 20 years
  in accessibility and disability issues, and I consider myself
  nothing less than a Macintosh separatist, so it pains me to say
  that pretty much any computer user with a relevant disability
  ought to be using Windows, not a Mac.

  Ponder that for a moment. Can you think of any other entire
  population that should not use Macs, that should actively _favour_
  Windows machines? (Grandparents? Muslims? Icelanders?
  Orthodontists?) Can you think of another group that is almost
  completely locked out of Macintosh use, but well situated to work
  on Windows?

  Did you even know this was a problem?

  It wasn't always this way, and things may improve in the Mac OS X
  era, but at the moment we're facing major roadblocks when it comes
  to disabled people's use of the Macintosh: The issues involved
  with accessibility are poorly understood and elicit fear and
  resistance, while at the same time the actual hardware and
  software a disabled Mac user may need is difficult to come by and
  quite often inferior to what the other platform can provide.
  Moreover, Apple has neglected disabled Mac users for years, and is
  set to make a major blunder with Mac OS X.

  But let's start at the beginning.


**Access 101** -- With computers having expanded beyond pure
  computing to become communication devices, people with
  disabilities want to use computers in ever-increasing numbers.
  However, certain disabilities interfere with computer use - or,
  more accurately, the way computers are made today presents
  barriers to some disabled people.

  How many people with disabilities are there? It's simply
  impossible to find reliable numbers on the many relevant
  disabilities worldwide. The forms disability takes are so
  widespread that even defining disability is tricky. (I once worked
  for a government project team that spent two years trying to do
  just that.) But as just one example, the American Federation of
  the Blind estimates there are 900,000 blind or visually-impaired
  computer users in the United States.

<http://www.afb.org/info_document_view.asp?documentid=1367#comp>

  Moving away from statistics, here's a useful way of looking at
  things: is your disability severe enough to affect your use of a
  Macintosh? In some cases, the answer is a clear no. A single-leg
  amputee, for example, has no barriers at all to using a Mac. But
  other disability groups do face barriers.

* If you're blind or visually-impaired, how do you read and
  interpret the text, graphics, menus, dialog boxes, and other
  visual details on the screen? How do you read the legends on the
  keyboard? How do you read software documentation? What about
  multimedia? How do you surf the Web?

* If you're deaf or hard of hearing, how will Macintosh alert
  sounds actually manage to alert you? How do you benefit from
  soundtracks found in multimedia?

* If you have a mobility impairment that prevents you from moving
  the mouse or typing on a keyboard, what do you do?

  Accessibility is about accommodating characteristics a person
  cannot change by providing options.


**Adaptive Technology** -- Even five years ago, it was quite
  possible to find a wide range of so-called adaptive technology -
  hardware or software designed to eliminate barriers to using a
  Mac. The "institutional support" for the entire issue of
  accessibility was also worlds apart from what we have now.
  Starting in 1985, Apple's Worldwide Disability Solutions Group
  (WDSG) worked on everything from Apple II accessibility to online
  communities for disabled kids. Crucially, the WDSG also worked
  with developers to produce adaptive technology and to make
  existing software and hardware accessible (with, admittedly,
  patchy results). But Steve Jobs fired the five-person WDSG in
  January 1998, saving a paltry million dollars annually.

<http://www.wirednews.com/news/print/0,1294,12351,00.html>

  Since then, despite Apple's financial resurgence, accessibility
  has had no official champion inside Apple and none of the official
  importance an entire department provides. All you can find now are
  a few skimpy, feel-good pages on the education section of Apple's
  Web site. (The emphasis on education seems to imply that disabled
  Mac users cease to be disabled once they graduate from school.)

<http://www.apple.com/education/k12/disability/>

  Meanwhile, Microsoft and even IBM have maintained and expanded
  their own accessibility divisions, keeping up with software and
  hardware development and crucial consciousness-raising among
  developers.

<http://www.microsoft.com/enable/>
<http://www.ibm.com/able/>

  Shutting down the WDSG coincided with the ascendancy of the
  Internet, which suddenly added entire new layers of
  inaccessibility, particularly for blind computer users. (I'll
  explore Internet accessibility in a future article.)

  Further, people with disabilities have legal rights. In the United
  States, Canada, Australia, most of Western Europe, and other
  nations, it's illegal to fire or refuse to hire a qualified
  disabled person (among other related rights). Employers are
  required to "accommodate" disabled employees. That can involve
  altering the job itself, providing adaptive technology, offering
  different work hours, or any of a range of modifications that do
  not threaten the existence or nature of the business. That might
  end up meaning that even all-Mac shops would be forced to buy
  Windows machines for disabled employees. In the United States, the
  Americans with Disabilities Act is the primary law enshrining
  rights for people with disabilities. In other countries, it's
  typical for human-rights legislation to cover disability issues.

<http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/adahom1.htm>


**Ignorance and Fear** -- Disability is commonplace in human
  society, but, just as it is often difficult to expand your sphere
  of friends outside your own race or religious group, it's unusual
  for a non-disabled person to have a disabled friend. People lack
  real-world role models - actual people they know and trust from
  whom they can learn about disability.

  And, in any event, even if you have a deaf friend, neither you nor
  your friend necessarily knows anything about blindness or
  paralysis. Disability is too diverse. The depictions of disability
  on television and film are notoriously hackneyed, stereotyped, and
  simply inaccurate, so take them with a grain of salt. Dealing with
  people with disabilities, then, requires you to contemplate being
  disabled yourself. That's tough for many people.

  There's no quick fix for the anxiety issue. It takes person-to-
  person acquaintanceship and simply getting used to disability over
  time. The integration of disabled people into the workforce aids
  in that goal.


