1993 11 The Computer Paper - Ontario Edition

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169 479 85 249

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IBM 4029-20 IBM 4029-30 IBM 4039-10R

81299 $1499 81899 83199 83799 8429 8879

IBM 4039-12L

IBM 4039-16L EPSON SfYLUS 800 EPSON ACHON 1500 PANASONIC 4410 PANASONIC 4430

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3864X-33 128K CACHE 386-DX~ 1 28K CACHE 488-DX43 128K CACHE 4&8-DX-50 128K CACHE 486-DX2%6 128K CACHE

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QUANTIJM 170 IDE QUAWfUM 245 IDE QUANlUM 525 IDE QUANfUM 1.05 GB IDE

8249 S319 8829 81249

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IDGTIKCH 32 I DGHKCH 32 W/OCR LOGHKCH 256 IDGmXH 256 W/OCR I DGH1XH COLOR •

SB PRO Dl iXUXE

SB PRO 16 ASP GRAVIS ULIRASOUND IDGHKCH SOUNDMAN PRO AUDIO SPECF. 18

$139 8259 $159

NEC 3FGE

8249

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8269 8119 8129 8129 8149 899

QUATIRO PRO 4.0 MS PUBLISH' 2 .0 Sl'ACKER 3.1 UPG.

8119 8139.

QEMM 7.0

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8299 S369 81129 81799

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ALL SYSTEM LPGRADES DONE WHLLE YOU WAIT

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 5

Monitors SrDisplay Cards ...................9 By Graeme Bennett

At The Movies:

Software Special Nects....................18 By Graeme Bennett •

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Redefining the Workstation.............36 By Ken Clark

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Stop the Phone

Processors oooooooo oooo 40

ModemsandWindows...34

Rob o t

When is a PC not a PC? By Graeme Bennett

Solving problems with PC modems. By Frank Hilliard

We attack of the recorded messages. By Grant Buckler

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Common Aisls to unify Unix at last.............35

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on File Compression ..A6

Leading vendors set the standard From Newsbytes

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Games

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Departments Letter from the Editor .........................6 Mailbox .... Masthead/How to Subscribe ............11 Techniques: About the Cover ..........52 What's New.................................66-67

Coming up in the Ontario Edition D EC E M B E R

I

New sbytes ................. F EB R U A R Y

Shows

Spreadsheets

ClASSIFIEDS Mon., Nov. 29 AD DEADLINE Wed., Dec. 1 DISTRIBUTION Fri.; Dec. 17

CLASSIFIEDS Mon., Jan. 3 AD DEADLINE Wed., Jan. 5 DISTRIBUTION Fri., Jan. 21

Comdex

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Calendar of Events.... Training ........... User Groups..., Classifieds ....

Index of Advertisers ...

.....70, 71


6 N O VEMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION How can people still work like this?

they did add was often erased by people getson for a bookkeepingposition, we were looking ting lost in the details. Who doesn't know over a number of resumesfrom applicants. It someone who was given a computer, who came out that one of thepeople applying for the then proceeded to spend hours creating a

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job had recently left a position where all the chart or graphic which would have never bookkeepingwasstill done manually. It wasa been attempted before the computer came small company, but not that small. They were along and even when produced, added little big enough to require a bookkeeper. Our con- to the profitability of the company? troller mentioned that she knew an accountant, aged45, who stirbborniy refirsed to get a comput- Hot All Smolre And Iwlrrors er. He still did all his work manually. I was "While this scenario may have been true for a floored bythis. I just could noti magine the labor time, what the computer industry has to offer has gone from smoke and mirrors to compo nent ofdoingaccounting thisway.

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unemployment roll.

The list goes on. Computers and technology

Each party presented some kind of plan to

doincrease productivity.

get people back to

Smash The Computers?

work, usually constrained by their other big concern, which is to do something about

Even if we as Canadians could smash all

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dites, it would not stop the rush of international competitors who are willing to use

deficit. No longer are the parties easily dis- the Internet means that software is being cernible along a traditional left-right spec- developed in India or the former Soviet

trum. The traditional right-wing Conserva- Union where an entire team of programmers tives are as likely to get involved in job cre- can be hired for a fraction of the cost of a ation as the supposedly left-wing NDP. The good Canadian programmer. Global satellite N DP, when t h e y c ommunicat i o n s finally do get into means that Canadian for making massive

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these computers, becoming modern-day Lud-

cutting the massive technology to compete. The rise of internagovernment spending tional telecommunications networks such as

power, is responsible

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hard-edged solutions. Computer networks

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with electronic mail do flatten the hierarchy ':i:::,'::::::-Jobs? of corporations, eliminating a whole layer of This month we were middle managers. Windows and Macintosh treated to the various graphical user interfacesdo shorten the leamp olitical parti e s ing curve on training — less training, less expounding their solu- demand for trainers. Optical Character tions for getting the Recognition software and scannersdo allow economy back on its companies to lay off typists. Voice mail sysfeet and people off the tems do mean fewer jobs for receptionists.

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not really add much to productivity. What

The other day, in the processof hiring a new per-

cuts to the public sector.

aking such a /Qgg g>~~ for the jobs

The q uestion g Q about any of these plans often falls into the realm of time

frame. The five years that most govern-

ments are allowed in

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afterthis ess|Qn'? One

believe, |s technQlogy.

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keters with charming English accents from British Guyana who

get paid $2 an hour. The efficiency of the worldwide distribu-

tion system created by com p uters,

telecommunications and airplanes means that many companies are relocating manufacturing plants in Mexisuccess of whatever the party's approach is. co, Thailand and India — anywhere they can Will we really know whether NAFTA is a achieve a significant wage differential for an good idea until 25 years down the line? Is educated and efficient work force. The worldthe current monetary approach good or bad? wide trends are unstoppable. p ower i s rar e l y enough t i m e t o implement properly and then monitor the

Can any Western government really effectively create new jobs in a slow world economy? How can Canada have full employment (according toMaclean'smagazine there are 1,6 million unemployed, a rate of 10 percent) if her trade partners continue to languish in recessions of their own? Even with its massive spending and debt, the government is only a very small part of the overall economy, which is on the order of $700 billion this year. With its hands tied behind its back because of the deficit, it is becoming more evident that the new jobs are

So What Do We Do? You think I have an answer when all those

politicians can't come up with one? Beserious. Some generalized notions to keep you going, though. Hang in there. Get educated,

keep learning new and valuable skills. Be

entrepreneurial (even if you work for someone else) and watch for opportunities. There are no safe jobs, but there are some big trends and opportunities. Even if you have a job now, look for ways to make yourself invaluable to your company. Or, in the event going to have to come from the private sec- that your company goes bankrupt, make sure tor. that your skill set will be so desirable that someone else will want to hire you. Try to Computers A Net Zero To prosluctlvlty? use computers and technology to your own Why is it taking such a long time for the jobs advantage. Keep moving. Keep learning. Stay to come back after thiI latest recession?One alert to changes that will affect you.

answer, I believe, istechnology.Foryears, the

RAINBOW

consumers are being called by telemar-

surveys have been saying that computers are Enjoy the issue, a net zero to productivity. The claim was that because of their complexity, mainte- Douglas Alder nance and training requirements, they did Publisher/Editor


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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 9 •

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aBu er's ui e B Y 6 R A E M E B EN N ET T

One of the most important components of your computer is its display. When making a purchase or upgrade decision, there are several important factors to consider. This guide will help you understand some a not-so-good one. of the e t rminoloygand the key factors that differentiate a great display subsystemrf om graphics card for all IBM compatibles. Most SVGA and other graphics cards also offer a

main motherboard of the computer. Amiga

VGA compatibility mode, There are several other less common

have third-party display card options available for those who want higher resolutions or more colors. Resolution, of course, refers to the number of addressable picture elements (" pixels" )

video standards. At the end of this article, I' ll

:.««'+t"

list some other artides on the topics of monitors and graphics adapters. Although you don't often hear it said, a VGA- or SVGA-compatible monitor is said to be an analog display. This means that it can

display a full range of colors (or shades of gray, in the case of a gray-scale display)essentially, as many as the video card can deliver. In other words, it is a meaningless

question to ask how many colors a monitor has. It depends on the graphics adapter. One factor which will affect the number of colors available on a system is the amount

of video memory. In most cases, this VRAM (video random access memory) is mounted right on the video card. Sometimes, addi-

tional VRAM can be purchased and added to the video card, increasing the number of available colors and/or the maximum resolu-

Types of Displays If you have been familiar with the world of

computers. for more than a few years, you may have heard that there are various kinds of display systems. Many of the older types, such as CGA, EGA, and Hercules monochrome are now effectively obsolete and aren't worth discussing here. Only a year or two ago, the nunimum display system most users might have considered was VGA. Today, the majority of PC users go a step higher and choose a "Super VGA" (sometimes called SVGA) system, which offers higher resolution. Because we' re stepping into the murky

Mailbox:=.'

-

'

.

world of terminology, let's stop and cover a few definitions. First, it is important to note that a "dis-

play system" is a combination of items: a graphics adapter (and its software drivers), appropriate cabling and a compatible monitor. Let's clear up some details about the

graphical user interfaces popularized the use

of bitmapped graphics displays, a typical DOS screen would only have 80 columns by 25 rows of characters to display. As you can imagine„ it is a lot quicker to move 2000 characters (a mere 2K of data) on a screen than it is to move these multi-megabyte

screen images around. This is the main reason that bit-mapped, pixel-oriented graphical displays arealwaysslower than characterbased displays. For this reason, it is very important that

with higher maximum resolutions and greater numbers of colors will require more VRAM,

cal applications. The standard VGA and SVGA cards that most PC manufacturers sell

In some cases, a computer may have "built-in" video. This is the case with current Macintosh, Arniga and Atari models. With

mean the same thing.

the number of displayable colors on a Mac LC, Centris or Quadra series computer by

of computers, it is now a common type of

days before Microsoft Windows and other

you have a fast video card if you are planning on using Windows or any other graphi-

these computers, you do not have to open

array. Launched in 1987 with IBM's PS/2 line

on the screen. A display card with 1024x768 resolution with 24-bit color (explained later) has to move 2.36 megabytes of data around just to redraw the screen! By contrast, in the

tion. The amount of VRAM a bcerd ran support depends on its design, of course. Boards

graphics adapter that drives our display. By the way, the terms "graphics adapter," "graphics card," "video card," and "display card" are used interchangeably. They all VGA is an acronym for video graphics

(and, to a lesser extent, Atari) computers

them up and install a video card — a connector for a VGA or similar monitor is right on the back You or your dealer can increase

installing additional VRAM into a slot on the

as part of their "bargain-priced" systems usually offer poor performance. As with other aspects of computer systems,you get what you pay for. If you base your purchase decision on the lowest price, you will probably get asystem with poor performance. In other words, if your graphics card costs around $75, it's going to be a slow one. Remember that it is not just the speed of the CPU that determines the overall performance of a computer. It's the "weakest link" Continued on page11

:

lexmerlrs sets the record straight In your article "HP Leads Bumper Crop of Laser Printers" in the October, 1993 issue

mentioned in Mr. Horne's letter. Thanks for bnnging this error of ona'ssion to our attention.

interuptions in the summer, mostly due to lightning, often no more than a second, but

you mentionthe Lexmark 4029 6P and 10P which were both discontinued by us in April, 1993 and were replaced by the Lexmark 4039 series (which supports automatic emulation

(The latest Lcm~ark printers will print at resolu-

just long enough to clean out the RAM...and make my day.

switching).

tions of up to600 dpi. They support both Post-

Wouldn't it be possible to have a parallel

Script and PCL5 printer languages, and a 5martSwitch feature automatically adjusts to the

battery DC supply behind the main power supply, and of equal voltage so when the

is enough to keep a small system (say a386,

main rectifier shuts down it would keep the RAM from losing all the info in it.

fiveor 10 minutesafterthepowergoes out, Tripp Lite also makes similarly priced and fea-

appropriate language.

The printers are powered by an AMD RISC

Darren Horne, Region Manager,Lexmark Canada inc.

CI's reply: The statements I made in the printers article regarding the lexmark models 1 mentioned are 100% trueas printed. H owever, 1 should have also added that Lexnrnrk has discontinued the 6P and 10P models in favor of the new ntodels

AC line power has been internipted and switches to the backup po~er system within a few milliseconds.A basic unit — the AP250 from American Power Conversion for example — costs about $150 and provides 250 voltwrnps, which

processor operating at16 MHz. The IOR comes with 2MB of memory and the 12R and 12L come with 4MB. They can beexpanded to 16M8.) — DT

This Brief Interruptlotl ... Where I live in the southern interior we

seem to be plagued with short power

3. S. Eiriksson, Hedley, BC.

llavld ranakaeepnas Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) systems, sold by a nunker of manufacturers, provide this kind of protection, A standby system typically consistsof a battery, DC-to-AC inverter, and sensing-switching devices which detect when the

hard drive and color monitor) going for about

tured units. Both brands are available in Canada.

Some people confuse UPSsystems with surge suppressors or voltage regdators, which protect against power spikes and brownouts. However, only a UP5 can protect against an acnurl interruption in line power, and many of them are equipped to handle fluctuations too.


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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 11

t'Of(7PU il Pd2i

i

EDITORIAL

PUBUSHER /EDITOR Douglas Alder MANAGING EDITOR Graeme Bennett

NEWS EDITOR David Tanaka CONTRIBUTINGEDITOR Geof Wheelwright CONTRIBUTINGWRITERS Graeme Bennett Frank Hilliard James MacFarlane Keith Schengili-Roberts Joe Wheeler

INonitors 8 Display Cards Continuedfrom page 9 mance of a computer. It's the "weakest link" principle: a fast computer with a slow video display card will appear slow. As I have writ-

ten before, a balanced mid-range system with a good fast (12 ms or so) hard drive and a fast video subsystem will provide much better performance, overall, than a faster computer with a bottom-of-the line video

card and a sluggish hard drive. Try to avoid bottlenecks when you are putting a system together.

Interlaced Video and Flicker There is a trade-off between colors and resolution. Many video cards have more than

pass, and rapidly alternating the two, interlacing relies on the phenomenon called persistence of vision to allow us to view the two

one resolution available. Common ones are 640x480, 800x600, 1024x768 and, less commonly, 1280x1024. Sometimes, the highest resolution(s) is

sets of images as one. The trouble is, there is

only available in a mode known as interlaced

usually a fairly obvious flicker. Most people find it objectionable.

(Interlaced video does have its place, though. Every Amiga computer has an

video. This interlaced mode is essentially a trick which allows monitors to display double the resolution they would normally be

optional interlaced video IIIode which provides it with NTSC video compatibility. Oth-

capable of. By displaying even scan lines during one pass and odd scan lines on another

such as the Aver AverKey or ConsumerTech-

er computers usually require an adapter box Continued on page14

NEWS BYTES CANADIAN EDITOR Grant Buckler PRODUCTION

PRODUCTION MANAGER Kit Griffin PRODUCTION STAFF Jana Kolar Ernest Stelzer

Ron Braunagel Carolyn Howse

COVER PHOTO courtesy of Animedia Vision Inc. Tek (604) 736-8568 or (604) 384-6880 COVER DESIGN& LAYOUT Graeme Bennett

PROOFREADER Neall Calvert ACCOUNTING BIADMINSTRATION SALESMANAGER Hari Singh Khalsa

ACCOUNTING MANAGER Dharm Kaur Khalsa CONTROLLER Chris McPhie

ACCOUNTINGASSISTANT Joanne Campbell ADMINISTRATfON Amrit Kaur Khalsa SECRETARY-TREASURER Kathryn Alexander ADVERTISING NATIONAL ADSALES John Oliver (416) 588-1580 Toronto VANCOUVEROFFICE

B.C. AD SALES Dyal Singh Khalsa (604) 733-5596 DISTRIBUTION Ken Kemp & Co.

PRINTER Transcontinental West TORONTO OFFICE

ONTARIO AD SALES (416) 588-1580 Yvette Doucette Tino Wong John Oliver CORPORATEDISTRIBUTION Sangeeta Seth CIRCULATION MANAGER Charles Oliver PRODUCTION Tom Lewis PRINTER Metroland CALGARYOFFICE PROVINCIAL MANAGER Patricia FitzGerald Calgary (403) 228-3355 Tanya Bielenstein Edmonton (403) 459-3554

PRINTER Calgary Sun WINNIPEGOFFICE MANITOBA ADSALES Suzanne FitzGerald (204) 949-7720 SUSSCRIPTIONS To have 12 Issuesof The Compurer Paper mailed diredly lo your home (in canada), send a chequefor $24.95 lo suite aa. 3661 west 41hAve., vancouver, B.C. V6R1P2. American subscnpuonspleasesend $45 in Us Funds Overseas please send$90 Canadian (fire( dassl.

THIS ISVOLUME6, No. 11, NOVEMBER1993 rhe Comparer paper is published monthly by CanadaComputer paper inc. All rights reserved.Reproduction in whole or in part without the permission of the publisher Is slncdy prohibited. The apinions expressed in articles are nol necessarilythose of the publisher.

The Impulse®POWERLITE®486 SubNotebook. Light enough to take o anywhere. With a sharp 7.4 display. Removable disk drive. Full peripheral power. PCMCIA. Builtin Trackball and fax modem, And m uch more. Plusa heavy duty warranty and national toll-free technical support. All starting at a lightweight price.

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Canada Computer Paper Inc. BRITISHCOLUMBIA:60,NB Grculatlon «8, 3661 W.41hAve., Vancouver, BCV6RIP2 Phone: (604) 733-5596, Fax (604) 732-4280 885 Number Mind tink! (604) 576-1214 (Lag on with the name*Computer Paper"Internet ) eledranic mail addresscontact theeditor al: lcpemindlink.bc.ca compuserve; 72627,'1732SEnle: Tcp

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14

N O VEMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

Monitors Sc Display Cards

The number of frames the monitor draws

Continued from page11

per second is called the vertical refresh rate

nology Northwest's Presenter Plus PC/Mac. Devices that can overlay computer graphics

most monitors will also refer to the horizon-

on live video are available at higher prices.) Computer advertisements sometimes refer to "non-int." monitors. This means the

monitor does not rely on interlaced video to achieve its stated resolution. When choosing

a monitor and display card, be sure to base your final decision on what you see, not

or vertical scanning frequency. This value is expressed in hertz (Hz). The spec sheets for tal frequency. This number is expressed in kilohertz (KHz). The Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA, the same folks who brought us

the minimum for 640x480 and 800x600 dis-

plays, while 1024x768 displays should provide a 70 Hz refresh rate. Higher rates are better. When a display card claims to be "VESA

compatible" or "VESA compliant," it means that the card, either through software

("TSR") or hardware (" BIOS" ), is said to be register-compatible with the VESA specifica-

VL-Bus and Super VGA) have come up with

tion. Some software programs require VESA-

some recommended monitor refresh rates.

compliancy.

According to VESA, a refresh rate of 72 Hz is

what the spec sheet says. Different Cards for Different Tasks There are different types of video cards available. Most tend to be optimized for a particular kind of display task. For DOS applications, a type of card known as a frame buffer provides good performance at a low price. Cards based on the Cirrus Logic GD5422 or the Tseng ET4000 chipsets are top performers in DOS applications, according to a Jan. 12, 1993 PC Magazinesurvey. Basically, this

survey concluded that accelerator cards have the fastest overall Windows performance,

while cards based on the Tl TMS34020 coprocessor are the fastest under AutoCAD,

Typically, coprocessor cards are more costly, but can be programmed to squeeze extra performance gains from specific applications.

Such cards are worth the extra money to AutoCAD users.

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Windows Accelerators

AKE

One of the most important considerations when choosing a video card is its software. It

should provide bug-free support for your

C et

favorite applications. You might think that most video cards ship with bug-free software. Unfortunately, this is all too often not the

ompu ter

case. AtThe C Paper,we get a surprising number of letters complaining/marveling at the sorry state of most video drivers, Because there are so many poor performers, I' ll mention some of the best Windows accelerators instead. Canadian manufacturer ATI's Graphics -Ultra Plus (US$499), NDI's Volante AT600 Plus (US$395) and Metheus Premier

1280 NI (US$399) all offer excellent performance. The ATI offering is a 24-bit card; the

others provide 15-bit color (32,768 hues). In living Color

a

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The number of colors available may vary depending on the resolution the card is displaying. Although the 256 colors available on a typical VGA system may seem like a lot, many users find that systems offering thou-sands or even millions of colors are only marginally more expensive. A system with 256 available colors is said to have an 8-bit display; 15- and 16-bit displays provide

32,768 and 65,536 colors respectively. Graphics professionals might want a "24-bit" display system with a whopping 16.7 million colors.

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Note that these numbers have nothing to do with the number of bits your computer's CPU (central processing unit) has. In other words, your 32-bit computer might have a 24-bit graphics card while someone else' s 486 might contain an 8-bit one. The number of colors available doesn't relate to the CPU at all. As with everything to do with computers, there's a good mathematical reason for these numbers. If you know a little about how "powers of two" work, you' ll have no trouble. For example, two to the power of two (shown as 2"2) equals four and 2"4 =16 (Zx2x2x2). As you may know, computers use

a binary (base 2) number system for all com-


ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 1 5 there's a good mathematical reason for these numbers. If you know a little about how "powers of two" work, you' ll have no trouble. For example, two to the power of two (shown as 2"2) equals four and 2"4 =16

open the Monitors control panel to change the number of display colors. On the Amiga, this is accomplished through a Preferences option.)

(2x2x2x2). As you may know, computers use a binary (base 2) number system for all computation. Hopefully, you can see how the larger numbers are calculated.

You SayYou Want a Resolution

24-bit displays are pretty much de rigeur for graphic artists and users performing professional-level image editing, photo-retouch-

processor, graphics program or desktop pub-

lution will probably be something in the

lishing application will be about half the size it should be.

neighborhood of 108-dpi. Hence, an onscreen inch looks about 5/8ths of a "real"

In case you don't know what those numbers are in the Font menu of your favorite

Another resolution-related topic is having a

WYSIWYG display. Many users with SVGA

true WYSIWYG display should show 72 dots

4FGe monitors and are running in 640-by480 mode, you can obtain quite a precise

cards feel, well, obligated to run the card at its maximum resolution. The trouble with having 1280x1024 on a 13- or 14-inch monitor is that the ruler in your favorite word

per inch on the screen.

WYSIWYG display, especially if you adjust

If your display card's resolution is 1024 by 768 and your screen is a typical 13-inch

the horizontal and vertical controls while comparing an on-screen ruler against a "real"

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users will be having a screen that is too small. Windows and other graphical interfaces are notorious screen hogs; with icons, menus and windows all over the place, you soon feel that you hardly have any room to work in. A larger screen is clearly an advantage. If you are a devoted Windows buff, I recommend a 17-inch screen. This size offers 45 to

60 percent more viewing area than a typical 14-inch monitor, but does not cost an unreasonable amount more. (This is less of a problem for Macintosh users. Most PC owners don't realize the Mac can support more than one monitor/display card and move windows and other items between screens as if they were "portholes" looking into a single, larger "desktop.") CAD and DTP aficionados may want to spring for a 19-inch or even a 21-inch display. The main benefit of these larger screens is the ability to view a full page at actual size.

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If you work exclusively with single pages, there are "portrait monitors" that allow you to view an 8.5xll-inch page at actual size. These monitors are available from several

manufacturers in gray-scale or color. Radius even manufactures a model called the Pivot that can swivel between landscape mode and portrait mode for extra versatility. It is important to remember that the more colors and/or pixels you have on screen, the slower your video performance is going to be. Hence, it becomes essential to have "accelerated video" when you are deal-

ing with many colors or high resolutions. Many Windows users are surprised when they discover that simply reconfiguring their existing video card to display at a lower resolution or with fewer colors can provide a significant performance boost. You may want to try manually installing several different

display drivers, so that you quickly switch modes with the Windows Setup function. (Mac and Amiga users, as usual, have an easier time of things. On any color Mac, just

display such as NEC's excellent MultiSync

(measured diagonally) size, your display reso-

less expensive gray-scale monitor, an 8-bit display card is all you need. It will display a full "photo-realistic" range of 256 grays. A 24-bit display is simply 8 bits worth of red, 8 bits worth of blue and 8 bits worth of green. A 24-bit display is said to be "true color," meaning that there are enough colors that the human eye cannot distinguish between adjacent hues in the 16.7-million color

display. shades of gray.) We suspect few users

If, on the other hand, you have a 15-inch

applications, they are point sizes. There are 72 points to an inch (72.27 precisely); thus, a

ing, or color pre-press work. If you prefer a

the last Seybold Publishing conference that suggested that perhaps 24-bit color isn't really enough; that perhaps we ought to have 48-bit color. (I' ll leave it as an exercise for the reader to figure out how many colors that would be!) Nevertheless, 24-bit color provides a practically unlimited tonal range. (Of course, a color display can also be set to

inch.

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16

NO V EMBER'93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

deep pockets, you can get a 21-inch display for your display card's 1280x1024 mode. But be sure you are sitting down when you check

bit bus. As you might guess, it could transmit 16 bits (two characters) at a time over its

puter is equipped

connector. Today, most IBM-compatible PCs

out the price for a good-quality color display

have this AT type of bus, which is now

of that size — the video card alone can cost more than a few thousand dollars!

referred to as ISA (industry standard architecture). Modern-day ISA machines have both

There are a couple of competing local-bus specifica-

Before we leave the topic of resolution, it is worth noting that all "compact" (mono-

8- and 16-bit slots, for backward compatibility with older cards. However, if you use a

chrome) Macs, including the very first model released in 1984, have had 72-dpi screen dis-

card with an 8-bit connector, it is going to communicate with your computer more

and Intel's PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect). Computers equipped

plays. This was one reason the Mac was-

slowly than a 16-bit connector would. While this might not matter in the case of an inter-

with t h e V L - B us local bus (sometimes

nal 2400-bps modem, a graphics adapter

refered to as VESA Local Bus or simply VLB) have been

and continues to be — so popular for DTP applications. Although VGA and its relatives are dis-

with an 8-bit connector can seriously affect

plays for IBM-compatible PCs, Macintosh,

video performance.

Amiga and Atari computers use similar technology,too. You can connect a VGA monitor up to most of today's computers. All monitors have one or moie "scanning frequencies," which determine the video modes it will be compatible with. If the monitor has a fixed number of available frequencies, it is

Further complicating the issue is the fact that, even though current CPUs are much faster than they were in the AT's heyday, the modern PC's ISA bus still operates at the original's speed of 8 megahertz (MHz), On today's fast 32-bit computers (say, a 33 MHz 386 or a 25 MHz 486), this 8 MHz ISA bus acts like a bottleneck. Other bus types, such

said to be a "fixed frequency multiscan dis-

with a local bus.

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tions: VESA's VL bus

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available for about a year. As you might expect, there are a fair number of VLB us vi deo c a r d s

available by now. The main limitation of VL-Bus is..that only two or t h ree devices (e.g., a video card and a hard disk

play." The best monitors have a variable number of frequencies. They can adapt to the widest number of video signals. For best results and support for the widest range of resolutions, look for a monitor that offers

as IBM's MCA (microchannel architecture)

variable frequency multiscanning, not fixed

by improving the speed at which the video card (or other device) can communicate with the computer's CPU. As Roedy Green explained in his excellent article on the subject in the April 1993 issue of The Computer

nected at once. PCI, on the other hand, supports up to ten devices on the bus at once. PCI has other technical advantages, too. Dell, which just

announced its first PCI-equipped PC, claims

tiple peripherals to operate independently," Dell's chief Technology Officer Glenn Henry

frequency multiscanning.

What lsa local Busl In a nutshell, a "bus" is a connector. Typically, a computer's motherboard has expansion

and EISA (extended industry standard architecture) provide a 32-bit bus, eliminating this bottleneck

A so-called local bus goes one step further

or multi I/O controller) can be congies only allow one peripheral to operate at a time, PCI has the advantage of allowing mul-

Paper(back issuesmay still be available), the

that because PCI bus devices are not directly

said at the introduction.

slots. These are its bus connectors. The old

local bus attaches almost directly to the CPU

XT-type PCs had what was known as an 8-bit bus. This bus could only communicate data 8 bits (one character) at a time over this connector. The XT's follow-on, the AT, had a 16-

and operates at the speed of the CPU. Hence,

attached to the processor bus, the processor can continue to operate while the PCI peripheral is accessing information from the system's main memory. "While many other local bus techno1o-

Intel says that PCI technology will enable vendors to offer what it calls "auto-configuration." The system can automatically recognize when a PCI-compatible add-in board

the bottleneck is eliminated. Local-bus video

provides extremely fast graphics performance, provided, of course, that your com-

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 There is some concern regarding the lowlevel radiation and electromagnetic fields emitted by monitors and other electronic clusive evidence of any harmful effects, you might want to consider a monitor that promises compliance with the so-called SWEDAC (Swedish Board for Measurement

and Testing) guidelines (advertisements sometimes simply refer to these as "'Swedish emission standards") if you are concerned about the risk. Glare and radiation filters for video display terminals are available from several manufacturers, including No-Rad, Sun Flex Some black area around a monitor's display area is normal, but the image should not have any appreciable concaveorconvex "pincushioning"distort ion,asshown here. Also, check that the display is not crooked, unevenly colored or blurry at the corners.

What's DotPltchl

and OCLI. For more information on VDTs and radiation risk, refer to the articles on the subject mentioned at the end of this article.

The term "dot pitch" refers to the size of the individual dots of light that make up the dis-.

Finally, you may wish to look for a moni-

equipment. While there is virtually no con-

play. Different types of monitors use differ-

tor that meets the new (U.S.) government standards for energy efficiency set forth in the Energy Star program.

ent technologies to put the dots on-screen. Some use what is known as a "shadow mask," while Sony uses a sort of grill in its Trinitron picture tubes. (Technically, a Trinitron tube doesn't have a "dot pitch," it has

With appropriate software (typically included with the displays), an Energy Starcompliant monitor or other device can automatically power-down when not in use to

an "aperture grill pitch." Now you know.) I prefer the razor-sharp image quality of Trini-

save energy. Besides energy savings, these

tron tubes to any other technology, even

monitors are claimed to have the added benefit of a longer lifespan.

though all Trinitrons have a faint horizontal line (it's actually a wire) visible about twothirds o f t h e w a y Cont. on page 65

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is also designed to handle future design advances in the Pentium architecture. Digital

Equipment Corp. has also declared that its next generation of Alpha PCs will support the PCI standard. Although PCI is technically a superior spec, it is newer and, as such, has fewer PCI-

bus video cards (etc.) available. (In July, 1993; Montreal-based Matrox shipped what it claimed was the first 64-bit graphics accelerator for PCI.) It is probable that you will not

be able to use local-bus cards designed for VL-Bus in a machine equipped with a PCI local bus, or vice-versa.

. assis Lebelr;" I

1. Can your PC run DOS, IFindows and OS/2' programs at the same time?

2. Can your PC simultaneouslyformat' diskettes, connect to an online service kke CompuServe and print a documenty

Note that just because a computer has a local bus doesn't necessarily mean that the video performance will be better. If you put

OM'

an old, non-local bus video card in a localbus PC, you would not obtain any benefit. Incidentally, you cannot use a local-bus

video card in a standard (non-local-bus) PC. Thus, if you have a local bus system, you must use a card desrgned for the local bus. When you do, thouz ., the improvement in video performance can be dramatic. For example, asPC Magazine reported in its Jan. 12, 1993 article on graphics adapters, cards based on the Mach 32 accelerator show the VL-Bus version to be nearly three times as

fast as the ISA version of the same card.

.

Choosing a Monitor When you are choosing a monitor, here are the most important things you need to know. Red, green and blue light combine to produce white light. This, of course, is where the term "RGB monitor" comes from. An RGB monitor's ability to place dots of light precisely on top of each other is essential for a

sharp image. This is called convergence. The best way to check for misconvergence is to look in the very corners of the screen while it is displaying text or another sharp-edged, steady image. You should not see color

It's my file and I' ll name it anything I want.

ass s screen

3. Can you save files under any name you tvant up to 254 characters longy

4, Does your PC come rvith over 25 use ful productivity app/et' Does it come tvith Adobe vype Manager y

a~s

5. Can you "drag and drop" objects likefiles, folders and printers anytvhere youscant, to group and organise your an-Ncreendeskiap<heuey you rvant?

58

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6 Can you take advantage of the latest, exciting multimedia video technokgy tvi thout buying additional hardrvareP sr

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fringes, undue blurriness or partially overlap-

gyps * ,

-:rrvu~

Call for yourPee demo diskette

ping ghost-images. Also, look closely at the left and right side

of the image on the screen. Some black area

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If a program "crashes", can you recover without rebooting your computer'? Can you run the new generation of 32-bit

lets you choose from the broadest range of PC programs

cave or convex "pincushioning" distortion. Also, try adjusting the brightness. Some mon-

programs? If you answered no, it's time to say yes to a higher grade of PC performance.

itors are unduly blurry at highef brightness or contrast settings. If you are going to be doing any color desktop publishing, you might want to get a

With OS/2 2.1 in your PC, you can get a lot more out of your PC. It's simply a question of multiple choice. OS/2 2.1

applications. So there's only one final question: what are you waiting for? OS/2 2.1 is available at pour local dealer/retailer or: Call IBM Direct 1-800-46$-7999Ext. 407.

around the display area is normal, but the

image should not have any appreciablecon-

monitor with the ability to adjust the red, blue and green levels independently. This

can help your screen display match printed output (somewhat) more closely.

17

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I •

18

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NO V EMBER '93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

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series based on the Babylon 5 pilot is curt is hard to ignore the impact computrentiymproductlon ers have had on t e l evision and I spoke with Foundation Imaging, the motion-picture special effects. Virtualcompany that does the computer rendering ly all of the spectacular special effects for Babylon 5. According to a representative, we see in the latest and greatest scithey can do the effects for an entire show for ence-fiction and fantasy films (as weII about the same money it would cost to build as a large number of less obvious enhanceand photograph just one "live-action" modments in many other fiims) are accomel. During the development of the original PIIshed with the aid of computers. Babylon pilot, Foundation Imaging worked While the majority of the machines used closely with Alan Hastings, the programmer m these productions are enormously powerfor the I.ightWave 3D software that comes hi — and expensive — workstations (a suite of 70 Silicon Graphics workstations at IndusHastings was also the developer of Aegis trial Light and Magic rendered many of the i eg~>wI stxu''we~ 'i r uag~~ytd'@',;"Ivy VideoScape 3D, one of full motio n 3 D $3 rrd~gyy the first 3 D software dinosaurs seen i n th e

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re l eases for the Amiga. Now, of course, with the release of the Toaster 4000 and the shiPment of the new software,

the se capabilities are available to other Toaster

The US$2,395 Video Toaster is one of those widely used types 'of computers in Hollywood t~'~;.',:::y':„;;.'<„.-,',,:,','.r,;:,'.:~:::,:w~~.;:g;,;;:;:..,',~:,.,:,;.:;~.:~",:,~„:.~~,.:,::r~~: rare products that provides a "killer applicais the Amiga. In many tion" — a capability so compelling that peocases, Amiga output is not used in the final pie buy a full-blown computer system just to product, but is used to work out ideas. beabletouseit. Becauseoftherelativelylow Sometimes though the Amiga output cost of a Toaster system (at about $10,000 for makes it all the way to the screen. For exama typical setup, it's not that lowl), a virtual pie, many of the effects on the new underwater sci-fl television series SeaQuest DSV are cottage industry has sPrung uP for Toaster~elated Products created using Amiga computers at Amblin With optional software called ToasterEntertainment's production facility. Link, it is possible to control a Video Toaster Ten artists there each have two Newtek from an external Macintosh, transmitting Vuieo Toasters Another room has 40 Toast images and other data over a high-speed ers networked together that do nothmg but render. (It's a pity they don't do some spe- SCSI link between the machines. cial-effects work on Roy "Leatherface" Scheider's visage, too. — Ed.) Video Toaster-equipped Amigas also created the spectacular spaceships seen in last year's Babylon 5 TV movie. Reportedly, a


ONTARIO EDITiON THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER'93

19

itizer and true-color paint system, is a good

ry readouts, temporal distortion field calcula-

engineering and development" in recogni-

makes a better work area than the 12-bit (4,096-color) color displays of older Amiga

choice for Amiga users looking for an inexpensive way to output images and anima-

tions and the like that you see on the show are produced on a Macintosh by technical

tion of its Mac-based video production system, the Avid Media Composer. The compa-

2000 or 3000 models. The new Toaster 4000 and the Amiga 4000's AGA chip set support high-resolution,

tions created with Amiga 3-D packages.

consultant Michael Okuda using SuperMac's PixelPaint Professional, Macromind Director

ny claims the Media Composer is the most popular digital, non-linear editing system in

Macs in Hoiiywood

and Swivel 3D software. Rick Sternbach, credited as "technical advisor" on the series, uses a Macintosh and 3-D software, too. Sternbach and Okuda coauthored Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual.

the world. Systems range from US$15,000 to almost US$90,000.

