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Date: Sun 14-Dec-1989 03:22:17 From: Unknown Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <9986@zodiac.ADS.COM>, jtn@zodiac.ADS.COM (John Nelson) writes: > > I know that what I've just described sounds a LOT like the NeXT computer > and for good reason. Jobs and Co. have done a wonderful job of synthesising > various technologies into one beautifully designed package that didn't worry Just Give up and buy a NeXT..... Let's face it.... There's no one at Apple [in charge] with any vision at all. All the leadership there is worried about 1 thing... the bottom line! And that is no way to go about "Changing the world" or "Giving you the power to Be Your Best" (more like "Giving Scully $9,000,000.00 a year plus bonuses") Scully and Gasse' only care about 1 thing..... how much $$ they can take from you from the latest incantation of repackaged MacII hardware/technology..... Just Give it up.... All you out there get little stiffies whenever you see a NeXT or read anything about it... So just abandon the "Old boat Anchor" today and start living the future..... I did!!!!!! >From: jasmerb@mist.cs.orst.edu (Bryce Jasmer)
Date: Sun 14-Dec-1989 07:15:40 From: Unknown Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <192@atncpc.UUCP> bruce@atncpc.UUCP (Bruce Henderson) writes: >In article <9986@zodiac.ADS.COM>, jtn@zodiac.ADS.COM (John Nelson) writes: >> >> I know that what I've just described sounds a LOT like the NeXT computer >> and for good reason. Jobs and Co. have done a wonderful job of synthesising >> various technologies into one beautifully designed package that didn't worry > >Just Give up and buy a NeXT..... >Let's face it.... There's no one at Apple [in charge] with any vision at all. I wouldn't go that far. What about Alan Kay. We have him to thank for starting all of this. What about Knowledge Navigator? This is quite feasable in the next couple of years. <EXTREME sarcasm here.> I think Apple has some really neat ideas but they are looking to far into the future and aren't putting out feasable solutions for the near future. NeXT seems to be doing a much better job at looking at what can be accomplished and what is good and exciting. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bryce Jasmer jasmerb@cs.orst.edu >From: amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker)
Date: Sun 14-Dec-1989 15:24:23 From: Unknown Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <192@atncpc.UUCP>, bruce@atncpc.UUCP (Bruce Henderson) writes: > So just abandon the "Old boat Anchor" today and start > living the future..... I did!!!!!! I'm happy for you. My "Old Boat Anchor" has: - A Resource Manager, permitting (among other things) international localization *without recompilation*, including all of the system software - Built-in facilities for handling non-roman writing systems and keyboards - Color - A printer that doesn't halt my machine when I print a page - Thousands of applications and hundreds of peripherals that I can buy off the shelf - A superior and more consistent user interface (IMHO :-)) And it's a lot more affordable. I think I'll keep it, thanks. Look, I don't mean to knock the NeXT, but is has a ways to go before it's competition for the Macintosh, except perhaps for a few specific applications. Amanda Walker InterCon Systems Corporation
Date: Sun 14-Dec-1989 17:33:05 From: Unknown Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <192@atncpc.UUCP> bruce@atncpc.UUCP (Bruce Henderson) writes: >Just Give up and buy a NeXT..... Let's face it.... There's no one at Apple >[in charge] with any vision at all. All the leadership there is worried >about 1 thing... the bottom line! And that is no way to go about "Changing >the world" or "Giving you the power to Be Your Best" (more like "Giving >Scully $9,000,000.00 a year plus bonuses") Scully and Gasse' only care about >1 thing..... how much $$ they can take from you from the latest incantation of >repackaged MacII hardware/technology..... >So just abandon the "Old boat Anchor" today and start living the >future..... I did!!!!!! I agree with the spirit of the above although it might be a bit on the inflammatory side. It's true that Apple charges a LOT of $$$ for their boxes and provides little in the way of support for the little guy. The NeXT computer *is* the future... unfortunately the future doesn't have the software that I need right now! John T. Nelson UUCP: sun!sundc!potomac!jtn Advanced Decision Systems Internet: jtn@potomac.ads.com 1500 Wilson Blvd #512; Arlington, VA 22209-2401 (703) 243-1611 >From: 2FHGKINGLY@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 04:39:08 From: fellman@celece.ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <1630@intercon.com> amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) writes: >In article <192@atncpc.UUCP>, bruce@atncpc.UUCP (Bruce Henderson) writes: >> So just abandon the "Old boat Anchor" today and start >> living the future..... I did!!!!!! > >I'm happy for you. > >My "Old Boat Anchor" has: > > - A Resource Manager, permitting (among other things) international > localization *without recompilation*, including all of the system > software > > - Built-in facilities for handling non-roman writing systems and keyboards > I can't see how most people would care about this! > - Color > By the end of the summer the NeXT should have color that will blow all other workstations away: High speed graphics processor and 32bits including 8 bits transparency (alpha) > - A printer that doesn't halt my machine when I print a page > If you are worried about this, then just buy a LaserWriter IINT. That's what I have to do with my Mac. > - Thousands of applications and hundreds of peripherals that I can buy off > the shelf > Right now (or VERY soon where indicated) I can get the following high quality programs that satisfy all of my current computer applications needs: 2 wordprocessors (WriteNow, Frame), drawing program(Top Draw), paint program (Artisan, Illustrator(very soon), spreadsheet(WingZ(very soon)), prog. languages(C, obj C, Fortran, Lisp), UNIX utilities w/ network services, Spice, Mathmatica, scanner (Abatron), Graphics Terminal emulator (Communicae), X-Windows (very soon), DaynaFile floppy drive. You can get a book from NeXT that list many more than I have here. > - A superior and more consistent user interface (IMHO :-)) > You've got to be kidding. The NeXT's interface makes the Macs look primitive. >And it's a lot more affordable. I think I'll keep it, thanks. > Last time I looked, my university price for a NeXT was much cheaper than a comparable MacIIci. And that wasn't counting all of the free software, DSP chip, or R/W/optical disk. >Look, I don't mean to knock the NeXT, but is has a ways to go before it's >competition for the Macintosh, except perhaps for a few specific applications. > >Amanda Walker >InterCon Systems Corporation >-- I do mean to knock the Mac, I think that they have taken a lot for granted. One can also buy an Amiga for 1/2 the price of a MacSE and get much better hardware. I hear that there is even a MAC emulator for it (AMAX?) -ron fellman (rfellman@ucsd.edu) Assistant Prof., Department of Elec. and Comp. Eng. Univ. of Calif., San Diego
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 06:17:59 From: eps@toaster.SFSU.EDU (Eric P. Scott) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? C'mon, Mac IIs are great... AS TERMINALS. I'm using one right now to access a NeXT using NCSA Telnet. I can throw up lots of windows, display graphics, loads o' fun. All it took was an added-price Ethernet card (since that's not standard equipment as it is on the NeXT). It even runs under MultiFinder, but I can't run TN3270 at the same time because I don't have MacTCP--decent TCP/IP isn't included with the Mac like it is on the NeXT. Ok, I could use A/UX, but that's even more expensive, and for the most part doesn't have software that makes use of the graphics (or the mouse!). Of course, this Mac II, and all its siblings are already paid for. Why are they here? Well, someone decided that they would be good for document processing. The LaserWriters come with 35 built-in fonts. Even the "clone" PostScript printers come with 35 built-in fonts. The NeXT even has the width tables for these already supplied. The NeXT has this great marketing philosophy-- all the things people NEED are in EVERY cube--Ethernet, TCP/IP, real multitasking, 35 fonts... WAIT--the fonts are MISSING!!! There are only FIVE usable fonts--the four "Blue Book" fonts and Ohlfs. The nifty Display PostScript and NeXT 400 dpi Laser Printer are USELESS for what I need, because all the other places that produce documents ASSUME that those 35 fonts are universally available. An amazing lapse on NeXT's part not to include all the outline fonts. Are we supposed to buy those from Adobe? They can't be that penny-pinching, there are hundreds of fonts in the Adobe catalog, and they'll make big bucks off all the serious publishing users. I'm just looking for MINIMAL DTP capability. Suppose the basic NeXT offering improves to cover the current deficiences that are forcing us to use Macintoshes. What should we do with the Macs then? How about a NextStep windowserver for the Mac II??? (We already have X-Windows!) The M0115 keyboard is almost identical, there's a mouse, a color display that can be put in 4-level gray mode. This would make the NeXTs we have that much more accessible--and acceptable--and convince the powers- that-be to loosen up on their pursestrings to allow us to buy lots more. They don't question Macintosh purchases, but we have to "justify" NeXTs. If cost alone were the criterion, the NeXT would have no trouble... -=EPS=-
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 16:18:55 From: halliday@cheddar.cc.ubc.ca (Laura Halliday) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <7614@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> rfellman@ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) writes: >In article <1630@intercon.com> amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) writes: >>My "Old Boat Anchor" has: >> >> - A Resource Manager, permitting (among other things) international >> localization *without recompilation*, including all of the system >> software >> >> - Built-in facilities for handling non-roman writing systems and keyboards >> > >I can't see how most people would care about this! *I* certainly care. Not all of the world speaks English, you know. Even in the English speaking world, there are variations (do you say month/day/year or day/month/year?). I'll bet Macintosh gurus somewhere are developing Russian system software, if nobody hasn't already. Can the same be said for NeXT? I like NeXT, and may very well buy one next year. But Amanda has pointed out a serious flaw in the way NeXT does things... ...laura
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 17:25:24 From: dorner@pequod.cso.uiuc.edu (Steve Dorner) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <5985@ubc-cs.UUCP> halliday@cc.ubc.ca (Laura Halliday) writes: >In article <7614@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> rfellman@ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) writes: >>In article <1630@intercon.com> amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) writes: >>> - A Resource Manager, permitting (among other things) international >>> localization *without recompilation*, including all of the system >>> software I have never, ever understood why this is such a BIG DEAL. Users can do their own localizations, the software company doesn't have to; SO WHAT? The company still has to translate documentation, etc. What difference does it make if the program has to be recompiled with new strings? At best, this is a minor convenience for a few users. (And it is possible to extract .nib files from NeXT apps, and play with them, ala ResEdit.) >>> >>> - Built-in facilities for handling non-roman writing systems and keyboards >I like NeXT, and may very well buy one next year. But Amanda has pointed out >a serious flaw in the way NeXT does things... As for the Script Manager, it is also a serious flaw in how APPLE does things. How many applications are Script-Manager compatible? Not many. How many Apple applications are Script-Manager compatible? NONE *I* know of. The fact that the facility exists on the Macintosh does give it a head start, granted; but as a practical feature NOW, TODAY, the Script Manager is NO BIG DEAL. And as for the consistency of the User Interface, let me point out that NeXT makes it EASY for developers to comply with the Interface. Apple makes it VERY HARD INDEED, though they are beginning to address this with some object-oriented tools.