**The Accessible Future** -- In my next article, I'll run through
  the relevant disabilities and provide a buyer's guide to the
  adaptive technology available to reduce barriers on the Mac. There
  isn't a lot.

  Simply put, _everything_ is better on Windows when it comes to
  accessibility. You've got support from Microsoft itself, the fact
  of corporate and government standardization on Windows as a
  guaranteed sales base, and the simple momentum of the world's most
  popular, if not best, operating system.

  You have, moreover, many more software and hardware products.
  Nearly all the vendors of Mac accessibility products sell the same
  products for Windows systems and also many other Windows-only
  products. Some vendors and distributors, like Madentec and
  Prentke-Romich, are effectively Windows-only and offer large
  catalogues of products.

<http://www.madentec.com/>
<http://store.prentrom.com/>

  Do a Web search for adaptive technology vendors and the resulting
  list is notable for its length and its near-exclusion of Macs
  (and, indeed, anything other than Windows). And we can all
  remember the course of development of continuous speech
  recognition on personal computers: Windows first, Mac later.
  That's quite representative of adaptive technology in general.

<http://directory.google.com/Top/Shopping/Health_and_Beauty/Disabilities/
Assistive_Technology/>

  Windows adaptive technology runs the gamut from word-prediction
  software that helps kids read and write to sophisticated
  combinations of screen readers and Braille displays, letting a
  blind person simultaneously hear text that's presented on-screen
  and read system commands (like menus and status-line messages) in
  Braille. Ironically enough, an onscreen keyboard included with
  Windows 2000, developed by Madentec, started out as a Mac-only
  program.

<http://www.madentec.com/screendoor/scr_frm.html>

  Although it may be a bit much to expect a blind computer user to
  retouch JPEGs in Photoshop or produce a set of PowerPoint slides,
  adaptive technology makes it possible for people with a wide range
  of disabilities to perform pretty much every computer task
  encountered in an ordinary office... on Windows, at least.


**OS Hooks** -- There's also the issue of system "hooks." It is
  quite possible to design an operating system that works elegantly
  with adaptive technology, but the operating system must be
  actively designed for that purpose, providing hooks, or background
  functions, that programs like screen readers can use directly.

  As a parallel, think of Macintosh menu commands: You can select
  Quit from the File menu or press Command-Q (or Command and then Q,
  if you have the right adaptive technology). The system provides a
  hook for a keyboard equivalent of a menu command. Access
  provisions work the same way, effectively giving you more than one
  way to accomplish a task.

  It's necessary to build access provisions into the operating
  system from the beginning; retrofitting is always more complicated
  and spotty. Microsoft has less than a perfect record in this
  respect, but at least they're trying, with something called Active
  Accessibility, among other efforts.

<http://www.microsoft.com/enable/msaa/>

  The holy grail is a set of system hooks that work with all
  software and hardware. The reality is that manufacturers of
  adaptive technology have to program their own hooks and
  workarounds. Can you say "reinventing the wheel?"

  Lou Grosso of Alva Access Group tells me that, based on his
  conversations with Apple's own developers, the first full release
  of Mac OS X and its candy-coated Aqua interface will contain no
  access hooks at all, but that subsequent releases might. (Apple
  did not respond to several requests for comment.) As far as Apple
  is concerned, does lickability trump accessibility?

  Over here in the land of the overlapping minorities (Mac users who
  also are disabled), things will probably get worse before they get
  better. Paradoxically, several developers contacted for this story
  hinted or stated outright that development for Mac OS X will
  reinvigorate their product lines. That seems dubious at best; even
  some die-hard Mac supporters are not exactly salivating at the
  prospect of an entirely new operating system. If adaptive
  technology developers found it too expensive or too difficult to
  develop for a platform that's been around for 16 years, how can we
  expect a sudden surge of development for an operating system
  that's still in beta?

  Moreover, Mac OS X is more visual than any previous Mac operating
  system. Contrary to popular belief (among, say, Web authors), it
  is not necessary to reduce visual complexity to make a system
  accessible. But the lack of accessibility hooks in Mac OS X is a
  serious issue, and, in the twenty-first century, brand-new
  operating systems simply should not exist without thorough access
  provisions. It's unforgivable.


**Forcing Apple's Hand** -- Steve Jobs has been in no hurry to
  reinstate the Worldwide Disability Solutions Group or something
  akin to it. (One Apple source did explain that the company employs
  an assistive technology partnership manager, but that could not be
  confirmed.) That may, however, have to change. The U.S. government
  has set deadlines in 2001 by which desktop computers, government
  Web sites, kiosks, telephone systems, and other forms of
  information technology must be accessible.

<http://www.access-board.gov/sec508/508standards.htm
#Section%201194.26%20Desktop%20and%20Portable%20Computers>

  There isn't a big-name software or hardware vendor that doesn't
  sell to the U.S. government, including Apple. The Lawrence
  Livermore National Laboratory alone reportedly has 12,000 Macs
  (and provides a page of Mac baseline equipment standards).

<http://www.llnl.gov/projects/ia/standards/ia7501-2/mac.html>

  Both existing computers and new purchases will be covered by the
  accessibility regulations throughout the U.S. government. Without
  significant recommitment to accessibility, Apple might lose
  government accounts altogether.

  Accessibility on the Mac has been neglected and damaged by Apple's
  own actions and that perennial bugbear, "market forces." A great
  deal of catching up is in order. Only time will tell how Apple
  will respond to this pressing need. In my next article, I'll offer
  an adaptive-technology buyer's guide to help you find today's
  accessibility solutions for the Mac.

  [Joe Clark is a former journalist in Toronto who's followed,
  written about, and worked in the disability field for two decades.
  Explore his many online accessibility resources at his Web site.]

<http://joeclark.org/access/>



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