Clearly, the 24-bit display of a Macintosh

256,000-color screen images instead of the zoomed-in, low-resolution, 4,096-color display of the original Amigas. It's no wonder many users called earlier versions of Toaster Paint "the weakest module of the system 2.0 software." A PC version of ToasterLink was planned, but sales of the Mac version have been so flat, it has been cancelled. Refer to The Computer Paper'sJune '93 issue for more info on the Toaster. The Video Toaster is by no means the only professional-level movie-making tool available for the Amiga. Sylvie Fefer, a Canadian animator nominated for a Genie award for the animated short film "Brush Strokes," recently bought an Amiga 4000 system so

The Macintosh also figures prominently

in Hollywood. Aside from some major onscreen visibility in the movie Jurassic Park (which, judging by the sales figures, everybody has seen by now), the Mac also figures in such well-known series as Star Trek: The Next Generation. No, that's not a PowerBook on Captain Picard's desk, but most of the animated computer displays, course trajecto-

Media Suite Avid Technology, Inc. recently received an Emmy for "outstanding achievement in

Avid has announced an upgrade to the Composer series of products it calls Media Suite Pro 2.0. According to the company, it is the only all-digital, complete desktop video production system on the market that lets users produce finished videotapes with professional-quality images directly from their Macintosh systems. Co n tinued on page 20

she coulduse a $100 pieceofsoftware called Take 2. According to Fefer, Take 2 and the digitizer it uses to capture images is without peer when it comes to computerizing the arduous task of line tests (also known as "pencil

tests"). According to Fefer, Take 2 can switch between 24 fps (frames per second) for film and 30 fps for video output tests. There is,

she says, no other program with its capabilities. "Another great thing," she says, "is that it can print out an exposure sheet to guide

you when you' re actually shooting your fiim Il Take 2 is not without its drawbacks. The program only works with the Vidi-Amiga

digitizer made by Scotland's ROMBO. Users of DCTV, Digiview and other popular Amiga

on

digitizers are out of luck. Although the pro-

gram generously allows users to work in different bit-depths (2-bit, 4-bit, etc. up to 16bit), two files with different bit depths cannot be easily merged. The nearest thing to Take 2 is another Amiga program, Animation Stand, from Irvine, CA-based Linkers System, Fefer objected more strongly to the fact that the

company insisted on a per-cell royalty for animations created with the program than she did to its $3,000 price tag.

There are literally dozens of 3-D modelers for the Amiga. The current leaders, though, are LightWave, which ships with the Video Toaster, and a sort-of-new entry into the market, Real 3-D. Real 3-D is the third generation of a program that, long-time users admit, didn't used to be very good. Now, it's the most full-featured 3-D program for the Amiga, according to VFX Video's Coniah Chuang. Particle animation, hierarchical movement, and the ability to "shatter" or scatter objects are only a few of Real 3-D's unique capabilities.

Choose five OS/2 2.1 products from the chart (up to $1400" value), pay only $349.95 total, and you' ll be saving a lot more than money. You"Il be saving time by working faster and smarter because you' ve got OS/2. Of course, if you' re using OS/2 now, you already know that. If you don't have OS/2, the cash you save on this software would buy you OS/2 with a big hunk of change left over. OS/2 is the operating system you need for today' s, and tomorrow's, PC's.

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It's a clear winner at mulb-tasking. (Who isn't doing more than one task these days/) In fact, OS/2 runs DOS, Windows and OS/2 applications simultaneously in any combination. And judging from all the OS/2 software that' s been written, or in the works, you' ll he able to expand your OS/2 software library indefinitely. Operate at ahigher level. Ask your dealer about OS/2 software savings now, or call IBM Direct at 1-800-465-7999. Ext. 408.

' in our

Impulse Imagine 2.0 is widely regarded as the Amiga's best modeler. Octree's Caligari24 (the latest version of a product that's been

around since 1986), Aladdin 4D, Sculpt/Animate 4-D, and Will Vinton's Playmation are

a few other popular Amiga modelers, All have street prices under US$300. (Vinton,

best known as the animator ofThe California Raisins, actually had little to do with the development of Playmation. In fact, the software i s th e l at e s t i n c a r n a tion o f Animation%umeyman, from longtime Amiga

animation software developer Hash Enterprises). Digital Creations' DCTV (US$379 street), a composite video display adapter, video dig-

'Based on manufadurers' suggesled retail prices.Oiler ench Oeeember 31, 189$. IBM andOS/2 are registered trade-marks and "Operate at e higher level' is a raglstered trade-mark of IntemaNonal Business Machines Corpora5on. 18M Canada Ltd., a wlated company, is a registered user. Windows e a tbde-mark of Microsall Corporalian. Praduel names relerwd to in this ad may be trade-marksor registered trade-marks of Iheir respeelivs manufactutlng or marketing companies.


20

NO V E MBER '93 T HE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

3D Software Continued from page18 Media Suite Pro 2.0 includes motion control and user-definable picture-in-picture

effects. Finished programs can be printed directly from the computer to videotape, in real time. The new release also includes a 60field option for improved image quality. Media Suite Pro 2.0 offers users the option of outputting an edit decision list

(EDL), expanding the system's functionality for customers that wish to bring their programs to an online suite for finishing. Media Suite Pro supports the European

PAL standard, and is available in English, French, German, Italian and Kanji versions. The package includes the Media Suite Pro

Photoshop can be used to create some pseudo-3-D effects. The package comes with

application; video, JPEG compression and

as though they are seen through a bubble.

a spherize command that makes images look

audio boards; a SCSI-2 disk controller; cables; user documentation; and a tutorial. The

Perspective, Skew, Extrude and Polar Co-

US$9,995 package runs on a Macintosh Quadra 900, 950 or Ilfx with 16 MB of RAM and requires an Avid-approved 2.0 GB of storage and a color multisync monitor.

bag of pseudo-3-D tricks. Kai's Power Tools, a $199 add-on package takes the power of a Spherize filter further

ordinates commands round out Photoshop's

;-'A''""

'

„ :

,

with a series of Glass Lens effects that also add shadows and specular highlights, more closely simulating a real bubble. Another interesting Power Tool from the collection is

You can see Mac-based animation work

(primarily using Adobe Premiere, Photoshop and Kai's Power Tools) in the wild new

(Fall '93) title sequence for the comedy show

'g~+;;4':,'"; ';„' ' '.'::."':~

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':, !8!Wit@,'"'',"'-''„~~:.

Continued on page 21

In Living Color.

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uncariny realism ia inciuding iiiuminatlon, surface..textures, reflectlvjty/fefractIvity,—: atmos iphenc condi:tiefis,-:::and: more. For-example, raydiosity' r allows:::,e'.red'object reflected in.a mirror to ': cast:ai:::red:reflection and shadows.to have soft edges, Currently, StrataVision 3d and r Stud)OProfor the Mac are the only application's'to:support this rendering technique. ' Rin rderlNan is a procedural shading lan. guage'.'developed by Pixar. RenderMan "RIB".: '(RenderMan interface Bytestream) files':cin be eithei ASCII or biney files. The i s Rend erMar) shadirig:.language supports «omplex surface shaders, light sources, atmospheric effects, surface displacement, and pixel processing functions. Shaded Polygonl — slower than wireframe modeling with hidden-line removal.

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 21 There are numerous 3-D packages for the Mac, with prices ranging from a few hundred dollars at the low end {Adobe Dimensions, Ray Dream AddDepth, Pixar Typestry, etc.) to over $8„000 at the top. Of course, the majority of packages fall into the middle ground between these extremes. Ray Dream

Designer (C$288 street), Aldus Super 3D 2.5 (C$429 street), Swivel 3D Pro 2.0 (C$669

street), Modelshop 1,2 (C$879 street), Alias Sketch 1.5 (C$889 street), StrataVision 3d 2.6 (C$999 street) and Macromind Three-D 1.2 . ~ Stereagrem.Delccue your eyes slightly eird iry ic meke the two dots at the idp of the image merge iirtc one. (Note: some people can't seem to dc this.)

RerMIerlan Pixar's PhotoRealistic RenderMan supports anti-abasing, texture mapping, motion blur„ depth-of-field, transparency and other effects the company claims make it ideally

DOS PCs, Macintosh, and a variety of Unixbased systems, including Sun4/SPARC,Silicon Graphics IRIS-4D/Indigo, DECstation, HP Series 400/700, IBM RISCstation 6000, and NeXT.

suited to the challenges of creating special effects for film. PhotoRealistic RenderMan was used to create award-winning effects in films such as The Abyss, Termjnator 2 and Beauty and the Beast.

Pixar has several Mac titles, most notably MacRenderMan (a Macintosh implementation of its RenderMan rendering engine) and

RenderMan software was also used to create the imagery in John Lasseter's Academy Award-winning short film, Tin Toy. RenderMan products are available for

(C$1449 street) are only a few of the most popular titles.

ShowPlace (essentially, a graphical "photo studio" enviromnent in which to set up RIB

files for rendering with MacRenderMan). ShowPlace/MacRenderMan is $695 ($495 for the CD-ROM version); a network version called NetRenderMan allows users to design Continued on page 22

called 3-D Stereogram. This filter, based on a technique discovered by a Bell Labs researcher, takes an image and produces a pattern of seemingly random dots that

become a 3-D i mage when you cross your eyes slightly. No word yet on whether this one might be harmful to your vision, but it certainly is interesting. These and other Photoshop-compatible plug-ins from Aldus, Xaos Tools and other

suppliers can also be used with a variety of other Mac applications, including Fractal Design Painter, Adobe Premiere and the 3-D application StrataVision 3d 2.6 from St.

George, Utah-based Strata Inc.

'CIJI8P~ )rFi Ii'd Pa'I The Feather Edges command inFreciel Pelnter 2.0 makespseudo 3-D effectssuch as thisone easy.

Because of its popularity, Photoshop can be exploited in other ways, too. CyberSave is a Photoshop plug-in that ships with the highly regarded Electriclmage Animation

System. CyberSave takes a 2-D grayscale image and exports it as an Electriclinagecompafible vector file. It works by displaying light-colored vertices as closer and darker

shades receding. It does three types of geometry: surface mesh, cylindrical and spherical. CyberSave was written by John Knoll, one of the primary architects of Photoshop.

Now all that network computing wes supposed lo be, can be. Our OS/2' LAN Server 3.0 has the functionality, flcxibiTity and high performance to maximize «II your network resources. So from individual departments to entire companies, ril can make a difference all across the LAN. Unlike a dedicated NOS, LAN Server 3.0 is built on top of OS/2. So you gel the benefits of preemptive multitasking, enhanced OS/2 Crash Protection and the

single LAN. r

In the INevles The Electriclmage Animation System (US$7495) was used to create the nuclear destruction scene in the motion picture Terminator 2: judgement Day.It was also used to

create the control room screen elements in jlirassic Park and the "double-take" sequence in the film Drop Dead Fred.The titles and theatrical trailers for Encino Man and Last of

the Mohicansalso featured Bectriclmage animation. Electriclmage animation can also be seen

in a wide range of TV promo spots, including those for Top Cops, The Young Indiana jones

Chronicles, Burden of Proof, Daddy and Palomino, as well as the main title sequences for Datejine NBC, Knight Rider 2000, Stunt Masters, and The Heroes of Desert Storm. It is

used to create the special effects for the series Space Rangers,and was used in the Miller beer

"Exploding Grandstands" ad (directed by none other than Ridley Scott, of B!adenmner

fame). One of the system's greatest benefits is its rendering speed. In a June 1992 review, MacWorld magazine named it as the rendering program with the best overall performance.

According to John Knoll of Industrial Light R Magic, Electridmage renders faster on a Quadrathan RenderMan does on an SGI 240VGX workstation. A demonstration video costs US$10; a demo CD-ROM US$99.

Workplace Shell™ GUI. Advanced end Entry versions both support the latest versions ol'OS/2, DOS «nd Windows on Token-Ring, Ethernet and IBM PC Network. There's support for Peer Services, optional support for Macintosh computers and TCP/IP, and you can connect more than l,000 users on a

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22

N O VEMBER '93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

3-D Software Continued from page 21

US$1495 3-D CAD package for the Mac comes from Columbus, Ohio-based

models on a Mac and render them on a net-

autoadesasys Inc. MacWeekmagazine recently called it "the best, though not quite the

work of Macs oi Unix machines. Speed

improvements vary, but range between 5 and 50 times faster. Typestry is Pixar's low-end type-rendering utility. It sells for US$299. RenderMan developer's tools and books are also available.

fornteZ for the Nec Oriented towards architectural design, this

Qad i(' %!:it

: *;

fastest, solid-and-surface modeler on the market." formaZ comes with a full featured drafting module, with extensive and powerful import and export options. It permits a number of sophisticated "Boolean" operations to combine surfaces and solids. It is a NURBSbased surface modeler with an unlimite d number of drawing planes. One of the greatest benefits of creadng models in a 3-0 program is that it is easy to view a scene from a different angle. The illustrations above are two views of the same room. The models were created and rendered by Ladislev KonopnusingAutodeak's30 Studio.

PresenterProfessional for the Ilec With strong spline-based modeling capabilities and very easy to use, Presenter Professional is thought by many users to have the best interface of any modeling program today. It has extensive import and export options and a spline (smooth curves) design feature It's modeler provides extremely fast

or s ave 0

Phong shading and ray tracing for realistic renderings. Presenter Professional supports MacRenderman more elegantly than most of its comnpetitors, with graphical shader editing and assignment from within the prograin. It also supports an optional Varc board acceleration for speeds of 10 times that of a Quadra. Presenter Professional comes with a number of built-in textures and very powerful image-mapping capabilities. For animators, it offers keyframe animation and QuickTime support.

Or

Introducing ClarisWorks forWindows. All works software claims to be integrated.

an integrated Windows program this is it...all the

But just try working with one. You' ll find your-

features of other integrated packages such as

self switching back and forth from module to

Microsoft Works for Windows...built around the

module. Cutting and

bestand most advanced user interface we've seen

pasting as you go.

in this class of program". ClarisWorks requires a

It feels anything

"lnsteud of openmgseparate applications to create a I orksheet and tvrite u letter, CturisWorks puts a single document on the screen. PC Computing,March1993

we

advantage of our special $155 promotional

designed ClarisWorks

offer. Do it now. And put the best integrated

for Windows to per-

works software package for

form like a

s i ngle Wmdows to work for you.

Situs peerful softwate-.

application. With word

processing, spread-

H

-- i

sheet, database and

I

<ari~,

tools to another. Without cutting and pasting back and forth from one screen to another.

moniker of "Sculpt 3D" into a family of products. On the Amiga, there's Sculpt Animate 4D. For the Mac, Byte by Byte offers a

range of products. Its lowest-price. modeling/rendering package is a US$1500 package called Sculptor. It offers Phong shading and anti-aliasing features. If you require raytraced output, there's the US$2500 Sculpt 3D. For US$3500, Sculpt 4D adds animation

demob@.

Versions of the 3D and 4D programs that run on a high performance RISC hardware accelerator board are also available, at prices rangingfrom US$3750 to US$9,000. According to the company, all Byte by Byteproducts carry a 30-day money-back guarantee. Also, any Sculpt package may be upgraded to a more advanced Sculpt product by paying

If you seouid like to request this demo disk by mail, please comphue this ccw pou and mail st to the address beioiu.

the difference in price.

ยนme II

I

glimpse of what the future holds look no further

Inflnl-0 Used to produce special effects in the movies

Co mpany Nume Address

than ClarisWorks for Windows...the seamlessness

Memoirs of an Invisible Man and The LawnProvince

with which a user can move from task to task

Daytime Phone

suggestsa new class of 'multifunctional * software". PC Computing advised "If you' re considering

iI

Sculpt has grown beyond its original

and single-frame device-control features.

To order your ClarisWorks

So you can move effortlessly from one set of

Stewart Alsop's P.C. Letter said "If you want a

Send for afree demo disk by phone,pleasecall 1-$fodi6g-g948, ext.140

graphics tools all easily at hand.

theless, the "Introductory version" of Presenter Professional is a useful and affordable tool for trainers,

First released for the Amiga several years ago,

Call for a free demo disk today. Or take

That's w h y

or smaller, has a maxitnum rendering window of 320x240 pixels, and has limited import/export and printing options. Never-

Sculpt

mere ZMB of RAM andSMB of hard disk.

but integrated.

A special US$95 version may be of particular interest to educators. It comes with a manual, videotape, and a "limited" version of the software. It can only save files of 100K

I

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$15$' SpecialOffer. Call 1-S0066S-N4S, crt. 140 And Ask ForA Free DemoDisk, 'ssrdd reeuiasd price.Thisof/eris wfst sees la tits. ster ms is esutsecherr asserquasi otter els93 Qsru cerpersrseLae rigtas rrsmea Qnis, ctsrusrerb, ctuuubris la design ers sssptr ssssetut satsuerserr uatanartu ef Quisoir saraauL attouuraaessssrkssesraut mcus err uu smpasr ef isir reeuarsiuakrs

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mttwer Man,Specular International's Infini-D is a capable modeler, ray-tracing renderer and animation package for the Macintosh. One of Infini-D's unique features is its ability to "morph' any 3-D object. Now at version 2.5, it is priced under US$1000. A companion product, called BackBurner, allows rendering tasks to be shared by all available Macs on a network, Ray Dream Inc. offers a similar product for its Ray Draam Designer


ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 <c'cc eccl < e l a

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Adobe Dimensions(a bove)and Ray Dream AddDepth(below) resemble illustrator and FreeHand, respectively. Note the style sheets" at the right of the AddDepth display. Although not shown here, both programs allow the edges of objects to be beveled.

media. Brush strokes in the RayPainter fol-

ters, was modeled in StrataVision 3d and

and a powerful event-based animation system.

Photoshop. It was rendered in StrataVision 3d using raydiosity with the highest level of anti-aliasing. It took approximatelytwo weeks

StudioPro's 3D Sculptor modeling tool creates workable surfaces. The spline/vertex editor makes shapessoft and pliable like vir-

low the surface of each object, unlike static two-dimensional filtering. Users can apply different media effects with RayPainter, including Chalk, Watercolor and Drybrush.

to render on one Quadra 950 (one of the fastest Macintosh models). Strata, Inc. also offers Strata StudioPro, an expert-level 3-D program for the Macintosh. Created for 3-D design and animation professionals, StudioPro retails for US$1,495 and offers sophisticated tools not previously available on desktop systems, claims Strata. StudioPro includes a spline-based 3-D sculptor, oRayPaintero rendering technology

tual clay. Its real-time smooth shaded feedbackoffers quick and intuitive modeling.

Users can also create custom RayPainter effects.

styles of a painting by one of the Dutch mas-

S cw ca<< aaoooac oce aaacoeece •<ooo

Also included is a 2D sculpting tool that

With StudioPro's special-effects exten-

allows spline/vertex reshaping of any outline or profile created in the program or imported

sions, users can Explode, Shatter and Atomize their animations.

from draw programslike Adobe Illustrator or

The program writes PICT, TIFF, PICS, QuickTime, DXF and EPS files. Image and

Aldus SuperPaint. StudioPro includes RayPainter, a unique feature that creates images that look as if they were hand-rendered using traditional

animation files support alpha-channels making photo and video compositing possible in Continued on page 24

~pC,qP'

Pull up a chair. Make yourself comfortable. You' ve just been • ac<<< ac:

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promoted to Chairman of the Network! Introducing the LAN NetView family of OS/2' LAN management tools. Now you can manage your network with a single, consistent user interface, without leaving your seat.

LAN NetView Fix informs you of problems < ceo

software. Unfortunately, there isn't room here to discuss the wide range of features of all of these packages here. It is worth noting, however, that only two of these packages-

Adobe Dimensions and Ray Dream's AddDepth — produce vector-oriented (i.e.,

non-bitmapped) output. These programs construct and output 3-D objects as PostScript files. While this means that they cannot have the realistic texture-mapping that is possible with bitmapped renderings, it allows

them to produce images that are resolutionindependent and, thus, scalable in a way

and recommends how to fix them. If you' re not at your desk, it will even call your beeper f LAN NetView Monitor lets you

stop problems — like dangerously full disks —before they happen. LAN NetView Tie lets you selectively link to your host system. LAN NetView even lets you track hardware and software configura.t,

tions, so you can better manage your

'+~ /

networks. And with Confi ration/ •O

that bitmapped images are not (at least without re-rendering a saved 3-D object model at a higher resolution, which can take several

hours or more). Both Dimensions and AddDepth allow 3D objects to be illu m inated with l i g h t

sources,producing shadows and highlights and, hence, a semblance of realism. (The

Ite

ss ss-rs. :-

word o3-Do on the cover was produced with

ss N

the Adobe product.) Dimensions (which requires a math-coprocessor, by the way) can

ts

create more sophisticated objects than AddDepth can, as the latter lacks a Revolve command. AddDepth, on the other hand, is somewhat easier to use. Either package is a good choice for Mac designers looking for an easy way to include extruded type and other 3-D effects in their DTP, Illustrator or FreeHand output. For more sophisticated 3-D realism, look

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sSI! you'll /me the rien<from yowogu'erL4/V lVerVleu <protidesa single, i nregrraed tr'etvof your system,Porn soya<here. Installation/Distribution, you can load software from a single, central code-server station, and really give SneakerNet the boot.

for a package that produces bit-mapped renderings, using Phong shading, ray-tracing, RenderMan or raydiosity techniques (see the glossary on page 20 for explanations of these terms).

And LAN NetView is backed by IBM service and support. For more information or to purchase call IBM Direct

We' re I the business of connecting yours.

to the spectacular oraydiosityo renderings it

can produce.

This ultra-realistic image, which is in the

ofhce

LAN NetView is based on open industry-standard architectures and technologies. It can manage LAN Server and NetWare'servers, OS/2, DOS and Windows clients, and other critical network resources and devices.

management position you' ve always wanted.

StrataVision 3D is one of the most popu-

illustration called "Jan's Room."

e~ L4 V / yet Vieu< you socould spend equipment. Your chrdr. more time trti thyour mast rreglectedpr'ece

1-800-465-7999 Ext. 716. Also available at selected authorized dealer locations. This could be the

lar 3-D packages for the Mac, primarily due The only trouble is, such realistic rendering brings new meaning to the word slow. In the quarterly newsletter that registered Strata customers receive, an article describes an

23

IBM, NetView andOS<aare registered trade-marks of Ir<temslpnal Business Machines Corporation. IBM Cans<raLtd., a reise«l company, Is a reglstered user. Netware is a registered t<at<H<< srk of Novell Inc. Windows is a trsNHH<err<pf Microsoft Corp.


24

N O VEMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

At The INovies Continuedfrom page 23

Photoshop and other professional applications. StrataVision 3D users can trade up to Stu-

dioPro for US$599. Sketching in 3-D Another popular choice (and no slouch in the rendering department, either) is Alias

Sketch, from Toronto's Alias Research. Alias has announced a promotion for its Sketch package where customers purchasing

Sketch1.5 forUS$995 receive a free copy of Adobe Photoshop or Adobe Illustrator. If a person already owns Photoshop or IHustrator, they can purchase Sketch for only US$395. Readers who recall our December, 1992

review of Alias Sketch 1.5 may recall that we termed it "a breakthrough application" for 3D drawing and rendering. The Alias/Adobe deal expires Oct. 29th.

research for the 3-D feature in this issue. It

seems that the company did not notice that the compression utility it used to compress the data on the release disks would expire after one year. When we tried to install Sketch a year and a day after the initial release of Sketch 1.5, we received an error

3 D programs ere olten used for product design. This image demonstrates ths realistic shading and retractions ptsmible with Alias utstch.

message that the "decompression atom had expired." Oops. Fortunately„ the problem was easy to solve. Simply setting the system clock back allowed the installation to succeed. A toll-

Bach from The Future The Computer Paper noticed an interesting problem with Alias Sketch 1.5 during our

. free call to the company's tech-support line verified that this was the recommended fix,

although an Alias spokesperson said that registered owners wishing a new disk set that solves this problem will be sent one. Also new from Alias is version 2.0 of its Upfront 3-D application, a low-end utility intended for architectural design and other 3-D applications that do not require sophisticated rendering. Although Upfront lacks the ray-tracing capabilities of Sketch, it provides

solid modeling features for $295. Alias' Mac packages are actually froma

separate division of the company known as

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organic texture can be incorporated into the scene, enhancing its realism. At B.C. Hydro's Environmental Resources department in Bumaby, B.C,, research assistant Allison Morrision-Powell uses Adobe Photoshop 2.5 for Windows and 3-D models created in Intergraph's Microstation CAD package to produce environmental impact studies, proof-of-concept renderings and other architectural simulations. Images are scanned on a drum scanner and saved as RGB TIFF files (often as large as 20 megabytes

Morrison-Powell prints color samples on

3

W YOURCANADIANCOMPUTERSHOWREGISTRATION FORMWILL BEFAXEDTOYOU. JUSTCOMPLETETHEFORM ANDFAX ITBACKBYOCTOBER29,1993ANDYOU'REREGISTERED! AFTER OCTOBER29, YOUMAYUSETHEFORMTOREGISTERATTHESHOW. r

INDUSTNAL TRtDE e

Many users further refine the 3-D rendered output of one or more of these packages with an image-editing tool such as Adobe Photoshop or Aldus PhotoStyler. Some 3-D pro-

then brought into Photoshop for retouching and editing.

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Nsaydandhakefr

A Case Study

each) to a Bernoulli disk. These images are

'

CAL L

series computers.)

Typically, a 3-D image is loaded into the

> TAKE ADVANTAGEOF16 EDUCATIONAL SESSIONSWHEREINDUSTRYLEADERSDISCUSS CURRENTISSUES,EXPLORENEW TECHNOlOGIESAND PROVIDEBUSINESSSOLUTIONSPRE-REGISTER NOWANDATTENDANY ORAll 16 SESSIONSFORFREEI (S375. VALUE) •

Alias markets products for IBM RISC SYstem/6000 stations as well as the entire line of Silicon Graphics workstations, including Indigo, Personal Iris, Crimson and all 4D

image editor, where a realistic sky or other

P RE- R E G I S T E R N OW A N D S A VE B IG!

Color Separator and Prepress).

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the "Style! Division." The original Alias division remains focused on the Unix workstation graphics market, with design packages such as Alias Studio and Alias Designer, animation products Alias PowerAnimator and Alias Animator, architectural software Alias Sonata and Alias Upfront, and the Alias Full Color line of publishing products (Publisher,

Canada's trtryest mdtrcer of corn trier related shows and conferences.

W ACRES OFFREEPARKINGI *Show registration $25, gt ths tiger. Registration rsstrittstl ts business persons 18 years anti over.

a Hewlett-Packard DeskJet 500C ink-Iet printer. She says that the Microstation software

allows minute details, such as the precise position of the sun's shadow, to be accurately rendered. This, she maintains, makes it an invaluable tool for visualization tasks, where realism is a top priority.

isCs popular Perhaps the most popular 3-D application of all is Autodesk's 3D-Studio for the PC. Autodesk, best-known for its highly regarded drafting and computer-aided design application, AutoCAD, has made impressive inroads Continued on page26


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SCREEN BLANKEitS (UT 180) Ascreen blankerthat displaysa selsclion olVGA graphicswhile blanked. Saveyourcreen

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26

N O VEMBER '93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION I

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ing and metallic shading. You can, for example, specify sunlight by enter-

ing the longitude and latitude and time of day — essential for architectural rendering. Accord-

ing to the company, TOPAS allows an unlim-

ited number of shadows from any light source to give more realistic renderings.

into the corporate market. Release 3, introduced at SIGGRAPH '93, improves the

C$3,500 program's anti-aliasing and rendering capabilities.

A Vancouver, B.C.-based company, Spherical Design, used 3D Studio to produce the OTwo Views of a Room" image on the

preceding page, and the castle and desktop computer images shown here. According to Peter Jaworek, who created the castle image, such

llpII'ade your PC to Intel 484 based PC from $250 e

'Some conditions may apply, please call tcsr details

out according to the n umber o f h o u r s spent creating them. Jaworek and his partner Ladislav Konopa

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includes all disk files and final output at any resolution. Of course, there are programs besides AutoCAD and 3D Studio to choose from.

Some do a lot morefor less money.

permits high resolution animations and stills for high-quality output to video and print.

Hurric'arreS stem 1

the RenderMan RIB output format. A version without. VTR support is called

C$500. This price

sequences, using splines for special effects. It j

and polygon capacity.) TOPAS also supports

say an image like the

One of 3D Studio's primary competitors in the 3-D graphics arena is CrystalGraphics' Crystal TOPAS Professional. TOPAS is a full spline-based modeler, animator and rendering tool for DOS ($3995) It features what many feel is the the strongest keyframe animator available, with time-graph and curve editing. TOPAS permits unlimited morphing

I '

It utilizes a powerful IGES translator to import models from virtually any CAD package. (By comparison, packages that support only DXF are far more limited in surface

jobs are usually priced

TOBbAS for DOS/Mac

scale, extrude, bevel and lathe.

castle would sell for between C$300 and

Upgrade yofr Hard Drive to a HighPetkr2rrance 2l2 MB &om$260'

el

Users claim that creating objects is an easteF task in TOPAS than it is in 3D Studio. TOPAS includes modeling options to drill, connect, bend, twist, taper,

l

TOPAS Desktop Animator. It sells for C$2495 for DOS and C$3500 for Mac. An even more slimmed-down version without animation is called Crystal 3D Designer. It sells for

US$995. CrystalGraphics also offers a US$295 package called Crystal Flying fonts, intended

for users who simply want to produce "flying 3-D logo" animations,

Many CAD, modeling and rendering programs have network licenses available, which can greatly decrease the cost-per-station, It is also worth noting that the majority of high-end titles are copy-protected, typically with a hard-

5 5698.0tI program to function.

AC-To edO S3 VideO-Card (Winanark v3.1: 18 )

533.00

AC- Tor edO P-9000 Video-Card (Wlnmark v3.1:over 56) $899.00

-

Worfcstgatlons Although personal computers continue to make impressive inroads into the studios and produc- . t ion h o u ses o f t h e world, there's no arguing that workstations are still where most of the serious work is being If you are interested In creating geagecibackgrounds, c you might colloider using tpnctnlo. done. As mentioned at the 'qwge are Ingot tgeeggta go, ehngoware ogl e commercial Iatxteaape 0oglocatore ter ag tglaloc oongplxogtsns'agate ynoy gmotgaocot nlachegglncnxgto gaguggggco Pengaita Iattdhgnlo

Continued on page 27


ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEIVISER '93 27 |I

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My apologies to the many companies

1

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Autodesk, 415-332-2344 Avid, 800-949-AVID or 508-640-6789 Adobe Systems, 41 5-961 4400 Alias Research, 800447-ALIAS Auto~des>sys Inc., 61 4488-9777 Byte by Byte Corp., 512-795-01 50 CADD Solutions, 604-681 -4686 CrystaIGraphics, 408496-61 75 Electriclmage Inc., 81 8-577-1 627 FoundationImaging, 805-2574292 Hewlett-Packard Co., 508436-5049 Macromedia, 41 5442-0200 Midmar Images, Inc., 800-245-6472 Newtek, 1-800-847-6111 Octree Software Inc., 41 5-390-9600 Pixar, 51 0-236-4000

here. One good source of product listings and contact numbers is the RenderMan Partners Catalog, available by contacting Pixar. Also, try calling the companies listed below. Many offer demo disks for a nominal fee.•

for furtherreading:

Strata Studlopro shows otf the realistic shading possible with raydiosity.

outset of this article, Silicon Graphics workstations are a popular choice, with a good range of powerful — and sometimes incredibly expensive — 3-D software. Machines from SUN, DEC, NeXT, IBM and and Hewlett-Packard, which claims to have provided the first workstation to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (MIT) Media Lab in 1985, recently donated $2.65 million in computer equipment and funds to support research projects at the Media Lab. Hewlett-Packard and MIT researchers are collaborating in what they call The Texture ' and Pattern-Modeling Project. The goal is to pursue "new ways of accessing information in multimedia databases, with the results to be used in medical and engineering applications."

Most serious graphics production houses use workstations for rendering and other

Ray Dream, 800-846-0111 or 41 5-960-0768.

Contacts:

and products I didn't have room to mention

Teichroeb, E. RenderMan and 3D-Studio. The Computer Paper (B.C. Edition), Oct. 1992 G. Bennett.Beyond The Mind's EyeComputer Animation on Videotape. The Computer Paper(B.C. Edition), Dec. 1992 G. Bennett. Sketching in 3-D — review of Alias Sketch 1.5. The Computer Paper(B.C. Edition), Dec. 1992

Specuiar international, 413-549-7600 Spherical Design, 604-583-1267

Strata Inc., 800-869-6855 or 801-628-5218 VersaCAD Corp., 61 7-275-1 800 Visual Information Development, Inc., 81 8-91 88834 VFX Video, 604451-01 37 Thanks to Alias Research, CADD Solutions and VFX Video for providing information on programs and terms described in this article.

It's PC DOS 63 from IBM. And it one-ups MSDOS'6 for a lot of reasons. For one, it's got improved memory The Memory Optimizcr not only gives users morc memory, but also a configuration watcher to run the system more efficiently. It's got utilities you don t get with MS-DOS. For instance,you get a Program Scheduler

m anagement.

high<nd graphics tasks. Universities, which almost always utilize workstations in the sci-

ence and math departments, usually have scientific visualization and other graphics projects underway. In nearly every dty, you ran fmd user groups of CAD; 3-D or graphics enthusiasts who get together to share info about the latest and greatest. Every year, many of these users make a sojourn to SIGGRAPH (a yearly show held by members of the international graphics spe-

cial interest group). There are many videotapes of SIGGRAPH highlights available, and some of the better pieces show up later on commercial releases such as the Mind's Eye and Beyond the Mind's Eyevideos published by Mirimar Images, Inc. (800-245-6472). I reviewed the latter in the Dec. 1992 issue of The Computer Paper.

Conclusion Computer graphics technologies and techniques are now quite commonplace in cartoons and other animation sequences. Major Disney successes such as Aladdin and Beauty and the Beastare prime examples. If you' ve

ever seen the famous ballroom sequence in Beauty and the Beast,you' ll understand why

the techniques have so many animation professionals excited — and worried. Now that systems are starting to appear with the storage capacity and bandwith to be able to produce professional-level output, we may expect to see rapid acceptance of nonlinear digital film, video and audio editing systems in the professional, corporate, education and — when the prices hit mainstream levels — consumer markets. In much the

same way that digital typography and prepress techniques have demonstrated their advantages over traditional processes, digital video solutions will soon be common in past-production facilities, production companies, television stations, advertising agencies and corporate film and video departments worldwide.

from any program or DOS command, and a new editor that allows you to edit files at the same time. It's got features you don't gct with MS-DOS. Such as support

for PCMCIA Card Services(i.c., hot plugability for portable users), and the industry's leading Pen support for DOS. And there's one more

reason that goes beyond the software — PC DOS 6.1 is backed by IBM's service and support, including a 24-hour helpl inc you can actually reach. What's more, the first 60 days ol' support are at no additional charge. So if you haven't got PC DOS 6.1, get it from your local dealer/retailer or: Call IBM Direct 1-800-465-7999 Ext. 411. Features and Functions Backup — Tape Support — High-speed floppy disk support Approximate number ot viruses that can be detected

PC DOS 6.1 IIS-DOS 6

When you consider all it's got, PC DOS 6.1 from IBM is definitely the one to get. ) 1,400

800

Automated system configuration optimizer PCMCIA II support Enhanced editor Program scheduler

IBM is a registered trade-mark of IrSemstiansl Business Machines Corporation. IBM Canada Lid.,

s relatedcompany, is s registered user. MS-OOS is a registered trade-msrk of Microsoft Corporaeon.


28

NO V EMBER '93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

Com )D AB ~ o o c ddo B/AA /Jlso .

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Fast, AffordabIS PostscriptPriatlag

8cennee

You know something's going on when topics

like these hit the pages of publications like

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BBSes and the Internet are appearing more often in ~H,

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The Wall Street /ournal, The Globe a/Id Mail and New Republic. This is no fad. Whether you' re interested in the online community from a technical, cultural or business sense it can be difficult to get the information you need to participate in this phenomenon. Luckily the online community has evolved to the point where it's large

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enough to support its own array of publications. Finding these publications is no easy task, though, as many of these magazines are often shuffled off into fringe'bookstores

instead of mainstream newsstands. Some of

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It's slick, trendy, has an attitude and, if you can get past the ads for smart drinks and other suspect mind-tinklers, it has got to be

one of the most leading-edge technology

products.

magazines on the planet. It investigates everything from do-it-yourself multimedia to

Editor Jack Rickard does an excellent job of picking up news that is relevant and

virtual reality, online lifestyles and the notorious C-word {cyberpunk).

important to both BBS users and sysops. The magazine has a monthly BBS modem discount listing where sysops can get hefty dis-

51399 $ 1449 386

Although that magazine is not strictly about online topics, it does cater to the network-aware technophile. If you can stomach its cooler-than-thou editorial slant it can be a fun read. It gives a goqd glimpse of up-andcoming technology and hot it all fits in with the digital revolution.

Removeable Drive

economic issues surrounding technology.

Continued au page 33

COMPA

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42 I49.00 Epson 388SL 25 4/60 41399 @699 . 00 Zttftith Z SPOrt 486 41799 TeXaS Iftstrttmttnte 486 $1999.QQCompttbook 486 33 $1999 NEC Uttrallte Versa 429$9.00 486-33 Subito fx/fytdm $2499 Toshlba T1SQO $2349.00 488-33 120 leg $1999 NEC Active INatrix 2/120 @7S9.00 486 dx 33 Act/ve Mtrx $4399 Samsttft 486sx25 4/12D 41899.00 ye be n cr n

SHORT TERM RENTALS

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2 Megs Ram Dos 5.Q, 85 Msg Hdd

C

AST 486 Bravo C ompaq 486 Colour

g/gigiI LTD. QTY AVAILABLE

ontlne Access

S6.50, Bimonthly Wiredis my favourite magazine. It strikes a good balance between technical and socio-

tfNred

1

120 Meg $249

counts on modems direct from the manufacturers. There's also a monthly BBS list for different regions of the world.