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 18:10:34 From: duggie@jessica.Stanford.EDU (Doug Felt) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <7614@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> rfellman@ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) writes: >In article <1630@intercon.com> amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) writes: >> [description of some features omitted] >> - Built-in facilities for handling non-roman writing systems and keyboards >> >I can't see how most people would care about this! Ah yes, good old American provincialism will never go away... I think the Japanese should just learn English. Better language, anyway. Funny how 'most people' so often translates to 'me and the people I work with.' >> - Color >> >By the end of the summer the NeXT should have color that will blow all >other workstations away: High speed graphics processor and >32bits including 8 bits transparency (alpha) What will it cost? The NeXT needs a graphics processor just for the 4-bit data it has to deal with now, anyway. When you start talking about the future you give up the argument. Amanda's not talking about the future, she's talking about NOW. In addition, NeXT isn't the only company which can bring out new products in the future. You can buy 32-bit graphics accellerators for the Mac today, and there will be more and faster ones coming. Whether, when this hardware ACTUALLY ships, it will "blow all other workstations away", well we'll just have to wait and see. (By the way, you aren't implying that the Mac is a workstation, are you?) >> - A printer that doesn't halt my machine when I print a page >> >If you are worried about this, then just buy a LaserWriter IINT. That's >what I have to do with my Mac. Or another postscript clone. Sure would be nice to have a choice of printers for the NeXT, though, wouldn't it? >> - Thousands of applications and hundreds of peripherals that I can buy off >> the shelf >> >Right now (or VERY soon where indicated) I can get the following >high quality programs that satisfy all of my current computer >applications needs: [list omitted] Please. VERY soon, even VERY VERY soon, is not NOW. The very phrase is a joke in this industry. You can't possibly be comparing the NeXT's applications software base to the Mac's. It's just not credible. There are a few good programs available for the NeXT. There will be more, if all goes well. That's about all one can say. >> - A superior and more consistent user interface (IMHO :-)) >> >You've got to be kidding. The NeXT's interface makes the Macs look >primitive. It's you who's got to be kidding. It takes more to make an interface than shadowed buttons and a dock on the side of your screen. The Mac at least has a standard menu location for 'undo' (and demands that all serious software support undo), doesn't require you to hold down the alternate key if you want to page the scrollbar, and gives applications an opportunity to save documents when you shut down. Modal alert windows actually look substantially different from regular windows. You can hide application windows without activating those applications. You can launch applications in a reasonable amount of time. You can even put documents on the desktop. I can't defend the Mac Finder, but it's five years old. The NeXT Workspace is just the five-year old Finder with a browser view and a dock added. And it doesn't even automatically update its windows when applications create new documents. Come on. The NeXT UI is 80% looks and 20% feel, if that. >>And it's a lot more affordable. I think I'll keep it, thanks. >> >Last time I looked, my university price for a NeXT was much cheaper than >a comparable MacIIci. And that wasn't counting all of the free software, >DSP chip, or R/W/optical disk. > >>Look, I don't mean to knock the NeXT, but is has a ways to go before it's >>competition for the Macintosh, except perhaps for a few specific applications. >> >>Amanda Walker >>InterCon Systems Corporation > >I do mean to knock the Mac, I think that they have taken a lot for >granted. One can also buy an Amiga for 1/2 the price of a MacSE and get >much better hardware. I hear that there is even a MAC emulator for it >(AMAX?) The NeXT is a better buy for the money, but the prices are pretty competitive here at Stanford. Do you need color and an applications base? Like a UI with some maturity to it? Buy the Mac. Don't mind waiting for a few years while NeXT cleans up the rough spots? Don't need much software, or foreign language support, but want a DSP, optical disk, and (marginally) better development environment? Buy a NeXT. Need speed? Look elsewhere... I'm not thrilled with the Mac either, but let's not make up advantages for the NeXT where they don't exist. The advantages are in hardware and systems software, not applications software base or UI. This can be remedied, but only if NeXT works at it. Writing off three-quarters of the world because they insist on using other writing systems than ours, and mistaking windows that drag whole and a file browser for a real UI, is not going to help NeXT turn the cube into a success. >-ron fellman (rfellman@ucsd.edu) >Assistant Prof., Department of Elec. and Comp. Eng. >Univ. of Calif., San Diego Doug "loyal opposition" Felt Courseware Authoring Tools Project Stanford University
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 17:56:43 From: amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? Sigh. OK, I do admit to being a little testy about this particular issue. I'll elaborate a little, and then I'll let everyone argue in peace... In article <7614@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu>, fellman@celece.ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) > [about international localization and non-roman writing systems] > I can't see how most people would care about this! Well, I don't know about you, but the population of the planet I live on is not completely made up of English speakers. Would like to have to learn Japanese in order to use your computer? Can I (or anyone) buy a NeXT with all of its system software in French? German? Chinese? > By the end of the summer the NeXT should have color that will blow all > other workstations away: High speed graphics processor and > 32bits including 8 bits transparency (alpha) "By the end of the summer." "should." Macs have no problem with 32bit + alpha color now, as we speak, and pre-existing software is already compatible with it, to boot. "all other workstations." Have you ever used a Silicon Graphics? A Sun with a Transcept board in it? This is an awfully bold claim to make for vaporware. > > - A printer that doesn't halt my machine when I print a page > If you are worried about this, then just buy a LaserWriter IINT. That's > what I have to do with my Mac. True, and I suppose you even can do basic printer sharing, as long as Mach supports the BSD line printer system. Point taken. I still think the NeXT printer is over-hyped, but that's par for the course in this industry. > Right now (or VERY soon where indicated) I can get the following > high quality programs that satisfy all of my current computer > applications needs: And the NeXT may suit your needs pretty well; it was designed as an academic workstation, after all. However, it doesn't even come close to what's available for the Mac. This may change, but if so it'll take a long time. > > - A superior and more consistent user interface (IMHO :-)) > You've got to be kidding. The NeXT's interface makes the Macs look > primitive. No, actually, I'm not kidding. The NeXT's gray scale buttons and so on are very cute, but they've made a lot of the operations abstract to the point of obscurity. Besides, an application bar and a directory browser are no match for the Finder. This is not to say that the NeXT doesn't have some nifty innovations, but as a whole it's a less cohesive interface. Also, I get the feeling that a lot of people who are claiming that the NeXT, or MOTIF, or whatever are more "advanced" than the Mac actually mean that they look newer. Just because something is familar, though, doesn't mean it's obsolete. > Last time I looked, my university price for a NeXT was much cheaper than > a comparable MacIIci. And that wasn't counting all of the free software, > DSP chip, or R/W/optical disk. Well, last time I tried a NeXT, its performance was closer to a II or IIx than to a IIci. Also, are you counting university prices on both sides? > I do mean to knock the Mac, I think that they have taken a lot for > granted. I think that Mac users take a lot for granted. I agree with Alan Kay that the Macintosh was the first personal computer good enough to criticize. But from my experience with the NeXT, it doesn't perform well enough at enough tasks to *let* me take it for granted... > One can also buy an Amiga for 1/2 the price of a MacSE and get > much better hardware. Hardware is only as useful as the software that is running on it. > I hear that there is even a MAC emulator for it (AMAX?) QED :-). The NeXT has some marvelous innovations, and I hope it succeeds. It's just not there yet, as some people have been claiming. Amanda Walker InterCon Systems Corporation
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 19:04:31 From: folta@tove.umd.edu (Wayne Folta) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? "" - A printer that doesn't halt my machine when I print a page "" " "If you are worried about this, then just buy a LaserWriter IINT. That's "what I have to do with my Mac. " I use a LserwWriter IINT and, with MultiFinder, my output spools to disk and prints in the background. It does slow the foreground application down, but not too much. Contrast this with the NeXT I tried out, which did literally grind to a halt while it struggled to do the PostScript imaging (at 400dpi, no less). There's a big difference there.
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 21:35:14 From: dorner@pequod.cso.uiuc.edu (Steve Dorner) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <21296@mimsy.umd.edu> folta@tove.umd.edu (Wayne Folta) writes: >I use a LserwWriter IINT and, with MultiFinder, my output spools to disk and >prints in the background. It does slow the foreground application down, but >not too much. > >Contrast this with the NeXT I tried out, which did literally grind to a halt >while it struggled to do the PostScript imaging (at 400dpi, no less). There's >a big difference there. READ OUR COLLECTIVE LIPS: You can attach the selfsame LaserWriter IINT to a cube, and have printing not impact the cube's performance AT ALL. Or you can buy a NeXT printer, save $2000+, and be patient while you're printing. IT IS A CHOICE, FOLKS. IT IS NOT nExt-PRINTER OR NOTHING. So shut up about the printer, and b***h about slightly less nonsensical things instead.