$4.9S, S times yearly It's difficult to say where the Online Access audience is. The articles tend to be aimed at the average consumer with very little technical information, yet it discusses some very complex online business database applications and the Internet, It tends to

OI

~

software companies. It looks, reads and feels like a true globally oriented magazine and not something

$4.50, Monthly For someone who is running a BBS or thinking of starting one, Boardwatch is the definitive guide to BBS software, modems and techniques. The ads are a Who's Who list of BBS vendors and an excellent place to start when looking for information and

I

W NNJI W 386 SL 25

then a bunch of smaller ads from lesserknown BBS, multimedia and networking

Boai'stwatch

Iwonsto 2(NO $6.9S, Quarterly

a

by Sony, Silicon Graphics, Apple and Philips„

er Paper.

a

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What makes Wired truly interesting is the type of advertising you see. Full page spreads

junkies happy between issues ofThe Compiit-

85

Getober SPeCials I I I

ing.

aimed at a niche market. If you want to understand the techno-trends of the future, Wired should be part of your mandatory reading list.

$309

+keg CoancaReee Sjvedeeae

What strikes me about Wired is that almost all of the contributors have Internet addresses listed at the end of their articles. Talk about wired, this crowd is certainly that, Marshall McLuhan meets Alvin TofflerWlred takes a serious look at the future of media, from Nintendo to Ted Turner. It also talks with many of the pioneers in areas like BBSing, the Interne, multimedia, and hack-

intellectual cultural criticism that will more likely be found on the shelf beside Mother losesthan PC Magazine. Whatever your tastes, there are certainly enough publications to keep the modem

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Quantm127NB u l7ms32KIpE.....5253. SEAGATE452NB12msI28KID[..5579 3865X/33 38&SX33MHZOKEXP>1&NBJ™QPTIJNIQINM&Slot,...-."510300 MAXTO R245NB15ms64KIDE.....531 g. Quantum245MB1&ms25NIDE.5339. 38&SX/40 386SX 40MHzOKExP>1&NBjND OPTIj ™ MISIMN65lot..........512900

89,00 MAxTQR213NB15ms64KIDE.....5273. TpsHIBA I2GB1zms5(si.....51199 386px/40 386Dx,40NHz,128Kcache,oK,Exp>32NBsINM,6slot..............51

EXTE RNALSCSI HpParollel KitwSW..5189. FUJITSU105MB14msS(SI.......5279. 48&SX/25 48&SX25NHz@64K(adI Exp>32114n lai QPII AM I SIMM85lat---5349I zS&K(ache p K , E x p >3 2 N I)ntel , OP l j ™ QNM/Sl ot. $549.00 SEAGAT E]30MB I&msIPE.............. 5238. MAXTQR345NB 15msIPE.......... 5419 486DX/33 48&DX,33MHz, TOSHA900NB' IB 12msSCSI256K...5989. MAXTOR130NB14mslDE.........5233. P548&DX/33 "ES I~ Sacket25&K(Ihe~~P''32MB"ntelUM(1™~I sat~599I EXTERNA LIEHpparall elKitw SW...5169. QUANTUM 1Q5NB 15msIE......5229 486DX2/50 48&DX,50MHZ,QK,25&K(ache,Exp>32NB,UMC,S™,BSlot.....5&99.00 QUANTUM127NB Izms5(51.........5289. QUANTUM 17QNB1zmsIPE.......52&3 486Dx/50 486px,50MHz,OK,256K(ache,ExP>32N,0PTI,S™N,Bslot.......5799.00

ALwAYs IN2000s(51H/F............... 5239. ADAPTE(15425(sl.zH/fKit.....5349' 4 86Dx2/664 86Dx o K, 2 56 ca E >32 NB ,U,M( , s,I NM, Bslot......5897.00 48&DX/33 48&D X, ,6 36 3MH MHz z, , OK , 2S &K K( ac ch he e, , Ex Xp P>1 28 MB UMC SI NN( EISA)..5859. 00 -

CASESC POWER SUPPllES4 KEYBOARDS

Honeywell/Keytronic101 s Enhanced...549.1 E0120ExtHDCaseHH45WSCSI....5139.

486DX/33ve48&PX$3NHz,pK,25&KCache,bp>128MB,UN(~ (VE/El/%$959.00 ' 48&DX2 /66 486DX,66MHz,OK,256KCache,Exp>128MB,UMC,SINN(EISA).51189.00

NONITORS/PANElSMITS UBISHI- NK-tlYUND AI-SAIIISUNG 50FTW ARESALE w 4FG 4NB x 9SINM&Ons....................5CALL 1MB x 9 SIMM6(hs................5(ALL NK Monito5 14 3FGx, e, 5FG/e, &FG............%ALL HCM-405T

NENORY UPGRADES-COMPUTERS L HP lASERS

VGA.39 640x480 I...........5269. 1MBMEMORYUPGRADE,HPII/IH. ....599. 4MBMEMORYUPGRADE,HP4--5299 S(428VS 14wSVGA.281024x768I..........5299 dBASEIV2. 0 DQS...5339, 4NBMEMORYUPGRADE, HPII/IH. .52 .69, POSTS(RI PTUPGRADEHP.............,5319. 5(428TX 14 SVGA 28 1024,g&870HZNl- $347 PC DOS6.1U..........563.

CO/PROCESSORS/UPGRADES Intel-Cyrix-LAVA PIAMON PPR 014" .281024d&872HzI NI....$459. WinFA XPro3.Q- ..--599. Cyri x387/DX/40..........................589.I Cyrix387/SX/33....., ...............579. 5(528DXL15"SVGA.281024X7&872Hzf5N1.....551g IBN OS/22.1........5129. 16550UAR T2S,lBDP ,1GBoold........549. I Intel 486/DX/33,50,2/66....,5CALL DIAM ONDSCN I&" .28 IZBQXI024 13(Iz N1.....5889 MS EXCEL4.0Kin...5149.

NUlTINEDIA/CD RON L RENOVABlE NEDIADRIVES 5(72&v 17syGA.2&1024e&872H fsN1 ......5899. VENT w'""""' '-'5"' URA4'" .1W in...$249. PCPowered150NB18msExt Drive...5689. Syquest105MBInt 3.5" IDEDrive.5587. DIANOIDPil17" .26 1280x1024130HzNI.....51199.

SONY CDROMIntKit (Kodak).........5299. NECMultiSpin84lm RO MS(51....5599. PRINTERS 4 SCANNERS

WORD'0 2for Win 5149' Syquest88MB20msInt Drive.........5499. Toshiba 3401CD , 200rns, S(51-5559 HP DeskJet 500/ 500C, 550Color....,.from5379. WINDOW S 31 5&9 Syques t44MB20msIntDri ve.........5389. NE((pEXPRESSw 10Cp's+Spk...5399. SANSUNGFinale8000,1200dpi&MB,Bppm,P5..52299. Borl andSuperPack..5239 IBM Las e rP ri n ter 10 ppm , &0 0 d pi , P o stS c ri p t.....5(ALL. Norton pesklopDOS...579. NODENS/FAX/VOICE CARDS4 SWITCHES + • + --5® Audio,lnt....5249. HP USERPRINTERS IIIP • TyiNZOO Q9&I) FA X/2400 NodemV.42 bisNNP5/Voice/Business NortonUtilities 7.0.....589. US Rob otics 14.4 Ext/ Int FAX/Modem, SW , V.42/32 bis/NNP5,57,600bps...5269 NK 97lpppm,zNB,35PaslScnptfonts,AutoSW ..$1339. HlyaldGiaphxsWinz.pU$110.

INTElSATISFACTIONMODEM/ FAX100/200/300/400/400e Int/External.....5CALL OK IDATAOL400 LaserPrinter 4ppm.................5&29. Quattro pro5.QWin...563. fax Line Manager 202FAX/PHONE /MODEMon1Une, Smart/Auto Answer.......51 49 PAN ASONI( 1180i, 2023,2123, 2124ET(.....5(ALL NS FOXPROWin 51&g Golden IMAGE800dpi,256 GrayScale, OCR.....5199. PARADOXWinl.p....5139. (aklldo JUNI)250NBInt Ta pitve... 239. I (ONNO R250NBInt Ta eDrive....5199 Mustek ColorArtistPro 800dPi, 16.7MCob5,m5549. 1288 o THHHtlaatic Avenue Toronto, OntarioNI6K1X9 Toronto,OntarioM&K1X9 (4 Streets E.of King / Dufferin - OpenSaturdatm)

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30

N O VEMBER '93THE COMPUTERPAPER ONTARIO EDITION

NAIIE OFBBS 2Hype:Space Port BBS

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416 999-9999 2 4

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416 588-9690 24 905 278-2771 144

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416 531-2188 24 416 503-1289 24 905 279-0907 96 905 566-8198 24

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416 466-6931 96 416 487-9771 24

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MagnaCom Markham DalaSys MeTaStAslo'S BBS Medieval Nights Metropolis Micro Stop III Mike's Gamesroom Millenium House Millennium Ill Monly Python's BBS

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F250/99 Etobicke F634 Toronto ON Humour, IBM and t

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Aneurysm

Anima World BBS

Another BBS System? Artful Abplhations Asterisk Axle

Bad Connection BBS Baltic Toad BBS Baudevllle BBS Baudy Talk BBS Beasley's Den Bibh DrWho & Telcom Bils N'Bytes Bizbsse" Black Lace BBS Bhck Orchid Black SlallionSystem Bhdes Revenge BBS 1

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416 905 416 905 905 905 416 416 905 416 905 905 416 416

630-8645 881-7936 283-0114 764-0906 949-1587 792-7247 532-1784 698-7395 669-2022

286-7509 450-3388 544-5006 283-5924 766-3342

96

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416 769-8972 96 416 267-6559 96 905 649-2964 24 416 494-8974 24 416 462-2922 24 905 456-191 8 96 416 633-0185 24 905 549-7895 96 905 646-2235 96

Cohilion ComSpec I Compu Ad Hamilton Compu Ad Niagara Cornpu Ad Toronto Compu Ad Toronto Compu-Tel

00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24

00-24 IO 24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24

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Grafix,Raytrace Open for all!

416 416 416 905 905

286-6191 750-8847 222-5473 731-2667 875-2043

96 24 24 24 24

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416 905 416 416

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416 416 905 416 905 905 905 416

236-0944 497-2124 824-7882 484-0607 878-5203 845-7868 829-4097 297-9376

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905 416 416 416 905 416 905

457-2917 495-1731 481-7816 242-2241 458-4812

24 24 96 24 96 498-9903 96 845-0540 24 905 452-8304 144

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416 416 416 416 416

740-0345 252-1133 244-8699 736-5258 281-3441

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10

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Garners' Guild BBS

Gates of Insanity Generh Genesis BBS Genesis BBS 878-6360 Geofuel Geoscience Good Tidings BBS

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416 416 905 416 416 416

422-0984 4724266 487-9093 754-2443 292-8757 264-3028 8284803 743-9187 466-9343 690-9379

24 96 24 24 24 96 24 96

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905 453-8656 905 270-8493 416 465-5366

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338-7229 731-3710 492-5042 844-2483 244-8078 882-21 72 921-6366 966-2475

24 24 96 96 24 144 24 96

00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24

$00 IFG $00 MFG $00 MF$00 CF$00 MF$00 CF$10 IFG $50 MFG

Oakville Couldn'I Connect IBM OS/2 BBS 9 yrs old/CD/ASP

798-2400 6364894 896-1446 539-0523 949-5327 539-9591 769-81 26 568-6963

24 24 96 12 24 24 96 24 96 96 24 96 96 96 12

00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24

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Online MeetPhce Recently Revived P1 PunterNet¹1 C64 BBS

00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24 00-24

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416 733-2087 96 905 846-1066 24

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Echo Mail,Windows Sierra-related!!

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Continuedonpage 32


DOWNTOWN LOCATION

GRAND OPENING

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5 175 (with system purchased) 5 185 (stand aiane) Oundes St. W

DOWNTOWN 161 JOHN STREET TORONTO, M5T 1X3 TEL: (416) 979-3964 FAX: (416) 979-5458

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MAXTOR IDE 245 Mb $ 330 SIMM1Mb'60 ns MAXTOR IDE 345 Mb $ 465 SIMM 4Mb'70 ns WEST. DIGITAL IDE 212 Mb SIPP 1Mb70ns WEST. DIGITAL IDE 256 Mb $835 DRAM 41256-80 WEST. DIGITAL IDE 349 Mb $,429.,-DRAM 44956 70

CONTROLLER IDE FD/HD IDE FD/HD/2S/1 P/1 GPORT

VESA IDE FD/HD.Q AT I/O 2S/1 P/18,PORT AT MFM HD/FD SCSI ADAPTEC1522 SCSI ALWAYS 2000

DRAM'4,1.@'09-70

Ca l l$ 6 5 Cal l $ 7 0

Call $ 2 3 0 Call $70

$ 3 $6.5 $6.5

KEYBOARDS ~; $ 60 Enhanced(:49't $ 24 $25 Keytrortip + 1' AT/XT .,~„$ 4 5 $ 80 Keytronic191 USA ~~ $ 58 $125 Honeywell101 Enhanced $55 $ 240 Fujitsu 101 Enhanced

$ 57

PRINTERS

M ONI TORS

M UL TI MEDIA

CD-ROM $209.-rr.:-Mitsumi int 350ms $ 238 $579 $285-.—,NEC int. 280 ms KX-P2123 24 pin color„, $ 283 Toshiba int. 340 IB $ 645 Chinon SCSI1rtt. +,6 CDs $520 :44s VGA A1 $250 m KX-P2124 24 pin coloreds' $419 $' 55 SOUND CARO' i14" SVGA ~28 $329 5 Color Kit $ 121 :1'4" 'SVGA .28 NI $ 'QM. KX-P4410 Laser 5$@tIIII$810 Sound Blastei" 2:,9 ' KX-P4430 Laser Sppm $ 960 S ound BlasterPro-Deluxe $ 1 6 5 hllAGNAVOX Ra~en Sound BlasterPro 16bit ASP $269 14" VGA (Paper White) $150 $ 190 Video Blaster $435 RP-9105 9 pin color 14" .39 SVGA (1024x768) $275 $ 250 RP-2405 24 pin 14" 28 SVGA (1024x768) $ .330, g RP-2406 24 pin color,~4 $ 279 It(lettttsonlc Panasonic KX-P2180 9 pin color $300 $335,,.„ KX-P2023 24 pin

1 4" SVGA .39 dp : @ ..; $ 2 7 5

14" SVGA,28 dp ke f4" SVGA.28 dp Nl Darius

RP-2420 24 pin RP-2465 24 pin wide Color Kit LP-510 Laser 512k

ISE 14" .28 SVGA Nl 72Hz $455 '5E 14" .28 SVGA Nl 72Hz $525 6FS 15" .28 SVGA Nl $ 680

Datatrain 17" SVQA .31dp .'~'!"'

LP-530 Laser.1Mb

$820

17" SVGA 1289 26dp > $1370 ~ Mits ubishi 17" 1280x1024 .26

$ 1240

CASES

Full-tower / display 250w $ 140

$ 45 '

80387SX-16,26,25.33 80387DX-25,33,40

$60

$ 95

- "

$421 $ 545 $1920 $32

ACCESSORIES

$65 Mini-tower /220W $65 + Med-tower/display 230w $105

MATH-CO PRO.-'

$ 930

i

FAX/MODEM

9600/2400 int. S&R "' $ 7p Zoltrix 14,4 int.S&R V42bis $215 USR 14,4 int. Sportster $235 USR 14,4 ext. Sportster $265 USR Courier 16 8 int. $685 USR Courier 16,8 ext. $745 USR Courier HST/DS int. $969 USR Courier HST/DS ext. $1039

Ink Cartridge Hstwliett Packard ';, HP Deskjet 599 L 4 $ 3 90 HP Deskjet 500c IR ,::;:;w„$528 Colorado int Tape Dr, 250 $ 269 $785 HP Deskjet 559c 250 Mb backup Tape $30 88p HP 4L 300dpi 1Mb

t)esktop /220W

220w power supply

Canon . , gg BJ-200 BJ-330 wide B J-820 Color

$ 380 $ 440 $ 55 $ ?69

'

HP 4 600dpi 2Mb 4L 1Mb RAM HP.p-series Toner si HP 4 Toner Ink cart. 500/500C

$1765 14p

HP Scanjet IIP

$1050

HP Scanjet IIC $1850 . gp L ogitech Scott@an 256 $ 225 $18 $ '149 MS Comp, ~ ae ~~eytronic mduse $35 gLogitech mouseman $75 .=- ~Lpgitech Trackman $90


32

NO V EMBER '93 TH E COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

I

I

NAME OFeee The Uon's Den The Lunatic Fringe The MCP BBS The Mix The Next BBS The OSH Exchng The Pinnacle BBS The Pleasure Paktce! The Powder Keg

This lisl courtesy ofThe Intemsllonal Prognunmers Guild,General Info; (905) 824-7947. (Business hours only.)TheComputer Paper has called and veriSed all ot thfws numbers. However, it cannot be held liable tor errors or omissions.

UI AREA APHONE 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 2

ew

eAoo AccEeeFEE MFS ePECIAUlY

4 1 6 3 954328 24 4 1 6 7 78.5542 96 4 1 6 4 4%9484 2 4 9 0 5 8 4 1-81979 6 4 1 6 4 3 1-4529 9 6 9 0 5 5 7 2-23079 6

0 0 - 24 0 0 - 24 16 - 07 00 - 24 00 - 24 00 - 24

$00 CFG $00 MFG $00 MFG $00 IFG $$$ IF$50 CF-

Recently Revived

RA ?? TG GT

Recently Revived GTP Nel/Echomafl Star Trek Info Health 6 Safety 0 0 -24 $00 MFG dBASE/Clipper 00 - 2 4 $30 IFG For only adults 00 - 2 4 $00 MF- For Winter 00 - 2 4 $30 CF- PrtvateBoard 00- 2 4 $00 CFG Great members! 00- 2 4 $20 IFG Celebrity GIFs 00 - 2 4 $00 IFG + Sls & supp sll 00 - 2 4 $00 CF- Health 6 Safety 00 - 2 4 $00 IFG Christian Based 00- 2 4 $00 MF- Musk Files

TB

SB

in ACCESS. 999-9999 A private BBS or a BBS not

TA WI ?? PB

$00 IFG

1 1 1 1 1 1

4 1 6 8 6 1-0872 144 4 1 6 4 9 6-1776 9 6 4 1 6 4 9 2-5756 2 4 4 1 6 9 9 %9999 9 6 4 1 6 7 8 7-72912 4 4 1 6 7 4 4-2922 9 6 9 0 5 5 6 7-5768 2 4 4 1 6 4 2 IHI251 2 4 9 0 5 4 7 1-7932 9 6 905 803-0474 2 4 9 0 5 2 7 5 4 278 96 - 0 0 -24 9 0 5 2 7 5-5338 144 0 0-24 4 1 6 4 8 4-0549 2 4 00 - 2 4 4 1 6 4 8 4-9454 9 6 00 - 2 4 00- 2 4 905 846-6618 2 4 9 0 5 8 9 8-33739 6 00- 2 4 4 1 6 4 2 2 ~ 1 144 0 0 - 24 4 1 6 5 3 5 4 983 144 0 0 -24 00- 2 4 41 6 6 5 1 -5673 2 4 00 - 2 4 4 1 6 5 8 8-29649 6 9 0 5 6 4 2-08412 4 23 - 0 7

The perfect BBS Toronto Heath Users' Toronto's Condos Total Board Trade Wind Tymnet

1 1 2 1 1 1

4 1 6 2 4 7-49399 6 4 1 6 2 6 5-5713 2 4 41 6 5 1 2-07919 6 4 1 6 2 2 1-8768 9 6 4 1 6 5 0 3-4388 2 4 4 1 6 3 6 5-7630 2 4

$00 CF$00 MF$00 CF$00 MFG $00 IFG g4 MFG

UFO Intelligence Net Universal Multi%tub University of Helll

1 905 459-6259 98 00-24 $00 CFG UFO InfoFor Ag UL 1 9 0 5 8 81-8557 96 00 - 2 4 $ 0 0 CF - P l s call today! RG 1 9 05 821-2522 96 00-24 $00 CFG Univ/Colg users TG

Vemarchy BBS Vineyard BBS

1 1

9 0 5 6 3 &4968 9 6 4 1 6 5 3 24456 9 6

00-24 00-24

$ 00 MFG Couldn'I Connect $00 CFG Christian

TA SU

Westonkt BBS Wobum BBS Workable ConceptsBBS

1 1

4 1 6 2 4 1-9793 24 4 1 6 3 9 64570 24

PB

1

9 0 5 9 4 $ 4838 2 4

00-24 $00 CFG Compatibles 00-24 $0 0 IFG E v erything! 00-24 $00 IFP 1 0 PunterNet

The Power Absolute The Private BBS The Regal Eagle BBS The RP In Time The Safety ShoppeBBS The Servants The Sonic Cornmunily The Spinal Tap BBS The Standard BBS The Switchboard The Switchboard I The Syndicate The Syruss Sysl The Tetemax BBS The Ticket The Toast Exchange The Trap Une Ths UHU Stic The UnderWorld BBS

1

1 1 1

1

905 8 7 3 -1579 2 4

00- 2 4

09 - 1 0 00 - 2 4 00- 2 4 00 - 2 4 00 - 2 4 00 - 2 4

$00 CFG $00 I$00 I$15 MFG $00 IFG $00 IFG $00 IFG $00 MFG $00 IF$00 CFG $00 CFG

WI SL ?'/

PB MA MX PB OP Fl

f512 Mississauga

CD-Rom online F522 Toronto ON F520 Toronto ON Good Gila/Msgs CD-ROM online USEnetNBBS net varkrty Toast Obsessive Hurry BBS WickedSysOp!

RG RA ?? SL HM MX RG

Couldn't Connect

TG

IBM/adult/window

WI RB WI QB '?? QB

Condominiums Recently Revived People Board

PB PU

1 905 8264)622 24 00-24 $00 IFG We scan our GIFs SL

Zo olds

'I

[F1]Help!

1 4 1 8 4 99-58tyl 144 0 0 -24 $ 0 0 CF - H e lp for.NewUser W l 1 9 0 5 2 77-1508 144 0 0 -24 $ 1 5 MFG Hassle Free RG

Wiseguy's BBS

4 16 322-7876 96

00- 2 4

88$ Explanation of Columns and Cocfes NAME OF BBSThename bywhichthe BBS isknown,If there is a Star (') at the end of the name field that means the BBS is operated by a registered member of The International Programmers Guild, LN The number ot BBS Data Lines or Nodes available at PHONENUMgiven. 4: Four BBS lines. 1+: More then one BBS Line.?: Ths actual number of active lines is unknown. PHONENUM The data fins phone number olthe BBS. 824-4731 Typical example of a valid phone number at which ths BBS can be reached during the hours indicated

RA

$0 0 M F G

B Etiquette Bulletin Board Services come and gowith alarming frequency. When dialing a new BBS number, please call wilhout a modemths first time and listen for the carrier tone to verity that a modem is in service.

acceptin ganynew members.Ityousream em ber,andyou

have the number you may add it in by hand, but only in the converted dialing directory list ot you own communications software, NOT in a list to distributed or posted anywhere.

RecordsofBBSss containing 999-9999 numbersWILL be

written to your communications software dialing directory with the BBS//CNVT.EXE utility, ready for manual edit by yourself. Accidentally dialing a 999-9999 number will result in a "We are sorry, your call cannot be completed as dialed...." message from BELL. BAUD Th e maximum bps rate supported at PHONENUM. 2400:2400/1200/300 bps supported 9600: 9600 to 300 bpssupported. 144: Up to t4400 bps

supported

ACCESS BBS access times in 24 hour format. 00-24h Open 24 hours around the clock (&Oeh: Open earn till the next day earn (so one hour shutdown from 8 to 9) 19-02h: Open from 7pm till 2am the next day. 17-23h: Open from

5pm till 1 1 pm evenings only (6 hours per dsy only) FEE The cost to become a member of the BBS in question. $00: Free Board - No Charge. $$$: Cost Unknown or Fee Optional.$95: Yearly Membership. NOTE: on yearly membership fees. All user fees were given to us by the boards. The Guild is nol responsible tor their correctness. Usually there are additional initiatipn fees, but these initiation fees, if any, are NOT included in the FEEs as indicated in the BBS/f database shown above.

7% G.S.T. may or maynot be added ontop of that fee. MFG Indicates if Messages, PD-Files and/or on-line Games are supported. M-G Messages and Games supported (No Files). M — Only local Message bases supported. C- LocalConferences and Message bases supported I- In ternational NetMail Message and Conference bases supported -F- Only Files available, no Messages, no Games?? Not Verified, Can't Connect! SPECIAUTY Ths most imporlant features of the BBS, or node 8"........ ...."means thatthe Sysop did nolconvey to the Guild what their BBS's specialization is, or that they specified that no features should be mentioned. "Private Board"means it 's NOT a public BBS and should be accessed with caution and only after having spoken with the owner. "neseLocation"Shows that this BBS is also a WAN (Wide Area Network). n means the code tor the

The totally integrated software package with an open door policy that allows dynamic linking between Database, Word Processing, Spreadsheet, Graphics and Communications applications.

WAN's nameF = FidoNst Node.G = GuildNetNode P = PunterNst Node R = RelayNet Node 0 = Other nst Sfe means the Node number ot that WAN.ie, "F412 Mississauga" indicates a Fido network node, al a location in Mississauga. "1.Voice SS5-1212" means the Sysop requires you to call him/her first at the voice phone number given, then they will give you access. Such private BBSes usually also have the 999-9999 number in the BBS dateline PHONENUM field which you may then edit when you receive the real BBS number from the Sysop. "Tpmporsrtly Down" the Sysop instructed us to indicate to the users that his/her BBS is temporarily oul of commission due to major repairs, maintenance, rebuilding or renovations. "Couldn't Connect" means that the Guild could not verify the BBS as operational this month. If unable to verify for three consecutive months the BBSwill be deleted from the list. "2nd. Month Down"means that this BBS was last month "Couldn't Connect" making this the second month that NO connection could bs established. "BBS Down and Out"the Sysop instructed us to indicate to the users that his/her BBS was permanently closed down and ceased all operations it could also mean that this BBS was last month marked as "2nd. Month Down" making this the third month that NO connection could be established. This will be the last entry mentioning this BBS. This BBS record line is ready to be deleted at the next issue of the BBS// listing. "Recently Revived"indicates that last month this BBS was listed as one of the following: "Temporarily Down", "Couldn't Connect", "2nd. Month Down", "BBS Down and Oul", but veritied as operational this month.

SW Contains a 2 character code for the BBS-Soflware

used. AL = Alchemy; BB = BBS BBS; PA = PronetSysism ; BM = BBS Management System;CH = Chairman; DR = Dracona;EM = Emulex or EMIX; R = Fido; FO = Forem; GA = Galacticom; GH = PC-Ghost; GT = GT Power; HE = Hermes; HM = Home-Made Software; HO = Host; IB = IBBSlcon; M2 = Michtron 2.0; MI = MiniHost; MX = Maximus;NC = NCC i;OP = Op us;PB = PC-Board;PC IH = In-House Software;PU = Punter/PCPN; PY = pyroto; QB = QuickBBS;RA = Remote Access;RB = RBBS-PC; RG = Renegade;RO = Robo-Board; SL = SearchLight; SP = Spitfire;SU = SuperBBS; TA = TAG; TB = TBBS; TG = TeleGard;UL = UltraBBS; VA = Vanguard; Wl = Wildcat!; WW =WWlv Nel;?? = Other TO CONTACT THE PROGRAMMERS GUILDeit her by; VOICE (905) 624-7947 between 9:00 am and 4:00 pm by FAX line- (905) 824-51 39 or by eMAIL logon to GUILD BBS (905) 824473f at any time FidoNet Node 259/419 to have

your nsw BBS li sted or have any changes made concerning your existing BBS.

THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMMERS GUILD Canadian Chapter, Toronto, Ontario Voice, General Info; (905) 824-7947 Business hours only. IntsrNet Address: AdminOToronto.Can.lP Guild.Org

TO T A L L Y

NTESBA 4 P T ttf A tt $

+azy l'Ius

See Ability Plus 2 at your local computer store or phone

(416) 464-9671 for a free Demo Disk

•e•x

C8 08ISItilltg/ITIDN


ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPLITER PAPER NOVEMBER '93

BI% Populi Continued from page28 ignore the fact that Canada and every other modem-capable country exist even though most of the services in both its editorial and advertisingare accessible from almost anywhere in the world. The magazine seems aimed more towards the online giants like GEnie, CompuServe, Delphi and Prodigy than the BBS scene, which is great if you' re considering joining a large online service and happen to live in the continental U.S. Online Access may be good at delivering some basic information to the beginner but the publication's narrow focus makes the whole thing feel like it's simply an advertising vehicle for the big commercial systems.

through the Internet, but you' re unsure of how both of you can get access to the Inter-

net. This books gives listings of every country and region and which organization is responsible for public Internet access in that

region. A Directory Of Electronic INall Addressing 4r Networigs The Internet is not a single worldwide network, it's a network of networks. Networks that are internal to a company, institution, government or region are all patched together into a larger umbrella network

called the Internet,

The book is aimed at the avid Internet user or administrator as a guide to navigating some of these sub-networks. This is a handy

The book has some handy appendices, such as a listing of international subdomains categorized by region. This allows you to find the E-mail addresses of many compa-

resource because not all networks use the same electronic mail-routing schemes, sometimes causing your mail to be returned or "bounced." Another use for the book is simply making people aware of the organizations that comprise these networks and what types of service they offer. For example, I found something called Giant Toad Systems, which is a free public-access USENET news access point in Toronto.

nies, institutions and organizations, such as Air Canada, Alberta Packet Radio Network, Calgary Board of Education, City of Toronto, NeXt User Group Yukon, and of course Mind Link, where The Computer Paper'smailbox resides. If you have a friend who resides at one of the sites listed in the book you might want to let them know — they probably have Internet access and don't even know it. Try sending them mail and see if it works.•

Connect $5.25, Bimonthly Connect is new, only in its third issue, but it looks to be a promising magazine for people

who have a modem and are looking for interesting services to call. It strikes a good balance between news, issues, large systems and BBSes. It's aimed at the average modem

user. It contains some very handy advice for both the user and sysop and does a good job of explaining technical topics. It looks at places to explore via the Internet, on CompuServe, GEnie, America Online, Pelphi and BIX and it investigates the BBS scene from new software to legal issues. Issue ¹3 contains a look at investing online — how to do it, where to get stock information and other online services like stock pricing history

databases. Connect is worth picking up if you can manage to find a copy. It took me a week of hopping from one bookstore to another to find mine. You' re better of subscribing.

TRY BEFORE YOU BUY + IBM and MAC Over 1000 Titles

88$ Caller's Digest

Formerly MISTER SOFTItARE

$4.95, Monthly BBS Caller's Digest reads more like a user group newsletter than a glossy magazine. The layout and design is amateurish, the writing is poor and the headlines, like "Alias...The Screaming Maniac" or "Something new Under The Sun" tell the reader nothing about the stories that follow. There's nothing really redeeming about BBS Caller's Digest.It's best left on the newsstand.

401 Hi hwa Dundas Bt. W. Hloor St.

Du das Bt. W. Kipling Subway

More Internet books A few months back I reviewed The Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog and 1've received an unprecedented number of calls, letters and E-mail about the book. If you are having difficulty locating it at your local computer or bookstore you can order it

directly from the publisher, O'Reilly and Associates. It costs US$24.95 plus $2.08 for mailing.It can be ordered by calling 800998-9938. Since the review of the Internet Guide,

I' ve received two related books from O'Reilly. Connecting To the Internet 188 pages, US$15.95 Let's say you have a friend in Greece who has acomputer and modem and you want to exchange E-mail and files without calling each other long distance. You' re swan that you can do all of this at relatively low cost

II

I

icto

I

Bloor St.

I I

MEGA Westyywd

I

GHOIcE Theatre 5 mlnutea I miupllng Subway (exit 427 on iyunxtas)

233-$435

~ IZ

0

0

E 0 D

N t,"

Plenty of FREE patkingi

3747 Bloor St. W. EtObicoke

33

te O

Queen St. E. (Hwy T) Country Royal Style Bank Donut

D

Lots of Free Parking II: o I

¹16 MEGA Ma n darin CHOICE Restattrattt

CL

'0

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K e( MEGA 0 CHOICE "

Trai BeyiyStreet FREE Parking

1420 Baymy St. Pickering

$37-05$7

239 Queen St. E. Brampton

(UNDERNEATH THK MANDARIN RESTAURANT)

455-$306 * 100% of evaluation fee deducted against purchase price. CALL STORES FOR DETAILS

bC

EC



ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER N OVEMBER '93 3 5 by the end of September, from UI or the OSF, and is to be submitted to X / Open for

Common APls

approval through that organization's fasttrack process in November. After that, test

suites for verification and X/Open branding

To Uni Unix At Last NEW YORK (NB) — In a move that may well turn out to be the real end of the "Unix wars," the two major Unix camps — X/Open and a long list of hardware and software vendors — have announced plans for a set of common application programming interfaces (APls) that they claim will make Unix applications fully portable. Unix International (UI) and the Open Software Foundation (OSF), which for several years have backed similar but competing versions of Unix, have joined X/Open in backing a comprehensive Unix specification. They said any Unix application that complies with the APIs would be able to run on any implementation of the operating system that does so, with only recompiling needed. Geoff Morris, president and chief executive of X/Open, told Newsbytes that the announcement ends the fragmentation of Unix that has been seen as a key weakness

tern V Interface Definition (SVID) and Application Environment Specification (AES). A working group of Unix system vendors, Unix International, and the OSF has put together an initial draft specification, and

I

will work with X/Open to finalize it. Member companies of both Ul and the OSF will review the final document, which X/Open will add to its Portability Guide. The draft was to be available for review

will be developed. Standardized documentation should be available by the middle of 1994. Products supporting the specifications can be expected by late 1994 or early 1995, Morris said. The final specifications will be available to all organizations, the standards-makers said. •

I

rrftel

fry/ s

for many years. The only way Unix could become more standardized, he said, would be if there were a single source of the system, which would not necessarily be desirable. Industry analyst Norton Greenfeld, director of Unix systems and applications at Infocorp, agreed. "I think it finally means that Unix as viewed by application builders is really one system," he told Newsbytes. The list of vendors backing the initiative is a virtual census of the Unix business, including ATILT, which developed Unix in the 1970s, IBM, Digital Equipment, Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, Unix International, Santa Cruz Operation, and a variety of major applications software vendors such as Computer Associates International, Lotus Development, and WordPerfect. The biggest name missing from the list is that of Microsoft, whose Windows NT operating system is considered something of a threat to Unix and may have helped concentrate the minds of Unix vendors on the need

for a true standard. Morris admitted the NT threat played a role, saying "competitive claims from the Microsoft NT community that the Unix community is fragmented'" helped push Unix vendors toward a common standard. So did a growing user interest in open systems, he said. The efforts of the Common Open Software Environment (COSE) initiative, in which a group of v e ndors last spring announced agreement on several vital Unix specifications, also helped lay the groundwork for the latest announcement, Morris said. Greenfeld said the move "takes a little bit of the wind out of the NT marketing," but he believes that user demand was a bigger factor in forcing the standards move than the NT threat was. Unix vendors have finally realized that they can differentiate their products in other ways that do not require making them mutually incompatible, Greenfeld observed, and the move is "long overdue." The effort's backers said that APIs were

chosen based on formal industry standards, including X/Open's Portability Guide, and widely used specifications, such as the Sys-

ZEGNA ProSystem III S

ZEG N A ProSystem IV S

' 9

• • 9

• •

4MB RAM, 256K Cache Pentium Upgradable 245MB Hard Drive 1.2 k 1.44 MB Floppy Drive VLB IDE Controller 8r I/O VLB CL IMB SVGA Card 14" NI SVGA Cohr Monitor 101 Enhance Keyboard

sxa681,289 Dx 25o81~829

Ox4381 y599Dmss81~899

Dxm$1,799Dmas82~899

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Video Presentation Kit VGA to Videoconverser Box Support Windows ga VGA Input Composrte Video, S-Video

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Sees I

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3soms, ls oKb/s

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6 x 108aseT Network Card 1 x 9-Port 108aseT Hub

~~ s~ 92 1 9

9269

Maxtor 214MB

~e nr

Maxtor 240MB

ssssr are 9299

Maxtor $40MB seriate

9399

tuser yurl er arfiucrroa of the prfca

Canon BJ-200

$359

Canon I J-AD

$465

8,5 x11', 360dpi, 500cpa(20cpi)

compatible card

' Spea1ners

Mmi Tower Case

I

' Mitsuml CD Rom IMv e

special package price

180 M B

3-Button Mourn

D-LIIXK 6-USER B UNDLE

AVerKey (PAL or NTSC)

I

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4MB RAM, 128K Cache Pentium Upgradable 210MB Hard Drive 1.2 8r, 1.44 MB Floppy Drive IDE Controller 8r. I/O Trident 512K SVGA Card 14" NI SVGA Color Monitor 101 EnhanceKeyboard 3-Button Mouse Mini Tower Case

• ) o

rmsnsucro~ s~e

ZEGNA ProSystem IV V

4MB RAN@ 128K Cache Pentium Upgradable 130MB Hard Drive 1.2 & 1.44 MB Floppy Drive IDE Controller 8r I/O Trident 512K SVGA Card 14" SVGA Color Monitor 101 Enhance Keyboard 3-Button Mouse Mini Tower Case

1MB RAh4 128K Cache 130MB Hard Dnve 1.44 MB Floppy Drive IDE Controller 8r I/O Trident 512K SVGA Card 14" SVGA Colnr Monitor 101 Enhance Keyboard 3-Bumm Mouse Mini Tower Case

$988

ZEG NA ProSystem IV S

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11 "x1 7", 380dpi, 500cpa(20cp) ~ After m anssrssctssrer's rebate

479-8892

1I KONIII (lRl5QII', tjIT 1, MIIKHhM, OI'., IR Itj FacsimQe 4 7 9 -1045 Vancouver . Toronto . Ott88vra


36

N O VEMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION Unix comes in many flavors, most

Re e i nin t

e W o i st a t i o n IY

KE N CL A R K

After reigning for a decade in engineering and businessc-ritical computing, workstation vendors brace themselves for a nevjf rival — the personal computer. Worirstatlon Computing Workstations are computers designed for intensive data processing needs. During the

Apple Macintosh or IBM PC. The terms Workstation and RISC Workstation are usually synonymous,

1980s, workstations took over the roles traditionally held by mainframes and minicom-

Workstation applications are usually categorized as "vertical." That is, they have a

puters in business, governmen, and academ-

narrow audience of interest; a typical vertical application might be an airline flight reservation system. Conversely, horizontal applications are programs with widespread use, such as wordprocessorsand spreadsheets.

ic computing; they also invented a few new

roles for computers: scientific engineering and research, departmental database servers, terminal servers, network servers and high-

performance graphics.. There are a number of major players in the workstation industry, including Sun Microsystems (the current market leader), Hewlett-Packard (HP), Digital Equipment (DEC), IBM and Silicon Graphics (SGI). Modem workstations are built on top of Reduced Instruction Set Computing (RISC) microprocessors. RISC processors employ a limited and simple instruction set, a large

number of general-purpose registers, optimized instruction pipelining, multilayer cache memories, and even multiprocessor capability to gain performance over traditional Complex Instruction Set (CISC)-based microprocessors, such as those found in an

Workstation applications frequently have

many simultaneous users, such as our airline example, hence workstations are always multi-user and multitasking systems. Workstations are often connected to many "dumb" text-only terminals, or sometimes over widearea networks to thousands of other worksta-

tions. The Internet is an international network of computers comprised almost entirely of Unix workstations. Graphical workstations are used exten-

sively rn computer-aided design (CAD), as well as in scientific, engineering, and architectual modeling. They are also used in a wide range of visual applications including animation, special effects, post production,

Unhr Worirstations The Unix operating system was born on a Digital Equipment Minicomputer, the PDP-7,

in 1969 at ATILT Bell Labs. Unix is by far the most common operating system running on modern workstations. In many respects, Unix defmes what a workstation is, much in

the same way that DOS defines a personal computer, and the name "workstation" often

implies "Unix workshgion.' There are a number of reasons for Unix's popularity on workstation hardware. Unix is mostly written in C, a systems programming language, and was one of the first operating systems written in a high-level language rather than coded in assembler. C enabled Unix to be quickly ported to new workstation architectures by hiding much of the underlying hardware behind the C compiler. Unix provides a large virtual memory model, multitasking, security, and networking fadlities suitable for scientific and busi-

ness applications, and therefore made an ideal operating environment for workstations.

derived from either Unix System V from ATRT, or Berkeley Unix, developed at the

Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of California. Many workstation vendors have combined, modified,

and enhanced Unix to position themselves apart from the competition, leaving the industry full of non-standard Unix operating systems. Multiple nonstandard Unix variants pose a serious problem for software developers, as applications written for one Unix platform will not necessarily run, or even compile, on another. This translates into making an already small software market even smaller, as application software will often run only on one particular workstation. Softw'are developers are faced with this, or increased

software development costs, by being required to write multiple versions of the software for multiple platforms.