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 21:26:57 From: mccoy@aristotle.Berkeley.EDU (Jim McCoy) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <21296@mimsy.umd.edu>, folta@tove.umd.edu (Wayne Folta) writes: > > "" - A printer that doesn't halt my machine when I print a page > "" > " > "If you are worried about this, then just buy a LaserWriter IINT. That's > "what I have to do with my Mac. > " > > I use a LserwWriter IINT and, with MultiFinder, my output spools to disk and > prints in the background. It does slow the foreground application down, but > not too much. > > Contrast this with the NeXT I tried out, which did literally grind to a halt > while it struggled to do the PostScript imaging (at 400dpi, no > less). There's a big difference there. The difference is that the NeXT uses Postscript for it's screen as well as the printer. This means that until they get a graphics processor it will slow things down, but at least the NeXT has -true- WYSIWYG. I find it very amusing that the people supporting the Mac are using the same justifications that the PC people used a few years back: there is no established software base. It was not difficult for this software base to grow on the Mac, and because the NeXT is not a programmer-hostile as the Mac was, I expect that the NeXT softare base will soon rival the Macs (although it will probably lack the frivilous software that is common among personal computers such as games, cute and useless utilities, etc.). The NeXT is at the same stage that the Mac 128K was a while back. It is trying to build a software base and user base that other systems have. I have no doubt that it will do so, but until it does there will be a flock of Mac worshippers who will continue to point out the fact that the Mac has a larger software base (remind them that the PC has an even larger one :-). jim
Date: Sun 15-Dec-1989 23:00:59 From: duggie@jessica.Stanford.EDU (Doug Felt) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <2179@accuvax.nwu.edu> mccoy@aristotle.Berkeley.EDU (Jim McCoy) writes: [stuff about printing deleted] >I find it very amusing that the people supporting the Mac are using >the same justifications that the PC people used a few years back: >there is no established software base. Software base IS relevant if you are considering a purchase of the NeXT now, just as it was for the Mac when it came out. People who don't mind being pioneers will see the potential of the machine and purchase it anyway. Both the IBM PC and the Apple II have larger software bases, and most of this is junk. What you need is a base large enough to offer several programs in a variety of categories and at different price and performance levels. This takes time and matters to people who need to find immediate uses for their machines. >The NeXT is at the same stage that the Mac 128K was a while back. It >is trying to build a software base and user base that other systems >have. I have no doubt that it will do so, but until it does there >will be a flock of Mac worshippers who will continue to point out the >fact that the Mac has a larger software base (remind them that the PC >has an even larger one :-). Yes, Mac worshippers will do this. NeXT worshippers will pretend the *current* problems don't exist. I myself prefer to castigate both camps. Doug Felt Courseware Authoring Tools Project Stanford University
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 00:05:05 From: chari@ut-emx.UUCP (Christohpher M. Whatlyey) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > No, actually, I'm not kidding. The NeXT's gray scale buttons and so on are > very cute, but they've made a lot of the operations abstract to the point > of obscurity. Besides, an application bar and a directory browser are no > match for the Finder. This is not to say that the NeXT doesn't have some > nifty innovations, but as a whole it's a less cohesive interface. Also, > I get the feeling that a lot of people who are claiming that the NeXT, or > MOTIF, or whatever are more "advanced" than the Mac actually mean that they > look newer. Just because something is familar, though, doesn't mean it's > obsolete. Well. From "real-world" experience, I can tell you that people who find the Macintosh puzzling get along rather well on the NeXT. It is just so simple to use. Use effectively, is what I meant to say. I'd love to take two people who are as technology ignorant as say my father or my roomate and sit them both down in front of a Mac II and a NeXT. I can tell you that whoever is on the NeXT will get their document out faster. Really, my roomate is one of the most ignorant people you could find when it comes to computers and he uses WriteNow, PrintManager, Webster Librarian and Quotations quite effectively. He never asks questions and he never complains. He cannot use a Mac and Word. Period! > > Last time I looked, my university price for a NeXT was much cheaper than > > a comparable MacIIci. And that wasn't counting all of the free software, > > DSP chip, or R/W/optical disk. > > Well, last time I tried a NeXT, its performance was closer to a II or IIx > than to a IIci. Also, are you counting university prices on both sides? What on earth are you talking about? The only time I find my NeXT slow is when I happen to be taking in stuff at 19.2k over the modem and unbatching news onto an optical when I'm trying to do something else. Text scrolling is faster than IIcis I have used for sure. And disk access. Don't even try to argue that one. Sorry to be fussy but, I'm letting off a little exam tension. Chris chari@pelican.ma.utexas.edu \ chari@nueces.cactus.org --NeXT Mail
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 00:28:01 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > In article <1630@intercon.com> amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) writes: >>In article <192@atncpc.UUCP>, bruce@atncpc.UUCP (Bruce Henderson) writes: >>My "Old Boat Anchor" has: >> - A Resource Manager, permitting (among other things) international >> localization *without recompilation*, including all of the system >> software >> - Built-in facilities for handling non-roman writing systems and keyboards > I can't see how most people would care about this! You haven't programmed the Mac and you only speak English. I see computers have had their legendary affect on your literacy. > By the end of the summer the NeXT should have color that will blow all > other workstations away: High speed graphics processor and > 32bits including 8 bits transparency (alpha) In contrast, the Mac has 32-bit QuickDraw NOW. And don't tell me it'll be here for the NeXT at the end of summer. NeXT is notorious for missing ship dates; they've missed the date for color before already. And don't get me going on the beta versions of Mach... >> - A printer that doesn't halt my machine when I print a page > If you are worried about this, then just buy a LaserWriter IINT. That's > what I have to do with my Mac. Nope. You can do it with a LaserWriter (not even a Plus) and a Mac Plus. MF makes the wait even shorter. >> - Thousands of applications and hundreds of peripherals that I can buy off >> the shelf > [ list of Mac applications ported to the NeXT, vaporware, and other > applications which have had implementations of their type on the Mac > for years. ] > You've got to be kidding. The NeXT's interface makes the Macs look > primitive. Buzz. The NeXT's interface is more versatile and less consistent. Might as well be a PC with a graphics package. Good bye, interface. Good bye, reusability of user knowledge. > Last time I looked, my university price for a NeXT was much cheaper than > a comparable MacIIci. And that wasn't counting all of the free software, > DSP chip, or R/W/optical disk. Oh, how nice. Universities get it for dirt cheap. Sounds like Apple's deal. It's a marketing strategy, nothing more. Do you think Jobs would throw so much away of what he learned at Apple? > One can also buy an Amiga for 1/2 the price of a MacSE and get > much better hardware. And no software, relatively speaking. And no interface consistency. And periodic forced graphics upgrades to run new software. > I hear that there is even a MAC emulator for it (AMAX?) And the emulator won't run Virtual, System 7.0, and I don't think Color QD. What a bargain. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 00:35:21 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > C'mon, Mac IIs are great... AS TERMINALS. Hmmm. Sounds like you haven't really used the Mac. I'm using one right now to access a NeXT using > NCSA Telnet. I can throw up lots of windows, display graphics, > loads o' fun. All it took was an added-price Ethernet card > (since that's not standard equipment as it is on the NeXT). It > even runs under MultiFinder, but I can't run TN3270 at the same > time because I don't have MacTCP-- > decent TCP/IP isn't included with the Mac like it is on the NeXT. That's an advantage, as far as I'm concerned. Contrary to the beliefs of most readers of UseNet, not everyone needs or wants or even knows what EtherNet is. Why pay for it unless you need it? > An amazing lapse on NeXT's part not to include all > the outline fonts. Are we supposed to buy those from Adobe? Hmmm. > Suppose the basic NeXT offering improves to cover the current > deficiences that are forcing us to use Macintoshes. Sounds like you shouldn't even be using microcomputers, then. I don't see your beef. > How about a NextStep windowserver for the Mac II??? If NeXT isn't yet working on this, they're idiots. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 00:55:40 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > In article <5985@ubc-cs.UUCP> halliday@cc.ubc.ca (Laura Halliday) writes: >>In article <7614@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> rfellman@ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) writes: >>>In article <1630@intercon.com> amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) writes: >>>> - A Resource Manager, permitting (among other things) international >>>> localization *without recompilation*, including all of the system >>>> software > The company still has to translate documentation, etc. What difference > does it make if the program has to be recompiled with new strings? You're missing the point about the resource manager. To really understand it, you pretty much have to hack it. This is not an elitist viewpoint. It's just that graphical intuition does not translate to the printed word. Granted, NeXT has done a lot with graphical design of applications. But not as much as Apple. Write your own NeXT graphical objects and see what I mean. > The fact that the facility exists on the Macintosh does give it a head > start, granted; but as a practical feature NOW, TODAY, the Script Manager > is NO BIG DEAL. Eh? Certainly it is; the Mac HAS a script manager. Does NeXT? The head start if of course important. How long do you think it will take for a non-existent script manager to be supported as opposed to an extant one? > And as for the consistency of the User Interface, let me point out that > NeXT makes it EASY for developers to comply with the Interface. Nope. Interface consistency has nothing to do with the difficulty with which the interface standard is adhered to. (Yes, I ended a sentence with a preposition. Sue me.) > Apple makes it VERY HARD INDEED, though they are beginning to address this > with some object-oriented tools. BEGINNING? Read the previous posts; OO has been with the Mac for 7 years. NeXT as a company hasn't even existed that long. The lag is attributable to the resistance to OO technology that is generalized in the field. (Individuals C++ enthusiasts may think "What? Resistance?" -- but keep in mind that the industry's backbone is still baldies guarding 200K line Fortran programs.) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 01:32:44 From: phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <3326@hub.UUCP>, 6600pete@hub.UUCP writes... >In contrast, the Mac has 32-bit QuickDraw NOW. And don't tell me it'll be >here for the NeXT at the end of summer. NeXT is notorious for missing >ship dates; they've missed the date for color before already. And don't >get me going on the beta versions of Mach... I have had a Mac before I bought my NeXT, so don't tell me I haven't used a Mac. One thing is for sure: what you consider a beta version is certainly much more reliable and stable than the unprotected Macintosh OS. If you run the wrong application on your Mac, your system dies. In contrast, my NeXT at one time was up for WEEKS, and I use the thing about 12hours/day. You are comparing the beta version of a Mercedes against the "refined" version of a Model T. >Nope. You can do it with a LaserWriter (not even a Plus) and a Mac Plus. >MF makes the wait even shorter. Don't make us laugh. Sure, a CP/M machine can do this, too. That doesn't mean it's worth anything. Incidentally, what's the going price of a new Laserwriter? So, why do people buy NT and NTX laserprinters, if they can do what you want to do on a non-plus laserwriter? >> [ list of Mac applications ported to the NeXT, vaporware, and other >> applications which have had implementations of their type on the Mac >> for years. ] Like Excel? Which for years had a 1MB memory limit? Until late in this year, there wasn't a single decent Mac spreadsheet which allowed us to use memory. Tell me: what decent Stats package exists on a Mac? What decent data handling processing languages and data tools exist on a Macs (although you and I may disagree here). Text Filters? Programming Tools? Graphically oriented Unix (don't tell me about A/UX [but factor in the $1000 price tag])? >Buzz. The NeXT's interface is more versatile and less consistent. Might >as well be a PC with a graphics package. Good bye, interface. Good >bye, reusability of user knowledge. Good bye, intelligence. I don't think its any more inconsistent than the Mac user interface, and its applications (try Microsoft garbage). Sorry, if you judge consistency by similarity to the Mac, NeXT won't do. >Oh, how nice. Universities get it for dirt cheap. Sounds like Apple's deal. >It's a marketing strategy, nothing more. Do you think Jobs would throw so >much away of what he learned at Apple? This sounds like, Apple is a school specializing in teaching employees like Jobs how to do things :-). I agree, though. Anyone with an introductory course in Industrial Organizations and Price Discrimination knows that its profitable to lower the price where the demand is the most elastic. >And no software, relatively speaking. And no interface consistency. And >periodic forced graphics upgrades to run new software. I think there is more GOOD software today on the NeXT than there is for the Mac and the PC combined. We already chatted about interface consistency. I am glad to hear that Apple decides to never force any upgrades, but stick to its good old proven design. Lucky for them, they don't have 640K problems, or they would have to invent OS/2 like schemes. >And the emulator won't run Virtual, System 7.0, and I don't think Color QD. >What a bargain. The point here was not to argue that one should buy an Atari, but that the Mac is vastly overpriced. The hardware---not the compatibility---is there at 1/2 the price >------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa >Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription >Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills Ivo Welch Assistant Professor of Finance UCLA Anderson Graduate School of Management w/o entrenched interest in Macintosh magazines and NeXT failure, and/or interest in submitting Mac and *D*O*S* articles.
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 02:11:07 From: rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? I don't want to contribute to the general bashing here, but some things have to be said to this: > NeXT is notorious for missing > ship dates; they've missed the date for color before already. NeXT has so far a pretty good record for KEEPING the things they promised. Including deadlines. The only time so far was the 0.9 software release. But this wasn't due to the software but because of a shipment of bad optical disks and NeXT was just verifying that there are no bad disks delivered. However don't make the mistake to take NeXT on what theu don't say but only rumors. So far the official statement from NeXT is still only "color/photorealism on the desktop for the 90's". Not more, not less. Maybe there is in the meantime an announce- ment for next year. But so far I never heared any fixed date. Therefore NeXT can't be late, as they didn't promise anything. > And don't > get me going on the beta versions of Mach... MACH is pretty stable, I get more often bombs on the Mac than crashes on the NeXT. And anyway: 1.0 is NO longer beta. SunOS 4.0.something has about the same stability as NeXT's MACH. (Whatever this means, at least it has protected multi- tasking, compared to the Mac... ) >Oh, how nice. Universities get it for dirt cheap. Sounds like Apple's deal. >It's a marketing strategy, nothing more. Do you think Jobs would throw so >much away of what he learned at Apple? University or not, compare the same pricing, either business or university pricing, and the NeXT will be cheaper than a comparable Mac (if there exists such a thing). On the rest (printer, color, etc) have been enough intelligent and less intelligent remarks, so I'll skip that. >Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for >subscription ^no wonder he is upset! Why don't you settle down and publish a NeXT Programming Journal? >Hire this kid | ^ maybe, one day... But he will have to work on a NeXT :) Does anyone know by chance how much international language support is built into Postscript? Does anyone know how international language support will be implemented in future Unix releases? (I mean NeXT would be stupid, if they would make a proprietary standard in this respect. But if they had some technology they could licence it to OSF. Ronald ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@cogsci.bitnet
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 02:23:49 From: rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? The main thing with ethernet is, that it does not cost much more than appletalk, if you put it on your mainboard. The user saves only k$$ because he has not to finance the profit of a second company, as you have to if you buy a ethernet card for the Mac. The use of built in networking is pretty simple. Many people dont use it because it is expensive to upgrade. If however it is built in, then they will use it, as soon as they have a chance. (After all they don't want to waste their money.) Only after the used it just because they have it, they recognize the benefit and applications like mail take off. > OO has been with the Mac for 7 years. Well there are OOL's and OOL's. C++ has not even a shot at the capabilites of Objective-C. Sadly enough, it seems to become a standard. The same holds true for the Mac. There is some OO stuff in the Mac (after all they saw it at Xerox), but its not even close to what NeXT offers (at least so far, and as we do not want to start another vaporware war...) Ronald . ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@cogsci.bitnet
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 02:42:05 From: jgreely@giza.cis.ohio-state.edu (J Greely) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <22438@ut-emx.UUCP> chari@ut-emx.UUCP (Christohpher M. Whatlyey) writes: >Well. From "real-world" experience, I can tell you that people who find >the Macintosh puzzling get along rather well on the NeXT. Don't fool yourself. From "real-world" experience, I can tell you about quite a few people who find the NeXT interface confusing, inconsistent, arbitrary, gratuitously incompatible, and suffering from an excess of design philosophy. It doesn't mean either side is right, it just means that I know different people. >It is just so simple to use. Use effectively, is what I meant to say. >I'd love to take two people who are as technology ignorant as say my >father or my roomate and sit them both down in front of a Mac II and a >NeXT. I can tell you that whoever is on the NeXT will get their >document out faster. If that's the sole test of ease-of-use, you may be right. If that person sits down *cold* at a NeXT, with nothing on the dock and the browser in its default mode, it may be ten minutes before they *find* the word processor, let alone print a document. Don't scoff, I've seen it happen. I'd love to run your Mac vs. NeXT test, and, unlike you, I have no idea how it would come out. I've worked with a lot of Mac novices, and I've watched a lot of people sit down at our semi-public NeXT and try it out. I still don't know which way the frog will jump. >Really, my roomate is one of the most ignorant people you could find >when it comes to computers and he uses WriteNow, PrintManager, Webster >Librarian and Quotations quite effectively. He never asks questions and >he never complains. He cannot use a Mac and Word. Period! You stacked that deck. Word is not the easiest word processor for the Mac, nor is it the default (nor does it pay more than lip service to the Mac user interface guidelines). Put WriteNow on both machines and try again. The naive-user friendliness of both machines is fairly equal; where I see the NeXT's *potential* is in supporting users who are no longer naive. >What on earth are you talking about? The only time I find my NeXT slow >is when I happen to be taking in stuff at 19.2k over the modem >and unbatching news onto an optical when I'm trying to do something else. >Text scrolling is faster than IIcis I have used for sure. And disk access. >Don't even try to argue that one. (aside: why not? was that intended as a formal proof?) As a dissenting voice, I find my NeXT quite pokey at times. Context switching can be tedious, application launch is sluggish, printing (to a NextLaser) makes the machine nearly unusable for the duration (although I did like the 0.9 feature of being able to stop printing indefinitely by rapidly moving a window), logging in takes a while, and booting, even with the usually-reliable fsck-skip, is slow. Performance is improving, but it ain't there yet. Dropping in an extra four meg would speed things up, but again, that's stacking the deck. When the NeXT is *finished* (a date I've arbitrarily set at October, 1990), things may be different, but right now, you're talking about a machine that's at the evolutionary level of a 128K Mac in 1984. When the NeXT-equivalent of a Mac+ comes out, we'll talk (that is, a Mac+ at the time it came out, not the low end of the family as it is now). "Sure, you can optimize the hell out of Fortran, but optimized spaghetti is still only lasagna."
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 03:32:36 From: jgreely@giza.cis.ohio-state.edu (J Greely) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? <7614@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> <1636@intercon.com> <7619@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> In article <7619@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> fellman@celece.ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) writes: >As was already pointed out, it is a simple matter to replace the .nib >files for any particular language or environment you choose. I thought that was "only so long as you don't increase its size" (for the common case of compiled-in nibs). Haven't checked recently, so I'll have to browse around and see what turns up. >Why should anyones' own machine have to carry around extra baggage >that they won't use, whatever their origin. They will want to have a >manual in their own language also I presume, thus it is desirable to >have seperate versions of a program. I think you missed the point here. I don't think anyone seriously suggested that one copy of anything would contain the "extra baggage" of multi-lingual dialog boxes. The point is that the internationali- zation support on the Mac makes it easier for vendors to produce those separate versions of programs faster, more easily, and more reliably. >I have found that very few applications can really make good enough use >of color to justify its high cost. In general, I agree. For *my* purposes, 8-bit grayscale is preferable to color. I don't treat it as an important issue because it's not, to *me*. I won't presume to tell someone else that it's not important at all. >How many different types of drawing programs or word precessors do you >need? One of each, that *works*. :-) Having half-a-dozen makes it possible for competition to produce better ones, as well as letting me pick the one that most fits my style (currently, my document-production style is Emacs+LaTeX, and my drawing program is Yap; go figure). While we're discussing "practical" applications, how many vertical-market accounting systems are there for the NeXT (and, to be nasty, I'll specify that it must be able to handle 30-character account numbers, and break on no less than 9 subsets of that number)? I don't need it now, but I know quite a few people who do, and they won't be buying NeXTs. >When I said VERY soon, I meant 2 weeks in most cases to 1 month for >X-Windows (Jan 15.). I'll bet that it would take about that long for >the ordering process anyway. It's vaporware until I *see* it. And where do I go to see it? Why, Businessland, of course, which is about a hundred miles from here. Assuming they carry it. Assuming they understand it. Assuming they don't drive me out of the store by knowing substantially less than I do about the machines they sell. Assuming they sell machines (I haven't seen any sales figures, but my impression is that there's not a lot going out the door). >With NextStep, every program can integrate the abilities of any of the >other programs via Mach IPC. Thus, I don't need an editor built into >each application. The 'Editor' can be automatically integrated into >any application. Quick! How do I make "any application" call Emacs instead of Edit? If you can't answer, your point is null. If I can't figure it out by poking through Librarian, it's useless to me, and there are a *lot* of things which can't currently be found that way. Full-text indexing is interesting, but there's a lot to be said for a decent "normal" index. >Also, Interface Builder makes consistancy built-in with predefined >print menus, edit menus, etc. that already are wired up and work. (excuse me while I chuckle heartily. Nothing against IB, but it ain't the last word in user interface toolkits. I had a grad student sum it up nicely: "it's an evolutionary step up from X or Prototyper, but not revolutionary") >>Hardware is only as useful as the software that is running on it. >True. It very much depends upon what applications you need and the >environment. For a networked system in a UNIX environment, the Mac >doesn't even come close. And the NeXT does? Despite a great deal of improvement since 0.8, the NeXT is still not quite at home in a Unix network. Proprietary system administration, subtle (and blatant) differences from "standard" Unix (arbitrarily defined as SunOS 3.5, just because that's what I compare it with most), and, neither last nor least, Yet Another Windowing Paradigm. Mac, X10, X11, SunView, MGR, NeWS, Motif, Open Look, weenie-widgets (ok, HPWM for X11), and ... NextStep. *Just* what we need. Yet Another Way to handle scrollbars, Yet Another Way to implement click-to-type, Yet Another Way to handle a mouse. Yet Another Way to Confuse Users (not that this is NeXT's fault, necessarily; the legal silliness currently stifling the industry is mostly to blame). >With a little knowledge of NeXT's finances, I'm not worried about them >going away for at least a few more years. I think that they therefore >have enough time to become a serious contender. My usual response is, "the only thing that could put NeXT out of business right now is the fall of Western Civilization (such as it is)". "Can I open my eyes yet?" "That depends. Are you waiting for us to be anywhere near ground?" "Right." "Keep your eyes shut." "Right."