Users and system administrators are also inconvenienced by this lack of uniformity. There are a number of competing graphical user interfaces (GUIs) available for Unix

workstations, and few generally accepted application interface guidelines for software developers to follow. An application written for a NeXT workstation will have a very different appearance from one running on a Sun workstation, despite the fact that both

machines are running Berkeley-derived Unix operating systems. As a result, users must become hmiliar with a different "look and feel" for each application and workstation

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOYEMBER '93 3 7 ty, and internationalization is also often very different across platforms, making life difficult for system administrators. Finding someone to help administer or support your

system can also be difficult, as personnel

fear of losing sales to the competition, and businesses began to question the wisdom of

investing in computer solutions with such a narrow range of application. However, if there is anything that can

trained on one particular Unix workstation will not necessarily be familiar with your system. It is common marketing practice for workstation companies to design propriety features into their systems that are different or unavailable on other machines. This enables them to differentiate their product from the competition, and also locks users into their products. After a company has signed on to a particular workstation vendor, when it comes time to upgrade or buy new inachines, this

unite a group of adversaries, it is a common

company is unlikely to invest the time and money involved in purchasing new applica-

Commonly, Open can be thought of as the

enemy. Recognizing that divided they could

not expect to compete with the mass PC market, workstation vendors have hopped on the "Open Systems" bandwagon, with the hopes of attracting more mainstream applications and building a larger commercial desktop market. The term "Open" is used to describe a standard interface, the details of which are published and available to any vendor to implement, be it a graphical interface, hardware interface, or Unix system interface.

tion software, or retraining users and system administrators. They are much more likely to

opposite of proprietary. The term Open is currently the buzz word of choice in workstation marketing.

continue buying products from the same

DEC has even named the revised version of

vendor, even if better products from other workstation companies are available.

its VMS operating system "OpenVMS" (this

Open Systems The proprietary and nonstandard nature of

proprietary systems).

the workstation industry divided the already small market and minimized the number of software applications available to customers.

System Interface for unIX) was published as

At the same time, and with the acceptance of clone hardware by the business community, personal computers became a commodity item, available and supported by thousands of vendors.

should communicate with the Unix operating environment. Nearly every Unix and

With the arrival of the Intel 486 and

enormous volume of application software to choose from. Workstation vendors refused to unite and give up their proprietary details for

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38 N O V EMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION interface, but even Sun now provides Motif

three times the going rate for RAM or hard

with its Solaris operating system. UnixWare from Novell comes with both Motif and

drives in the personal computer market.

Open Look GUIs.

Big Changes

Recently, Sun, HP, and IBM agreed to

tions are more expensive, have more powerful RISC-based hardware, and run a true vir-

.

tual memory/multitasking operating system with some vertical but few mainstream

It is unclear whether the shift towards Open

applications. PCs are less expensive, have less-powerful Intel CISC-based hardware, and

develop a Common Open Software Environment (COSE). COSE will be a set of Open standards by which all vendors agree to comply, unifying

Jittle too late, or exactly what is needed for them to remain a large part of the business

the Unix industry. A first useful draft of COSE can beexpected by mid-1994. Some workstation companies have even

personal computer and workstation industries are on a collision course. In fact, with the recent release of Windows NT by

migration of Unix-based workstation operat-

adopted some Open hardware standards.

Microsoft and the release of the Pentium processor by Intel, they may have already

time (SCO Unix, for example). This year saw the release of Sun's flagship operating sys-

collided, and probably only after some settling of the dust will things become clear again, Unix/RISC workstations have historicaHy had three undeniable things differentiating them from personal computers. Worksta-

tem, Solaris 2.1, to the Intel 486. NeXT Computer went one step further this year and left the workstation hardware industry altogether, becoming a software-only company d ependent entirely on it s port o f t h e NextStep operating system to the 486. Then there is Pentium, the 486's successor. Pentium many RISC techniques in its architecture, while maintaining compatibility with the 486's complex instruction set. The Pentium processor, combined with a

SCSI-2 disks, tapes, and CD-ROMs can often be swapped between different workstations. Some workstations now accept standard memory modules (SIMMS), and several vendors have promised to support Intel's PCI bus. Until these standards were adopted, workstation users often had to pay two to

CAD

t~-

standards by the workstation industry is too

DOS and Windows. First to confuse this harmony is the

computer market. What is clear is that the.

F a x: 537-1354

fast local or PCI bus, offers performance better than many RISC-based workstations. Consider also the soon-to-be released multiprocessor Pentium PCs, and suddenly performance is no longer useful in differentiating PCs from workstations. The Pentium processor also raises the price of PCs to new heights; the Pentium is

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RISC processors such as the DEC Alpha or the IBM/Motorola PowerPC. To promote a common PC to workstation performance, you are looking at a Pentium with a PCI bus, video accelerator, fast SCSI-2 hard disk,

CcNacomb Abyss fabulous 3D anlmatlan in ' a fantasy world of wizards. Malar Shyker — action-packed, shoot-em-up spaceship arcade game. Mottster Iaah -help Johnny Dash save his dog . from the evil undenr/arid. Solar Winds-combines fast-action arcade excitement with strategy as you explore the galaxy an dangerous missions. HomePlatl -quick and easy way to draw and print house plans. Etwislon Publhher -full-featured desktop publisher with a graphical Interface. Icon Manager — create. edit. extn2ct. organize, and install hans. Ojlndows) Dare to Dream -incredible graphical adventure game (Windows) Iite Earlh Centred Universe -astronomy program simulates Earth's sky. (Windows) TimeIi Chctas -Personal Information Manager, similar to Lotus Organizer. (Windows) 'Sharerare programsrequireseparatepaymentto authors if founduseful.

32MB of RAM, and a $7,000-plus price tag. At the same time, workstation. vendors have

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Condusion So where do all these changes leave us, the ' confused users? For the time being, right where we started. Windows NT is still an

unproven product, and most Management Information System (MIS) managers quietly agree that it will be some time before they suggest NT to their clients for businesscriti-

cal applications. The current low price, power, and stabili-

for its unique features, NT now becomes a

viable alternate.

price of high-performance computing drop-

The workstation .industry has also changed the rules. Windows NT is already available on RISC-based workstations such as the DEC Alpha, and will be available soon on several others, giving Win32 (32-bit Win-

ping at rates amazing even for the the computer industry, and with the long-awaited arrival of good operating systems on the desktop, business and personal computing will see a dramatic change for the better in the immediate years ahead.•

range of hardware for which to offer their software, Workstation vendors are also offering DOS emulators such as SoftPC in record

which will allow users to run NT applications on Sun hardware without any help from Microsoft. Sun also plans to licence its WABI technology to other Unix vendors.

on the RISC market. NT will also need some time to build a base of Win32 applications before it will be differentiated from Windows 3.1. Whatever the outcome, it is certain that the real winner will be the user. With the

dows NT) application developers a wide

• • •t

R OtSB S

e

t••

(Windows Application Binary Interface),

even POSIX-compliant operating system.

tion developers have chosen Unix in the past

mance better that that on a PC. Finally, Sun is currently testing a Win32 interface for its workstations called WABI

ty of Unix workstations make them still the best choice for a departmental server. It will

er applications. It is clear that where applica-

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High-perforanance 0$ Back when DOS was king, before Windows 3.0, before System 7 on the Mac, NeXT promised — and delivered — an industrialstrength Unix workstation clothed in the silkiest o f u s e r i n t e r faces. NEXTSTEP was always good, but, as Microsoft, Apple, SCO and other system software vendors marched toward the nineties,

the way "black hardware" NeXTstations (and Macintoshes) do. Also, because PCs do not include the DSP chip that was an integral feature in all NeXT hardware (and again, recent Madntoshesdo I sense a pattern here?), there is no DSP support in NEXTSTEP/Intel, although the

lowly SoundBlaster is supported. Other features that were present in last year's NEXTSTEP 3.0 release for "black hardware" are missing in NEXTSTEP 3.1 for Intel Processors, too. Gone is support for the Phone Kit and ISDN. Gone too is AppleTalk — that's being handled by a third party.

NeXT kept one step ahead, lead-

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0 249.00 0 2$9.00

Imel 14.4 FaxlMeaemBrt Teleba Ttaablaau 19.2 Modemat.I TetabaTraaalatar 192 tteaem Eal. I ga g.go ugttSaenatet 14.4 MadamInl 0 649.00 USR Sponater 14. • MadamEat.

0raa.oo 0 819.00 0 209.00

0 24a.oo 0 23a.og

Mauox ttgn USma2MBtuESA> 0Sa g.N USAsaonatar1a•Faar iaoaem tat Matmx MGA tmareauaa 3MB IISANESIIS1255.00 USR Saenata rtoIFtaN oaem Eat. Taaaa inatmmanta4$SLO25 aiaa Texas tnaaumeata 486DX125 4/120 Teaaa Inaaumtata 486gtg25 atstta Teaaataaaumaats egsDX2I504/I 20 Zenith 2625 38ISIJ25 2ett Zenith 2-gaua86SLQ33 2HI Zenith 2star 4860LCrLt a/I 70 Zenith 2-SauatSSLCI31 4200 Colour

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As operating systems go, NEXTSTEP is a heavy hitter (it outperformed most, if not all, of its competition in our May '93 OS sur-

vey.) As such, it carries some pretty hefty hardware requirements. The test machine-

a 66MHz Dell 486 — was equipped with 40MB of RAM (a minimum of 16MB is required). The NeXT OS and support files occupied a whopping 120MB of our test sys-

hardware model, the NeXTstation Turbo.

8

I

I

I

And, in what seems a bizarre twist, it's no longer possible to run DOS or Windows programs under NEXTSTEP — at least until version 3.2. More on this later. Because NeXT has long touted its sys-

tem's Display PostScript features, we were surprised that 3.1 only supports PostScript printers — especially since release 3.0 on black hardware supported Epson and IBM dot-matrix printers. Also, it is unfortunate that the only way to run DOS or Windows programs at the moment is to partition the system's hard drive and install DOS on the other partition. Version 3.2 is expected to address this and other shortcomings of the initial Intel release.

Best of all, a comparably configured Dell machine costs over a thousand dollars less than the NeXT hardware did. It's no wonder

The Comfort Zone

the company pulled out of the hardware game.

tem. It comes with the necessary IPX software to connect to a NetWare LAN and mount remote drives, use network printers

PC Coanpromlses

a

8•

elegant, it's a joy to use.

tem's 320 MB hard drive. Display and file-system performance was substantially better than the fastest black

plcII ale ueacl Io owl's llllleul MmeAaIHaa ae l$5awAM Ie calli

Happily, it survived the transition. It's still wonderful. This is an operating system so

Translating NEXTSTEP to run on "industry standard" hardware necessitated a few compromises. Due to the limitations of its PC floppy drive, inserting a disk into the drive does not automatically mount the volume

NEXTSTEP, with its Mach underpinnings, is

very much a network-aware operating sys-

(including AppleTalk printers connected via Novell) and share files. With a third-party product called IPT, a NEXTSTEP PC can also act as an AppleShare server, print server and mail services server.


PLUSTEK PAGE SCANNERS

8

For people who scan50or more documents at one time, there are few options. a&ay the only scanners with that

capacityare professionalorflatbed scanners with hefty price-tags. But even these usually only hold 5 to 10 pages. The solution? It's simple

600 dpi Gray 600 dpi 24 bit Color 600 dpi ADF Gray 300 dpi 24 bit Color

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Special price available with Plustek scanner purchase PRjNTERS HP 5QQ HP 550C HP IIIP HP4M Canon BJC800

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5.InputDevice forfax card

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9. Support Word-processing, Image Editing, DTP sofbvares. 10.Support Systems: DOS, Windows, OS/2.. 11.Canadian warranty and technical support Gray color 50 sheets A9F Gray Colnpate St Save Logitech $299(300dpi) $ 5 9 9{400dpi) N/A Phstek $525(600dpi) $ 7 2 9(600dpi) $ 8 69(600 dpi) HP $999(300dpi)ee $ 1659(400dpi) $1329(300dpi)ee esCan only scan%.5" X I I" letter size page, ADF Capacity only 25 sheets for Hp

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Fiick. 0(S@, 80co=%%%%iR N>ll 00Y(N 88rlrRKRQ A)I, A@00r(I( Irtlf) . 13II Q~ + 099( WY31 W YG), Nr+@P(...,... 99 I I

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HandHeld

Sheetfed

Flatbed

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r(rgWI 1900W S 3.1.. 300.. Jtt list sg)IIt. 99 g=ttt. (410)409-0000

@In%It)1


42

N O VEMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION At no time during our lengthy test drive ty/refractivity, atmospheric conditions, and did I have to leave the comfort zone of more. RIB flies can be created with a variety NeXT's graphical user interface, although of programs on PCs, Macs, and other platUnix hackers may enjoy the fact that there's forms. a full Mach kernel lurking under the stairs. NeXT's RenderMan Viewer allows Ren-

I f'AgK '7C Sg&NZ SPgg&fdS

eiauiiriis

aspects of Unix. For example, although NeXTmail makes it easy to send and read

USAobolcs 14,400

VESALocalBusSystems

Inteinal $239 External $289

466 DX-33$1699 • 466OX-60$1699 486 QX2-66$1999

Fax/Modems

All ~

Hard Orlves Maxtor 245MB $299.00 Maxtor 345MB $399.00 Quantum 245M8 $309.00

de r Man Interface Bytestream "RIB" files to be

users, the setting up of a dial-up service

the hassle, NeXT users should take advan- t o perform "distributed rendering." Basically,

• 4MQ Fast 70ns ~ • 170MB Fixed Drive • 12MB 8. 1 A4MB ReppyOrtvee • 1MB VESA Local BUS Video Card - VESA Local BUS IDE Coiitroller • 14' Nendnterlaoad SVOA .28dp Monitor • Mini-Tower Case w/200N CGA lPower Supply • 101 Enhanced Keyboard • 2 Serial, 1 Parallel, 1 Garne Pert s Button Mouse »Weir -1 . g 6 . leb e ur I

tage of the servicesof a local NeXT user this means that a number of machines will group. work together, combining their processing In Vancouver, VNUS (Vancouver NeXT power to complete CPU-intensive tasks by User Society) offers UUCP (" Unix-to-Unix "sharing the load." Multiple CPU support has Copy" ) service to VNUS members, through a b een touted as a feature of Mach since the dial-up service called WIMSEY. VNUS will d e but of the original NeXT cube in 1988, but help users get UUCP set up and running. i t s eems that, with the release of 3,2 just Membership in VNUS is $55/year. around the corner, it is finally about to According to VNUS' Bob Bajwa, $10 per e m erge from the vapor. RenderMan should month will get VNUS members access to p r ovide a valuable "real world" application of Internet E-mail. For other users, WIMSEY t h is powerful "distributed object" capability.

/

ts COMPUTERS- PRINTERS - SERVICE -SUPPORT -SOFTWARE - NElWORKS - SOLUTIONS - AS

Ci%N©ll 4ga. +®SJC Carom LI~eeuSBI eall kaama -60 PCL5

COLQUII BUBBLE JB PRINIBI

Plain paper 300 dpi 100 sheet feeder 3 emulations Fast printing

Energy eIelent Supe~ilne toner

g+NOTE Caaoa JEf 486

48SSLC-25 VGA MonoDisplay 4mb Rem

eSne Hardalak

Oos 6.0 Windows 3.1 2 PCMCIA Slots Built in Trackball

uecoiiaiaNiiiii

Hewlett Packard

Laserjet II

$17$.

costs $20 per month, plus a fee per kilobyte for downloads. It is one of several regional Compelling Software and nationalservicesproviding accessto the An often-touted feature of NKXTSTKP is its Internet. For details, see the article "Enter inter-application conununication. Although the InterNet' in the Sept '93 issue ofThe th e term is in danger of falling into meanComputerPaper. inglessness, NEXTSTEP is "object oriented" Once on the "net," NeXT users will dis- to the extreme. NeXT objects talk to other cover some of the appeal of Unix, as so- apps, other objects and, if you believe in called daemons work in the background to

$159.

II $899.

s ays, by the end of the year you will be able

account. is still appallingly complex. To ease to set up a network of NEXTSTEPcomputers

Com e With:

•g• •

ti m e. Of course, the real-time view doesn' t d i splay all the, detail that RenderMan's "pro-

"multimedia mail," complete with sound cedural shaders" are capable of rendering, and/or image enclosures from other NeXT but it's a great feature. Better still, Bajwa

• 12eKB Caohe

386SX-40 2lilB RAN $ 2 49.00 3860X-40 4NB RAN $ 4 29.00 486DLC"40 4MB RAN $549.00 4860X-33 4lilB RANI $74&.OD r• •

Unfortunately, not even NKXTSTEP can

completely simplify some of the less savory rotated and viewed from any angle in real

n

• Ulll IN IQIILE i|T PRIITIR i

If you' ve seen the Tin Toy or Knick Knack 3-

NeXTmail, t h e y

a ssert, p r ovides

D computer animations from Pixar (most unequaled ease of access to Internet E-mail

$S69S.

recently„ they circulated Canadian movie

f a cilities.

theaters in an Asuna promotion), you may Be c ause NEXTSTEP provides an unusualhave noticed an "extra special thank-you" to ly rich array of standard services, such as Steve Jobs in the credits of these fllms. That's Digital Webster [dictionary], spelling check-

ACCESS Business Centre ...your access roogca technology

(416) 830 8497

u n r eleased products, distributed objects.

send and deaver mail and Mes automatically Few people will argue with the assertion as you work. One, called SendMail, delivers that NKXTSTEP is a great operating system. E-mail. After you haveproperly configured Most will even go so far as to admit that the your system, UUCP wakes up at a pre-deter- NEXTSTEP GUI is the best, bar none. But a mined time, logs in to the net and delivers great operating system is not enough for the Usenet news, which you may then read at majority of users. They buy computers to run your leisure with a program called News- applications and this, unfortunately, is Grazer. This free utility, Bajwa notes, was where NeXT is a little shaky. written by an ex-NeXT employee. NeXT buffs will point to several key applications that highlight the operating sysThls looks like a Job for RencferlNan ter n's strengths.

I

esswa a ue 3

OOV80100- NBNQld -SWO TIBAON - AMOS -408080IN -)Hl080lÃl M38/NHN HJINBZ

because NeXT founder Jobs was (and still is, I e r , thesaurus, etc., word processors and other

believe) a major flnancier of Pixar. Not coin- NKXTSTEP applications tend to be richer cidentally, NKXTSTEP includes built-in sup-

t h an their DOS or Windows cousins.

port for Pixar's 3-D graphics language, Ren-

You can, for example, fax pages directly from any application and the fax is imaged What, you ask, is RenderMan'/ Similar to courtesy of NeXT's Display PostScript imagthe way PostScript is a 2-D "page descrip- ing system. derMan.

I

e

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Sporal ]

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I I 3868X System', 1MB RAIN

tion" language, RenderMan's "RIB" files can Disp l ay PostScript is of particular aid to describe 3-D objects and space with uncanny N e X T graphics apps. Graphic artists have reahsm, including surface textures, reflectivi- s e v eral compelling NEXTSTEP apps to

• 12 ii 1.44 FloppyDrive • SVGA ColourMonitor • 32 Bit V. LVideoGird 1M8 • 32 8itLV.Canlriller Card

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J

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 43 choose from, including Adobe Illustrator and a new program from Altsys, the developers of FreeHand. Altsys' Virtuoso can best be

recently a special Evaluation Kit containing

US$299. However, be forewarned that the

both the user and developer versions of NEXTSTEP 3.1 for Intel processors for

Evaluation Kit is not upgradeable to subsequent releases (e.g., the f 3.2

described as FreeHand for t h e N e XT, although it surpasses the current Aldus releases for the Mac and Windows in several

US$299. Unfortunately, this special offer expired at the end of September, although any distributors, retailers or value-added resellers that have stock purchased at the

release). For that, NeXT says, you must fork

special price may still be able to offer this bargain.

ing. Although the company now depends

ways. After Adobe's rather lackluster support of its NeXT products, the company signed a letter of agreement allowing RightBrain Software to develop and market its NeXT products Illustrator and TouchType. Other com-

panies, too, have stepped back from early commitments to the platform. Users of the NeXT release of Lotus Improv 1.0, for example, have to "upgrade" to Windows in order to get Improv 2.0.

The Evaluation Kit consists of the user

and developer releases on CD-ROM, a user's guide, "The NEXTSTEP Advantage Kit" promotional booklet, diskette and video, a programming guide and a half-price coupon for technical documentaion. This "tryout" version is a bargain at the special price of

386DXQO

Software Shortcomings Currently, the only way to run DOS and/or Windows on a NEXTSTEP-equipped PC is to install one or both in a separate hard disk partition. This, according to NeXT, is a tem-

porary problem only. NeXT software engineers are said to be currently preparing a release of the software that will work in concert with a special "Intel version" of the SoftPC software emulator by Insignia Solutions. This version, currently in beta under the name of "SoftWindows," will be bundled in a demo version with the 3.2 release. Accord-

ing to a NeXT spokesman, it offers about 8096 of native 486 performance. NEXTSTEP 3.2 is expected to be released in November '93. Insignia Solutions' SoftPC DOS emulation software doesn't currently run under NEXTSTEP but, according to Bajwa, version 3.2 will support it i n n a t iv e mode, as opposed to releases on the original NeXT

machines (fondly referred to as "black hardware" by NeXT buffs), which have typically needed to emulate an Intel chip on other CPUs. NEXTSTEP supports DOS partitions from NeXT's Unix file system. It reads DOS disks and, interestingly, can also read Macintosh HD disks directly. One very interesting program we saw running under NEXTSTEP was called Executor. It is a software program which runs Macintosh applicktions on an Intel-based PC (a version for "black hardware" is also avail-

able). Although it does not run all Mac applications (PageMaker and HyperCard are two major apps on the "not yet" list), it does support quite a few, including Microsoft Word, Excel, Quicken, and other important "prod uctivity" p r o grams. Combined w i t h NEXTSTEP's innate ability to read Macintosh HD disks, it provides another solution to the

current — and hopefully temporary — paucity of native NEXTSTEP/Intel applications. The future NeXT says it already has commitments for 25,000 units of NEXTSTEP for Intel Processors. It also has deals with several hardware manufacturers to bundle the operating system with PCs and even Hewlett-Packard's Apollo workstations. Some of the PC vendors include Digital Equipment Corporation

(DEC), Compaq, Epson, and NCR. NEXTSTEP is currently being ported to HP's PA/RISC architecture, and is expected to be released on that platform next year.

w.128KB cache

orthcom ing

over the big bucks: US$1,995 and US$795 for the developer and user editions respectively. I think NeXT should reconsider its pricsolely on tliis one product for all its income

and, as such, shouldn't be expected to price its software like a loss leader the way IBM has with OS/2, the inescapable conclusion remains: if people don't buy NEXTSTEP, the company's not going to last. A recent estimate suggested that the company needs to sell 40,000 units per year to be profitable.

T.I. 486DLC-33 w.64KB cache

NeXT as an environment that speeds development of custom software applications.

NeXT claims custom applications can be developed five to ten times faster than on

other operating system platforms. To encourage firms to consider the development of client/server applications using NEXTSTEP, the company offered until

copies, and urged NeXT users to "spread the gospel" to their PC-using brethren. And so theyshould. There are plenty of PC users out there, dissatisfied with the limitations of D OS, Wi ndows, Unix, etc. Chances are, PC users who try NEXTSTEP will love it. NeXT should put as few obstacles as possible in the way of that fact. At this point, NeXT needs all the users it can get. • Thanks to Bob Bajwa of 1st Step Consulting for assistance with this article.

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r am m i m , R e p a i r s Lotus 1-2C Win full version.............312 CadKey Light.....................;...............185 Harvard Graphics upgrade..............109

AdaPtec 1840 NCA Bus SCSL.........40S SONY 31A internal..... Always ae00 SCSI 16bit...............,....2ae MITSUMI internal....... Future Domain SCSI 16bit................190

Ctuattro pro Vera.0 Win upgrade......ae MONITORS TTX SVGA0.28..................................aaa Word Perfect 5.2 Win upgrade...........55 TTX SVGA n.l. O.SL..........................365 CA Simply Accounting Van.........,....1ae cache...............,................................1085 212MB (13ms/64KB cache)...............286 TTX SYGA n.i.0.28 f 6".....................515 CA dasse Fast %An...........................a80 .................................225 486DX266, 266KS cache, L.BUS.....845 266NIS (13rns/64KB cache)...............325 DC415N SVOA Data Train 0.28.......a25 CA imageWln... 486DX40, 256KB cache, L.SUS.......T75 340IHB (13ms/128KB cache).............3SS DC%21 SVGA DataTrain 0.28.........325 CA present win.................................180 CA Superproject Win........................599 488DX240, 256KB cache, L.BUS.....745 CA Textor Wln......................................78 486DX43, 25SKB cache, LBUS.......550 QUANTUM LASER PRINTERS FOR CD SELECTION .. ..................CAI.L 486DLC240 ISNI 64KB cache...........545 52INB (f 2ms/64KS cache).................165 HEWLETT PACKARD 486DLCaa Texas Inst 84KS cache.190 127INS (amsl32KS cache).................269 FAX 8 MODEM aaaDX40, 12SKScache.....................18$ 170MB (ams/32KBcache).................275 HP 4L............................................,....879 38asxa3..............................................128 270lNB(Smsl256KB cache)...............% 5 HP IIIP+.............................................11aa ZOLTRIX SNO FAX SIR a 2 4txt Cooling fan for 486.............................25 425MB (Sms/25$KS cache)...............479 HP 4...................;..............................1 Taa MODEM lnternaL.................................BS 525IHS(smsl256KS cache)...............TSO RAVEN............................................CALL ZOLTRIX 14.4 FAX $IR a 14.4 v.328IS 520MB SCSI(SMSI256KB cache),.. .890 MOOEM internal................................175 VIDEO CARDS DOT IjjiATRIX MAXTOR ZOLTRIX 14.4 FAX SIR a 14.4v.a28IS ATI 130MB (14ms/64KB cache)...............260 PANASONIC NIODEM externaL.............................225 ATI XL 24bit COLOR 1IHB+mouse...14$ 213MB {14msie4KB cache................288 PRACTICAL PERIPHERALS 14.4 FAX KX-Pf 123 24pin...............................21 5 ATI ULTRA 1MB+mouse...................235 245MB (14ms/64KB cache)...............335 SIR a MODEM external......................65 KX-P2023 24Pin.................................265 ATI ULTRA PLUS 2NS OEM.............285 a4SMB (14ms/64KB cache)...............430 KX-P2123 24pln /color option..........275 WANG 14.4 FAX SIR a 14.4 V.a2BIS ATI ULTWL PRO 2MS OEM... ...........3$9 MODEM internal................................1$5 ATI ULTRAVESA Laus 2M8 OEIN...360 US ROSOTICS 14A F/Nl internal......235 TAPE BACKUPS EpsoN LQ670 24Pin......................................a45 US ROBOTICS 14.4 FIIN external.....275 ATI ULTRAPRO EISA 2NIS oENI......469 COLORADO CIRRUS LOGIC FUJITSU 2OOM POCKET 8600 FAXSIR a 2400 CIRRIUS LOGIC 1MS VESA LBus....146 Conner 250MS internal...................445 DL1160 color 24pin....„.....................375 MODEM..............................................125 TRIDENT1Me VESA Laus...............125 Conner 260MB external (parallel)....455 CITIZEN INTEL SatisFAXtion 400 internal.....540 Colorado 250MS internal..................245 GSX-230 24pin paper cutter, color 250MS Trakker (parallel) HD CONTROLLERS Colorado AUDIO CARDS ...........................................................A66 option.................................................32S RAVEN............................................CALL NIASTER BOOINER {Sound Blaster 2.0 VESA t.ocsl Bus...................................ea ADAPTEC 522A 1 SCSI HDD/FDD....110 compatible) w.MIDI Software.............85 CD ROMS INK JET t.OQITECH Soundman 16.................210 AOAPTEC f542CF SCSI HDDIFOO..295 NEC CD ExPREss+1 0 cos ext........428 HEWLETT PACKARD ADAPTEC1742Aa2bit EISA SCSI....490 Sound Galaxy NX Pro II 16...............235 TEXEL 270ms BARE..........................635 HP DESK JET 500..............................39S Sound Slaster Pro.............................fas 486Dkt48 EISA+ ISA+ L.BUS, 25SKS HARD DRIVES cache................................................10S6 486DX246 EISA + ISA+ LBUS, 256K8 WESTERN DIGITAL

HP DESK JET SOOC.................,....,....525 Sound Blaster ASP 18.......................255 HP OESK JET 550C...........................775

HP DESK JETfmtOC.......................1775

Eval Brew The NEXTSTEP operating system is billed by

486DX-33 Intel w.256KB cache

Steve Jobs, in a moment of uncharacteristic conservatism, stated at NeXTWORLD Expo that it will take two years to sell that many

SOFTWARE

BÃl ENSV REAUMBI

Dos 6.0 upgrade.............

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER N OVEMBER '93 4 5

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Product Fo ntographer v.4.0 for Macintosh Pnblleben Altsys Corporation,269 W. RennerParkway, Richardson, TX?5080 Ph: (214)680-2060 Lbtl Prise: C$599, street priceC$359;US$269direct form Allsys SrstnmretlnliementhMac: II or newer;3megsof availableRAMmemory; ffoaling-point math chip recommended.According to the company, aPCversion will be available in 1994, It will require a 386or newerrunning Windows3.0 orhigher, 3MBavailable RAM.

point math chip is present, a version of the program is installed that takes advantage of the chip. Is this another case of software competition leading to a bloated program suffering from "feature-itis?" — that depends on what

Altsys Corporation's Fontographerhas for some time been the most popular and accessible tool available for

4.0 is a total rewrite of Fontographer, retain-

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afrany Options, Help In Abundance The range of options is truly comprehensive,

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an d would be daunting were it not for AItsys' • IDECTRL ISA/VESA LB......,...,.......$22/49

your needs are.Whateveryou may seekto do with fonts, chances are you will be able to do it with Fontographer 4.0. For commercial

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ing only the experience gained from previous versions — the program has acompletely new look once onegoesbeyond the familiar initial window displaying all the characters of a font.

considerable effort to make the complexities

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Whatever one has drawn or imported can be

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requires nearly 3.3 megabytes of hard disk e ars>ii::states'i"::::t ":::':.e",::lffla::::::ret': seTs@:::etgtrrss.'"''.:ifntfge<®'::. 78 i02

Multiple Master or TrueType font, and platforms supported include Macintosh, PC, NeXT and Sun. Any of these fonts can be

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lowed by a Reference space; the procedure is quick and painless utilizing the Diskpoubler Installer from 5th Generation Systems to install everything but three selfextracting files: a clever and infor-

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Section and six app end ices. Num e r o u s "tips" are strategically placed along the way, to assist the reader. The manual's index is

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46

N O VEMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

The Big Skinny Lowdown on

What iscompression? As a computer user you may have come to the point where you realize you need more

room on your hard drive or you need to speed up the way you work across networks

type of compression can occur at either the

driver or fiIe leveL Driver-level compression Driver-level compression makes your operat-

or phone lines. How do you remedy the situation? Well, short of a major investment in additional hard drives and CPU accelerators,

ing system think your hard drive is twice as

big as it is because it compressesevery Ale on your system. Your computer must decompress and recompress each file as it is used. When you create a file, it is compressed before it is written to disk. As such, all file

compression software is the answer. With a compression utility you can inaximize your hard disk space as well as create smaller files to speed file transfer time.

How does compression work? Just as you don't have to be a computer engineer to

need more disk space or faster file transfer, you don't need to be an engineer to understand and use compression software.