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 03:21:08 From: izumi@violet.berkeley.edu (Izumi Ohzawa) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <5985@ubc-cs.UUCP> halliday@cc.ubc.ca (Laura Halliday) writes: >In article <7614@sdcsvax.UCSD.Edu> rfellman@ucsd.edu (Ronald Fellman) writes: >>In article <1630@intercon.com> amanda@mermaid.intercon.com (Amanda Walker) writes: >>>My "Old Boat Anchor" has: >>> - A Resource Manager, permitting (among other things) international >>> localization *without recompilation*, including all of the system >>> software >>> >>> - Built-in facilities for handling non-roman writing systems and keyboards >> >>I can't see how most people would care about this! > >*I* certainly care. Not all of the world speaks English, you know. > >I'll bet Macintosh gurus somewhere are developing Russian system software, if >nobody hasn't already. Can the same be said for NeXT? What do you think Canon, which owns 1/6 of NeXT and has exclusive distribution rights for NeXT in east Asia, is doing for its market of Japan, Korea, China among others? And no one puts in a universal power supply for 100 - 240 volts into NeXT just for satisfying travelling US users. I do care too, and NeXT is better prepared for non-English writing systems. NeXT uses Display PostScript and its extended version handles the complete Japanese character set (6000+ characters). The printer version of this is already in LaserWriter II NTX available in Japan (includes a hard disk within the printer). Not only will this take care of Japanese, this will allow writing systems which go right-to-left (Hebrew, Arabic), as well as text lines that go from top to bottom. This without any hardware modification. Do you know that Macs sold in Japan have different hardware (ROMs) to make Kanji rendering faster? Although KanjiTalk runs on the US version of hardware, but slowly. NeXT cubes sold anywhere will be identical in terms of hardware. No special ROMs are needed, and the cube can be plugged in anywhere without any power converter. The good part is that the current NeXT printer will be automatically a Kanji printer too by a simple upgrade to a new version of Display PostScript. With Mac, you will have to buy a new printer if you use anything other than NTX. Ah, you might say that KanjiTalk can print Kanjis on regular LaserWriters, but try printing them at 60-point Font size. Yuck! Those smoothed jaggies are ugly. Izumi Ohzawa, izumi@violet.berkeley.edu
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 06:39:30 From: chari@nueces.cactus.org (Chris Whatley) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? jgreely@giza.cis.ohio-state.edu (J Greely) writes: >In article <22438@ut-emx.UUCP> chari@ut-emx.UUCP (Christohpher M. Whatlyey) > writes: >>Well. From "real-world" experience, I can tell you that people who find >>the Macintosh puzzling get along rather well on the NeXT. >Don't fool yourself. From "real-world" experience, I can tell you >about quite a few people who find the NeXT interface confusing, >inconsistent, arbitrary, gratuitously incompatible, and suffering from >an excess of design philosophy. Are they 'user-interface' naive or are they the types who sit around saying that things are "confusing, inconsistent, arbitrary, gratuitously incompatible, and suffering from an excess of design philosophy" all the time? (like me for instance) >If that's the sole test of ease-of-use, you may be right. If that >person sits down *cold* at a NeXT, with nothing on the dock and the >browser in its default mode, it may be ten minutes before they *find* >the word processor, let alone print a document. Don't scoff, I've >seen it happen. Yes I have too. At the workstation lab where I am a sysadmin, you would not believe some of the confusion that arises when using the NeXT. Part of the problem is that they are naive users (Math grads and professors mostly) who want to use Mathematica. They do learn quickly though. Generally, if things are set up in the dock properly, noone has any trouble to speak of once they figure out when to click once and when to click twice. > I'd love to run your Mac vs. NeXT test, and, unlike >you, I have no idea how it would come out. I've worked with a lot of >Mac novices, and I've watched a lot of people sit down at our >semi-public NeXT and try it out. I still don't know which way the >frog will jump. One horrible thing about the Mac is that there is no concept of a home directory which makes losing your files in the Word utilities folder or somewhere a much too frequent occurance. This alone, I think, would make the NeXT win. >>Really, my roomate is one of the most ignorant people you could find >>when it comes to computers and he uses WriteNow, PrintManager, Webster >>Librarian and Quotations quite effectively. >You stacked that deck. Word is not the easiest word processor for the >Mac, nor is it the default (nor does it pay more than lip service to >the Mac user interface guidelines). Put WriteNow on both machines and >try again. The naive-user friendliness of both machines is fairly >equal; where I see the NeXT's *potential* is in supporting users who >are no longer naive. Well, one major difference is that he can actually use all of those things at once in a relatively intuitive fashion! >>What on earth are you talking about? The only time I find my NeXT slow >>is when I happen to be taking in stuff at 19.2k over the modem >>and unbatching news onto an optical when I'm trying to do something else. >>Text scrolling is faster than IIcis I have used for sure. And disk access. >>Don't even try to argue that one. >(aside: why not? was that intended as a formal proof?) Please don't ask me about formal proofs. I just said bye-bye to the most horrible course of my scholastic career. Logic. I had almost forgotten. >As a dissenting voice, I find my NeXT quite pokey at times. Context >switching can be tedious, application launch is sluggish, printing (to >a NextLaser) makes the machine nearly unusable for the duration >(although I did like the 0.9 feature of being able to stop printing >indefinitely by rapidly moving a window), logging in takes a while, >and booting, even with the usually-reliable fsck-skip, is slow. >Performance is improving, but it ain't there yet. Dropping in an >extra four meg would speed things up, but again, that's stacking the >deck. Eh. Well. I guess that's why everyone is bitching about slowness. I have 13MB in my cube and my perception of its speed is that of twice the speed of an 8MB machine. The extra five megs is a significant improvement. All of those things are true in general though. It is a bit too heavily laden at times to be very responsive. It is improving and I certainly hope that they find some other method (comme lazy initialization) to speed up application launch. > When the NeXT is *finished* (a date I've arbitrarily set at October, >1990), things may be different, but right now, you're talking about a >machine that's at the evolutionary level of a 128K Mac in 1984. When >the NeXT-equivalent of a Mac+ comes out, we'll talk (that is, a Mac+ >at the time it came out, not the low end of the family as it is now). Yes. I agree. I have two hopes for speed increase. One is that NeXT comes out with the 040 version and the other is that they come out with a graphics co-processor on which you can RUN DPS so that you have a nice unladen 25Mhz 030 left over for crunching (chewing really). I'll take either one but, I'm sure I won't be able to afford both. Chris
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 09:53:50 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > Well. From "real-world" experience, I can tell you that people who find > ...my roommate... cannot use a Mac and Word. Period! Word's not a Mac program. It's a PC program ported to the Mac. I know, I know, it is vastly superior to the PC version and is very different in some fundamental ways, but what I'm most importantly saying here is that Word/Mac is not a Mac program. People have complained about it for years. WriteNow, which I imagine chances are the word processor your roommate uses on the NeXT, is a Mac program. It borrows heavily from MacWrite. QED. > Text scrolling is faster than IIcis I have used for sure. Whoops. Try the NeXT being 4-bit mono and the IIci you might have used being in 8-bit color. Whenever I'm doing heavy text on a color Mac, I turn all the colors off. Performance skyrockets. That's what the Monitors cdev was designed for. > And disk access. Don't even try to argue that one. You're kidding, right? The optical drive is hideously slow. The 100MB SCSI Winchester is OK, but that's not standard, is it now? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 10:16:27 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > In article <3326@hub.UUCP>, 6600pete@hub.UUCP writes... > I have had a Mac before I bought my NeXT, so don't tell me I haven't used > a Mac. Have I? > One thing is for sure: what you consider a beta version is certainly > much more reliable and stable than the unprotected Macintosh OS. If you > run the wrong application on your Mac, your system dies. Oh, God, here we go again. It's not the OS, it's the applications which don't know any better than to not check out the system before running. Do you think Apple is responsible for every dork who doesn't check for HFS before making PBH calls? > In contrast, my NeXT at one time was up for WEEKS, and I use the thing > about 12hours/day. Same with my Mac, when I'm not hacking it. >>Nope. You can do it with a LaserWriter (not even a Plus) and a Mac Plus. >>MF makes the wait even shorter. > > Don't make us laugh. Sure, a CP/M machine can do this, too. That doesn't > mean it's worth anything. I wasn't saying it WAS worth anything. I was pointing out that spooling was available for Mac PS printing with the implication that it wasn't on the NeXT. > Incidentally, what's the going price of a new Laserwriter? If you don't like the price, get a clone. Aple charges what the market will support. That doesn't really say anything about the printer itself. > So, why do people buy NT and NTX laserprinters, if they can do > what you want to do on a non-plus laserwriter? Because spooling is the only thing I was talking about. There are a lot of things you can do with the NT line that have nothing to do with spooling, not the least of which is speed. >>> [ list of Mac applications ported to the NeXT, vaporware, and other >>> applications which have had implementations of their type on the Mac >>> for years. ] > Like Excel? Which for years had a 1MB memory limit? Until late in this > year, there wasn't a single decent Mac spreadsheet which allowed us to > use memory. > Tell me: what decent Stats package exists on a Mac? > What decent > data handling processing languages and data tools exist on a Macs (although > you and I may disagree here). Full dBASE code compilers. I don't have much experience in databasing, but it seems to me dBASE is "decent" by most anyone's standard. > Text Filters? Programming Tools? MPW. Lightspeed (THINK) anything. > Graphically oriented Unix (don't tell me about A/UX > [but factor in the $1000 price tag])? Price tag is irrelevant, as I said before. Apple charges what it can. X for A/UX will be out "soon," as will X for NeXT. >> The NeXT's interface is more versatile and less consistent. > I don't think its any more inconsistent than the Mac user interface... > (try Microsoft garbage [on the Mac]) Hmmmm. The sheer _amount_ of rules for the Mac UI is larger than the corresponding amount for the NeXT. Given what we've learned about the amount of deviation to which programmers subscribe on the Mac, what's going to happen when Microsoft releases Word for the NeXT? Ugh. >>And no software, relatively speaking. And no interface consistency. And >>periodic forced graphics upgrades to run new software. > > I think there is more GOOD software today on the NeXT than there is for > the Mac and the PC combined. Whoops. If you'll read back a bit, you'll see we were talking about the Amiga here. >>And the emulator won't run Virtual, System 7.0, and I don't think Color QD. >>What a bargain. > > The point here was not to argue that one should buy an Atari, but that the > Mac is vastly overpriced. The hardware---not the compatibility---is there > at 1/2 the price The hardware counts for nothing without the compatibility. I won't pay less for something that's at least 2 years out of date. > w/o entrenched interest in Macintosh magazines and NeXT failure, Whoops. Macker is a free magazine I put together in my free time. I have no entrenched interest in it because, as subscribers will attest, I haven't even gotten my shit together to put out the first real issue yet. (Hang on, folks. I have the articles all put together and all I have to do now is wrap it all up with the editorial...) > and/or interest in submitting Mac and *D*O*S* articles. Ecuuuuse me for marketing my skills. I happen to have learned a lot about DOS before I realized the error of my ways. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 10:31:56 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >> NeXT is notorious for missing >> ship dates; they've missed the date for color before already. > > NeXT has so far a pretty good record for KEEPING the things > they promised. Including deadlines. The only time so far... Nope. They told us we would have the machine with a real OS (or they implied it would have a real OS by telling us the machine would be ready) about 6 months before it actually shipped. And they told us they would have color NeXT month, January (this was a rep we had on campus last summer). >> And don't get me going on the beta versions of Mach... > MACH is pretty stable... I wasn't talking about its stability, I was talking about its half-life. > I get more often bombs on the Mac than crashes on the NeXT. Firstly, the NeXT runs a UN*X variant. Processes rarely kill the entire system. (Although I seem to be doing it with increasing frequency... but that's probably because X gets killed and kills the machine in turn...) The Mac doesn't run UN*X. The Mac is a microcomputer. Sometimes it runs UN*X. The OS it is shipped with isn't UN*X. This is according to demand. Secondly (and I feel like I should put this in a macro at this point), I DON"T CRASH THE MAC unless I'm hacking. People I know don't crash the Mac. If crashes happen, we blame the application and throw it out. The crashes go away. It's the application's problem. The OS is stable. > And anyway: 1.0 is NO longer beta. <clap clap clap> How long did it take again? > University or not, compare the same pricing, either business or > university pricing, and the NeXT will be cheaper than a > comparable Mac (if there exists such a thing). Marketing marketing marketing. Macs cost because people pay. >>Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for >>subscription > ^no wonder he is upset! Why don't you settle > down and publish a NeXT Programming Journal? Give me a NeXT and I will. But I'll have to learn tons more about UN*X, Objective C, and NeXT's class library first. Give me three or four years. >>Hire this kid | > ^ maybe, one day... But he will have to work on a NeXT :) Fine. I haven't got anything against UN*X. But I wouldn't tarde my SE/30 for a NeXT, regardless of monetary considerations. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 10:53:17 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > Why should anyones' own machine have to carry around extra baggage > that they won't use, whatever their origin. They shouldn't. Do you really think extra routines in ROM is significant "baggage"? The resource manager doesn't "weigh" anything. > They will want to have a manual in their own language also I presume, > thus it is desirable to have seperate versions of a program. Haven't you heard the rhetoric about Mac users not needing manuals? Most of it is true. The part you do need a manual for you ask a human being about. Screw the manual. Word needs a manual; it's not a Mac program. > I have found that very few applications can really make good enough use > of color to justify its high cost. But that's not the point. The point is not that Mac has color and NeXT doesn't, the point is that NeXT can't point to vaporware and say it's anything but vaporware. I HATE color. It distracts me, it gets in my way, and by its very nature takes longer to draw. I always turn it off. > How many different types of drawing programs or word precessors do you > need? As many as it takes to satisfy a diverse marketplace. > What are some applications areas that you use the Mac for that you > can't do with the programs that I listed? Preference always affects efficiency. Once a higher up was smitten by WriteNow and sent out an edict that everyone learn it immediately. There was widespread rebellion because WriteNow doesn't do all the things that Word does, and our department was full of computer geeks who could deal with Word's nonsense (including me -- I love Word but will always take time to point out that it's not a Mac application and should probably be taken out and shot.) > BTY. When I said VERY soon, I meant 2 weeks in most cases to 1 month for > X-Windows (Jan 15.). In other words, Real Soon Now. Vaporware is vaporware until it's in the users' hands. > Where is a 'hide' button for the finder? System 7.0.* > Where is the multitasking... It's here. It's been here for a while now. Longer than NeXT. Bash the type of multitasking if you must. > or the interprocess communication. System 7.0.* * OK, this stuff is vaporware. Bash away. But I bet there are more developers working with advance copies of System 7.0 than there are with release copies of NeXT/Mach 1.0... :-) > Also, Interface Builder makes consistancy built-in with predefined print > menus, edit menus, etc. that already are wired up and work. As do AppMaker, Prototyper, and hordes of evangelists spouting interface rhetoric. > Granted that the [NeXT] feel is a bit slower than a IIci Ah, but you see, that's all that counts. > but then it is doing a lot of stuff in the background. > I generally have five or more applications always running > (a clock, a performance monitor, mail, nfs, and a calendar program). > The user feel is still more than acceptable for me. Run a bunch of apps under MultiFinder and that's basically the effect on the Mac, too. I sympathize. > the NeXT, unlike the Mac, can live very comfortably with the DECstation. I suppose that depends on your idea of comfort. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 11:02:40 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > The use of built in networking is pretty simple. Many people > dont use it because it is expensive to upgrade. If however it > is built in, then they will use it, as soon as they have a > chance. Nope. Phone companies will never wire EtherNet. Too big and expensive. Fiber optics look good for that. Soon as that goes through, the NeXT's EtherNet will be a boat anchor. I don't have any faith in EtherNet for personal workstations at all. It's great for academia at the moment, which is what NeXT is for. But we're talking about whether NeXT can or should bump Mac from the personal arena. > Only after the used it just because they have it, they recognize > the benefit and applications like mail take off. Truthfully, I can hardly wait. Anyone who reads alt.cyber* can, too. > C++ has not even a shot at the capabilites of Objective-C. I'm not qualified to say anything about this except that Think C 4 does Objective C. Or a large subset. Someone's liable to chime in about this any second now. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 11:55:40 From: 6600pete@hub.UUCP Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? Damn. I knew I would leave something out. > From article <6761@tank.uchicago.edu>, by phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu: >> Like Excel? Which for years had a 1MB memory limit? Until late in this >> year, there wasn't a single decent Mac spreadsheet which allowed us to >> use memory. So? Until late in this year, the NeXT didn't even have a real OS. Should you really be building a spreadsheet bigger than 1M or is that a job for an accounting package? What accounting packages are there for the NeXT? >> Tell me: what decent Stats package exists on a Mac? Oh, SYSTAT. I suppose that's a bad stats package, though. I don't know tons about stats pacakages, to tell you the truth. There are a number more than one, though. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pete Gontier | InterNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu, BitNet: 6600pete@ucsbuxa Editor, Macker | Online Macintosh Programming Journal; mail for subscription Hire this kid | Mac, DOS, C, Pascal, asm, excellent communication skills
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 16:25:17 From: bell@eniac.seas.upenn.edu (Mike Bell) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <3335@hub.UUCP> 6600pete@hub.UUCP writes: >From article <23098@brunix.UUCP>, by rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony): >>> NeXT is notorious for missing >>> ship dates; they've missed the date for color before already. >> >> NeXT has so far a pretty good record for KEEPING the things >> they promised. Including deadlines. The only time so far... > >Nope. They told us we would have the machine with a real OS (or they implied >it would have a real OS by telling us the machine would be ready) about 6 >months before it actually shipped. And they told us they would have color >NeXT month, January (this was a rep we had on campus last summer). > >>> And don't get me going on the beta versions of Mach... > >> MACH is pretty stable... OK, this discussion has lined the Mac camp up against the NeXT camp. Well, I am both a Mac developer and a NeXT Developer, and I have one thing to add. As a developer, I judge a machine on two main criteria; the machine itself, and the developer support I receive from the company that makes it. I have developed for the Mac for over 5 years, and have always received tech notes, a commercial support network (Applelink), bug fixes and patches...etc. The support that NeXT gives in comp.sys.next is great...but not everyone has access to netnews. Also, there are hundreds of undocumented anomolies (missing symbolic links, undocumented program features, undocumented changes that must be aplied to standard unix programs to run on the NeXT, out-and-out bugs, etc...) that have never been mentioned to the registered developers. I am also still waiting for the magical NeXTbus interface chip; without which I cant do any hardware development. Developing for the Next has really made me appreciate Appple's Developer Tech Support, and all the little things that they do that we developers take for granted. All that said, I do like and use my NeXT....as a UNIX machine. Right now, however, it isn't going to replace my Mac. It is possible to do things on the NeXT that you cant do on the Mac, but there are some basic programs on the NeXT that are painfully slow....specifically graphics programs. As the hardware evolves, this may change.(Hopefully). Now if I only had MACH on my Mac with a finder front end.......... Mike Bell ******************************************************************************** Mike Bell CSnet: BELLMA%ERVX01@dupont.com Senior Engineer Applelink: D2747 DuPont Electronic Imaging Core Technology Group MacBrisc..... When you feel the need for speed.......... ********************************************************************************
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 19:05:39 From: rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >>> NeXT is notorious for missing >>> ship dates; they've missed the date for color before already. >> >> NeXT has so far a pretty good record for KEEPING the things >> they promised. Including deadlines. The only time so far... > >Nope. They told us we would have the machine with a real OS (or they implied >it would have a real OS by telling us the machine would be ready) about 6 >months before it actually shipped. And they told us they would have color >NeXT month, January (this was a rep we had on campus last summer). > It is completely irrelevant, what a rep. tells you on campus. If he tells stuff like this, NeXT should make him shut up, because he harms NeXT. The only relevant things, are what you get as an official press release. This does not mean, that any rumor and specualtion you can find in some newspaper is true, but when you have the company spokesmen/womyn releasing official statements to the press, then it is relevant. And so far these announcements did hold pretty well. Ronald ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@cogsci.bitnet
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 19:17:52 From: rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >I wasn't saying it WAS worth anything. I was pointing out that spooling was >available for Mac PS printing with the implication that it wasn't on >the NeXT. Spooling IS on the NeXT. What makes the print process stall the whole machine is that the printer has no postscript interpreter and the WINDOW-SERVER can't interpret postscript for the screen and for the printer at the same time. As soon as you print on a printer with it's own postscript engine, there is hardly any noticable slowdown, there is complete spooling as in any UNIX system. >Price tag is irrelevant, as I said before Well, if it is irrelevant, why are all people talking about bang/buck ratio? Just send me your superflous money, I'll take care of it... >Hmmmm. The sheer _amount_ of rules for the Mac UI is larger than the >corresponding amount for the NeXT. Given what we've learned about the amount >of deviation to which programmers subscribe on the Mac, what's going to happen >when Microsoft releases Word for the NeXT? Ugh. Maybe it is not how MANY guidelines there are, but WHAT guidelines. The more there are, the less I'll remember them all, and the less consistent will my programs be. Ronald ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@cogsci.bitnet
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 20:21:31 From: rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >Nope. Phone companies will never wire EtherNet. Too big and expensive. >Fiber optics look good for that. Soon as that goes through, the NeXT's >EtherNet will be a boat anchor. I think we don't talk about vaporware? Normally you wire just your office. And if you need access to some other, national net, then there is no obsatcle to plug in a board into the NeXT to allow for that. But the NeXT has to work NOW and not in a few years when fiber optics are finally widespread. There are a lot of companies using ethernet. And without floppies, DOS, MACos, there has to be some way to integrate the NeXT, and this is the network. Ronald ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@cogsci.bitnet
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 20:29:18 From: gwangung@blake.acs.washington.edu (Just another theatre geek...) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? People, PEOPLE, PEOPLE!!!! Can we cool down the my-dad-can-beat-up-your-dad arguements (or at least take them to talk.comp.religion???)? And can we recognize that what drives a machine's acceptance is the software available NOW? Or we going to be like Amiga and ST fanatics, circa 1986???
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 00:19:23 From: rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? I've been reading all this Mac vs. NeXT thread for the past week, and have even participated in some of it when the allegations against the Mac got ridiculous and inaccurate. But I personally am getting weary about this especially when *no one* is contributing anything contructive to this, outside of "My machine handles objects better than yours", or "My machine has more apps than yours" or "My machine is faster than yours"....ENOUGH ALREADY!!! You know, when it comes right down to it, the Mac and the Cube don't compete directly in most enviroments, and for the ones we do, I haven't heard many good arguments on why customers buy one machine over the other. All you guys are spouting off the mouth about hard specs and esoteric BS that quite frankly gets a little old in the real world. I have a hell of a lot of respect for the Cube regarding technical innovation, sound, unix enviroment and such, but that doesn't mean that I want to froth at the mouth, and bash every Mac at a moments notice. Likewise, the Mac has 32-bit color, myriads of storage options, multiple screens and a vast software collection in all catagories, but I don't bash NeXT for being a relative newcomer, or that solutions aren't here yet. The NeXT has toomuch going for it for it to wither and die next year. About two years ago, I think I would have held most of the opinions that many of you on both sides do. But now that I am an engineer in a sales enviroment, I see things from both sides of the street. Most of the things you people argue about do not matter to the customer unless there is something specific than one can do over the other. But most of the times, one feature or product does not convince someone to use that platform...or close sales. You all miss the point on several issues, and as the volume level increases, the strength of the arguments deteriorates dramatically. These places are meant as a forum to discuss the relative strenghts and weaknesses of a platform on several issues. And sure, every now and then, a flame is necessary. But before this gets any worse, please take a deep breath, reread what you've written, and think twice before sending it. Some of it is downright laughable. Others kill your own arguments. (stepping of the soapbox...my "flame" is done)
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 00:30:51 From: rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? A bit of clarification is needed here. X-Windows 11 has been available for A/UX for quite awhile now, certainly since the last two releases. Also, Appletalk access is available in release 1.1.1, allowing you to access any printer on the network, as well as other networked Appletalk services.
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 00:35:12 From: rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? Please define what it means to be "confortable" with a DECstation. We have two Vaxen here in house in which I'm quite cozy with. Please explain. thanks...
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 00:43:32 From: rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >From article <23100@brunix.UUCP>, by rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony): >> The use of built in networking is pretty simple. Many people >> dont use it because it is expensive to upgrade. If however it >> is built in, then they will use it, as soon as they have a >> chance. >Nope. Phone companies will never wire EtherNet. Too big and expensive. Wrong wrong WRONG!!! Phone companies string networks every day! they installed our original Ethernet system. (BellSouth). If you believe this, then you still live in the days before the AT&T breakup. Also, Ethernet does not need to be thick or expensive anymore. Unlike the thick or thin wore solutions that have been prevelent, many firms are moving to *unshielded twisted pair* (read: phone wire) solutions. How do I know? My Mac is hooked to one. Who installs this for most people? "Hello, BellSouth?"