In a nutshell, compression makes your Ales smaller. It works by looking at files and replacing repetitive chunks of information with simple codes, thereby reducing the size of files while retaining their original integrity. Let's use the following sentence as an example: That's one small step for man, one giant

leap for mankind. If we replace words or parts of words repeated in the sentence with a token, let' s

saving and opening operations are likely to be slightly slower than they are on an B Y 6 R A E INE B E N N E T T uncompressed drive, especially on slower computers. (Many users report that the slowredundancy can be compressed more than TIFF (tagged image file format) files.Admitone that does not. If every character of a file t e d l y, it all gets to be a bit of an alphabet down is most noticeable when saving.) DR-DOS 6.0 (which uses compression technology from SuperStor version 1.0), MSrence), you would not achieve any compres- most common names you are likely to hear. sion at all — in fact, the "compressed" file Oth er t e chnologies are best suited for DOS 6.0's DoubleSpace option (reportedly based on the DoubleDisk product from Vertiwould be larger! Practically speaking, this co m p ressing the differences between frames, means that executable Ales will usually not a n dare most appropriate for use in anima- soft, which was at best a mediocre percompress as much as text files, images or t i o ns, video games, video playback, etc. former), Golden Triangle's Times Two for the sounds. "Dithered" black and white bitmaps B r uce Artwick's Flight Simulator (licensed to Mac, and all Stacker products for DOS, OS/2 and compact formats like fax files don't Su b l ogic and Microsoft) was one of the earli- and Mac perform driver-level compression. Because of the extra overhead involved, compress much at all. est examples of this so-called "delta compresthe use of virtual memory (using a "swap There are a variety of different compres- s i o n." file" on your hard disk as a substitute for sion algorithms. Some are optimized for text, RAM) is not advisable on a compressed drive. while others are best suited for compressing Tr a nsparent compression was unique (admittedly, a very rare occur-

s o u p after a while, but these are some of the

say "¹" for "one" and "$" for "for man", the graphics images. Many compression proTr a nsparent compression works to compress sentence becomes: grams are based on compression algorithms f i les transparently, which means that a comThat's ¹ small step $, ¹ giant leap $kind. developed by researchers named Lempel and pressed file has-no outward appearance of Because the tokens ¹ and $ take up less Zif. So-called "Huffman coding" improved be i n g compressed. The only factor that

space than the words they replace, the resulting sentence is smaller. In very much the same way, compression algorithms work on the entire contents of a file to make a file that is smaller and that takes up less disk

compression ratios for text (hence "LZH"),

while a man named Welch was responsible for the "W" in LZW's graphics optimizations, such as those found in compressed

All of the driver-level products allow an area of your drive (typically, a "phantom parti-

tion") to remain uncompressed to address this problem. Most users agree that Stacker is the best ch a nges is that the file takes up less storage of the driver-level compressors. Stacker is space on your hard disk. Transparently comavailable for DOS and Windows, OS/2 and softp r essed files depend on w a r e to be decompressed and opened. This DOS, and the Macintosh. We tested all of

comp ression

these packages and found them to perform

well, We were disappointed that Stacker for OS/2 and DOS only supports DOS'"FAT" (file allocation table)-format partitions. We have gotten rather used to the long (up to 256 characters) filenames available with OS/2's HPFS high performance file system. Nevertheless, we had 16 MB of disk space available on our 300 MB hard disk before Stacker and 150 MB afterward — with no perceivable slowdown, As a matter of fact, on a fast computer, compressed files may copy to or from standard disks even faster than uncompressed data, because there is less information being transferred. For exam-'

space. Types of compression There are basically two types of compression: transparent and archiving. The latter category has several sub-genres, including "lossy"

methods such as JPEG and fractal compression — both are methods exclusively used to compress images. We will not discuss lossy compression here, as it has been covered in several previous articles — most extensively in the article entitled PC Image Processing with Stylein our Jan. '92 issue). All of the methods used for general-pur-

: IjojI

pose compression are termed "lossless,"

ple, copying 8.5 MB of OS/2 2.1 data from

meaning that they do not throw any data

one disk to another on a 33 MHz 486 with a 14;25 ms hard drive and 16 MB of RAM produced these results:

away during the compression process. Well, hopefully, anyway. As such, they are appropriate for all types of data.

Continued on page 50

A file that contains a large amount of

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2406. 24PIN Hush, CLR Comp...................... 8279.00 486DX60,128K W CPU....,... $669.00 2465, 24PIN, WIDE ............... S439.00 486DXII66,128k W CPU.....,. S739.00 Fer VESA I..B odd ................ S 30.00 LP510 Lazer Sppm HRIP Comp .................,... $789.00 For PS socket add,...,..„....: 8 36.00 Laser, Sppm, For 256K cache add .....,.... $20.QO LP6M. HP III Comp ..................... 8999.00 6'printer cable .................... 8 S.OG 25' printer cable ........,......... S 19.00 Mammals ................,........... 8 39.00 HP Ptlnters HPSGO ............. 8379.00 HPSGDc........... 8529.00 World Atlas ....................,..... 8 39.00 HPSSOc........... S779.00 Sherlock Holmes ................. 8 44.00 HP 4L .......,...,.. $869.00 SelectWare,...,.................... S 24,00 HP 4 .............. $1769.00 CD Lens Cleaner ......,......... 8 24.00 Trident 266K ......................... 37.00 Encyclopedia 5,0................ 8 42.00 Canon Printers Trident 512K ......................... 8 49.00 Desert Stotm ........................ S 39.00 88 200....................,.......,..... $409.OQ Trident lmb 8900CL ..........., 8 72.00 KIng Quest 5........................ 8 39.00 88 300 ..................,............... 8459.00 ATI XL 24bit ......................... $124.00 MSWotks for WIndows ........ S 94.tm 88 330.................,................ 8529.00 ATI XL24bit St mice ............ $149.QO USA wars (Korea, Vietnam) 8 49.00 88 10E w/ Feeder,.............. S334.00 ATI Gr Vitro+ 2MB .............. 8239.00 • • s : O' ' I I g s ATI GR Ultra Pro 2MB .......... 8449.00 ATI GrUltra Pro2MBVESA L,B .... 8419.00 C.LVESA LB1M8 1bmCLR........ 8124.00 BTC 101 ....................................... S2I.IXI Deskiop Case w/230W PS ........ $64.00 KeyTronic SQQ............................. 834.GD C.L VESA 2MB ibm CLR ..... 8169.00 Mini Tower w/23{MI PS .............. $64.00 Honeywell 101 ....,...................... 862.GD Compact Med,TGw/200WPS.......... $70.00 Medium Towerw/230WPS......... 899,00 s• I F. Tower w/26QW PS.........., 8129,00 PS/2 to PC KB adapter .......... 89.25 FIT 28ON ..........................;... 8139.00 n us m e a PS2 Mouse adapter ............... 89.25 Genius Jovstick.„............,.......... 822.99 Keyboard ext. coble .....;....... 87.25 P29 Auto Ane Joyslick .............. $18.99 VGA color exf. cable ............ 87.25 Mouse Pen Pro .......................... $95.% Null modem cable 9%-26F .. $14.50 IDE Super IO ............................... SMOG Logilech 1st Mouse ................... 852.GD GD Serial cable 6' M/M ....,....,..... S7.60 2 Game Port .........,..........,......... $18.DG LogifechMouse Man ................$76. GO Serial cable 6' M/F ...,............. S7.60 AT 102$, 1P, 1Game .....,.......... $19.GD LogitechTrackman ...................$9G. Y power splifter ...................... S8.00 IDE Super 10/VESA1B................ 86O.GO Logitech Trackman Portable . $109.txi SCSI HD cable ..................... 819.00 Adopfec 1622/SCSI................. 8109.QD MicroSoft 28 ............................... 839.GO Logitech Dexxa ......................... S26.GD IDE HD cable ......................... 88,00 Adoptee 1642C ....................... $259.II Sharp Silver w/pad .................... S26.QD IDE FDcable ..........................SS.QO Adoptee 1642c Kit .................. $319.X

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S O F T i.i Notional Distributor ot computer Tschnologiss

Head Office 6981 Millcreek Drive, Unit 10-11, Mississauga, Ontario LSN 6B8 Tel (416) 819-9555 Fax (416) 819-9375

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prices subject to change without notice.trIreresenre lhe right to limit quantities. Not responsible tor ttlpographiml errors in adrrertising.


48

NO V EMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

Fontographer 4.0

aeter, which has been improved to provide a highly sophisticated drawing environment reminiscent of a combination of the best of

of the program, and editing

FreeHand, IHustrator and Canvas. The Preferences selection has four sub-menus that allow the user to select the number of

menting with a few of the variations available in the Preferences section, I was

"Undos" (up to 101), how far a cursor key

able to modify the drawing

will nudge a control point, size of a grid, manner of snap-to-grid behavior, what gets selected when a path is clicked on, how contioI points will be displayed and with what on-screen labels and co-ordinates, and the fit and placement of windows and dialog

features to best suit my drawing style and hence get the most satisfying results. A full array of 18 drawing tools is provided in a palette, and a "Layers" palette is available to switch between the Out-

Continuedfrom page 45 that relate to theart of type design. For those who hate reading manu»s there is a respectable implementation of Bal-

loon Help for System 7 users, as well as numerous "hints" and Help entries embed-

ded in the program's many dialog boxes. An awkward 21"-long three-fold double-sided Ouick Reference Card contains concise illustrated summaries of the program's main features and the many keyboard shortcuts. Systern 7 users will also find that they can

"drag and drop" any PostScript or TrueType

Actual manipulation of the control font on the program's icon or alias and the p o i n ts is smoother than in previous versions Program launches and J „, nl r@( (ee,g' r(dade (,@etc. yet(ud '((((ede,s" ((late l s (m reads in the font. If all e this isn't enough, Alt.let ese .testa te s

sys offers free, unlimited tech n ical support (user pays for the eall) Any time I have called

I usually reach a live body right away and

D 0 .(-(e,

r r

have received friendly

X j

it

el ('

(se'ee,ses.e

I

z7

and k n o wledgeable

help.

gram is the drawing window for each char-

Center transformationsaround:

Keyline modes. By experi-

Center of selection Firet traneformation:

80

Then:

Qa itorizontal Q llertical

Sketu

Horizontal -12

Then: also supports the use of presRotate sure-sensitive tablets and calligraphic tools. If you'd rather draw your characters the old-fashioned way and scan the images in for tracing, the auto-tracing feature is subtle and powerful, on par with stand-alone tracing programs — so good in fact that only minimal editing of the resulting trace is needed.

~dsj

carefully and manually in making these types of fonts — they are so difficult to make that currently even Adobe has only three Multiple Master font o f f erings! Nonetheless I believe this is the future of computer typefaces, and Fontographer is on the leading edge in this endeavor.

The Challenge If there is a drawback to Fontographer 4.0, it isn't with the program per se, rather that the creation of professional typefaces from scratch really requires three to six years of intensive study and training for a designer to reach the required skill level. Less experienced users will still find the program helpful for modifying existing fonts (even blending or "morphing" between two different fonts to produce a completely new font, but this is a wildly unpredictable process). Fontographer makes it easy to embed graphics, logos and signatures in a font format that can then be conveniently accessed via

The Multiple Master Revolution

• lot Line IIppert • Information Lihrlmy • Iyec|all

High performance, low cost, DOS based, FAX ON DEMAND and Voice Mail system, featuring fully interactive voice prompts,

Fax Broadcasting and many more features.

For mere information eall I-$11-I8$4II5

FAXCRSSORIE8 e • e • • e • • • • ee e e e • ee • • THE "FAXSOLUTIONS COMPANY"

871 Victoria St N., Kitchener, Ont. N28 384

Arguably the most advanced feature of Fontographer 4.0 is the ability to create Multiple Master fonts, a technology pioneered by Adobe Systems Inc. One of the drawbacks of computer outline fonts as compared to traditional ehot lead" fonts is that in the latter, the typesetter could utilize characters that were individually rendered at a given point size to be visually appropriate for the size used, i.e., the stems, tapers, bowl sizes, etc., were larger for small sizes and became relatively finer at larger sizes to suit the visual needs of the reader. Electronic outline fonts can only generate the same proportional relationships at any point size, affected only by "hints" that would adjust small point sizes to conform to the available "dots-per-inch" of the output device and hence somewhat improve the smaller fonts' appearance. With the advent of Multiple Masters it is possible to achieve complete "optical scaling" of a font, and additionally to produce custom weights of a

ae( r ees

"on the fly" within any program. Fontographer does its best to automate the process of producing a Multiple Master typeface, but the process is so complex and fraught with pitfalls that it falls to the user to proceed

So, included in the program is a full-featured and intuitive bit-map editor for "finetuning." Similarly, for those who want to go beyond the program's automatic kerning and hinting, there are extensive controls available for these parameters.

• Imchmes . • Price Liiti • JLpplication Fol'mI

V e r tical 0 degr ees

thin or condensed to heavy or expanded,

accurately rendered by Adobe Type Manager or the TrueType engine) are poorly defined.

YOur buSineSS, Sm@l Or large, has an imPOrtant meSSage todeliVer. FAX ON l3EMANO provides your existing and prospective customers with immediate acct to information, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

keystrokes. Entering the complex world of typography can be challenging and intriguing; Fontographer 4.0 won't inake you into a

world-class type designer, but it can provide the most convenient, powerful and exacting

means available for turning your evolving skills into realities. Joe Whaler is a Macintosh computer consultant, media theorist and freelance writer residing in Victoria, B.C.

gQ

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font in several dimensions, i.e., from ultra

The program can automatically generate

- • ale e

100

Flip

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Hints

Ve r t ical

Hints views. The program

I

(ts(eds el

i plea+ Hor i z ontal

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line, Template, Guides and

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Functionsthe Way You Work The "heart" of thepro-

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Upgrade Options: Trident 1 Meg VGA ...................... $35 All XI24 1 Meg VGA ......,....,......... $66 VESA Cirrus Logic 1 Meg VGA..... $62 VESA 1 M VGA Sr IDE contoller ... $88 Megalmage 15' 28 flat screen....$250 Leaa:MS00$6.0 .......................... - S40

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All PlfOne Computer Packages came wSh free 75 Meg plagrama bunzSe Includshk Games, Speadshssts. Word Processing, Home Organizer. Store phonsa. Appolniment rograms, Educational fk Tutoriah, Music, Personal and business finance programs, Database, mage Processing, Virus checking Ik Cleaning. Windows software Ss Demos, stc;

- All speck)I pdcea on lhs advediarzNnt ass cash dbcounted, must bs pay by cash, money order or cemlled chszpaa only. VISA, Nksster Cards or eovsmmerN P.O. ars on segular prices (Segl4ar price ss Cash dlacounled price t 3%). Government. educational institutions Sr corporate p,o. are welcome, Prices are subJect to change without notice. Canon, Eesslstt Pac VIDEO CARDS FAX MODEMS Ohhhatee OSvettl, Panaeonlc, " 5 years Warranty GVC/USR " Monoaraphlcs $28 Asstrsz&aed 386SX-40 $120 " 2 years Canadian Warranty " Raven, C&T VGA 256K 640 S 39 9 6/24 Send fax Int Modem $ 4 0 386DX<0, 128K $ 159 Prtces are not included color kit T rident SVGA 512K 1024 $ 4 9 96/24 Send/Rec fax int Modem $89 486DLC-33. 128K $185 Panasonic 2180, color 9 pins S 200 Trident IM 32 blls color S 78 GVC 96/24 Int S/R fax Modem $78 $225 P anasonlc 2023, 24 pins S 2 7 5 LASER ACCESSORIES 486DLCM, 128K ATI XI24 IM OEM $ 118 GVC 96/24 Ext S/R fax Modem $105 486DX-33 VESA, 128K $ 490 Panasonlc 2123. color 24 p S 289 Canon BJ-xxx Ink Cofliogs ATI XI24 1M Sr Mice OEM S 149 GVC 14.4 Int s/r fax v42 v32 $229 486DX-50 VESA, 128K $ 668 Raven 9105(2180), color 9 p $190 H P 4L memory 1M {HP) $ 14 0 ATI Gr Ultra + 2M original $ 2 99 GVC 14A Ext s/r fax v42 v32 $249 486DX2-66 VESA, 128K S 74 9 A TI Gr Ultra Pro 2M OEM $ 4 18 USR 14A Int s/r fax v42 v32 $234 $ 1 02/162 2405(2023), 24 pins S 249 HP 2pQPPgd IM/2M - First 4 M memory (call) S 250 Raven S 279 ATI Gr Ultra Pro 2M original $448 USR 14.4 Ext s/r fax v42 v32 $264 2406(2123), color 24 p$279 HP 2pQpggd 4M C ooling Fan for 486 CPU S 2 0 Roven S 225 ATI Gr Ultra Pro 2M VESA S 429 WlnFax 2.0 for GVC only Raven 2420(2124). color 24 p$389 HP 4 memory 4M $ 20 $ 92 VESA ET4000 1M $14S IO card with one 16550 port $40 Raven 2465(1624), 24p wide $445 HP Toner for IIP/SP+/SIP VESA Cirr Logic 1M HP Toner for II/SI/IID/IIID $ 1 02 S 124 Color KIt(fnotor, cable. ribbon) $55 S 190 $140 VESA Clrr Logic 2M CASES with Power Supply Samsung 2412 24 pins $ 199 HP Toner for 4 HP 4 Level 2 PostscApt (HP) + $580 Samsung 2421 24 Pins Wide $380 OTHERS (Original Packaging) Desktop case $65 4 M memory bundle Mini-Tower case S 65 Optical Glass Filter S 35 HP 4 Multi sos troy $110 MONITORS M sd-Tower, digllol 230W $ 1 0 5 MS compatible mouse S 15 H P DeskJet 500 Ink Cart S30 Tall Tower case, digital 280W S140 LASER PRINTER, SCANNER HP DeskJet 500 HC Ink Cart S 45 Datas 14' TTL paper white $124 Ksytronlc mouse $28 200W power supply $45 Canadian warranty. not grey market I HP DsskJet 500C Color Cart S 49 IBM 12p Mono VGA 'No box $120 M icrosoft mouse 'No box S 4 5 14' 1024 .39 S 269 LogltechMoussman 'New $85 All laser printer come with toner. Okl 400 1M/2M memory $110/170 Datas 14' 1024 .28 S 299 L ogltech Trackman 'New 8 99 Okl 400s 1M $170 Datas HP 4L 4ppm 1M, 300dpl Msgalmags 14' 1024 .28 $ 99 L ooitech Scanman 256 S2 28 Image Drum OL400/800 $265 Msgalmags 14' 1024 .28 Nl 2 $329 DRIVES Jsz CONTROLLERS HP 4ML 4ppm 4M Pcalacrlpt $1328 Okl VldsoSlastsr bundle $ 459 Okl Toner for Laser S 38 HP 4 8ppm 2M. 600dpl 14' 1024 .2S Nl $345 Adllb compatible music card $37 Pana 4410/Raven 510 1M $130 Magltronic I DE Quantum 245M, 17ms $ 3 19 HP 4M 8ppm 6M, 600dpi Tatung 14' 1024 .28 low<ad $450 S oundslastsr compatible S7 0 Pana 4430/Raven 530 2M $190 Msgalmags 15' 1280 .28 $ 5 60 IDE Quantum 525M, 14ms S 799 HP ScanJst IIP $ 949 Panansonlc/Raven Toner S oundslaslsr Pro Deluxe $ 14 9 $ 45 Datatraln 17' 1280 .31 IDE Samsung 125M, 16ms S 218 HP ScanJet IIC $ 789 Soundslastsr Pro 16 $210 IDE Samsung 251M, 16ms S 285 Okldata 400e 4ppm 'New$1688 $675 NEC 3FGs 15",28 1024 S 81 9 Soundslastsr Pro 16 ASP SCSI $2SS I DE Seagals 212M 16ms $ 27 9 Okldato 830+ Bppm, 2M $1378 Speaker 3$-11 NEC 4FGs 15'.28 1024 $ 955 $15 I DE Seagate 340IVI, 12rns $ 4 1 9 Okldata DOC'IT 3000 New Coil MEMORY N EC 5FGs 17',28 1024 $ 14 9 9 Speaker SMS I DE Ssogats 452M, 12ms $ 5 5 9 Okldata DOC'IT 40(0 'New Cop ' Please call to confirm prices. N EC5FG 17'.281280 S 1 7 30Joystick Bondwsll Q$-123 IDE WD 212M, 14m s $ 279 Raven LP-510 5ppm (HPII) 8 728 N EC 6FG 21' .28 1280 S 3 0 7 0 Joystick Winner 1000 S 30 IDE WD 256M, 13m s $ 299 Raven LP430 5ppm (HPIII) $989 DRAM 41256-80/100 $ 3.00 S 8.50 DRAM 44256-70 IDE WD 340M, 13ms S 389 S 10.00 CD ROM IDE WD 420M, 12ms DRAM 411000-70/80 S 520 S 18.00 SORWARE Conner Int 250M TapsDrlvs $219 SIMM 256-70/80 S 67.00 Mitsuml int 350ms 150k/s Kit Jumbo Int 250M Taps Drive $239 INKJET PRINTERS SIMM TMW (call) 380 S 64.00 Nsc 74scsisxl'280ms 300k/s$ Ms Borland ONceSWin upgrade S J umbo Tracker 250M TD $ 4 9 9 " 2-3 years Canadian Warranty SIMM 1M-70 (coll) S 135 S 199.00 Nsc 84scsiint 280ms 300k/s8 630 BuslnesVision Taps DC2120 250M $30 SIMM 4M-70 (cal0 CA Tsxtor for Windows S 50 S 419 SIPP 1M-70 (cal0 S 69.00 Panasonlc int 320ms 300k/s Klt$350 Panasonlc 5 1/4' 1.2M S 63 Canon BJ-200 C orelDraw 4.0 upgrade S2 6 9 Canon BJ-330 600cps wide S 575 Phillps Int 350ms 300k/s Kit $3M Ponasonic 3 1/2' 1A4M S 55 IV 2.0 upgrade S 135 S 1199 Phlips sxt 375ms 150k/s Kit $470 dBoss IDE FD&HD controller S 19 Canon BJ-800 Color Lotus 123 4.0 Win upgrade $130 S 1399 VESA IDE FD&HD controller S 60 Canon BJ-820 Color MS DOS 6.0 $48 S 384 KEYBOARDS IDE FDSrHD 2Ssr/1P/1G cntr S 30 HP DsskJet 500 MS Windows 3.1 S 48 S 23 MATH CO-PROCESSOR S 498 BTC 101 Keyboard SCI Adaptec 1522 for Dos $124 HP DeskJet 500C color WP 5 .2 Windows upgrade $1 55 $ 40 ST 3873)416/20/25/33/40 Mhz 3 75 WP 52 Windows full version $355 S 785 Ksytronlc AT/Xf " USA " S CI Adaptec 1542C kit S 3 2 9 HP DeskJet 550C color Ksylronic keyboard " USA" S 62 H P DsskJet1200C color $ 1 7 8 9 AT I/O card 2Ser/1P/1G paris S 25 Cyrix 387DX, 25/33/40 Mhz S 75 WP 6.0 DOS comp. upgrade $176 A T MFM HDSFD controller S 7 9 HP DeskJst 1200C Poalscript 3 2595 AT keyboard to PS/2 adaptor S 12

MOTHERBOARDS

DOT PRINTERS


50

NOV E M BER '93 TH E COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

Compression Continued from page46 Standard disk to standard disk: 71 seconds Stacker drive to standard disk: 66 seconds Standard disk to Stacker drive: 68 seconds There is a transparent compression extension for OS/2 that supports HPFS partitions. DCF/2 (DCF stands for disk compres-

sion facility) comes from a small company based in Ft. Collins, CO called Proportional Software Corp. It allows the user to create a

compressed HPFSdrive on either an HPFS or FAT-based drive. However, at least in version

l. Ia, the compressed drive created by DCF/2

can't be accessed under DOS. Also, it's not as fast as some of the DOS-based products (in some cases, Stacker is over ten times as fast), but at least OS/2 users with HPFS drives now have a remedy for OS/2's hefty disk requirements.

Flic-level compression File-level compression works to compress

and verify each file individually, and only the files you indicate. When you create a file, it is first written to disk in its original

form and only later compressed. Open a compressed file and it is decompressed. Make changes to the file and it is saved

l ll

uncompressed. It will be compressed again either during idle time or manually. This then brings us to the two types of file-level compression just mentioned: idle time and manuaL Idle-time compression works when your computer is turned on but is not being used, much like a screen saver does. You indicate

which files to compress — for example, files you haven't used for a long time or don't use often — and the files are compressed in the background. . This type of compression is quite coinmon on the Macintosh, but virtually nonexistent on t h e PC. AutoDoubler, Now

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Compress, and SpaceSaver are idle-time compressors for the Mac. All three create "transparently compressed" files. A transparently compressed item has been compressed during idle-time compression or manually. Once compressed, it has

I

no outward appearance of being compressed, except for the smaller amount of space it occupies on your hard disk (AutoDoubler can optionally display a small RDD" symbol on the icon as a visual clue to its status). Launch the item and it is decompressed into memory as it is used, so that it appears to

your system just as the uncompressed version would.

~

The particular compression utility that created the files must be running on your system in order for you to use transparently compressed files. This is perhaps the biggest hassle with a "background" file-level compressor. If you turn the system extension off,

all your programs and files become inaccessible — at least until you decompress the archives manually or restart with the trans-

parent compression extension re-enabled. Although there aren't too many compatibility hassles with file-level compressors, there are a few with each of the leading

I I

t

Perfect for the Mac, for example) don't rec-

ognize DiskDoubler-compressed files properly, at least in some cases. Because of the way Now Compress checks the serial port, users of a serial-port graphics tablet such as the Wacom SD-420 ~ill find that background compression never kicks in. Although StuffIt SpaceSaver appears to be the most troublefree, even it has trouble with Adobe's SuperATM unti l y o u t u r n o f f S paceSaver's

i

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titles. Some programs (PageMaker and Word-

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"progress monitor" display.

Although they are somewhat less flexible, driver-level compressors exhibit none of these problems and are likely to be less trouble overail. Driver-level compression can cause some incompatibilities with diskrepair, security and anti-virus utilities, although the newest release of Norton Utilities is compression-savvy. Norton Utilities

7.0 supports drives compressed with DOS 6.0 DoubleSpace, Stacker, SuperStor and SuperStor Pro. Central Point Anti-virus detects viruses inside files compressed with PKZip, PKLite, LZEXE and ARJ.

Stacker for Macintosh claims to work cor-

~

rectly with disk recovery programs such as Norton Utilities, Mac Tools and Disk First Aid; however, it is incompatible with disklevel encryption products. Interestingly, both Symantec and Central Point Software licensed Stac's compression

Admission (not valid with any

technology, for Norton Backup and PC Tools backup, respectively. I

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Novell recently announced that it, too, will use Stacker LZS data compression in its next version of DR-DOS. Novell DOS 7, which is expected to be available by the time


ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER N OVEMBER '93 5 1 you read this, will also include a bevy of advanced features, including pre-emptive multitasking, peer-to-peer networking, security, backup, anti-virus and, as might be expected from Novell, Netware client support.

INanualTransparent Compression Manual compression allows you to create compressed files immediately where you require them. If you do not warit to wait for idle-time compression to compress certain files or folders, you can select them and compress them manually. On the Mac, DiskDoubler, Stuffit SpaceSaver and Stuffit Deluxe (which includes SpaceSaver), Compactor Pro and Now Compress all provide manual file-level compression. As stated earlier, this technology isn' t relevant to driver-level PC products. Each of the Mac utilities includes a system extension that allows compressed files to be transparently decompressed as needed, so they may be used normally by standard applications. In all the leading Mac file-compressing utilities, the System Folder (where all the computer's operating system files are kept) is never compressed.

What else ls there? If transparent compression is so great, is there any reason to use anything else? If you want to archive information to floppies and other storage media or send compressed files via modem, the answer is probably "yes," By their very nature, transparent compressors automatically decompress files whenever they are accessed, This occurs with both driver-level and file-level compressors. Thus, if you select a file to send to a remote computer with your modem, the system transparently decompresses it before sending

it. The same thing happens when you copy compressed files to a floppy or other removable backup device — they arrive at the destination decompressed (most Mac file-level utilities can optionally maintain compression during file copies). Other users will need a manual file compressor to create archives that can be distributed to others.

On the PC, PKZip is by far the most popu lar manual f i l e-compression ut i l i t y , although ARC and a few others are sometimes used. In case you were wondering, the PK stands for Phil Katz, the developer of PKZIP and several other compression-related shareware products. The current version of PKZip is PKZ204g.EXE. Because of the ubiquitous nature of the "ZIP" file format, there are numerous utilities that can decompress ZIP files — the most popular being PKWare's own PKUNZIP. To use it, you simply type PKUNZIP <filename>. It is not necessary to type the ".ZIP" exten-

sion — it is assumed. You have to make swe that PKUNZIP is either in the drive or directory you are working on (i.e., in the same location as your ZIP archive) or in a location mentioned in the PATH statement so that DOS can find it. Also, you need to have extra room on the disk for the soon-to-be-expanded files. If you want to decompress to another drive, well, it can do that, too. Type

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same thing goes — just type ARC and press

SQ//NAY

<Return> instead.

Most manual compressors can also archive entire directories of files, too. On the PC, you usually have the option of compressing with relative hierarchies preserved, or full directory paths. The former means that you could locate the files in any directoContinued on page 53

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52

N O VEMBER '93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION •

. •3 Year Partsand

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Techniques

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Warranty

This issue's cover image is an excerpt from a video presentation created by Animedia Vision Inc. (604-73L8588p44-3361) for a real~state developer. Intended to impress prospective tenants, the video features models crfxsted, rendered, and animated with Autodesk's 3D Studio. It demonstrates human actors moving around inside a "virtual building and interacting with ils decor and fixtures. A post-production facility added the human actors using the 'blue-screen chroma key technique where afi areas of a parficular color are replaced with a secondary image — in this case, the computergenerated background. According to Animedia's Edward Lyons, it is the

IPC System Configuratien INTEL Micro-Processor, 4MB RAM, 128K Cache,250MB Hard Drive, 1.2MB & 1A4MB Floppy Drives, SVGA 1024 x 768 0.28DP Colour Monitor, Microsoft Mouse, 101 Enhanced Keyboard, 2S/1P/1Game Port, New POS 6 & Windows 3.1, VESA Local Bus controller, VESA Local Bus 1MB Video Card, Upgradable to 2MB, Free Technical Support!I

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details that take the most time when modeling 3-D

Sysfefn Configurafian

objects. For example, Lyons claims that one of the m ost complex models inthe whole scene shown on the cover of this issue is the tiny angel statue below the painting at the end of the hall. Lyons says a veritable cottage industry has sprung up around 3D Studio, and, for his company, selling the sofiware and supporting hardware is only part of the picture. Animedia also provides modeling, animation and producfion services, and gives seminars on 3D Studio, Autodesk Animator, Targa (a series of high-end graphics cards) imaging and CorelDRAW. The scene selected for the cover image was re-rendered in high resolution, yielding a 2K-by-2K Targa TGA" file. Additional image editing was done in Aldus PhotoStyler. The file was then compressed with PKZIP and backed up onto several floppy disks using the DOS Backup utility and delivered to The Computer Paper. The ZIP file was reassembled (using the DOS Restore command) and"unzipped"on a 486.Itw as thensentover 7heComputerPaper'sEthernet network

• Intel 14RSSX-25 CPU• 4MB RAM • 120 MB hard drive

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IPC Systems are compatible with operating systems like. Microsoft DOS, IBMOS/2, Unix, Zerdx, and Windows, 3.1. Other hardware components such as CD ROMDives. Sound Cards. Fax Modems, Tape Backup Ddves ana LAN Cards may easily be added Io fhe IPC Systems. Suggested Applications may Include Desktop Publishing, Image processing, accounting soffware. CAD/CAMci Network file servers lie intel Inside Losois si edenwkof Intel Corpordion.IPCisthehedenerhof30 Nice

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to a Mac Quadra 700 with 20 MB of RAM, where color correct ionswere made wfi h Adobe Photoshop.Thefi le was conver tedto CMYK mode and savedasaTIFF (tagged image file format). The words, captions and logo were added in Aldus FreeHand 3.1. The three-dimensional 3-D was created in Adobe Dimensions and saved as an Illuslrator file, which was loaded into FreeHand and added to the scene.The FreeHand fi leandthe CMYK TIFF image werethen saved onto aSyauest44MB removable platter and delivered to our service bureau for output

as film negatives. Because the image is intended to be printed on newsprint, I requested that it be output to negatives with a 100 lines-per-inch "line screen" on the form we sent to the service bureau. This form also contains details about the size of the image, the version of the program we used to create it, whether the negatives should be emulsion-up or emulsion-down, and of course, when we need the work done byl A list of all fonts used in the file is also written on the output form, so that the appropriate character outlines may be downloaded to the service bureau's Post-

Script imagesetter. The final image wasoutput at 1270 dots per inch to a Unotronic imagesetter. In'addNon to the color-separation negatives, a MatchPrint color proof is created to check color balarice and ensure that all elements printed properly. This is an essential last step before sending the negs out to the press.•

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER N OVEMBER '93 5 3 to these settings as "implode" and "shrink.")

Compression

Some programs, such as Now Compress or

Continued fromage p 51 ry on your drive, and the required subdirectories and files would be constructed relative to the original. In the case of the latter, the entire directory "tree" is explicitly specified.

If you are not big on typing obscure commands at a DOS command line prompt, you might prefer the graphical ease of PC Tools for Windows. Its version of the Windows File Manager allows you to ZIP and unZIP files with.a click of the mouse. Among its many other talents, Norton Desktop for DOS allows DOS users to easily create and extract ZIP files. UnZIP and unARC utilities (with a variety of names) are also available on other computers, including Amiga, Atari, and the Mac — primarily to facilitate the decompression of files created on a PC. You' ll find shareware compression and/or decompression utilities

on virtually any BBS (bulletin board system). This cross-platform compatibility issue

has led to several programs that can decom-

press a wide range of "alien" archives. For example, Aladdin Systems recently released a PC version of its UnStuffit utility to assist PC users in accessing files archived with Stuffit on the Mac. Now Compress' freely distributable "Now Expand" utility handles most of the common Mac file formats. It can decompress and

Stuffit SpaceSaver, allow you to have both options simuitaneously available. Norton Desktop for DOS, DiskDoubler

and AutoDoubler can even be configured to choose the best method for each file automatically.

As you might have guessed, you can' t compress a file that is already compressed to make it even smaller. A file can only be compressed once. Most programs will try to compress a file that is already compressed, but nothing will happen, even if the file was first compressed at the "Faster" setting and you change the compression setting to "Smaller."

Executable file Compression There are several programs that can perform a different kind of compression. Variously

termed "resource compression," "executable file compression" and other such terms, the basic idea is this: after the compression pro-

gram squashes yow program, it appends an unsquashing routine to the program code, When you run the program, this code is executed, your program decompresses and "Bob's your uncle." For the PC, the shareware title PKLite offers executable file compression capability (most Norton products are already compressed, by the way). Although we know of no shareware titles of this nature for the

tions are included in the file, so the person receiving it can simply double-click the archive and it will be decompressed without having the compression software installed. On the PC, such executable files may be created with PKWare's SEZIP utility, and necessarily end with ".EXE"; on the Mac, they

sors offer both of these safety features.

often end with ".SEA" (for "self-extracting archive"). Of course, an installation program may handle everything for you with a dou-

with driver-level compression is to move cer-

Mow safe ls compression?

press and/or decompress files according to

The concern over file integrity, or guarding against the loss of data, is sometimes raised in regard to file compression. Because compression reduces the redundancy of a file and changes the context of its contents, it is more difficult to reconstruct a compressed file that has become corrupted or damaged than an uncompressed file that is damaged. The key, therefore, is to reduce the chance of

name, label, location, filetype and a variety of other criteria. Now's offering, on the other hand, offers a good balance of features (induding a number of unique options like "compress at specified time" or "exclude if recently modified") and is somewhat easier to use. Stuffit Deluxe is the only Mac compression utility currently available that supports

damage. This can be done in several ways. Files can be compressed individually, as is done with file-level compressors. Driver-level com-

Apple Events and user scripting. This means

pression, which compresses all the files on the hard drive, presents a greater risk of damaging or losing entire files if a single glitch occurs. Stacker, DiskDoubler and AutoDoubler are the only titles we' ve seen that specifically daim to be "fault tolerant."

Mac, Salient's AutoDoubler 2,0 comes with such a utility. The Amiga has shareware programs PowerPacker and Turbo Imploder, while Atari users can look for Pack/Unpack to serve this purpose.

for the Macintosh, Vertisoft's DoubleDisk and Microsoft's DOS 6 do not provide an easy method for removing the compression and restoring your data, and require that you reformat the disk. In the worst case, you

Archiving

could lose all the data on your hard disk.

gies elsewhere.

An archived item is a copy of the original item which has been placed into an archive, a sort of folder whose purpose is to compress one or more items to their smallest sizes and then combine them into a single file to simplify transfer from your computer. Open an archive and the items it contains are decompressed and copied out of it. In most cases, an archive is self-extracting, which means it can be used by people who don't own the compression application you used to create the file.

This is another reason why some users do

many others. Its menu implies that it decompresses DiskDoubler files, but actually requires third-party software to handle this format. At least the "DDExpand" utility it requires is freely available. Indeed, in virtually all cases, companies release a freely distributable "expand-only" files. To not do so would be inviting piracy.

Archiving compression allows you to create a collection of compressed files, called an

Speell or Size

archive, which is used to speed up modem and network transfer time and backups.

utility to allow users to access compressed

Most compression utilities offer a choice of

When you create an archive, a copy of. each

speed or compactness. Files archived using a

file you select to include is compressed into an archive, while the original file remains unaltered. An archive is usually self-extracting, which means that decompressio'n instruc-

program's "smallest" setting will typically be substantially smaller than those compressed with the "fastest" setting. (Norton Desktop for DOS, as well some other products, refer

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includes an Unstack option, although many users find that decompressing a close-to-full "stacked" drive is a major headache, even with this feature.

Typically, a file being compressed is verified using checksums both before and after it is written to disk in a compressed form. This process checks for errors and ensures data

integrity. Some programs (SpaceSaver, AutoDoubler) offer an option to turn off "write verification" to increase speed. You should NOT select this option for safety's sake. Also, the safest utilities preserve the origi-

nal copy of a file being compressed until compression is complete. This avoids data loss in the event of a power failure. Both of these issues were problems with the 1.0 release of AutoDoubler, but most — if not all — of the current crop of file-level compres-

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that Stuffit Deluxe can be easily made to search for and extract all ".ARC" or ".ZIP" files on a Mac user's desktop. To accomplish this, you must write a "script," or use Stufflt's "Watch Me..." feature to create one automatically. Here's a script to extract ZIP files; you could change it to work with ARC files by substituting the word "ARC" instead. Translate Zip Begin D ecode Des k t o p F o lder . Z IP" i n t o "':Desktop Folder:" noConvertCRs End Although scripting has, up to now, been a relatively foreign concept to most Mac users, we expect it to grow in popularity as they realize what PC and Amiga owners have known for years: batch files are a powerful way to control your computer, especially when the syntax is easy enough to understand that you don't have to be a programmer to create one.