Date: Sun 16-Dec-1989 16:18:57 From: norman@a.cs.okstate.edu (Norman Graham) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? > It was not difficult for this software base to grow on the Mac, and > because the NeXT is not a programmer-hostile as the Mac was, I expect > that the NeXT softare base will soon rival the Macs [...] On the contrary, it was *EXTREMELY* difficult for "this software base to grow on the Mac." It took a lot of effort on Apple's part to convince software developers to write programs for the mac; Then it took a lot of support from Apple to see that the developers completed their projects. To quote Guy Kawasaki "Apple dedicates over 150 people and spends over $20 million per year to support developers. That's about 140 people and $18 million more than any other [hardware] company." Commercial software houses care very little about how programmer-friendly the NeXT is. The bottom line is usually the deciding factor. 'Are there enough NeXT users who need my particular product and are willing to pay a price that allows me to make a substantial profit?' NeXT must convince them that either this is the case or this will be the case by the time the project will be completed. Software for the NeXT box won't just happen. NeXT must expend much effort and resources to build a software base. Is it?
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 06:48:13 From: chari@nueces.cactus.org (Chris Whatley) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? There are a few misunderstandings... 6600pete@hub.UUCP writes: >From article <22438@ut-emx.UUCP>, by chari@ut-emx.UUCP (Christohpher M. Whatlyey): >> Text scrolling is faster than IIcis I have used for sure. >Whoops. Try the NeXT being 4-bit mono and the IIci you might have used being >in 8-bit color. Whenever I'm doing heavy text on a color Mac, I turn all the >colors off. Performance skyrockets. That's what the Monitors cdev was designed >for. Well. It is grayscale, not mono for one thing. And, for another, I WAS talking about the mac in 1-bit mode. >> And disk access. Don't even try to argue that one. >You're kidding, right? The optical drive is hideously slow. The 100MB SCSI >Winchester is OK, but that's not standard, is it now? I wasn't talking about an optical. I was talkign about a *330* meg SCSI and anyway, the optical is (perceptibly) faster than most Mac drives that cost $1500.00 and give you 256 megs of storage on a $50.00 removable disk. Oops. I guess there aren't any. Oh well.
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 16:29:22 From: rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <1989Dec17.064813.16650@nueces.cactus.org> chari@nueces.cactus.org (Chris Whatley) writes: >There are a few misunderstandings... > >6600pete@hub.UUCP writes: > >>From article <22438@ut-emx.UUCP>, by chari@ut-emx.UUCP (Christohpher M. Whatlyey): >>> Text scrolling is faster than IIcis I have used for sure. > >>Whoops. Try the NeXT being 4-bit mono and the IIci you might have used being >>in 8-bit color. Whenever I'm doing heavy text on a color Mac, I turn all the >>colors off. Performance skyrockets. That's what the Monitors cdev was designed >>for. > >Well. It is grayscale, not mono for one thing. And, for another, I WAS >talking about the mac in 1-bit mode. > >>> And disk access. Don't even try to argue that one. > >>You're kidding, right? The optical drive is hideously slow. The 100MB SCSI >>Winchester is OK, but that's not standard, is it now? > >I wasn't talking about an optical. I was talkign about a *330* meg >SCSI and anyway, the optical is (perceptibly) faster than most Mac >drives that cost $1500.00 and give you 256 megs of storage on a $50.00 >removable disk. Oops. I guess there aren't any. Oh well. > > >-- >Chris Whatley >Work: chari@pelican.ma.utexas.edu (NeXT Mail) (512/471-7711 ext 123) >Play: chari@nueces.cactus.org (NeXT Mail) (512/499-0475) >Also: chari@emx.utexas.edu I said that I wouldn't say any more about this, but if more of this inaccurate dribble goes on, then I have no choice. We all know that the NeXT machine is 4-bit mono, not grayscale, but you *did not* imply that you were refering to the Mac's performance either in 1-bit or 4-bit mono earlier, and to say so now destroys your original argument. Make sure you are explicit about this. Even then, I think your argument is grossly inaccurate, and I have used both the cube and the IIci. My counterpart who works for NeXT in Atlanta will even say that the optical drive is slow; he has to me. The optical drive was a gutsy technological advance that I think was a little bit ahead of its time. Competing technologies today are much faster and are approachine 30ms access times, which I consider a watermark of working in a tolerable unix enviroment. the Canon optical does not come close to these specifications. Also, most of todays technologies will get you 600 meg on a disk, not 256. The Canon was state of the art when it was ready in 1987. The NeXT machine, unfortunetely, was not. And if you think you can't get a removable manegto-optical drive for the Mac, then you haven't been shopping lately. And as far as the 330 meg Winchester drive goes, this drive is no different than any similar unit that is available for the Mac, PC, or any Vax/Unix platform, simply because all these companies buy their drives from the same manufacterers, primarily Imprimis, Micropolis, Priam, and others. Again, i say, MAKE SURE YOU KNOW WHAT YOU'RE SAYING HERE!!! Some of these comments made here are downright wrong! And silly!
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 17:22:34 From: wilkins@jarthur.Claremont.EDU (Mark Wilkins) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <3334@hub.UUCP> 6600pete@hub.UUCP writes: >> Graphically oriented Unix (don't tell me about A/UX >> [but factor in the $1000 price tag])? > >Price tag is irrelevant, as I said before. Apple charges what it can. >X for A/UX will be out "soon," as will X for NeXT. X-Windows for A/UX has been out for months. It's X for the Mac OS (from apple, there might be another vendor) which will be out "soon". -- Mark Wilkins wilkins@jarthur.claremont.edu P.S. Don't forget about object code compatibility between Mac OS and A/UX
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 17:26:22 From: jcargill@oka.cs.wisc.edu (Jon Cargille) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <37341@apple.Apple.COM> rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) writes: > > We all know that >the NeXT machine is 4-bit mono, not grayscale Gee, I'm glad we all know that...... Flame on: Mono is black&white which implies 1-bit. "4-bit mono" is nonsense. NeXT is 2-bit GREYSCALE which implies 4 (2^2) shades of grey. Flame off. In article <37341@apple.Apple.COM> rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) writes: >In article <1989Dec17.064813.16650@nueces.cactus.org> chari@nueces.cactus.org (Chris Whatley) writes: >> >>I wasn't talking about an optical. I was talkign about a *330* meg >>SCSI and anyway, the optical is (perceptibly) faster than most Mac >>drives that cost $1500.00 and give you 256 megs of storage on a $50.00 >>removable disk. Oops. I guess there aren't any. Oh well. > >My counterpart who works for NeXT in Atlanta will even say that the >optical drive is slow; he has to me. Anyone who says 90 ms seek time isn't slow is lying or brain-dead. >And if you think you can't get a removable manegto-optical drive >for the Mac, then you haven't been shopping lately. Jeez....read what he wrote!! He wasn't saying that you can't buy the same technology for a Mac. Of course you can. But people who buy NeXTs are getting one a LOT cheaper. Last prices I saw for Mac drives were in the $5-6K range. Of course, those are double sided drives (600 M), so you could probably get a single-sided (300M) drive like the NeXT's for half that. But they're definitely not cheap. You could buy a good chunk of a NeXT for what the drive will cost you... >Again, i say, MAKE SURE YOU KNOW WHAT YOU'RE SAYING HERE!!! Some >of these comments made here are downright wrong! And silly! I'd like to send that one RIGHT BACK AT YOU, BUCKO! :) Sorry for joining in on this one, folks. I don't see that we're accomplishing anything here. How about we redirect this discussion to alt.religion.computers? See Followups line. Jon jcargill@cs.wisc.edu
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 20:24:42 From: phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? First, I must apologize for my previous message. It was a bit too personal. Thank you, Pete, for not starting a war. Still, I stand by most of the content of my previous message. Here is my latest (short) contribution to what appears to become Pete's war against the rest of the world. >Should you >really be building a spreadsheet bigger than 1M or is that a job for an >accounting package? In my opinion, spreadsheets should be able to handle a few megabytes worth of spreadsheet with a few thousand rows (problem in Mac's Full Impact) easily. >Oh, SYSTAT. I suppose that's a bad stats package, though. I don't know tons >about stats pacakages, to tell you the truth. There are a number more than >one, though. Systat is pretty bad (although it is pretty expensive). The magic words are SAS and S, furthermore Matlab, Gauss and (for small applications) Minitab and (for TS) SCA. I guess everyone can insert his own favorites after the "furthermore." S is available by now. True, full-blown SAS is under development for the NeXT. /Ivo Welch ivo@next.agsm.ucla.edu
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 20:43:19 From: phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >Anyone who says 90 ms seek time isn't slow is lying or brain-dead. How about 90ms over a 100 terabyte surface :-)? If you restricted yourself to half the OD surface (128MB), you get approx. half the average access time. There is of course another problem, if I am correct: To write, the heads must pass twice over the surface (once to erase, I think). /ivo welch
Date: Sun 17-Dec-1989 21:38:09 From: wilson@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU (Wilson Chan) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <6773@tank.uchicago.edu> phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu writes: > >>Anyone who says 90 ms seek time isn't slow is lying or brain-dead. > >How about 90ms over a 100 terabyte surface :-)? If you restricted yourself to >half the OD surface (128MB), you get approx. half the average access time. > >There is of course another problem, if I am correct: To write, the heads must >pass twice over the surface (once to erase, I think). > >/ivo welch To quote Sept. 1989 issue of UnixWorld: "Writing is done in three passes-- an erase pass, a write pass, and a verify pass. ...writing took about the same amount of time as reading..." (p.82) wilson@media-lab.media.mit.edu Standard disclaimer applies
Date: Sun 18-Dec-1989 01:25:25 From: rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >the NeXT machine is 4-bit mono, not grayscale, What please is the difference between 4-bit mono (or for the sake of the argument n-bit mono) and grayscale? >My counterpart who works for NeXT in Atlanta will even say that the >optical drive is slow; he has to me. You can't really compare the optical to a hard drive, compare it to a floppy, then you get what it is meant to be: removable and portable, not necessarily fast. >Competing technologies today are much faster and are approachine 30ms >access times, and then again: compare the costs: a disk costs around 250-300$ vs. 100$ (50$ for universities) and a single drive unix costs about the same as an entire NeXT system. And third they often state as capacity what can be writen on a double sided disk. But as they have only one r/w head you have to turn the disk to access the other half of your capacity. This is very unpractical, as you can not even access the whole information if you had a second drive, because you can't split the media. Except for the little space you save, you traded a lot of hassle if you chose to use one of these 1.5 sided optical systems. As long as they can't access both sides at once, double sided disks are nonsense, and quoting the capacity of both sides to be the capacity of the drive is close to a criminal act... Ronald ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@cogsci.bitnet
Date: Sun 18-Dec-1989 01:45:19 From: rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? >NeXT is 2-bit GREYSCALE If you take into account the alpha value (compositing) then it is actually 4-bit, isn't it? >Anyone who says 90 ms seek time isn't slow is lying or brain-dead. I would't say it is fast, but the 90 ms don't tell the whole story. a) within a certain range the access is much faster than one would think, as it can be done by just moving the laser and not the r/w head. (This can not be done with hard drives obviously) Therefore the difference between avg.access (90ms) and track to track access in a limited range is much bigger than with pure magnetic media. (I think within 5Mb the acces is something like 4-5 ms) If you compare this to a e.g. 40mb hard disk, this an 8th of the whole capacity. If such a HD had an avg. access time of 25ms this would mean about a worst access time of 90ms and a track to track access time of 4-5ms. If the HD has about 512 tracks, then it can access only 250kb of data within this time. (250 kb are approx. the content of 3 cyl. of this 40mb drive) b) the data transfer rate is pretty high c) again: the optical should be considered as a floppy replacement, that's why there is no floppy in the NeXT. If you like the idea or not, this is what it is meant to be. If you think the media is too expensive: the 1.44MB floppies did cost more than 7$ when they came out. So 15 times more money for 170 times the capacity seems to be a good deal to me. Ronald ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@cogsci.bitnet
Date: Sun 18-Dec-1989 04:50:17 From: mfi@serc.cis.ufl.edu (Mark Interrante) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <6772@tank.uchicago.edu> phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu writes: > >Systat is pretty bad (although it is pretty expensive). The magic words >are SAS and S, furthermore Matlab, Gauss and (for small applications) >Minitab and (for TS) SCA. I guess everyone can insert his own favorites >after the "furthermore." S is available by now. True, full-blown SAS >is under development for the NeXT. Reality check: SAS has a product called JMP that is out for the MAC that is very nice. It is not SAS it is a fully interactive and graphical stats package. I have spoken with SAS employees (not just salesbeings) and the concensus is that a straight port of SAS wouldnt sell on the MAC. They are appearantly moving SAS towards a more modern software architecture where it will work nicely on graphics "workstations". In the future. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mark Interrante Software Engineering Research Center mfi@beach.cis.ufl.edu CIS Department, University of Florida 32611 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Imagine what it would be like if TV actually were good. It would be the end of everything we know." Marvin Minsky
Date: Sun 18-Dec-1989 15:10:26 From: jmann@bigbootay (Jim Mann) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? But, for businesses, NeXT prices are NOT cheaper than MAC II prices. Yes, the LIST prices are comprable. If I buy all my hardware from Apple at list and all my software at list, then the NeXT is cheaper. But most businesses do NOT buy at list. We get about 32 % off on Mac hardware, and buy all our software from places like MacWarehouse and MacConnection at 30% - 40% below list. Currently, BusinessLand does NOT discount NeXTs, even if you want to buy lots of them. So, in the real world, a comprable Mac is cheaper.