Conclusion The compression utility you choose will nat-

urally depend upon your needs. If you regularly send or receive files with a modem, a manual archiving/dearchiving utility is

handy. You' ll probably be able to find a shareware title that serves your needs. A few of the many titles available include PKZIP for the PC; Compacter Pro for the Mac, PKAZIP for the Amiga, and ARC.TTP for the Atari,

Even if you never upload files (shame on you!), at the very least, you' ll want to track

down a decompress-only utility or two for your bag of tricks.

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tain files to an uncompressed partition of the hard drive — not always a viable option, Now Compress and Stufflt Deluxe offer the best features here, with Stufflt Deluxe being the most advanced overall. It can com-

AutoDoubler, DiskDoubler, Compact Pro, SpaceSaver and Stuff lt 1.5.1, although, strangely, it does not support Stufflt Deluxe files. According to Now, Aladdin already supplied a freely distributable UnStuffit utility, so Now's programmers devoted their ener-

BinHex, Compactor Pro; SpaceSaver, and

pressed will be left alone. The only option available to PC users

ble-click on an installer or "SETUP" batchfile.

convert files and archives compressed with

Aladdin's Stuffit Deluxe for the Mac handles perhaps the widest range of archive formats, including ZIP, ARC, UUENCODE, TAR,

Finally, you should have final say over what gets compressed and when. This level of control provides you the comfort of knowing that files designated not to be com-

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93

ForMacintosh (Driver-level)

Stacker for Macintosh 1.0 (US$149 from: Stac Electronics, 619-431-7474; fax 619-

431-5726) Times Two 1,0 (US$149 from Golden Triangle) eDisk (US$89.95 from Alysis) (File-level and archival) Now Compress (US$129 from: Now Software, 1-800-374-4750 or 503-274-2800) Now Expand (freely distributable) More Disk Space 1.1 (from Alysis) StuNt Deluxe 3.06 US$120 SpaceSaver 1.05~ (included with Stuff lt Deluxe) StuffIt Classic, Stufflt Lite (shareware) UnStuffIt (freely distributable) From:

Onic kTimeCompression

With thehelpofQuickTime,Apple's Macintoshsystemsoftware provides abasic setofsoftwarecompression/decompression schemes that meeta rangeof compressionneedsfor still images, animations andvideo. Photo Compressor Applewasthefirst personalcomputer companyto implement the joint PhotographicExpertsGroup(JPEG ) compression scheme asastandardpartof systemsofhvare. JPEGis ahighquality.still imagecompressionschemethat offers ratiosranging from 10:1 to 25:1 with no visible picture degradation.

AdobePhotoshopandother programssupport QuickTime JPEG compression.

Animation Compressor Apple'sAnimation Compressor is basedonrun-length encoding principles tocompresscomputer-generatedsequences from 1to32bits in depth. Thiscompressionschemedisplays animations-such asapresentation slideshowor adynamicbar chart-atacceptablespeedson all color-capableMacintosh computers, Video Compressor Apple'sVideoCompressor—developedbyApple—allowsdigitizedvideosequencesto playbackfromahard disk or CDROM inreal-timewithnoadditional hardwareonany Macintosh with a68020or higher Motorola processor. TheVideo Compressoroffers compressionratios rangingfrom5:1to 25:1. Thevideoplaybacksizeis typically lessthan1/4 of the

Aladdin Systems, 408-7614200

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computerscreensize,althoughwith hardwareadd-onssuchas Radius'VideoVisionor RasterOps' StudioVision (etc.), fullscreen/full-motion displaysarepossible. QuickTime 1.6.1 The currentreleaseof QuickTimefor Macintosh is QuickTime 1.6.1.TheQuickTimeextensionfor Macis available fromuser groupsandelectronicbulletin boards. QuickTimfor e Windowsis at version 1.1.lt is bundledwith variousmultimediaproductsfor thePC. Applealsosells aQuickTimeSampler set, includingthe QuickTimeextension, picture,movieandconversionutilities on floppy disks andaCD-ROMof samplecontent. • CoarauhAppleCanada,416-513-5?87 or800-263-3394

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(whole disk) DiskCopy 4.2 (from Apple, freely distrib-

utable)

F or&m igs (Driver-level) EPU (similar to Stacker, shareware) PKazip (shareware) ZOO (freely distributable)

LHARC (shareware)

The Best Small BusinessAccounting Software

ARC (freely distributable) PowerPacker (shareware) Turbo Imploder (freeware)

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N O VEMSER '93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION •'

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products. According to Gore, Apple will try to simplify its product line by doing away with the Centris name, replacing existing Centris models with equivalent Quadras. On October 21, he forecast, Apple would launch seven new Quadra models using 25

Quadra To Be Main Line, NncWeek's Editor Predicts B Y GRAN T B U C K LER, N E I ilf S BYTE S Gore had a few other barbs for Apple, TORONTO (NB) — "Sometimes," MacWeek Senior Editor Andrew Gore told an audience which he said is hoping to address market at MacWorld Expo/Canada, "I wish the Mac- confusion over the large number of Macinintosh could be declared a minor so Child tosh models by introducing more models. But he spent most of his second-day keynote Protection Servicescould come and take it away until Apple could prove it was a fit par- address doing something his newspaper is ent." known for — predicting unannounced Apple

megahertz (MHz), 33MHz, and 40MHz Motorola 68040 processors. Six of these will have Ethernet local area network (LAN)

To the user, Gore said, the PowerPC Macs will look and work just like existing Macs. He while the machines will added onewarning: run existing Mac software, they will not deliver the hoped-for performance improvements with software written especially for the PowerPC chip. And when will t h at appear? Gore said Microsoft Corp., one of the key Mac application suppliers, is running behind in its efforts to develop PowerPC ver-

AB thesoftware are upto-date and new

fP g k

tions, but should have the Word and Excel

packages ready within 90 days after Apple launches the PowerPC Macs in March. The first Duo portable based on PowerPC technology is expected next fall, he added. Gore also touched on a rumored new Mac, called Blackbird, which he said will be a notebook intended as a response to IBM's recently launched ThinkPad 750. Expected in March, he said, it will have an activematrix color screen that will be the largest on any PowerBook at 9.4 inches, and will use

Electronics (PIE) division, Gore praised the Newton and dismissed the PowerCD CD-

NoadultGIF's

ROM device, which he said is "a pretty lackluster CD-ROM drive." Despite complaints about the handwriting recognition in the Newton MessagePad personal digital assistant, Gore said, Apple is

All the files are compressed (ZIP)

+

sions of its Microsoft Office suite of applica-

a modular design with two expansion bays. Turning to Apple's Personal Interactive

No duplicates

"selling every single one they can build."

Ready for use in BBS (" FILES.BBS" support )

0

Macs based on the PowerPC chips that Apple, IBM, and Motorola are jointly devel-

said, and there will also be a new Macintosh

Checked for known viruses

0

screen, and a Duo 270c with an activematrix color screen. In the spring, he added, Apple will bring out a 290c, with a 68040. processor and an active-matrix color screen. Also in the spring, Gore expects the first oping. He predicted three initial models, ranging in price from US$2,000 to US$4,000, built on PowerPC 601 chips running at 50MHz and 66MHz, and possibly carrying the Quadra nameplate.

@ Software for MS-DOS, Windows, Linux and NeXTStep

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Duo 230 but with an active-matrix gray-scale

interfaces and compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM) drives built in. One will be an AV model with audio and video capabilities. A handful of new Macintosh Performa models would also appear in October, Gore

Announcing the first ever subscription based monthly CD ROM -for the software lovers and BBS operators all around the world. + + +

Duo 250, which will be essentially like the

Lowcost(LessthanS10adisk)

He said more products in the Newton line can be expected quite soon, and not just

from Apple — other companies, including Panasonic, Siemens, and Motorola, have licenses to build products around the tech-

nology. And the Newton line may use other processors than that in the initial model.

Soon AMIGA and MAC support

Gore said he expects Apple to launch a New-

Powerful file viewing software included for non-BBS use

ton built on a PowerPC chip before the end

of 1995, and the company may even build one around the Intel chips used in IBM and compatible personal computers. "It' ll be ulti-

mately up to folks like yourselves whether

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ture's got a lot of elbow room." Commenting on recent corporate developments at Apple, Gore said there is good news and bad news about the firm's drive for

market share over the past couple of years.

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it's successful," Gore said, "but the architec-

The good news is that it is working: Madntosh unit sales are up and the architecture holds 16 to 17 percent of the worldwide PC market today versus about 12 percent three years ago. The bad news is that, "in order to

be able to pump up the volume, Apple has had to cut their margins," and that has meant cuts to research and development and to staffing and benefits.

"We at MacWeek are pretty convinced

1-800-363-2083 ( VISAand MasterCard )

that we haven't seen the end of the layoffs,"

he added. But he praised Apple for having "shown a willingness to do what it has to do

to keep the platform viable and also to keep people developing for it." Continued on page59


COMPUTER "EXPERTS" AND THE AMIGA

ADVERTISING FEATUREyour computer, it is more powerful, and therefore better. Despite these larger numbers, the subject of much reporting, research and review by computer "experts", the fact of the matter is that overall performance of the hardware/DOS/software combination of IBM coinpatibles hasn't really improved that much. It remains restricted by the architecture of these computers, a rather dated and basic design in terms of today's technology. 33Mhz to 66Mhz CPU's are needed to run relatively simple programs under today's "user-friendly" graphical user interfaces, with nominal multi-tasking abilities. They require huge amounts of RAM and large hard drives just to install and load MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows; not to mention the memory inanagers,

After many years as one of the best kept secrets in the computer industry, the

desktop utilities and the huge amount of software program code that remains the

AMIGA is now clearly recognized as a powerhouse of a mainstream computer. That this recognition has taken so long is a bit of a

inillstone of IBM coinpatible system design.

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Being caught up by the escalating "Numbers Game", and thereby comparing the AMIGA with these sorts of specifications is totally misleading. The computer "experts" who have done their homework will realize that they are comparing b ananas to oranges. The power of the AM I G A originates from it s modern architecture and

sad commentary about the level of computer

literacy amongst many computer professionals. Too many "experts" in the industry, whether they be writers for major co m p uter pub l i c at i o ns, developers, "consultants" or salespeople, appear to lack an overview of the market. being only familiar

with IBM compatibles or the Macintosh. Being safely ensconsced within their knowledge

operating system. Yes, it also increases CPU power, RAM and hard drive capacities. But the AMIGA does this to permit even more complex software applications, not to keep breathing new life into a dated design.

of a single platform. why have they not attempted

to broaden their horizons? Are they so used to the limitations of one particular computer platform, that they assume all computers to be more or less the same? More to the point, are they doing their

A NOT H E R V A R I A T ION OF TH E NUMBERS GAME

readers. their clients and customers justice. with

well informed advice? The answer. unfortunately. is "No!" In all fairness, there are many professionals in the computer industry who have closely examined thc AMIGA and have reported knowledgeably on its merits. And fair enough. some have in good conscience recommended against itsuse; particularly for straightforward business applications. Where a huge capital expenditure has been made in computers. networks, software and staff trainin g, i t usuall ymak e s ht tle e c o nomic sense

" -'"" " *

" " - " " - ' " ' " " '" '

glorified typewriter or clerical tool. It is the next generation of computer, Here, Now. Today!

Apple Corporation is trying hard to perfect new

technology in, a so far elusive, attempt to recapture market attention with a concept as novel as the

original Macintosh was, with its user-friendly interface. H o w e v er. one has to admire their continuing commitment towards true innovation.

Will they succeed again? Who can tell, but their variation of the "Numbers Game" may well have conspired against them. For years, Apple lured consumers with the concept that if the computer, or the software, was

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Macintosh users paid incredibly high prices for the privilege of owning a computer that was billed as A4000 aud A3000T: Powerful Multimedia computers being For the test o f us • SHOULD AMIGA SHARE THE BLAME? Consumers are now refusing to play this numbers Commodore Business Machines has often been blamed of failing to make both the g a me and Apple is slashing prices in a frantic effort to retain market share. Will computer industry and the independent user more aware of the incredible power of this leave them enough profit to bring out new technology? the AMIGA. Is this a fair accusation? The AMIGA is a proprietorial computer platform. It cannot be cloned. Its THE WORLD OF COMM O D O R E AMIGA custom chips, processing in parallel with the main CPU, together with its powerful The World of Commodore AMIGA will be making its annual appearance in multi-tasking operating system (which is as readily accessed from a graphical user Toronto from December 3rd to the 5th at The Toronto International Centre on interface, from Amiga-DOS commands, or any combination thereof) make for a Airport Road in Mississauga. As always, there will be keynote speeches on new uniquely powerful system architecture and developments, seminars on a wide range of subjects operating system. Indeed, the AMIGA is more of interest to AMIGA users, and the usual akin to a workstation than a standard desktop fascinating displays of products and applications. computer. Make sureto mark these dates in your calendar. Of Commodore, in creating the AMIGA, has course, this is also an excellent opportunity for nondeveloped a cornputer with an app e t ite and abilit y AMIGA users to see what the AMIGA is all about. to run software applications which are simply not within the realm of possibility Just be prepared for one thing. Non-AMIGA users are always surprised by how for its competition. It is a tall order to develop so advanced a computer platform much AMIGA owners enjoy computing! as the Amiga, while at the same time being asked to educate the computer industry as to what the next generation of computing is all about. The truly professional LAST MINUTE NEWS "expert" in the computer industry can easily be fooled by the "Numbers Game". Yes the rumours are true. New Tek, the creators of the Video Toaster are planning To understand the Amiga, it has to be experienced to be believed. to start shipping the Video Toaster Screamer before the year is out. The Screamer is an external 3-D rendering engine designed to speed up rendering on the Amiga THE NUMBERS GAME Video Toaster. The system speed of the Screamer is in excess of 600 MIPS! When you get down to basics, there is little difference between one IBM AMIGA can also play the numbers game. compatible and another. Manufacturers of IBM compatibles advertise numbers. In their world it is important to be faster than the competition. Faster CPU's, larger data caches, faster data busses, more RAM and larger hard drives. The marketing rational is that if you can attach specifications with bigger numbers to

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58

NQ V E MBER '93THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

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Claris introduced ClarisWorks 1.0 for the Macintosh in 1991, and claims it became the best-selling integrated product within six

months, unseating Microsoft Works for the Mac. Earlier this year, the company introduced Version 2.0 for the Mac, and also ClarisWorks 1.0 for Windows, the subject of this review. Among its stiffest competition will

be none other than Microsoft Works for Windows, Version 2.0.

IY

D A V I D T A I (IAKA

Integrated applications have been around since the early days of PCs, and have maintained a Swiss Army Knife kind of allure: one tool, many functions. Comparisons between the two integrated

With most ClarisWorks modules, one is

These include a set of basic drawing tools

applications are inevitable, and the programs

presented with a screen that looks somewhat similar to KeMaker Pro. The database module is immediately familiar to anyone who knows the Claris database application. An opening menu presents the user with a choice of the type of document: word processing, graphic, spreadsheet, database or communications. When the product was launched, Claris crowed that it presented a "breakthrough in interface design that offers

for straight and freeform lines, curves, circles

users a more natural way of computing." To

The appearance of-the database module departs from the others. The cluster of but-

do provide similar features: word processing, spreadsheet, database and charting modules, as well as a set of drawing tools.

wit, it provided a "seamless" integration of

modules, unlike the bolt-together approach of other (nudge, nudge) integrated products. Does the seamlessness work? Yes, to a

sensible move, since it is quite an elegant

sheet.

There is a way around this, however. If you select "'graphic" as the document type,

T'RY: BEFO"R:E" YOU" BUl)Y:!

you can create linked text frames and there-

by flow text around any graphic and spreadsheet elements you might want to place on the page. It works quite well, athough manually fitting text and graphics on the page could become tedious on a complex project,

The "graphic" moniker for this document type is itself doubly confusing. First, what the mode really represents is a pagelayout function. Second, the name implies

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that you must enter this document type for graphics work, but the fact is, the graphic tools are available in all the modules that use the common toolbar.

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piece of work.

The comm unications module is actually

a gateway to the Windows Terminal program. Selecting the communications documents inunediately launches Terminal.

Installation is straightforward and the complete package, including tutorial, samples, and import/export filters, takes just 2MB of hard disk space. In the Readme notes, Claris warns that the program may crash when used with certain 24-bit accelerator cards when they are set to 800 x 600 resolution. At lower (640 x 480) or higher (1024 x 768) resolutions, the program was well behaved. The page-scale feature allows page magnifications from 3.12 percent (thumbnails)

to 3,200 percent (really big). Using a 1024 x 768 resolution, I found setting the page scale to 160 percent gave me approximately a full page-width view with a 14-inch monitor. I think ClarisWorks for Windows will

find a constituency among those looking for a lowlandintegrated package,and the $1SS promotional pricing makes it especially attractive. As a version 1.0 product, it has some rough edges, but it's very usable. •

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tons at the bottom of the screen are the same, but the toolbar is replaced by one that looks like the FileMakerPro toolbar. While it

modes, meaning the same tools are available in each. If you are in the word processing

However,there is no provision for wrapping the elements around each other. When you place a spreadsheet in a word processing document, the table hides the text beneath. The same thing happens with underlying numbers if you place a text box in a spread-

be o<S~

The word processing and spreadsheet modules provide most of the basic functions.

dampens Claris' claim of seamlessness, adopting the Filemaker control panel was a

toolbar button.

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colors and textures, Around the pen icon are also grouped drop-down menus for nib width and arrowhead type. These work well and are somewhat reminiscent of the pen and pour icons in CorelDraw.

point. The same toolbar is accessible in the word processor, spreadsheet and graphics module, you can open a spreadsheet (and vice versa) by clicking on the appropriate

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 5 9

INacWorld Continued f' rom page56

MacWorld Highlights Include Color, Multimedia, DTIB Desktop publishing, the niche that helped the Macintosh gain acceptance, has not disappeared„but multimedia is taking a growing share of the attention. These tech-

nologies, along with an assortment of color printers and miscellaneous other things,

graphics package. To be available in Canada in November, ClarisImpact will sell for about

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Claris' booth. Multimedia took several forms, induding home entertainment. Yamaha Corp. was

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demonstrating "home karaoke" with its CBX-T3 tone generator, which attaches to a computer with a musical instrument digital interface (MIDI) and allows it to produce the sound of one or more musical instruments.

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C$375, said a company representative at

occupied the show floor at MacWorld Expo/Canada held in late September. Coming just six weeks after the Boston MacWorld show, the Toronto event was light on new-product announcements. Still, a good number of Mac users took the opportunity to get a close-up look at things many had only read or heard about. This year's show included several pavilions bringing together vendors with related products. At one, a Pre-Press Pavilion, prod-

ucts such as clip-art collections, color copiers, electronic stripping technology, and Kodak's PhotoCD technology were gathered together. K odak also showed the PhotoCD which allows photographs to be captured on a compact disc rather than film — at its own booth, along with writeable compact disc

read-only memory (CD-ROM) devices and color printers. Color printers were scattered throughout the show, with products from QMS, HewlettPackard, Tektronix, Brother, and Fargo Elec-

tronics among those shown by the manufacturers or their Canadian distributors. Claris Corp., Apple's software subsidiary,

was showing ClarisImpact, its new business

C

Draw To Learn for Macintosh IRVINE, CA (NB) — Draw to Learn has announced the Macintosh version of its educational software program that teaches children to draw. The first edition offers lessons on drawing dinosaurs. Aimed at children 6 to 12 years of age, the software breaks drawings down into basic geometric forms, company officials said. An animated character, Rembrandt Worm, shows the child the stroke as well as the form to be made. The resulting drawings are

detailed recreations of nine dinosaurs, each of which takes about 30 to 45 minutes to complete. The artist behind the Draw to Learn drawings will be familiar to Captain Kangaroo trivia buffs as Tom Howell, who was the artist behind the drawing segment of the popular children's show. Retail pricing for the product is US$39.95. Contact: Draw to Learn Associates, (714) 2630910, fax (71 4) 263-0337

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unprintable. They are one of the worst examples of what happens when technology becomes a tool for those who regard other people as no more than raw material to help . them meet sales targets. The Canadian Radio-television and

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Canada has tried, unsuccessfully, to limit the ADAD"s intrusion into people's lives by putting some conditions on its use. But many users of the devices have not followed

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com regulators are on the verge of banning automatic dialing-announcing devices (ADADs). ADAD is the technical name for a machine that dials your phone number from a preprogrammed list, by just working its en area, or at random. When you answer it plays a recorded message. There are other

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shown they cannot be trusted with the tech-

followed to the letter, they are not enough. Today's rules require that the phonerobots identify themselves at the beginning of the call. But by the time you pick up the phone to hear that identification, you may already have dashed in from outside, tumed off the movie you were watching, or climbed dripping out of the bathtub. Today's rules say the automated calls must be made during

certain hours. But many people work hours other than nine to five, and may go to sleep in the early evening or not get out of bed

until mid-afternoon. And a growing number of people, this writer included, work from home and rely heavily on the telephone to do their jobs.

These machines simply should not be used, except where the need to get information out overrides the right to privacy-

which primarily means use by public agendes. And there's more. Technology has not created the problem; it has only allowed our privacy to be invaded more efficiently. Along with ADADs, regulators should ban all telephone solicitation except calls to individuals

who have previously — by giving their phone numbers to the organization doing the calling — indicated an interest in what that organization has to say.

Yes, that will stop businesses from using the telephone to prospect for new customers. It will stop charities from using the phone to prospect for new donors. Fine. They can use other means — the mail, billboards, print and television advertising — that do not force themselves on us and interrupt what

we are doing. Our homes are our own private spaces. Our telephones are a service for which we

pay. And we are individuals, not faceless buying-machines at the beck and call of a random-number generator. •

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O NTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 6 1

news

DEALERS ONLY

lBM Canada Makes PowerPC Modules BROMONT, PQ (NB) — An IBM Canada Ltd. factory will make electronic modules for all PowerPC chips used worldwide, the company announced as part of its rollout of the first IBM PowerPC-based systems in Toronto. The Bromont plant — one of IBM Canada's two manufacturing facilities — took part in the design of the PowerPC packaging, the company said. The plant will package Power-

PC chips on electronic modules and mount these on a ceramic base. It is the only supplier of these modules in the industry, and will provide the modules, not only to IBM, but to other PowerPC manufacturers, including Apple Computer and Motorola, officials said. The Bromont plant exports about C$2 billion worth of products each year. Contact: lBM Canada, (416) 474-3900

Recall: NEC Notebook Batteries BOXBOROUGH, MA (NB) — NEC Technologies has recalled batteries used in two models of notebook computers that were sold in the United States and Canada from December 1988 to April 1990. In seven reported cases, the batteries short-circuited while being charged, destroying the computers and sometimes causing fires. There were no injuries as a result of the incidents, a spokeswoman for the company said. The lithium metal batteries were used in NEC's PC-17-01 and PC-17-02 notebooks, which were sold only in the U.S. and Canada, the company said. According to the spokeswoman, they were not used in any

hydride ones. The company also said owners of the notebooks can remove the lithium batteries from their notebooks and run them safely on AC power until they receive their replacement batteries. No special precautions are needed in handling the removed batteries, the spokeswoman said. Contact: NEC, 800-237-291 3

tions compete with the regional phone com-

their approval, Unitel Communications Inc. will offer toll-free 800-number service in competition with the established phone companies in nine of 10 provinces starting in January. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) must approve the service before Unitel can go ahead. As the CRTC has shown itself in favor of telephone competition — particularly with its decision last year to let Unitel and a coalition of Toronto-based Lightel Inc., and

panies — that approval is likely to be given. Unitel still faces one obstacle, though. The Saskatchewan government — which owns the telephone company, Saskatchewan Telecommunications (SaskTel) — has shown no sign of allowing competition. New federal telecom legislation that became law earlier this year will eventually put the province's telecommunications under federal authority, but not for another five years. Contact: Unitel, (514) 395-5259

SGML Tools Frotn SoftQuad

dard. The company said that ApplicationB uilder, w h ic h i n c l u des i t s e x i s t i n g Author/Editor software, will let developers create applications that take advantage of SGML for delivering and re-using informa-

tion. The package includes Author/Editor, development t o o l s f o r cu s t o m i zing Author/Editor, and a programming language that works with SGML. It is now in beta testing with systems integrators, a spokeswoman for the company said. Contact: SoftQuad (416) 2394801, fax (416) 239-7105

Systetnhouse Buys 3 Education Firms OTTAWA (NB) — SHL Systemhouse Inc., wants a bigger chunk of the end-user education business, and has set out to get it by buying three smaller firms. The systems integrator has acquired Ivy Computer Centres Inc., in Toronto, Micromaster Computer Education Ltd., in Edmonton, and KEE Sys-

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other NEC products, and have not been used since the company stopped selling these two models. The company said it made about prioes ' to 13,000 of the batteries. NEC is telling customers to contact the company at 800-237-2913 to have the lithium batteries replaced with nickel-metal-

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TItlu: Wa y ne's World Publisher. Capstone

garners, Wayne's World is more of a primer

appropriate course of actton. The demented minds of this dynamic duo eventually hatch a plan to stage an offshoot of a telethon, a "Pizzathon," wherein viewers pledge their money to the cause, and receive a pizza or two for their donations. In typical Wayne and Garth fashion, this is a great idea in theory, but stands very little chance of practical application. Neither Wayne nor Garth have $50,000 worth of pizza ingredients on hand, nor a tote board, decent entertainment, volunteers, an advertising budget, or the necessary video equipment to stage such a monumentous event. However, if they are able to enlist the assistance of a dedicated gameplayer, the race to save Community Access Television and Wayne's World is on. The hunt for 50,000 big ones is conduct-

static, and removing any possibility of making that one small yet fateful move that may

and their surroundings, and icons at the

It goes to figure that in a capitalistic society one will try one's best to capitalize on past triumphs. The continuing Saturday Night Live "Wayne's World" segment was pretty funny stuff, and was soon followed by a somewhat humorous film of the same name. Now, on the heels of that cinematic masterstroke comes the Wayne's World adventure game for those PC owners who are not yet, like, totally hurled out by the seemingly infinite omnipresence of these two Illinois rock' n' roll waste cases. But despite initial feelings to the contrary, Wayne's World is a competent product. Not designed for seasoned adventure of that genre, offering situations that remain

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In Wayne's World, conversing with the wrong person or picking up the wrong object won't result in a restart or a violent demise for either Wayne or his faithful sidekick, Garth. One is simply not allowed to do it. This distinct lack of violence, too, is to be lauded, as in the world of Wayne and Garth,

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will not fly in all directions.

Game premise is simple. Having salvaged their television program during the course of

ed through a standard adventure game interface, with a surface view of the characters base of the screen providing a point-andclick method of either looking at objects (such as Wayne's trusty hockey stick), pulling or pushing objects, etc. Icons across the top of the screen give graphic reference of objects on hand. Wayne's World never takes itself too seriously, and it becomes obvious that game writers brought a sense of humor to work with them. Garth may senselessly say to Wayne, "How many marshmallows can you

stuff up your nose," or "Don't you think we

the Wayne's World movie, it is now the very existence of Community Access Television

should eventually change clothes," or "I dreamed about Madonna last night," to

(in Aurora, Illinois, anyway) that rests upon the shoulders of Wayne and cohort Garth in

which an unmoved Wayne replies, "You dream about Madonna every night."

the PC Wayne's World. In an effort to cut spending, the affable mayor of Aurora has announced that unless $50,000 can be raised within the next 72 hours, C.A.T. is finished, and Wayne's World along with it. To make matters worse (or better, depending upon one's viewpoint), there also seems to be some form of evil influence threatening to censor or cancel the broadcast of W.W. With cancellation and airwave oblivion looming ominously on the horizon, Wayne and Garth mull over their

Familiar digitized voices will transmit repetitive phrases such as "Are you mental?", and the supplied musical score is a thing a beauty...shyeah, and monkeys might fly out my butt on a nightly basis. Wayne's World — light entertainment not for the Grey Poupon crowd. Gameplay gets 2 1/2 out of a possible 4, graphics 2, while audio rates but a single cone. 'Til next time, party on gamer-type

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 6 3

giga

does not have an infrared controller or

Amiga World: IJSA I 32 Game System Introduced

PASADENA, CA (NB) — Commodore has announced its new answer to home enter-

chip, the unit boasts built-in cache and performance in the four million instructions per

tainment with the CD32, a television-based game system for under USS400 that includes a double-speed

second (MIPS) range, company officials said.

c ompact

di sc

read-only memory (CD-ROM) drive that will aiso play audio and Kodak Photo CDs. The un i t , which looks more

The CD32 offers the Amiga Disk Operating System (ADOS) but officials said Commodore has gone to g reat pains to be ,

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system is available

when needed, yet stays out of the way

of programmers.

like a CD player

While the same h igh h o pe s h a d been expressed at the introduction of

than a computer, is built with the capability to add a special video compression-decom-

infrared controller interface although company officials said they left themselves the option of adding it in the design of the unit. However, distribution quantities of the CD32 are limited at best. Commodore officials said they' re shooting for the Winter Consumer Electronics Show (CES) where they plan to make a big push for the CD32. Over 50 titles are in development for the CD32 which are expected to be available for the holiday season. Other CD formats that will work with the

board and Commodore says it will be able to play the video CDs planned by Philips and Paramount. The CD32 has already been announced

in Europe and Commodore says it has put all its resources into the development of the units for retail distribution both in the U.S.

and abroad. Company officials hope the CD32 will make consumers take another look at its computer systems as well, since the CD32 is based on the same Advanced Graphics Architecture (AGA) chipset as is in the Amiga 4000 desktop computer. Based on the 68EC020 microprocessor

tion, and CDTV titles if they are written to the correct specitKations. Not all CDTV titles will work in the CD32, company officials

added. Commodore also announced the Amiga 4000 Tower unit, which was on display at the show. The 4000 Tower should be in production in the next two months. • Commodore Business Machines, (416) 4994292

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CD32 include: audio CDs, CD+G, Karaoke (Video CD) using the planned MPEG addi-

CDTV, c o m p any officials said they now realize CDTV was too expensive and there weren't enough software titles available for it to spur consumer demand. Company president Jim Dione said he hopes CD32 will become thenext Commodore 64, the home entertainment system that literally sold millions of units back in the 1980s. Commodore officials boast that the CD32 can display 256,000 colors, which is

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 65

INonitors & Display Cards Continued from page17 down the screen. Sony,.Mitsubishi, Seiko, Apple, Radius and other less well-known manufacturers use Trinitron tubes in some of their monitors. You should get a monitor with as fine a dot pitch as possible. This measurement is expressed in millimeters, as in "0.26 mm" or ".26 dot pitch." Sometimes dot pitch is

abbreviated as "dp". Although monitors with larger dot pitches (e.g., ".39 dp") are inexpensive, they are hard on the eyes and

can quickly lead to eyestrain. Do your eyes a favor and spend a little extra on a betterthan-average monitor.

Hilliard, F. Upgrading to VL-Bus. The Computer Paper, July, 1993 Alfred Poor et al. Graphics Adapters.PC Magazine, Jan.12, 1993 Oliver Rist et al. 17-inch Displays. PC Maga-

zine,June 30, 1992 Color For Less (13- and 14-inch Monitors) MacUser,Aug. 1993

Big Screens for Small Macs (LC and Ilsi displays),MacUser,Feb. 1993 VDT User's Checklist, The Computer Paper,

Jan. 1992 British Columbia Ministry of Health. Radiation Risk, Ergonomics and Video Display Terminals. The Computer Paper(B.C. Edition), Feb. 1993.

Contacts:

As we have seen, the world of PC display options is a complex one. I hope that this article makes it all a little easier to understand. If you would like more background information, please refer to the following articles: Wheelwright, G. Beyond VGA. The Computer Paper,Oct. 1992 Green, R. Local Bus Video. The Computer

ATI, 905-882-2600; fax info line 905-882-2620 Aver, distributed by ADDA, 604-278-3224 Consumer Technology Northwest, 503-643-1662 Dell, 416-764-4200 Digital Equipment of Canada, 41 6-597-3100 Matrox, 51 4-685-2630 Radius Canada, 416-777-9900

Paper,Apr, 1993

TeachYour Noighhopo, They'PeNotBumruleo BY D A N A B L A N K E N H O R N .

when we want, with people around the world,

"on the ground."

even buy digital services under ISDN standards. Most adults still don't know what

people still don't understand those benefits. They must be shown how to gain them, one-onone. If you are within the sound of my modem, you are, by definition, a computer guru to your neighbors. Remember what you were like before you first set fingers on a computer? Now, look across the street or down your block You have something to teach your neighbors.

modems are. This was brought home to me recently

Fact is, when looking at this technology you and I take for granted, most people still

when I attended my first PTA meeting at my daughter's new school. Their big problem was communications. They talked about newsletters, about sending notes home, about phone trees. I mentioned the idea of putting in a computer bulletin board, maybe with fax and voice capability, They looked at me like I was the Man in the Moon. Despite all this hoopla about "Information

only see the dark side. They see client-server networks taking away their jobs. They don' t see the new jobs, or the new business opportunities„awaiting them if they use those same networks to gain new skills and new insights. It's becoming the new political dividethe computer literate and the computer illiterate. Most of the computer literate like NAFTA, because they know that their minds can conjure up better jobs than their hands. Most of the computer literate understand health care

building and serving them, despite all the stories about Internet junkies from the White House on down, the fact is that if you' re a BBS

user you' re unusual. And you' ll probably

reform and "re-inventing government"they' ve seen how automation can save money. Most of the computer literate want the "Infor-

mation Superhighway" now, and are willing to

reasons. It means things that seem common-

something about it.

place to you remain mysteries to most of your neighbors. Politically, it means issues that have become important to you — like what happens to the Internet, or the fate of the "Information

But the computer illiterate remain the majority. They have to be educated, with respect and not put-downs, one-on-one, on how to use this technology and how to benefit from it. They' re not dummies, and if they' re treated like dummies they' ll rebel, slowing the technical transformation which still must take place if our government and our other institutions are to become efficient. There's a danger here. The market's "invisible hand" does not respect national borders, If this freewheeling democracy rejects efficiency, and the paternalistic oligarchies to our Far East embrace it, as they are embracing it, the "invisible hand" will just write.us off and move on. The future is at stake, •

the benefits of the Information Age for your

children and your posterity, you' re going to have to do some hard work. When "DOS For Dummies" became a big

computer book sales hit last year, followed by innumerable copy-cat series, many in the industry took it as a sign that the mass market was finally becoming computer-literate. I have to disagree. A part of the mass market did buy those books, but it was only that part that feels

• • • • •

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from a telephone or cellular phone line. Most

remain unusual for quite some time. That's important to remember for several

Superhighway" — are clear as mud to most of your neighbors. It means if you want to ensure

• • • • •

e 341 MB FastHard Drive

There are lessons in this for journalists and

forget the wide gulf between what's available and what reporters like to call the situation

Superhighways," despite the mergermania over

• 486 DLC-33, 128K cache

Governmentand Company PurchaseOrdersareW elcome. O Pen SundayS

policymakers, too. Since we live with this technology, day-in and day-out, we take it and its attendant buzzwords for granted. We assume

the benefits of being able to communicate,

and one phone company. Very few homes can

3T- I N ulti-media systems:

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NetWO rkiltg,0n4ite SerViCeS,COmputer UpgradeS8 COmputer Rentale(for companies)areavailable

it should be leading-edge, The rest don't like to think of themselves as dummies and, believe it or not, don't know what DOS is.

Writing about technology, it's too easy to

Here are some uncomfortable facts. Most homes still lack PCs. Most school children get very little access to PCs. Nearly all Americans still have just one source for cable television,

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66

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commercially available later this year. The disc is based on the National Gallery's own in-house computer informa-

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Contact: One-Off CD Shop Toronto Inc.

contains an interactiye guide to London's National Art Gallery. The disc should be

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Doing it "in-house" is still cost-prohibitive for all but the largest firms, but the One-Off CD Shop offers this service for roughly $300 on a onewff basis. The One-Off CD Shop Toronto is also working on interactive multimedia applications using their high-resolution color graphic capabilities.

(NB) — Microsoft has unveiled Microsoft Art

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tion system, which is known as Micro Gallery, According to Microsoft, its Art Gallery disc allows home and office PC users, art enthusiasts and educators, to learn about some of the world's greatest works of art using their Windows-based PC or Apple Macintosh computers. The disc itself contains images of the gallery's entire collection of more than 2,000 paintings from Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, Titian, Holbein, Rembrandt

and Vincent Van Gogh. The pictures are represented as high quality 256-color reproductions, digitized from the National Gallery's photographic archives. Vast text and graphic files are stored and

accessible alongside the painting images. The disc contains more than 5,000 pages of information, including more than 700 artist e•

• •

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Plato ommrmpot Doppler Compreer Coupe

The latest book to bear the Star Trek moniker is the Star Trek Guide to 20th Centtrr/r Computers (ISBN ¹1-56761-257-1). Written by Jennifer Flynn and illustrated by Hans

and Cassady, Inc., the $22.95 softcover volume uses the premise that it is a "history lesson," and mixes in just enough 24th-century "facts" to stay interesting. There are plenty of full-color illustrations of how computers and their peripherals work (not to mention

plenty of fanzine-style shots of every nextgen Trekker's favorite crew and their gadgets), and the text is both informative and breezy — just the thing for the Trekker on your Christmas list. Contact: Alpha Books, a division of PrenticeHall Publishing, (416) 293-3621.

IBM division builds Inmac's Insignia PC Mail-order personal computer and accessories supplier, Inmac, has launched a new line of Insignia personal computers that have been built for Inmac by IBM Corp.