Date: Sun 19-Dec-1989 06:51:50 From: wb1j+@andrew.cmu.edu (William M. Bumgarner) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? <5985@ubc-cs.UUCP> Consider where hyphenation, fonts and spell-checking of "foreign" (just different, not foreign) languages is needed most: Word processing and DeskTop Publishing. Frame, the single most impressive piece of word processing/DTP software I have ever used, supports all three for UK English, French, German, Dutch, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Italian, and Norwegian. It's there-- it just isn't system wide (that I know of). Admittedly, there is a large gap when it comes to eastern languages... b.bumgarner | Disclaimer: All opinions expressed are my own. wb1j+@andrew.cmu.edu | I officially don't represent anyone unless I NeXT Campus Consultant | explicity say I am doing so. So there. <Thpppt!> "I ride tandem with the random/Things don't run the way I planned them..."
Date: Sun 19-Dec-1989 23:59:33 From: karl@cgdisis.uucp (Karl Sierka) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? Greetings, (Oh wealth of resources) NeXT users. Has anyone successfully connected third party disks to the external SCSI port on the (v1.0) NeXT machine? If so, which drives have worked and which have not? What steps were performed in either case, and why were they taken? I'll summarize to this list. Thanks for your time. karl --- Karl Sierka sierka@ncar.ucar.edu or (303)-497-1338 karl@cgdisis.ucar.edu (128.117.24.18) CGD/NCAR 1850 Table Mesa Drive Boulder, CO 80301 Karl Sierka sierka@ncar.ucar.edu or (303)-497-1338 karl@cgdisis.ucar.edu (128.117.24.18) CGD/NCAR 1850 Table Mesa Drive
Date: Sun 19-Dec-1989 17:58:46 From: chari@nueces.cactus.org (Chris Whatley) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? 6600pete@hub.UUCP writes: >From article <23143@brunix.UUCP>, by rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony): >>>I wasn't saying it WAS worth anything. I was pointing out that spooling was >>>available for Mac PS printing with the implication that it wasn't on >>>the NeXT. >> Spooling IS on the NeXT. What makes the print process stall the >> whole machine is that the printer has no postscript interpreter >> and the WINDOW-SERVER can't interpret postscript for the screen >> and for the printer at the same time. >OK, but then we get into an argument about where printing begins and ends. Is it >the PostScript interpreter's fault that printing slows the NeXT to a crawl or >is the print spooler's (lpr's?). I don't know -- that's probably a >philosophical issue, and I've had enough philosophy for one education, >thank you. Let us get this straight.... 1) If you have a NeXT with a NeXT Printer attached and print something... a) the file goes into a queue b) the printer daemon see that there is a file waiting to be printed c) the printer daemon sends the file to the printer which, in this case, happens to be the window server. 2) If you have a LaserWriter hooked up to your NeXT a) the file goes into a queue b) the printer daemon see that there is a file waiting to be printed c) the printer daemon sends the file to the printer which, in this case, happens to be a LaserWriter In case 1, the system slows down. Why, because it is rasterizing millions of dots to blast out to the printer engine. The speed of the NeXT printing at 400dpi is comparable to that of a 300dpi LaserWriter IINTX (at least as far as I can tell). This makes sense, it takes alot of computing to print a 400dpi page. In case 2, the NeXT is not slowed at all. All it is doing is sending files over a serial line at 9600 baud to a LaserWriter. Any computer can do that. A standard benefit of using unix is that any computer can spool its print jobs on that NeXT connected to the LaserWriter or a NeXT printer. >...and the printer most likely to be used... Of course. If you need a high quality, high volume LaserPrinter, by all means, do NOT get a NeXT laser printer for the NeXT. Get an Imagen or even a Linotronic. The NeXT printer is cheap and it produces a low volume of exceptional output. There is nothing special about this it is 400dpi and it is PostScript. Chris
Date: Sun 19-Dec-1989 18:02:00 From: chari@nueces.cactus.org (Chris Whatley) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? 6600pete@hub.UUCP writes: >From article <23147@brunix.UUCP>, by rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony): >Granted. But we were talking about hard-wiring EtherNet on the NeXT motherboard. >In the Mac, you drop in a card. Later you can drop in a fiber-optics card. Now, >this is not a specific advantage (or at least I am not attempting to show that >this is a specific advantage here). Yes that is true. One thing you fail to recognize is that it doesn't cost NeXT much more to build ethernet on their board than it does for Apple to put AppleTalk on theirs. Also, the NeXT has slots too. You could even use it as a gateway to a fiber-optic network if you wanted.
Date: Sun 20-Dec-1989 02:47:24 From: cbradley@attctc.Dallas.TX.US (Chris Bradley) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <37341@apple.Apple.COM>, rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) writes: > I said that I wouldn't say any more about this, but if more of this > inaccurate dribble goes on, then I have no choice. We all know that > the NeXT machine is 4-bit mono, not grayscale... Actually, the MegaPixel Display and DPS provide a 2-bit/pixel grey value, with a 2-bit/pixel alpha (transparency) value, for the 1120x832 pixels on the screen. DPS performs an automatic dithering function, creating apparent greyscales with 2-bits/pixel when given a "fill" value (0 <= value <= 1). These "dithered" regions, at 92 dpi, do indeed present varying shades beyond the "black, dark grey, light grey, white" that is possible with plain 2-bits/pixel. > Again, i say, MAKE SURE YOU KNOW WHAT YOU'RE SAYING HERE!!! Some > of these comments made here are downright wrong! And silly! I couldn't agree more :)
Date: Sun 21-Dec-1989 10:18:12 From: ts@cup.portal.com (Tim W Smith) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? < Really, my roomate is one of the most ignorant people you could find < when it comes to computers and he uses WriteNow, PrintManager, Webster < Librarian and Quotations quite effectively. He never asks questions and < he never complains. He cannot use a Mac and Word. Period! And if or when Microsoft sells Word for Next, your roomate probably won't be able to use it there, either. The perverse nature of Word is able to transcend any particular user interface and become unusable to non-gurus on any machine. Tim Smith
Date: Sun 21-Dec-1989 10:23:33 From: ts@cup.portal.com (Tim W Smith) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? Many people have claimed here that a Mac with MultiFinder does not make you wait for printing. Please tell me how to accomplish this wonderous feat. I've got backgound printing enabled. When I print, control returns to the application fairly quickly. And then every few seconds while the file is printed, menus stop working and keystrokes get lost. This does not sound like "not waiting" to me. I suppose if I typed at 3wpm, it might not be a problem, but I type a lot faster than this, and it is quite annoying. Tim Smith But it is a *long* way from what it should be. I hope this works better under System 7.
Date: Sun 22-Dec-1989 03:05:06 From: rogerj@batcomputer.tn.cornell.edu (Roger Jagoda) Subject: Re: What do I want to see in the Apple of the 90's? In article <37341@apple.Apple.COM> rewing@Apple.COM (Richard Ewing) writes: >In article <1989Dec17.064813.16650@nueces.cactus.org> chari@nueces.cactus.org (Chris Whatley) writes: >>There are a few misunderstandings... >> >My counterpart who works for NeXT in Atlanta will even say that the >optical drive is slow; he has to me. The optical drive was a gutsy >technological advance that I think was a little bit ahead of its time. >Competing technologies today are much faster and are approachine 30ms >access times, which I consider a watermark of working in a tolerable >unix enviroment. the Canon optical does not come close to these >specifications. Also, most of todays technologies will get you 600 >meg on a disk, not 256. The Canon was state of the art when it >was ready in 1987. The NeXT machine, unfortunetely, was not. >And if you think you can't get a removable manegto-optical drive >for the Mac, then you haven't been shopping lately. > Well, with Canon owning almost 20% of NeXT, does this mean we (the brave souls who bought the early machines designed in '87 for that year's technology) will get Canon's latest and greatest drives as an upgrade option (I won't hold my breath for the "free" part of that line...but if NeXT REALLY wanted to reward us for debugging their product for them...). SONY has 30ms Optical drives for the PC and MAC and there's no reason for NeXT not to but the very best from one of their benefactors (Canon, not Sony. A friend of mine who works for Canon says they've had 30ms AND BETTER for "a long time now". I am sure Canon has even better one's in the wings. Why can't we get 'em, even as a (gulp) cost upgrade? Just 'causin trouble... Roger Jagoda FQOJ@CORNELLA.CIT.CORNELL.EDU

These are the contents of the former NiCE NeXT User Group NeXTSTEP/OpenStep software archive, currently hosted by Marcel Waldvogel and Netfuture.ch.