The Insignia line comprises three models based on the Intel 486DX CPU running at 33

biographies, many with spoken names and

MHz to 66 MHz, and one model based on IBM's 486SLC2/50 chip. It is being manufac-

500 glossary terms explained. The total text comes to more than a million words. Neil MacGregor, the director of the

tured by the IBM PC Co.'s Austin Industrial Business Center. Inmac has primarily been a business-to-

National Gallery, said that he is very pleased

business supplier of peripheral devices, soft-

to have worked with Microsoft on the disc project. oNow people all over the world will be able to have access in their own homes to the system that has been delighting visitors to the gallery. This will enhance their enjoyment and appreciation of great painting," he

said. Microsoft Art Gallery will ship worldwide at the end of this year with a suggested list price of US$79.95 or its local equivalent. The disc needs a multimedia-equipped PC with Windows.

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Able to make single CD-ROMs for either the MacorPC,the One-OffCD Shop Toronto offers a cost~ffective alternative to storing information on reams of magnetic media. Large amounts of information, such as corporate manuals or transaction records, can often be transferred to a single CD-ROM.

Gallery, a CD-ROM (compact disc- read only memory)-based package for Mac and PC that

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Tomorrow's

small and large businesses alike.

Microsoft To Deliver london's National Art Gallery To TheDesktop

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One-Off CD Shop International is setting up shop in Toronto, making available the large storage capabilities of CD-ROMs to both

(¹I 6) 975-8768

WITH PURCHASEOF ANY OF THEABOVE SYSTEMS 130MB HD$255 •245 MB HD $380•.28dpSVGA $310 •.28dp N/ISVGA $340 Two Boxes of HD Diskettes with Every System Purchase

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Contact: Microsoft, 41 6-568-0434 or 800-9923675.

ware and supplies, but with the inclusion of

personal computers from AST, Acer, NEC and Toshiba — as well as the new Insignia mod-

els — the company is now a "one-stop shop," says Tony Beradine, general manager of Inmac Canada.The company has also begun to eye the growing small office home office (SOHO) market and includes Insignia models specially configured for the typical needs of a home business operator. Inmac has also launched three specialized mail-order catalogues: PC Select, lviacSelect, and Networking and Connectivity. Contact: Inmac, 1-800-567-5992

In Toronto area: (41 6)826-1515


ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 6 7 magazine will be distributed to over 300

Try Before YouBuy Software OnCDROM From Ambra

TORONTO — ExperComp Services Ltd. has launched a etry before you buy" program that allows users to explore more than 80 software titles without having to first buy them. The company is including a free, encrypted CD-ROM with its High Performance line

North American newsstands later this Fall. The premier issue will look at the Canadian Internet scene and will feature articles on the FreeNet movement, SchoolNet and Canadian politics on the Internet. Therewill also be regular articles on various Internet tools, games, and on the general subject of "Sex, Drugs and E-Mail.e It will be published six times a year and costs C$29 for an annual subscription. Contact: Strangeiove Press (613) 747-6106 or 72302.3062®CompuSetve.Com onthe Internet

When Only The Best Will Do... Choose IBM PS/1 • Real ease of use.

• • • •

Fast, easy, powerful 486 computing. Complete expandable systems for the entire family. Complete In One Box Ready To Take Home I year on site service and IBM Help Club

Bonus sotNrare Includes: Mavis Beacon Teaches TypingI. Chessmaster 30tN and World 4ttas. Instant Financing and Leasing 4 vattattle.

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of Ambra personal computers (except the notebook model). The CD-ROM contains software titles from vendors like Microsoft, Micrografx and Symantec. To try a specific title, you call a toll-free number and receive a decryption code that unlocks the software for one try. This can be done up to three times for each title. If you decide to buy it, another toll-free call will lighten your credit card by the appropriate amount, and the software is yours. Expercomp Services is a subsidiary of IBM Canada Ltd. It was launched in 1992 to make a line of IBM-clones under the Ambra

brand name. Contact: Goodman Communications (416) 924-9100

developed by IBM, Apple and Motorola. The four PowerPC-based workstations and servers are part of IBM's RISC System 6000 line. They include a base 250 system unit, two PowerStation units — designated 25T and 25W — and the PowerStation 25S.

IBM says the systems offer approximately twice the performance of its Model 230 systems but cost the same.

Prices for the PowerPC-based systems, which were to be available by mid-october, range from $7,720 to $13,380.

Test Pre-paid Card

"Hello! Phone Pass" is a pre-paid calling card that may eventually be available across Canada. The card allows the occasional longdistance user to make calls "almost anywhere in the world," without having to have a pocketful of change or credit card, according to BCTel. BCTel, AGT and Bell, which are part of the Stentor group of Canadian telecommunications companies, are market testing the card until the end of March, 1994. The Hello! card has the same dimensions

as a telephone calling card, but is purchased in various fixed denominations. During the

test phase, the cards will be available only in a $20 denomination. The customer dials 1-800 to reach an automated multilingual voice system, enters a 12-digit code found on the back of the card, then dials the long-distance number. The system determines the value remaining on the card and tells the user (in the language he or she selected) how much time can be spent on the call. The call continues until either party hangs up or the remaining

value on the card is exhausted. The voice machine wams the caller one minute before the funds run dry.

Contact: IBM Canada 1-800-563-21 39

K$ 2 •

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intelligent Pricing ] Support for a dealer near you

Lotus CanadaHas SmartSuitesFor OS/2, Windows

SOFTllIARCRNTAL SAVE$20.00,Gg YOUR free meinbershi p

Hoping to capitalize on a growing trend amongst users to buy software in suites or bundles, Lotus Canada has introduced SmartSuite for OS/2, as well as a revamped

B OX Bo x

Following the The Internet Business Journal, which is available through subscription only, Strangelove Press, based in Ottawa, is launching a similar publication aimed at a more general audience and will be

available on newsstands. InternetInsanity

OF 1 0 3 •5 H D QF 10 5 • 2 5 H D

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version of its SmartSuite for Windows. Lotus claims its SmartSuite for OS/2 is the first complete software suite for OS/2 2.1. It comprises 32-bit versions of the Ami Pro

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word processor, 1-2-3 spreadsheet, Freelance Graphics presentation graphics software, and cc.Mail E-mail package.

The company says the applications are true 32-bit versions designed to take advantage of OS/2's Workplace Shell, multithreading and multitasking capabilities. Ami Pro, one of the first word processors for Windows, has been compl etely rewritten for OS/2, says Lotus, yet retains file, style sheet and macro compatibility with Ami Pro 3.0 for Windows. As an introductory promotion and for as

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for OS/2 package. In the latest version of SmartSuite for Windows, designated Version 2.1, Lotus has dropped cc.Mail but added Approach, the database application it bought (along with the company that developed it) earlier this year. Both the SmartSuite for OS/2 and SmartSuite for Windows 2.1 have a suggested retail

price of $959, ($719 upgrade). Contact: Lotus Canada, 1400-CO-LOTUS.

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On October 4th, over a million area codeschangefrom 416 to 905

free copy of OS/2 2.1 with each SmartSuite

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long as supplies last, Lotus is also including a

New Publication

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IBM Canada has launched the first systems based on the PowerPC 601 microprocessor

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68

4 NOV E M BER 93

TH E COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

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Both companies say PCI offers advan-

news

tages over other local-bus implementations

or proprietary architectures, including its ability to work with processors such as 486

and Pentium chips, an open standard that includes over 120 system manufacturers and

Nintendo 3rd Most Profitable in Japan

over 3,500 shareware titles for Microsoft Windows and DOS; Soundsations with over 1,000 sound clips for Windows or Macintosh computers; and the World Literary Heritage, containing over 700 classical literary works.

TOKYO (NB) — Nintendo was the third most

public-domain software pre-tested by Softbit,

profitable business in Japan last year, following Toyota Motor and NTT.

Fifteen categories are available and the breakdown includes: 900 Windows tools; 220 accounting, spreadsheet, and home manage-

Nintendo exports most of its game machines to international markets, but due to the relative strength of the Japanese yen, has plans to produce more of its hardware overseas. Nintendo is currently planning a spacesatellite based game service on which it will sell game software and hold a variety of game competitions. Despite the slump in the Japanese computer industry, Nintendo continues to do well with a 163.8 billion yen (US$1.64 bil-

lion) profit for fiscal 1992, which ended in March 1993. Nintendo's profit passed that of fourth place Matsushita Electric. Contact: Nintendo, tel 481-75-541-6111, fax +81-75-531-1820

Shareware, Sounds, LiteratureOn CDs IRVINE, CA (NB) — Softbit has announced three new CD-ROM (compact disc read-only

memory) titles —Power Tools, a disk with

The Computer Book Clearance Centre

50 /a-80 /o Discounts On SeleCted TitleS • New titles every week • Mail and special order by phone

"Specialists in computer books for beginning users, consultants and programmers."

The Power Toolsdisc offers shareware and

ment programs; 70 database tools, 200 edurational programs, 350 games, 400 utilities, and even 170 programming languages. Each category is broken down into sub<ategories to help users find what they' re looking for and there's a graphical user interface with icons to make access easier, the company added. An alphabetized index is included and on-screen installation instructions are available for both DOS and Windows. The Soundsations CD offers 1,000 royalty-

free sound effects indexed by topic. The sounds come in both Macintosh format in the System 7 Sound edit format and PC format in the Windows-supported .WAV format. Cartoon-like effects, animals, sneezing,

musical instruments, machinery, laughing, clapping and more are all available for use in multimedia presentations or for use on the

desktop. The sounds range in length from a few seconds to a full minute. For students, teachersand history buffs, the company is offering the World Literary Heritage CD-ROM with 700 great literary

works. Not only does the disc have famous speeches fromleaderssuch as George Washington, Winston Churchill, John F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King, but over 20 minutes of voice narration by celebrities and images of the authors as well.

Ed Begley, Richard Burton, E.G. Marshall, and JamesMason read selected passages and over 150 high-resolution images, some with a biography and image of each author, can be viewed. Contact: Soflbit, (714) 251-8600, fax (714) 2617336

Dell's Pentium Prototype UsesPCI Bus AUSTIN, TX (NB) — Dell Computer Corporation has rolled out a Pentium-based desktop prototype PC that incorporates Intel's Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI)

local-bus. The system was demonstrated at the

annual management conference of the

OPen Mondaythrough Saturday 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM

MISSISSAUGA

OMPUTE

Microcomputer Managers Association held in New York. Dell's chief Technology Officer Glenn Henry says that while Dell currently offers other industry-standard local-bus technologies, the company thinks PCI is the most attractive long-term solution.

I/O card suppliers. They also point out that

because PCI bus devices are not directly attached to the processor bus, the processor can continue to operate while the PCI peripheral is accessing information from the

system's main memory. "While many other local bus technologies only allow one peripheral to operate at a time, PCI has the advantage of allowing mul-

tiple peripherals to operate independently," Henry said. Intel says that PCI technology will enable vendors such as Dell to offer what they cail "auto-configuration." That's the system's ability to automatically recognize when a PCI-compatible add-in board has been installed and will reconfigure itself to accommodate the card. Intel says that PCI is also designed to handle future design advances in the Pentium architecture. Contact: Dell Computer, 800-289-3355

Cricket 3-D 'Mouse' Adds Tactile Touch FREMONT, CA (NB) — A new player in the three-dimensional (3-D) mouse controller market, Digital Image Design (DID) has introduced the Cricket. The company says the Cricket offers all the control of traditional mice and joysticks but adds tactile feedback that can be linked to software events. Like Logitech's Cyberman, the Cricket is

specifically designed for role-playing, adventure, and action games in a 3-D virtual envi-

ronment. The device looks like something you might find on Star Trek: it is an arched

banana-like shape attached to a wedgedshaped head. While other 3-D controller manufactur-

ers, such as Logitech, say their 3-D products are not recommend for flight simulators, DID says the extended shape of the Cricket is made for use as a joystick in-flight simulation. The company says the unit offers flight control, a button that allows pressure and

direction to be fed back to the computer, rows of tactile sensors that can display vibra-

tion, amplitude, and frequency in the user's palm, a trigger button that returns pressure

as does the long hand grip, a magnetic position sensor, and microphones for ultrasonic

tracking. The Cricket has been designed for use with the Inscape software library from

Advanced Visual Systems (AVS) used on workstations. However, the company is planning a IBM-compatible personal computer (PC) version of the Cricket for release sometime in 1994. Contact: Digital Image Design, (212) 222-5236, fax (212) 864-1189

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTER PAPER NOVEMBER '93 69

bookreview

find sections dealing with the structure of

Two More For T e Internet tew B Y KE ITH

S C H E N G IL I - R O B E R T S

Tmlu:

Th e Internet Navigator: The EssentialGuideto Network Exploration for the Individual Dial-UpUser Autbsr: P aul Gilster Publisher. John Wiley &SonsCanadaLtd. Prius: $24 .95 US softcover 1993 352 pages

w

Instead of K just getting an Internet :. N ' vt.::.:tg:::;I:.':6:. :4 T . o . ."": address to i 'asui n ji's>''iaa a r 6»'v6' ".' ' h elp y O u

ith the rapid growth of the Inter-

.:~

.:-,: we

are

shown use-

and comp ut i n g r equ i r e m en t s needed to set up the Internet in

large organizations.

There' s

how to get connected.

a lso e v i dence that t his b o o k

Contact: John Wiley & Sans Canada Ltd. 1-800-

was rushed

567-4797.

into print,

Title:

Con necting toInternet: the An O'Reilly Buyer'sGuide Author. S usan Estrada Publlebsr. O'Reilly & Associates Prius: S1 5.95 U.S. softcover 1993 1?0 pages

Internetfills in some gaps from the first book on how to assesswhat sort of equipment you need to connect to the Interne, the world' s fastest growing communications network.

ful and fun applications available on the Internet, ranging from getting information for a school project, to downloading pictures

The book is intended primarily for Information Systems Managers who are planning to hook up large organizations to the Inter-

of planets from NASA. The main difference between this and other books is that this one is aimed specifically at the dial-up caller, where the author himself started out, and where the most growth on the Internet is occurring. You' ll

net. While there is a section devoted to the typical dial-up user, such users will find oth-

typographical errors which is very uncharacteristic of other O'Reilly titles. Despite that, the research behind the book is sound, and it explains in detail the types of telecommunications options and the

computing resources needed to set up the Internet within an organization. It also warns about pitfalls most often associated with setting up an Internet link,

will help you determine the type of Internet access best suited for your needs, and tell you how to estimate the most cost-effective way

of getting the service you need. It also provides a good listing of Internet service suppliers for the U.S. and Canada. While somewhat limited in its audience

appeal, the technical audience this book is aimed at will find Connectingto the Internet

er books on the Internet more helpful in the

useful when trying to set up Internet services for their organization.

long run. The type of detail this book goes into will only be of use to people who need to know about the full telecommunication

Distributor: O'Reilly & Associates: 1-800-9989938 or order@ora.corn on the Internet.

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3.x, and Ethernet/802.3 LANs.

NOVELL'S CNA STUDY GUIDE David James Clarke, IV

NOVELL'S PROBLEM-SOLVING GUIDE FOR NETWARE SYSTEMS Logan G. Harbaugh

THE ROOKIE'8 GUIDE TO UNIX WARE: A MAJOR LEAGUE OPERATING SYSTEM Novell's Problem-Solving Guide for Net- Susan Adams, Colieene Isaacs & Ware Systems takes a systematic approach Marcus Kaufman to finding and exing problems anywhere on

NOVELL'S APPLICATION NOTES FOR NETWARE 4.01 Novell Press

The Rookies Guide to UnixWare is a highly readable, easy-to-follow tutorial for UNIX beginners. By using the world of baseball — its rules, its strategies, and its traditions — to illustrate U NIX concepts and procedures, this unique guide explains UnixWare in a way that's fast-paced and fun.

This book is probably the most important asset for NetWare 4.0 and 4.01 users available. It features the industry's largest collection of up-to-date information and examples of the features of this powerful version of NetWare. The best overall guide to Novell applications available.

0-7$21-1376-1 Paper $26.95

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Novell's CNA Study Guide is for individuals who want to become Certified NetWare Administrators. Written by our network Covering NetWare versions a Certified NetWare Instructor, this ~s.x,and 4.x, this book gives you the skills book covers all aspects of NetWare 2.2 you need to: resolve intenupt conflids, memory conand 3.11 CNA program — as well as Oicts, and other common server and workmost of the Certified NetWare Engistation problems neer (CNE) program. ntis is the only pinpoint physical breaks in the cabling avord or solve print server pitfalls book of its kindf troubleshoot links with tahiti mainframes,

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Toronto Computer Books

581 vttllue Iepeee y I. {4vI6) S25 2g88 Ttrrettto, Ontario M4+ IY4 EMa f lAddressFaag [4$Q) 9QI+47$ topolaotu

North York Computer B o oks 3~ ~ < ~~un ~

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App N(t(es t()r Net%':.(re4.0j

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as it suffers from a poor job of editing and layout. This can be seen in the numerous

O'Reilly's new book Connecting to the

This book is written by someone who

resources on the Internet — it tantalizes you by telling you what's out there, and then gives you the tools to get there yourself.

for those beginning users who want to learn more about what the Internet can do, and

Whole InternetUser's Guide and Catalog,

stand how it all works. TheInternet Navigator is another good addition to the growing body ofInternet books.

book takes a good approach to the available

its approach, and guides the reader through all of the various tools and types of resources available on the Internet. This book is ideal

F

almost equal growth in the number of titles available to help people under-

remembers the awkwardness of trying to get

service providers in Canada in an appendix. The fntemet Navigator is non-technical in

ollowing quickly on the success of their

net, there has recently been an

a connection to the Internet, and then getting lost in a wilderness of data. Gilster puts this experience to good use by deliberately showing the new user just what's there. This

the Interne, the growth of FreeNets, and the types of pay-forcccess Internet links available. There is also a good listing of Internet

0-7821-1124-6 Paper $39.95

Waterloo Computer Books 1 IQnu Street Norah Waterloo,Ontario

tu2J RWB

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Mississauga Computer Books 170B laundnnStreet Bast uuhtni nnnuun, Ontario

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70

N O VEMBER '93 THE COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION •

FaCe it e • •

You' re a Trainer BY ROBERT

FO RD

If you have ever shown someone how to per-

both you and the learners.

form any task using a computer, you are a trainer. If you' ve been paid for it, you are a professional trainer.

The Steps: 1. Prepare for the session and deflne the

With so much to learn about computers, almost everyone who owns or uses one will, at some time, take on the training role. Infor-

mation Systems professionals are particular users of sitdown-and-let-me-show-you training sessions. These far outnumber formal training events and are rarely recorded. Unfortunately, few people use the basic tech-

niques for one-on-one training. The main reason is our grounding in impersonal lectures and reading assignments. One-on-one training is highly personal.

It's you and the person beside you. A failed training session can be the result of a simple misunderstanding and will reflect poorly on yoll.

If you become nervous about times when you must share your knowledge with someone, try the following steps. They will make your training events fast and painless for

task to be learned. 2. Explain and demonstrate the task. 3. H ave the trainee explain the task steps, 4. H ave the trainee explain and do the task. S. Have the trainee perform the task while you observe. Each person has their own preferred

learning style. Contrary to popular practice, few people leam effectively from lectures and manuals. Visual and interactive "hands-on"

material neededfor the learners before the

right directory and thereare no unexpected

session.

frills on the training machine.

For example, how much of Lotus do they need to leam? If the trainee is simply going

Preparation Checitllst:

to enter numbers into a spreadsheet, then teaching macros is pointless. Once you know what is required from a computer product, then determine the tasks. Learners' experience and needs tell you what the first task is. For example, if they' ve never touched a keyboard before, then dealing with the cursor keys is crucial before going onto more

advanced subjects. Remember: people are lazy. They want to learn the minimum for

success. If there's interest beyond the basics, that's when you lend out the manuals. In your preparation, divide the material into pieces that logically lead from one to

• • • •

De t ermine the application of the knowi. edge to be taught.

e Break it into tasks based on the learners' experience and needs. • Put the tasks into a logical sequence. • •

Pr epare any visuals, handouts or flie. Fo r ward your phone or shut off the

ringer. Te ll your co-workers you are training and are not to be interrupted. Fi nd a chair for the trainee. Ha ve manuals and handouts ready. Te st your hardware and software. Set up IDs and test them if you are train-

another. Keep them small. Recall that adults can focus their attention on a topic for maybe twenty minutes. After that you need to alter the subject, venue or simply call for a break. It is utterly pointless to push training

techniques are often faster and more effi-

on someone who is not ready. Postponement is preferable.

cient. Such material tends to be modular. This is good because adult learners tend to

During preparation, determine if the teaching equipment differs from the learn-

ing on a LAN or mainframe. The second step is to demonstrate and explain the task, Each should start with a two minute introduction. For example, if

you were teaching someone how to use cursor keys in a spreadsheet package, you might say: "In the next couple of minutes I'm going to show you shortcuts for using Lotus. There are a number of keystrokes that will

Therefore step one is critical for onewn-

ers' system. Training people on an AT keyboard, when they are using a PC keyboard at their own desks, will sabotage your work, If

save you lots of time when you enter your weekly numbers. This will let you get the job over with sooner and more accurately." This

you can do the training at their usual computer - wAh no interruptions - that's the best. Also be sure that sample files are in the

introduction states why you are inflicting

wanna leam Lotus? Sure - sit down - I' ve got five minutes." Determine the scope of the

want to know exactly what they need and nothing else. one training. Preparation is more than: «You

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ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 71 utter lack of jargon. Never assume that a per-

specifically what they' ve correctly recalled

son knows what DOS is. If you have to use a specialized term, ask the trainees if they know what it means. You may be surprised. They may be very knowledgeable about their

(and why) and then let them tell you what they missed. Most people know what they have muddledup, and being reminded

Daily Office Standards.

Next, slowly perform (but not agonizing-

pletely and keeping your hands away from the keyboard. Ideally you' ve exchanged seats

doing each time you press a key, Watch the student's body language. If they are looking

at this point and they are driving the com-

the learner: "What sort of traps could someone get into wit h th e procedure I just showed you?" Their answer will let you know how well you' ve delivered the concepts. Once they have watched you perform the task, and have asked all their questions, you must then ask them to tefl you how to do the task. In this third step, you speak rarely. It's up to them to verbally demonstrate their understanding. They must tell you what to do; then you do it. The trainees' use of language helps to store the knowledge in their brains. After they have tried recalling what the steps to the task are, then give feedback on their performance. Positive feedback is critical. Tell trainees

THECONTINGENCY PLANNINGEXPO'93SponseredbyDRIEthe (Disaster Recovery Information Exchange). At Metro TorontoConvention Centreon Nov, 2nd, 1993 from 9 AM to 4:30 PM, For more information call Alysone Will or Julia Williamsonat Co-ordinationPlu's Inc.8629067. S.C.I.B.- CANADIAN COMPUTER/OFFICE TECHNO LOG Y SHOW- November9-11 at MontrealConventionCentre. COMPUTERFEST '93.Canada'slargest consumercomputershow andsale.Nov 12 -14 1993.SkywayCentre, Etobicoke, Ontario. Contact: Ryhan Ahmad, ShowFestProductions(416) 925-4533 CANADIANCOMPUTER SHOW & CONFERENCE November 22-25, 1993at the

TorontoInternational Centre,6900Airport Rd., Mississauga.The24thAnnualCanadianComputerShow & Conference,The Fall ComputingClassic. Canada's premiere computerevent, featuringall aspects of the desktopandportable technologies, includingthenewest in personalcomputers, notebooks,palmtops,software, networking, open systems, communications, OS/2, Windows,pen-basedandwireless technology,multimedia, andmore. ContactDeborah Dugan,G.D.E.,Show Manager (416) 252-7791or fax (416) 2529848.

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puter. At this stage you cannot touch the computer without asking the trainees' permission first. It's their computer now and your behaviour must reinforce this fact. During step four trainees explain the task as they do it. If they become stuck, provide a hint. Do so only if they ask, or answer "yes" to your offer of help. Give more feedback. Ask them what they thought they did correctly. Then, if mistakes were made, ask them to identify them and state what they might do to fix the problems. Add your own observations. Then either undertake step four again or move onto the performance test. Step five is easy. Sit back and watch the trainee flawlessly perform the task. Give positive feedback as necessary. Then you start all over with a new introduction to the next task. So, the next time someone comes by and asks: "Hey can you show me how you do that?" Your response is "Sure. What is it that you' re trying to do?"

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doesn't help. Step four involves you shutting up com-

ly so) all the keystrokes, stating what you are

at you and your hands, this is good. If they are not - or are fidgeting - you may be losing them. When training, ask questions to confirm understanding. It's pointless to press on to the next task if the previous one has not been learned. Pitfall: Yes/No questions don' t work. The trainee will say virtually anything to make you be quiet and complete the training session. Start your questions with "what" or "how". For example, if there are pitfalls in using a particular keystroke, ask

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CASEWORLDOctober 19-21, 1993 in Boston.TheNational Application Development Conference & Exposition and announcing0-0 EXPO,the Object-Oriented Conference& Exposition. Call (508) 470-3880, PC EXPO Oct 19-21, 1993. Chicago,IL. Contact Nat'I BlenheimExpos Inc. 800829-3976. SEYBOLD COMPUTERPUBLISHING-West Oct20-23,'93.MosconeConventionCenter, San Francisco, CA. Amulti-faceted event, focusingontheevolving processof communication, with a central themeof Multimedia. Alargeportion of the exhibits and conference topics devotedtoelectronic publishingandgraphic designapplications. Contact: SeyboldSeminars(800)433-5200 or(310)457-8500. CO-ROMEXPOOct 27-29, '93. World Trade Center, Boston,MA.Focusing on how to profit from digital publishing,and those whowant to access the info, on disc. Contact: MitchHallAssoc.617-3618000. MACSHOW November 1-3, 1993. Philadelphia,PA.Contact: TheShowManagementCoInc: 215-540-9111. GALSExpointernational '93, November14. Georgia World Congress Center, Atlanta,GA VOICENovember 3-6, 1993. Nev: York, NY, Contact: IPC Trade Shows Inc, 800888-21M. CO MD E X/F aI I November15-19, 1993. LasVegas, NV, Contact: Interface Group 617-449-6600. SEMINARS-Flynn McNeil Raheb8 Associates are

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MOBILE COMPUTING/FIELD FORCE AUTOMATIN O-Feb 17, '94. Will showyou how notebook computers, pen-based computi ng,etc..can make you andyour organization moreeffective and productive. ELECTRONICDOCUMENT MANAGEMENT-March17,'94. Leamhowto get the best valuefrom theuseof electronic documentmanagementtechnologies. RAPIDAPPLICATION DEVELOPMENTApril 21, '94.Will showyouhowtodevelop informationsystemswith a highlevel of user involvementandsupport, ELECTRONICPUBLISHING-May 19,'94. Learn howelectronic publishingandonline documentationcan reducecosts and enhanceretrieval of information. For moreinfo. or to register for theseminars,call FlynnMcNeil Reheb and Associatesat (416) 925-8111or Fax: (416) 925-8515. •

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stanlin at2774!1L for medical affice,educagonal compugng 45.SOF-FILETECHNOLOGY Phone/Fax: An IBMcopyof LeisureSuit LarryGoes $ Lookingfor Love(in severalwrongPlaces). 203-2753 AAp BBS:Wearebe new andgmudn MICROS OFTames indudes Word for Win, Ag hotgifs all the~time!! I 416-237-1010. EXCEL,Powerpoint &Mail. Shrinkwmpped. $299. Call Marlin 235W15. Ati!IIGA Daily - PlanetBBS1500Mugs 5 ANLST/PGMR Novell mgmt DOS PCse tuPCV2.X/3/X dBASECliPsystem Per Progm, Dsh a 4164%45M ar 416 +4%- gramming&more. Ip 496-9035. MICAOSOFT Word 5.5 for DOS$100. forOOSandMac$80eachallsealed HELP, Ineeda1084Smonitor, Ramexpan- Works AMIGABBS: Fm Bloom Bmon. 416- sion for A1000,also anyother Amigabits, new. Bill 242-872!. complete286/386. Cashpaidl Call Rob8- MONOmonitor card $80. - 360 f/dr. like new $17.- (386) 200watt p/supply$30. ANIMATION and graphicsBBS -thecorn- 9pm. 741-7228. 7.1 $20. Pat251-2476. mand line toaster/l ight wave/imaginecon- IBM XT,640K,20MB Hp,CGA colormoni- PCTOOLS ferences/onlinegames- tons of users. 24 tor, 2FD,IBMproprinter XL ion of games. OWN AUNIXSYSTEM: Yaucannowhave hrs. 1200-1440~ ubaud. 416-5334%1. $300 O'N756 l 3MB your ownUnix OS(Unux) for lessthan$90 BBS Lists: Usta for BBSin Canada, USA, I p STUFF togiveawayto kids non-profit (copying &floppies). This includesX-Windows,TCP/IP,&Tek Call451-1659. EuroPe,Australia andtheCaribbean. Over org Shnniaftergpm 5365884 6000 numbers,with morenumbersadddaiPCTOOLS with stacker. $180. Call 842ly. For alist send$3to I. Breuster, 10Rod- SVGA .28monitor, 80387-25 co-pro., SB 3276. da Blvd., Unit 65,Scarboro,Ontario. M1E Pro i CDROM.Call andleavemsg. at4614875. QEMM 386V6.0 newpkg., $25. 502-0226. 2Z6. BLUEMoonBBS:1G1G+OS/2 & DOS Files WANTED - Software for HP Scanjet +, SOUNDblastersoundcard,new inbax$85. on-line games& Netmail Bases. 24 hrs. preferablyScanga15. CallDoug244-2783. Tel. 763-7326. 2400-144. Play TradeWam. 416-840. WANTED Commodore software for 8032, THETEACHERS ' MARKSHEET for Macor 8096, Superpet. Call evenings416-839- IBllt, Free trial. SaftwareSpirit, 4602 - 46 Street, Spirit River,AB,TOH3GO(403)864CAREER BBS: Networking, strategies, suc- 4943. cessPsychology,aiticles (416)266-7005. WANTEp peag or aiive - prlam519 hard 3608 VENTURA Publisher Windowsedition 4.0. CLUBV Bbs: OpenedAugust 31. Running drive. After 6 pm.519-338-2238. new. Wonin contest. Value$699. WANTEO dead or alive: Computers, Fax Brand Sell $350. CallMike283-5556. sa es online "amesandfriendly s"so s machines or copiers. Top dollar paid. G ra ok! fg&87 at 48 Phone4RH828 or 5434!271. WRITEyourownlottey programs - usemy of ag 6/49 draws- with C Lang. DDLLInc. M40M5 . 41&M4115. WANTED AAMmemoiy - whateveryou can database sourcecode•$15. O.Watson,291,6220DAAGON Mountain: dedicatedto RPG s and sellme. Cag Doug244-2783. 17 Ave.S.F,Calgary,Alberta, T2AQW6. onlin egism 14,400bps.322-7871. WANTEp:40megorgp meg SCI hard FREElist of Bulletin Boards, sendBASEto drive used. Call271-7843. J. Young,P.O.Box67023, mp YongeSt, WANTED:peedor alive: Computers (IBM M4P1EO. Comp). Cal4694828. l Turbo XTsystem, 40 MegHDD,mono ICA BBS over 50,000gges. 24hours. Eto- WANTED:laser orphotocopiertoner car- 1 monitor etc.Asking$250obo884-3166. tridge. Savetheenvironment, Freepick up, 1MB RAM Expansion board (8103A)for JURASSIC SRIZ BBS- Jurauwic Park Fans call 9406710. 8310 laptopComputer$80. 42M will love this BBS. Brand newboard. WANTED.Oid EPYXnamecaged Omni Bondeg IDE H/0 $130. 20MMFMH/0 $80. Call AccePtingnewusers now. GreatAnsi, over cron Conspiracy".CallIt!!le at622%00. 896-2687. 40 onlmedoors, tonsof files. Aunning on Tribbs. 14.4 baud, 24hrs. (416) 886- WANTED: Sharplaptopor notebook. Days 2MEG ComspecRAMexpansionfor Amiga 416-7384501.Evgs.416-8844951. 5487. 1000; selconfi l guring,vey sturdy. Asking $150 obo.CallColin3224!333. LIKEgames'/ CallSnipper.4154049. 3 PS2 4MEG $200 ea,2 enhanced 386 NIAGARA ON-LINEBBS. Afree board feaMemExpBd4SIOE$300 ea, 116/4 token tu 'ng Fracterm andFractal hareware 14.4 $1QQ LptUS123Ikff d R f 1 l g ~ ring. Adpt$200.5164657. N~ 4K 20m. 416-7Q&27. $10Pevgs:Jack7734X!88. OPPOATU NITY is knocking...U gonnalet ACCpACpLUSV5.1 IC/OEwanted. 416- 8MEGICD RAM expansionforAmiga2000 has2MEGsinslagedlikenew.Asking$220 me inyyy M+M4164386063. 940-9240. obo. CalCol l in3224M. THECHUR CHS RE CITADEL- gayand ADOBE! am ~bio, W;ndows 31 AQ new 9 PIN Printer $50. Imagewriter II color lesbian communityBBS. 24 hrs aday. $10 each. !call Francis 7414963 or Mark printer $200.obo. 286 Motherboard$50. 416424-9541 284 1201 40 mg hd $100. 3.5"dnve$40. 9444694. THEE48AILmachine.Aun!Quamassaging ALDUS FREE HAND3.1'for Windows- 14" Goidstar SVGA monitor, 1024 x 768, sys™ (Electro-love) Free 416~94 unopened$300/obo.416-349-3460 .28mm, N-l, Non-Glare,Anti-Static, not 6122. PADforWindowsrelease3with manu- usedmore than 2 hrsJ85Mb ConnerIDE THE formula I pedi!ac KBfans of F I alsI$80. Persuasionfor Windows H.D. 12ms 8 345 MbMaxtor IDE H.D. autoracing,24his. Free.1200-2400. 695- I 2 Aldus g h ~ $75 P l adl588. 1.4ms. Sacrificingeveiything...Cheap.Call 482& 705-7214!084. IM. THEMIXBBS: 24*r Int Net/Echomail & 20 MHz286 system: new keyboard,40 OwkbSupport, GTNtwk, latest shareware ASAIAMA(AIKUM: Theworld'sThe mostAlim. pow- Meg HDD,monitor etc. Asking $425obo. erful Islamic software: releases. V32bis/HST 300 to 1680baud Our An/Hadith/Arabic/Eng!ish ag(416)781- 884-3166. 4164l14!197 7861 24h 42M HDDConner28msIDE.Goodshape, THEYARDSALE BBS: onlineclassifieds, CLIPPEA 5.2 -completepackage,natan $130. CalKen l 652-9233. FREE access. 113e message areas. Upgrade, unopened $500. 'Crystal 245 MB &527MBIDEHDs for sale. Gary Oshwa,ontario. 24 hours. 300-2400 Report em'Unop g$95 94H398 4954649. baud. Cal571-2847. l TorontoTwiliglg Comm unications BBS. 7 CYRILLICfor Windows416-252-9828 Ad'- 256KSimmsRam$5.00 ea Call279483! or 327-1967. lines andgrowing! Over4 GIGS ( that's 400 Megabytes) ofonline IBM& AMIGA EXCEL4.0, newin box,cost $395. Best 286 Computer,40MIN, 2M RAM,mouse, files Online! Plus greatOnlineGames & offer. AMor PM.(MACVS). 2844!67L DOS 6.0, Windows,WordPerfect, Lotus RPGsfor yaur enjoyment l.ow affordable FREEL!STof newsoftwarefor testingand IQ dBase,etc. $9XLCall896-2687. rates. Onlinechat included. Call 4164!63- revtevr. SASE to J, KoomefR.R.rg St. 286 Laptop, 1 MB,int mod,$400. Call8878779 for 2400baudor 416463-1103 far Thomas,Ont., NSP 3T1. 2168. 14.4 v.32bislHST. 286 Super-slimLaptopcomputer 40MH/0, TROPICALPmdise BBS. 24 hm. IBM. 3 GAMES AMgE GA agbl es.G Ag aS me PaM cE kS agefor scoIBM nlainor oncomginal 1.44M F/0, 2M memory, only 8 Ibs, 2.2 gigs of files. Online gnat: Alms; Mos P andmanuals. A variety to choose inches height $700.Cal!896-2687. sageBases;TechSUPPort. 16.8bPsV,32 & disks from. Each gameis$5. Cagfor moreinfor- 286ATMotherboardc/w 2MegRAM(12/8 V.42bis. FugymodiTied. 4164344823. mohan 416279.2347 Mhz,70ns). Windows readyas is. $100 WORTH Even By'e,24 km. CD-ROM,Free LOTUS 12311far MAC. Shrink wrapp d. obo. Call7824741. Memb Ships New Numb5 Cog416-738- $100 CNI485-2583 1077 forNode1. 286SX1MbRAM 40MbHOmonocardand LOTUS Smartsuite with 123,Amipro, Free- monitor 1.2 fdetc. Asking$400. Call466lancegraphics,ccmail, manuals. Newnev- 6328. I er installed. $190.7594!286. 386-DX25 - loaded,VGAmonitor 4MB 386 or 486 andprinter. Will pay up to MACINTOS HSORWARE- MacDraw II and RAM, 120 MBhard, open architecture. $1000. Call621-2197. FilemakerII. Bothbrandnewin sealedpack- $1200. CalFranci l s741-8963. Markalter 8 486DX-33. 4MBwith 340MB, 1.22/1.44 ages• $40each. • Karl (416) 748-6319 at 284-1204. 386/20SX Laptop,2 MB RAM,42 MB HD, SVGA(Hl) 2MB, Will pay $1800cash. Evenings.791-8873. MEDDORAWARTLIBRARY -A Software VGA, 3.5 floppy, 2S/1Pport. $850 obo. Programcontaining original cliP~~™Qes Call 492-6102. 440Qor3600BaudFaxModem CailKon I I

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386/25MHZw/387HD40digital board 12x12Fax-modem4 MB Ram VGA monitor DOS6 Win 3,1 manygames. Big tower 1.2/1.44 floppiesmouselike newprinter Panasonic24 pin. Call 2720087. 386 DX/33IBMCompatible, 84 Meg HardDrive, 2 high density floppies, 4MegRam(5 1/4. 31/2) SVGAcolor monitor and512K videocard,2serial, 1 parallel, Internal24/96FaxModemcard and software,101enhancedkeyboard, OO S6, WP5.1, Windows,lots more.. .only$850obo.Call275-3890. 386 SX-33,2MBRAM,120MBHD, VGA color, 1.44fl. dr., mouse, 1yr. warr. $900, 2781373, 386DX33, 4 MB RAM,120MBhdd, 1.44 and 1.2FD, 101board, full tower,SVGATTX, 2400modem,mouse,WP5.1, Lotus 2.2, 24 pin Brother M-1324printer. Asking $1050 obo. Call John532966. 486 DX334MB105HD2FOD SVGA, mouse, external modem. $1400obo. Call803-8532. 486DLC40:128KCache,8 RAM, 212IIIIB HO& 300IIIB SCSIHD,1 8 4 SoppySVGAmonitor & 1MB SVAcard, SBPROwith MIDI,GVCext.14400modem, $3000. Tonsofnewsoftware! Askfor John. 94IHi683. 486DX-33MHZVesacomp. 245MBHDSVGA monitor, SVGA card, 101keyboard,mouse,brand new,1year warranty. $1390. Eve. 651-3081. 4S6DX33Motherboard,64K,OMb,exp.to32Mb;8slots,Landmark CPU+109Mhzll/386DX40 Motherboard, 128K,OMb,exp. to 32Mb, 8 slots, Landmark CPUi65Mhz!! Sacrificing every thing...Cheap,Call?OS-7214084, 486SLC-2 5Mhz.VGA,Notebook,4MBRAM ,120MBHD,carrying case$1950,SVGA,.28P,monitor$345.752-9387. A PERFEC T graphics printer! Okidata400with 2.5 megmemory and new cartridge. Cost $950. Asking$700. Call277-1071. AMO, 1MBchip + 2MBfast RAM,Ext drive. GVPCttlrv205MB HD, 100disxs. software, magazines, agfor $650. Bardya4907997. A500/C128:ForSale. CallKamil at822-496S. ACEEXFastV.32 BisFaxModem,external. Superbuyat$259 obo. CallOralat502-9397. AMIGA5001MB 1084SGoldenImagemouseJoystickover$300 in games/utilities/disks/Amigamagazines.$700 oboGlenn4795454. AMIGA500,greatcond,1MB RAM ,2400baudmodem,ext.3.5, printer, monitor, joystick and sottware, $1000obo. Call Milan 416-454¹)865. AMIGA 20005MB45MBHD. Lots ofs/w, $1200. Call¹57-2351. AMIGA 2000: 1Meg,3.5, IBMxtcompat(.5 Meg, EGAcard, 5.2s); 1Q84monitor, IBMprinter, mouse,joysticks, 50~software pkgs, manydisks,$600. 416-294-6474. AMIGA2000: A2080 C-Monitor,3DD,PC Bridge board,20MB HO, software $950. Bob487¹)804. AMIGA monitor for sale$200obo. 2400bpsmodemfor sale $50 obo. CalMark l 287-0026. AMIGAsystem: Amlga 500$150, Amiga 1084monitor $170, SCSIController (SA500) $100. All in excegentcondition. Call Yosi after 6 pm. 6304518. AMIGA: Fusion-forty accelerator4MB,52MBQuantum+ICD2080 controller + megachip. Easylgraphicsboard. $1,780. Call lan after 7 pm at 455-9648. APPLE 11E, 128K.duodrive 280printer card, joystick, numeric key pad, software, manuals$450. CallAfan. 926-4518. APPLE14" monitor .39 dp. New. Asking $100. Call Stephen 754-3'I69. AST 286-10,1MBRAM,70 HDD,1.271,44 FDD,SVGAcolor, ATI graphicscard,$650. Steve296-0575x2919. AST 386/SX16,4MBRAM. 212HD, 2FDO,TapeB/U, SVGA W/ATI XL24 tMB card, USR14.4/14.4 Data/Fax, Soundblaster, Bus mouse.Call 236.8195 ATARI 1040ST.color and monomonitors, 60 Megharddrive, Epson LQ printer, lots of software.desk,more. $1250obo. Tom 237-9997. ATARILynxcolor portable videogamesystemwith 1game16bit. $95. SagaGenesis gamesfor sale or trade. $25. 499¹ISO?. ATARIMEG A-ST: 2MB,monitor, printer, spreadsheet, wordprocessing, database,desk top publishing, 60 floppy disks, $475. 2941828. ATARI PORTF OLIO 32K 16 bit computer palmtop type $300 O.B.O.752-6083 BOCARAM SmegMemoty upgradeexpansion cardwith 4 mega on it$200 ortradefor 16 bit soundblaster. 101 8 t02 enhanced keyboards $15, $20. Call661-9766. BRANDnew quantum 85MBHDO$170.536-5896, BUY-SCREEN new/usedforTandy2810HD.Call538-1706. C¹I¹:15¹t DD,cofor mo nitor, pdnter, Seiko 1000 plus software and books,$300obo. After6pm. 881-2965. C¹I¹C: 1541C Disk Drive, SeikoshaPrinter, Joysticks,Software; ag perfectcondition: $200. CallAnthonyat245¹)993. C64 1541DDPnnter andinterface. Manuals, modem300 baud, cables,lots ofsofhvare, Steven2994614. CANON sheet feederfor BT-10. Neverused. $59.90. PhoneNorrnan 971-7589. CD ROM drive 600m iliseconds 20KBbuffer 150kdatatransfer rate plusonegameasking$100. Call Mareat624-3941. CGAVideocard $20, I/OPluscard, $10. Gall441-0744. CITIZEN200 GXDot Matrix printer. Rarely used,comeswith manualsandoriginal box, 3print modes. Only$125. Call2753890. Color printer. StarNX100QRainbow BKB buffer 120cps: picaelite orator courier sansarif condensed proportional printing 240dpi extra ribbon 20 Ibs paper $200. Glenn479-5454.

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COMMODORE1084SMon. RGB,TTL,Analog,Composite.Lanr audio inputs. $180or tradefor VGAMon. Mark287-0026. COMPLETE Amiga500system.Includes210MBHD,'2.04ROMS, 2.5MBRAM, 2002CommodoreColorMonitor,2400 BPS JVC modem,software,manuals etc. Asking$1100. CaliGaryat519971-2743, COMPU TERSystem: HighperformanceMicronics 486SX-intel, 4MB RAM, Multi-t/0 1OEController, Quantum1?OMBH/0, 1.2MB 8 t.4 MB,keyboard,tower, softwareincluded. Paid$2MO- asking $1275. 519-942-3064. COURIER HSI 14.4K$150. 502¹)926. EGA car d$25,Floppy dr.1.2MB $30,360K $9,CGA card $25, Modem14,4bpsbrandnew$210. CallAlexat 8&4444. EGA car d$25,Floppy dr.t.2Mb $30,360K $9CGA card $25, modem14.4bps. Brandnew$210. CallAlex at 8294444. EGAcolor monitor 14"goodcondition. Asking $60 - Margaret 754-7326. FOR SALE:Computer386SX2085M HD4M RAM,modem $850. Also computerdesk$65. 519-942-3229. FOR SALE: ST251/42 MEG.$100. Miniscribe 3085/6S MEG. $130. ColorVGA$150. CallMarioat748-5817. FORSALE: VGAcard $65, VGAmonitor mono$65, WAN Gkeyboard new $15andtypewriter $50. CaliJohn472-3153. FOR SALE;Weitek3167 mathcoprocessor-$99,AMD 386SX25 - $75, calPeterat452-4724. FULLPageScannerc/w Photoshop $450. CGC BLP EliteLaser Jet Printer$590. 416-385-8625. HARDDRIVE: 40MbSeagatemodelST251, MFMtype. With or without controller. Call416-538-5381. HEWLETTPackard Laserjet For SaleDemo: I/J IV (600 DPI)w/ toner 8 warranty. Call to scheduledemonstration - $100 discount. Darren519-942-3064. HP LASER JET3, 1 year old -990, memoryfor HP,postscript cartridge. 696.6407. HP Scannerinterfare kit for IBM PS2. Never used$120. 386 SX/16AMIboard new. Neverused. $160. 458-1575. HP-III Laser printer exc. cond. Only 4350prints. 3M RAM $1 300. 962¹I560. IBM 4019Lasersw/ postscript. 2 to choose,agoptions incl. 500 sheet tray,envfeeder,$1200-1400. Call848-4640. IBM computer640K2FDmono with software$150. CallTonyeve or wkh 691-5544. IBM DisplayWriter system, keyboard,monitor, dual 8" floppies, manuals andapprox. 50 8" disks. $90. Any relics out there'? 519-622-6340.

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74

NOV E MBER '93 TH E COMPUTER PAPER ONTARIO EDITION

<" IB iCMO S / " ~ Upgrade: $40 ATI XL24 Vkleo Card 14" SVGA Non-Interlace Monitor $35 tulIC3 inteml'ed.I,'N)ttilsl ImlIIII 230MB IDE Hard Drive $35 (Fcrsiw than 486CrX-33.LandMork 2.0 - ISTHMI-4 - MK Irdeinal cache. Made ki USA,4 MB R/Wl - 1.2 gr 1A4M FD, IDE C~ w / 2 8/P/8 - 1MB SVGAcord. SVGA Color fvtongor 28dpt -170M Hard Drive, 101Enhanced Keyboard - ivilnl lower oossr.IBhdDGB5J3. Mouse & Prfd . Heat Snk Ik CPUFan, Moth-Co

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Computer Brokers Canada inc. (CBC) is u leading national distributor of personal computers, components and peripherals, Due to our strong continued growth, we have these exciting new opportunities for intelligent and energetic individuals to join us as:

junior Soles Representatives These positions involve supporting senior account representahves in their complex dealer relahons. You will be assisting with driving sales in current accountsand handling a large volume of incoming calls. The ideal candidate will have an excellent telephone manner, sales experience, strong prospecting and organizational skills and a proven ability to learn quickly in a fast-paced environmmtt. Knowledge of microcomputers is a siyuficant asset. For this ~r r n i /r/ plerrsccall <905/660-1616 exi. 1500.

Senior Sales Representatives Your three to five years' successful sales experience, induding experience with account management, and your inMepth knowledge of microcomputers and peripherals have prepared you to take on this drNerrging role. A solid team player, you are enthusiastic and enjoy a fast-paced atmosphere. Distribution experience would be an asset. SeniorSalesRepresentatives are also required in our Vnncouver office. Appficnnfs s/rrurfd highlight their pre ference of/orn/inn ashenfaxing a resrr mrsfo the nrrrrrber g/t err beforu.

IBM Keyboard.416432-3613. IBM PS/I386 BX20/38760 MB HD,3.5

fd,4 MB RAM,VGA color,mouse,2400 bps, modem.$t000. 749-9056. IBMPS/1w/40mb1,44color. New. Asking $800.Paul88M796. IBM PS/2558)L4MB,60MB-HD,internal modem,8513VGAcolor monitor, DOS, Stacker,OEMM , WP5.1, 1-24r3.1. New condi gon.Includesmanuals,books.more software.$12IL 625-7925. IBM PS/2al 286/33MB12 fd,manocard & monitor$425. CallNick43IH307. IBM P81 SX-38620MIh 40 MBHD4MB RAM, VGAmonitor, mouse, software: WP5.1andWindows3.1, 1.44flopp, less than 1 yearold, $1000 o.n.o. Call 538-

3407. IBM Ouietwriter111printer. sheetfeeders, font cartridges. Excellent condition. $350. CallSenthil at821-1783. IBM TokenRingadaptor card(ISA) SM0. Attachmate3270emulation card $150. Call 946-8398. IBM Token ring card $550obo. 823. 7317. LAPTOPNECUltralite. Sell for $600. Softwareincluded. 416-9274730. LAPTOP-Zenith 286 supersport-backlit display, 1.44 fd 640Kexp to 2 MB HD

inte rnal.Fax modem canyingcase.sleek design. $850obo.Call650-5708. lASERPRINTER: NEC 860~.excellent condio kn. 8PPM,300x 300 DPI. Cost $4000 new,asking only $900. Accessoriesalsoavail. CallMark2824I301. LASERMASTER800 DPIpostscdptlaser printer, SMmemoryand135 original fonts, Good condition. Cag971-7MB. LOWpricecomputerparts from$25to $425. CalNhk l atter6pmat 4394%7. MAC SE «ndHPDeskWriter withtwocartridges. For Sale. incl. Microsoft Excel and MacWrite. Agooddealat$850.finn. Call 4284)809. MACINTOS HFEVER: I havevarious Macintoshmodelsat tin'I be beatprices. Call Paul al8314it58. M/CINTOSH LCI 4/40 w/14" color monitor, keyboard,mouseand lots of sfwr. 6 monthsnew$1680. CallBriana4-9 pmat 25H566. MEMORY RAM: 1MBi parity chips(grh) 70 ns. $30,enhanced 101bilingualkeyboard for .8088t286$30, Call 608-7399 anyti meorevenings653-9692. MITSUW gCD.ROMnew. 50msec150kb complete with interfacecard software cables. Richard.$180.93243tt. MODEM: ATI 2400Etdev42BIS, error correc tMNP5compress,sendfax,external, mint condition. $65 firm. Call Dave 842-3967. MONITORS:Aanuuing 12"amberTTL, like new,$40. COM PAQ14" SVGA, needs repair, $100. Call 608-7399anytime, evenings 653.9692. MOUNTAIN tapedr,TO4000 8,TD8000. Ph. 4990376. NCR DM-5 computer,10 MB hard dri ve, color VGA, 5 1/4 FD.with LOprinter $400. 763-7326. NEC286Computer for sale:NK 286.640 RAM,MonoSamsung monitor, 101Enh. KB, 5 1/4 FDD,21MBHDD,2400/9600 FAXModem,DOSS.$500call2368195 NECLaptop640K2FOD $400. Call2717843. NECLASERprinter extracartridge, 500 sheet trays. II50 obo286IBMcomputer with CGA color rrenitor, 60 rneghd$550 obo. Call271-7843. NEW/USE D hardware videocards/acceler. 40MB Harddrives, 9 pin printers,

OLYPMPIA Qlytext20 w/y includes twin

drives, keyboard,monitor andmanual. $275. Phone 2404412. PANASO NIC1124 24Pindot mahix printer. Like new. Comes with manualand ribbon. Paid $410. Selling $195obo. Call 762-1905. PANASO NIC2123 printer SI50. 24 pin, quiet technology, incl. colour kit, 800 sheets bondpaper(25%cotton). Call 416/905.276-8817. PANASO NIC4430 laser Sppm2mb Ram almostnew. $1059. 519-745-7055. PC JR. 128K1FDD 8Amber monitor somes/w$75or b/o, Peterafter 7«t 7817583. PERFECT for graphics printingl Okidata 400 with 2.5 mgmemoryandnewcartridge. Cost $950. Askmg$700. Gall 539-9839. POSTSCR IPT for IBM4019 laser Printer. Wiry notupgrade?$100or bo. Call8484640. PRINTER HPDeskjet 5000 -$560. Call 737-5480. PRINTER: PanasonicKX-P1180g-pin.

2K. Manycharacter sets. Bi-directional;

up to192 charJsec. Envelopes,single,

continuous,fomw. Excegentcondilion. WanantyMarch1994. $100. 7244tgf. RAM 24 MegGimm efor anyIBMdone. Asking $250 each/2M dips$7each/1M dips $3each/Jeny4544256. REAL IBM Proprinter III(4201) 9 pin w/cabl es$100.Voicemail:608-73SL TeL evenings:8534Pk SANYO16LX deluxe, 640K, 40MBHD, 5.25 ~ 3,5FD,101KB.mano, mouse, Roland9101printer, DOS5i mare, $650

obo. Cal890e00 l exl 6236. SIMMSForSatecheap286 Olivetli computer for sale40MHD1.2M tlopyy EGA very reliable. Make an ofl'er. Call Shahab 7424tt44. SOUND blaster 8 bit sound card deluxe edition 2 monthsold completewith software manualsoriginal package. Ibchard. $80. 9324311. SOUND bhster delwe oewi never used, includesfull utsgesamlgames$100. Call James497-2047. SUPRA14.4Fax/ModemMSmouse, Windows, WP for Windows,Excel. Call 416465-5855. TOASTER2.0,17meg,f60hd,040accelerator. CallPeterwk. 2524I07. hm. 6549656. UPGD Apple2GSw/ the works4164536370. VGAcolor monitor. CTX14 VGAmonitor plus extension cable. $200obo. Call929. 8177. XEROX printer. Daisy wheelprinter, very goodcondlgon$190.Plscall5S8-1863. XT 2FDD,monochrome monitor,650K memory. Goadcondition. 6'l75. obo. Call Chantalat287-2394. ZENITHMinisport Portable computer, 2 megabytesRamMSDOS3.30 built into the RQM. $395. Will Faxdetails. Call 416468&74.

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SOFTWARETRAINING, IMAGING,

SCANNING, COMMUNICATIONS, HARDWAREREPAIRTEGHS, PROGRAMMING,DTP, ACCOUNTING INSTALLATIONS. SUBNT RESUMETo: CREA11VEPCSOLUTIONS,

286,Mboards, anycabies, keyboards, 2400 modems,VGA/SVGAmonitors, All positions cali for a high degree of motivation, superior interpersonal skills, and excellent oral und written communication abilities.

We offer good growth potential, as well as a highly competitive compensation package and an enjoyable working environment. If you would like to join this dynamic organiiation, please state the opportunity of interest when mailing or faxing your resume, in confidence, to the attention of Cathy at:

57 AdeSSO DriVe

)ging< Qttrttt~ ptg(/'I

Concord, Ontario IAK 3C7 Fax: (905) 660-T116 No phone cnlls please.

mouse. 416-9214I700. NOVELLNetworli, 286 80MServer, setup

as 2stations,indudeEthernet cardsand cable. Asking$1500.Cali896-2687.

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For BBS,UNIX,OS/2,MACINTOSH NETWORK INSTALlATIONS,

p oBox isr6-1245,

ETQBICOrtE, ONMSCeve

ANALYST/PROGRAMMER-10yrs.exp. seeks f/t, p/t work SpeciagyRapidApp.

Recycled Comyutnl Inc. MaeintoshesFor Sale Mac Plus 2.6 Mts with 20 Mb ezt. drive + Imagewrlter Pdnter Many other Mac systems avaflablo

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AMIGA

Dev. in Windows, WFW, FOXPRO, ACCESS, QBJECTVISION, PARADOX. Cal Bill Landry6t9-2463. ANALYST/PROGRAMMERseekscontract/ft PC tutoring, C, Clipper, dBase. Datamgmtexp. iy 416496-9035. ANALYST/PRQGR AIIIIMER seeks con. tracgfugtimein DOS,UNIX, Novel, C,4, Windows,Assembler, CUPPER,Communications. 7 years' experience. Call Alee 416-36IHI744. ANALYST/programmerseeks PCprogrammingassignments. hp. In C, CH. PascalSma , gtalk, Windows. Veryreasonablehourlyrate.Daveat326-9459days, evenings 2674240. ARCHDESIGNER: 15 yrs experienceACAD. R12seeksresidentiaVadditional work tull/part time or coraract. Call Joe 4164I37-2566. BA seekspart-timeemployment/contract. Experience:C(DOS,08/2, Mac),Clipper DOS), Basic (AlpraMicro). Call Gabor 16-265-5821. CQlllIPUTER knowest-all seeksf/t job DOS 8 WIN Imowledge,Imagescanning/conversions,graphicdesign, Customersupport Call Peter4914I694. COMPUTE ROperations position wanted: Software: IB MVS/XA/ESA/TES2/TSOISPF/IMS/ESP /PCM/ICUGDG/EMAIUCICS IROSCQE/CA1+Hardware:CPU3090/30 33/4341/XLSIDASD3390/3380N DT 32903276. CalChuck l 416-508-8945. COMPUTERSPECIALISTDOS,Windows installation, setup, tutoring, small programmingdBASELotus Call53837tr/ COMPUTER specialist seeks f/t position experienced inAS/400, DOS,LAN,Windows, WP,Lotus etc. Pleasecall 6639518. ENGINEEER available ft/pt. VAXIVMS, Fortranandmore. Programming,training, research anddesign. CallZoran41lbl81• 3695. FQXPRIWPMacros,Helpavailable. Will travel. Readyforanychallenge. Ted $15/hr. 416-3614I493. GRAPIBC designer, 5+years' exyerience, excellent traditional skills + Pagemaker, glushatoi, Quark Seeksft/pt or freehnce opportunities. NorthToronta Glenn3225899 MACH.ENG.tt/pt, dBase, Clipper, Lotus, Excel, Wind. or will work vol. for CLan training. Zoran532-5256. MACINTOSH Artist: Computer layout, typography,igustrationsseeksfull, part or Ireehnceemplo yment,Lac483.5240. PARTNER for Fax broadcasting. No investment. Know-howandequipment required. Cal9254gt78. l PROGR AMMEREXP. in CNovel, Clipper, dBASE seeks full or part time job. Stephen496-9035.

AUTOCAD,Excell, Lotus, WP,seeking work. 244-2100 BARTER NETWORK: AgBusinesses 4206967 X611 CHARTEfIED ACCOUNTANT: Business starts pinfo, taxation, freeconsult S.Goal 8&6428 COMPUTER /DTP LESSONS: Perfect for the university student/private individual. An introductory lesson(s) to theMacor DTP, etc. Reasonable. Call Barry8895311. FREEPRICELIST - Unique Computer Products, supplies. Write: APM6021 YongeSt,Box927,Toronto,ON,M2M 3W2 NO BS!ve I' got asystemthat wil makeU $$$. Not a scam!! Sent meaSASEand see Ior yourself. U got nothing to lose. FM 725CoilegeSLP.Q.Box 31016Toronto M6GAH7-Don't letibis onegoby! I!! QNE QNONE Training for the new PC User System Setup DOSHD mgrnt. WINS.t 6154320

IBM

• we curry the top names inAMIGILand stM pnxlucts • Our prices are eomixrrubte to US. mail outer houses • christam sale on ngAlisGA products eiFecuve November 1st to December 51, 1993 Saahsm Saumur MOnday SOFvadny, 9 am. - ft TLWL

(416) 750-9909


ONTARIO EDITION THE COMPUTERPAPER NOVEMBER '93 75

AMIGANA UTSMEETING Onthe second Sundayeach month,6-8 p.m.,at2975 Don Mills Rd.West, OrioleCommunity RessourceCentre, 2ndfloor, GarnesRm. Full Amigausers support, monthly tutorials and presentations of latest software and hardware for theAmigaand, coming soon, aBBS. ANIMATORS' GROUP— Interested in the creation of2-Dand3-Danimaliong ZimgraphicsLtd. offershands-ontraining and membershipsforthoseinterested in computer graphics.Formoreinlormation call (416) 929411 55.a CANADAROUNDTABLE ON GENIENightly andweekendmeetings. Discuss CanadianPolitics, Sports, Canada-U.S. Relations, Travel, Entertainment. Try En Francais,whichincludesaFrenchtutorial. More info71-800-638-9636. CANADIAN COMPUTER GRAPHICS ASSOCIATION — CCGAs' mission is "to provideeducationandinformation in computer graphicstechnologyandits applications. At special events members are informedof developmentsin theindustry, and provided anetworking forumto develop career andbusiness opportunities. Additional benefits include; insurance, newsletters, subscriptions, employment liaison office, andannual art 8 design competition. CCGA, 2175Sheppard Ave. E., Suite 110,Wigowdale, Ontario, M2J 1WB.Fax:491-1670 Tek491-2886. CANAMCOMPUTER CLUB -for serious computerhobbyists. Breakfast meetings are heldeverySaturday morning at Obies Restaurant inWardenWoods Mall, Scarboro. TheClubhas asister grup in the U.S. where info„ ideas and help are exchanged.Membershipis freebutafull breakfast is $5.00including grtuity. For info. call Cy Leonandat 2884I318. CASESPECIAL INTEREST GROUP — A special interestgroup is beingformedto help peopleinterested in learning more about CASE. Thepurpose is to providea forum wheremembers mayshare their experiences.Experiencedusersor those interested inCASEcall Joe DaSilva at 252-1408,or RobBeckman928-2694. CASE — Computer Aided Software Engineering is open to anyoneinterested in being toolandtechnologyindependent. 111/2 hours,monthlyscheduledmeetings. Vendorpresentationsaswell asindividual, BBS 497-5263, (log on if MIS Affiliated messages .into Tech2ndcategorycaged CASE).ContactJoe DaSilva at 252-1408 or RobBeckmanat 928-2694. CLUBCUBASE—Toronto area users of SteinbergSoftwareproducts, especialy their powerhouse sequencer Cubase, now have a forum to shareinformation and developskils. ClubCubasemeets at 7:30 pm onthelast Mondayofevery month,in RoomC426attheCasaLornaCampusof GeorgeBrownCollege - 160KendagAve. For moreinformationcontact ClubCubase at 62 HamworthDrive,Willowdale, ON, M2H3C2orcall 496-9905. CLUB MAC COMPUTERGROUP OF ONTARIO —AgMac users, Macintosh OS 6 related issues, meets 2ndTuesday, Michener Institute, 222 St. Patrick St., Toronto, 7 pm to 10 pm, infoline 4621702. COMPUTERTRAINERS'NETWORK — A group of teachers,tutorsandconsultants who meet the first Thursday of every month to discusstraining or computerrelated issues.Meetingformatconsists of refreshments, business portion, guest speaker andmemberships available. Location: 121KingSt,W., 24th Floor,Toronto, Ontario. Formoreinformation pleasecall Veronicaof VisionComputer at(416) 3230406. CYBERP UNK RESEARCHLABORATORIES — Merry hackers in search of picturesque;mountains,RAMandfairytales. For further data write c/o CyberPunk ResearchLabs.-SenecaCollegeofCom. munication Arts, 1124FinchAve.West, North YorkONM3J 3J3, ELECTRONICGAMES PLAYERS'ASSOCIATION(EGPA)- EGPAannounces the start of theirCanada-widesearchfor computer andvideogameplayers interested in swappin gtheirusedgames.Asamember of the EGPA,individuals will be able to exchangegamesoftware. Memberswil

also beableto buyusedgames without a trade. Membershipavailablefor the first year with anannual renewaLIf youare interested in joining or would like more information, please send $1 to cover postageand handling to: EGPA,292 Patricia St.rNorthBay,Ont., PIB7Z3.Theone dollar isappliedtoyourmembership fee. IRMAC — Information ResourceNlanagement Associationof Canada: dedicatedIo data manage ment, IRM.data dictionaries, CASE,andstrategic pier.ningin thecorporate environment. Monthly meeting in Toronto, Ottawa,andVtctoria. (416)9606508. K.R.D.— 1995(TheKidstuff ReunionDrive GroupFor 1995) At 144GigardAve., Rlverdale.Tek461-1343. Callfor meeting dates 11AM Saturdays.Group'sfocus is to collect 1975-6Canadianpenniesin order toreassert interest bysigning apetition to reinstate the1975-76 CTVShow "Kidstuff". Komputer Kidstuff 199522 20052?.Askfor Jeffrey Leitner (416)4611343.

KW-MUG— 376 Peel Street, NewHamburg,ON,NOB 2GO.(519)662-2627. Focus:Publicdomaindistribution; reviews of currentsoftware; meetingsvariable, no

fees. LOGIC —An Independent Apple User Group: Provides a support andinformation network tousersat aglevels. LOG IC accomplishesthis by: holding monthly meetings,hostingSpecial InterestGroup meetings, providing anelectronic bulletin board, publishingtheMapleOrchardmagazine (freeto members), andmaintaining an extensivelibrary of sharewareandpublic domainsoftware. Iiileetings1st & 3rd Tuesdayof themonth, North YorkCentre, 5110 YongeSt., in the Memorial Hall at 7:30 pm.Messages(416) 3234828 BBS (416) 487-9771. METROTORONTOADAM GROUP (MTAG) - Supporting ADAM, CP /M-TDOS Users contact; (416)424-1352or write to: P.O. Box165,260AdelaideSt.E.,Toronto, ON, MSA1NO . Meetings 2ndMondayof each month, 1485Albion Rd(Community Cen-

tre) and 4thSat. eachmonthat thePape Ave. Community Center. Bi Monthly newsletter. MISSISSAUGACOMPUTER CLUB(M.C.C)...SupporgngIBM-PC, Macintosh, and Amiga systems. Presentations, Demos,Rafff es,SIG's,and "LOADS"of shareware... also amonthly newsletter. "ALL WELC OME", If interested or further information pleasecall Robert Brower President) at(416) or "TOTAL 4' 8901503 CCESS BBS" at (416) 568-5294... Meeting heldthelast Tuesdayof eachmonth. NKi USERSGROUP — NeXTcomputer support ,2ndThursday,Toronto Western Hospital, corner of Bathurst 6 Dundas, yellow elevator to 6th floor, 7:00 pm, DanielO'Conneg(416) 365-1899. PCCT(PERSONAL COMPUTERCLUBOF TORONTO) — PCusets,3rdTuesday,St. Gabriel's CommunityCentre,672 Sheppard Aye.E. (2blocksEast of Bayview, North side).NorthYork, 7:00 pm;membership includesshareware, BBS,special interest groups (SIGs) &workshops. Information(416)2444786. TAF TORONTO ATARIFEDERATIONXE/ST/Falconcomputers. 300 members. BBS. Newsletter. SIGSfor MIDI.DTP, Generalandmore. Meets7:30pm. Third Thursdayofmonthin North YorkMemorial CommunityHall in theN.Y. City Centre Ligrary building. 51 10 Yonge St. at Park Home.BBS- (300-16.8) 2350318. InfoLine (voice)425-5357. THECANADIANAUTODESK MULTIMEDIA USERGROUP— Interested Users of Autodesk Multimediaproducts areinvited to cagPiaZimperi at(416)929-8155. THE CANADIANINFORMATION PROCESSING SOCIETY- presents thefollowing meetings at the Toronto Boardof Trade,3rdfloor at 6 pm,Oct. 20th-Canadian Information TechnologyOutlook, Speaker -MaureenMottonen of International Data Corp. And on Oct 21stObject-Oriented Databases, are They Readyfor theCorporate Sector, SpeakerGregZippior ServioLogic Corp. THECO MMUNICATIONNElWORK - Join our Social Network/Support Groupfor

SHYpeopleandenhanceyour Social and interpersonalskills. Parbcipate in weekly organizedsocial andcultural activities. Weeklymeetingfrom7-10pm. Pre-regis-

tration is required. Call for more info at 851-6696 or851-2980. THE DUR HAM P.C. USERS' CLUB- supports local computer enthusiasts with monthlymeetingsandanewsletter, a software library andmanyspecial interest

groups. Meetingsansecondthrusday of each monthat 7-10pm(freeadmission). MeeingsheldatCAWLocal 222Hal, 1425 Phillip MurrayAve.,Oshawa. ContactBarbara Riceat 416-434-7420 or BruceLay-

- f r f

craft 416-728-9351. THE ELITE GROUP OF 3-D PROGRAMMERS —(E.G.3DP) in association with LT.P.D. Dedicated to Atari users. For more information write to LT.P.D, c/o E.G.3D P), 37 MontyeAve., Box p2, oronto, OntarioM6S2GB. THESOCIETY FORTECHNICALCOMMUNICATION- Toronto Chapter's November meeting is at 7:00 onTuesday, Nov, 9th, at the North York Civic Centre, 5100 YongeSt. (in GoldRoomA). SpeakerMike Churchwrd,EducationDirector for the Quality ManagementInstitute, For more info.call ChrisMil at408-7690. :'s THE TORONTOCOLOUR COMPUTER GROUP —meets on the 2nd and4th Mondaysof eachmonth. Formoreinformation, call LarryOsborneat (416) 9721809. TIMEX-SINCLAIRUSERSCLUB— AII Timex and Sinclair Computers. 1st Wednesday of themonth, 14 Richome Court, Scarborough,ON,M1K2Y1, 7:00 pm. Demonstrations,bi-monthly newsletter. Voiceinfo.(416) 751-7559. TORCHI (Toronto Region Computer Human Interaction) - — Meetsevery second Wednesday of themonth from 7:00 pm-10:00pm.Memberscomefrom busi-

ness,academic, andgovernm ent toshare interests in humanuseof computers, reflected in humanfactors, usability, Ergonomics,theuser interfaceandmany other relateddisciplines. Formoreinformation respeakers,topics andmembership. Wearethelocal chapter of Sigchi a part of ACM.Call M. Boshes(416) 4482697. TORONTO APL SIG—An educational and

social organization concernedwith theuse and oromotionof APLcomputer language.

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T1 Ltd.......... 17, 19,21, 23,27 Smart LuckSoftware .....................,..... 54 ABSGroup .....................,....„............. 71 Adept .................................................. 70 The WorldofCommodore ......... 50 Claris .......,................„................,...,... 22 IBM Canada CompacRBM Systems .......................59 IPC .............................,.............,.........80 SmartMachine.............................,....... 6 Adesso Computer Access ................... 75 CMSTraining ...................................:. 71 I e I I Compass Technologies ...................... 65 KCCI ....................,.............................. 52 Software Exchange............................. 58 Wonimation,....................................... 62 Knights of theDigital Revolution ........ 71 MicroSolutions .....,.....,........ 2 KehtronComputerInc, ....:.........,.....„. 59 Software Galore .......................,.......... 59 123 Computer Warehouse .. ..............61 Complete Paul Swift ........................................... 71 2000'sTechnologies........... ........ 65, 77 Compu-Tel................„,.....,..............,. 62 KGBEnterprises ..........................,....., 66 Stacker .............., ...„....,.................... 37 SoflTrainInstitute ............................... T1 ories .........,...................... 43 tgtobytesComputers .......................... 58 StarlightComputerServices ............... 26 3A Computers,.....,...........................37 Compumem ComputerFreelancersUnlirrited ........ 71 Starlighl Inc........................................ 70 LaserStorageNetworks ...................... 53 SummitSoll ....................................... 47 DataRecoveryInc............................... 77 TrainingNow-ForTomorrow ............ 71 ABCComputers .........,.....,.. ......,....... 31 CompusoftBusinessSystems............ 40 Accessories,.............,......... 28 Macromind Services....,..............,......... 6 The ComputerShoppe...,.................... 67 Ability Plus......................,.. ,............. 32 Computer This index is provided as a reader service. Every effort has been made tomake itas comp tete as possible, however, the publication does nct assume liability for errors or omissions.

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• Intel 486DX-33MHz CPU• 4MB RAM • 128k ext cache • 3 PO local bus slots• 5 ISA 16-bit slots • 170MB hard dntre • 1.44MBIIoppye 1MBKI bus vldeocard e SIVGAcolour monitor, 028dp, 1024x 768, non-interlaced e 200W power supply • Mioosoft mousee 101 keyboard eMS DOS 6.0 • Windows 3.1

~5 m (S.rt.p)

but we ' ve built in a short cut. Now data can stream

through a 32 bit data path, at full processor speed, and deal with your monitor and hard drive at their own level. Peripheral Component Interconnect

(PCI) is the new local bus standard. Developed by Intel, in association with the industry, PCI overcomes many of the

AVAllASLK FROM 705-728-2213 416-639-1654 416-229-2700 . Electronics 2001 41 6-255-8106 ACSYS LlndertNood Computers Scarborough 416-281-0650 Richmond Hill 41 6-771-6807 Computer Variables Simcoe Computer

Computer Odyssey

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. 264MB/sec.The IPC 433PCI board even has a ZIF socket to accommodate a Pentium™ Over Drive™

how fast the processor is, no matter how fast the video card or disk controller is, data still has to travel on the bus. The ISA bus or the EISA bus. Slows the whole thing down. The new IPC 433PCI system offers the

and sustained transfer rates of

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processor when you' re ready to upgrade. ~ YRAR C®4-4N+ So kick grandma off the team. Experience the true speed of your CPU. Or check out the IPC 466PCI starting at $3950 (S.R.P.) and watch for our new Pentium based PCI system available soon. For more information on the ultimate PCI local bus systems from IPC, or for the name of your closest authorized IPC dealer, call us toll free at 1-800-846-7655.

COMPUTERS The Intel Inside Logo is a registered trademark of Intel Corporauon. TheIPC logo is a trademark of 3O Microcomputers. Price, congguration, and programs subject to change without notice

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TheLP-470PSfeaturesthe samesmall sizeandweight as theLP-410SLIMprinter, andfeaturesAdobe PostScriptemulation inaddition to thestandardHP Laser)etSeriesIIPemulation. Thisprinter comesloaded with 17 PostScript fonts,28bitmapfontsand10 TrueTyp e-compatible scalablefonts~aking it the perfectprinterforyourtext andgraphicsapplications. And tohandletheheavier demandsof PostScript, 2Mb of RAM arestandard.AnAppleTalkorserial interfaceis alsooptionallyavailable.

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PR-9606

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