August 2004
Transcription
August 2004
August ‘04 From the Editor Executive Contact List Well,... Please feel free to contact any of the following individuals if you have comments or questions relating to Macintosh Users East or Macintosh computing in general. Position/Name Phone# President Jim Foster Hm: (905) 433-0777 Courtice Email: [email protected] Apple Liaison Bruce Cameron Hm: (905) 983-9205 Orono Email: [email protected] Treasurer John Kettle Hm: 905-404-0405 Oshawa Email : [email protected] VP Programs Len Clement Web Admin Sean Murphy Presidential Assistant Gary Moore Logistics C. Greaves & M. McCarthy Programs John Babister Secretary Helen Alves Macintosh Users East [MaUsE] eMail: [email protected] 208 Winona Avenue, Oshawa, Ontario, L1G 3H5 Canada MaUsE Message Line: 905-433-0777 Double Click Double Click on the web at: www.mause.ca Double Click Editor Michael Shaw Hm: (905) 576-2097 Oshawa Email: [email protected] [email protected] Small Print What you are looking at is the latest edition of the Double Click monthly newsletter from the Macintosh Users East, (MaUsE), a motley collection of old and new Mac users who reside in Southern Ontario with a motley collection of old and new Macintosh computers. What more do you need to know ? Oh, yes. This Newsletter is created by Michael Shaw, Double Click Editor, on an antique Macintosh clone, a 1997 Daystar Genesis MP 800+ running OSX v10.2.6. Submissions from MausE Club members, ‘though rarer than hens’ teeth, are always welcome. Send them to: [email protected]. I have never refused a submission yet. There's always room for another piece on ANY Mac-related topic and I’ll make room if there isn’t. I would like your submissions. But I won’t beg. Apple, Macintosh, and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. The MaUsE (Macintosh Users East) is an independent user group and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Apple Computer, Inc. The next meeting will be held at Faith United Church on Nash Road in Courtice Ontario, at 7:30 on September 22th, 2004 DeLocalizer I found a reference to this program on one of the Low End Mac Lists for people with Apple iBooks and PowerBooks. A new user was complaining that he got an iBook with a tiny 30-gig hard drive and after installing the system he only had about 20 gigs available for applications. A helpful subscriber wrote in and explained about how the new Mac operating system was just a wee bit bloated to make it usable for all Mac users, especially the ones who needed exotic languages. I recall watching my Jaguar install disks spending a lot of time putting local Korean, Chinese and Finnish files into my Mac and drivers for printers I’ll never own. I just know I’ll never use them. I have no idea yet how many files are involved or how much hard drive space but if the amount of time the installer spent inserting all of these foreign language files is any indication, it must be a huge wad of data. When you launch DeLocalizer it presents the window below, with a suggestion that you check the boxes to select the languages and language files that you do not intend to use. As you can see, I want to wipe the resource files (localization packages) for all of the foreign languages except French. DeLocalizer will remove all non-American English localization resource files that you request. This application is geared towards American English users, as it will not remove localization resources for American English. Users that use other languages may still use DeLocalizer to remove languages that they do not use (except, of course, American English). Localization files provide the language support for an application. All strings of text that an application uses are defined in a localization file. Mac OS X also includes non-English localization files for people who speak other languages. While this is a wonderful technique for easily bringing applications to other languages, it can use up more space than you may be willing if you plan on using no more than one language. While Mac OS 10.1 allows the option to not install localization files, some inevitably exist on your drive. DeLocalizer requires Mac OS 10.1.2 or greater with the BSD subsystem installed. You may choose to remove resources from your startup disk only or all volumes currently mounted on your system (probably won’t work for network volumes). If you would like to examine the Unix command that is to be executed, you may paste it into a text editor when you are prompted for your administrator password (that is when DeLocalizer copies it to the clipboard). To test out this program I used my old Daystar Genesis MP 800+ and ran DeLocalizer on a 7.5 Gigabyte partition with OSX v10.2.8 installed. The processor was a 800 MHz G4. I set the preference for “StartUp Disk Only” because I have lots of drives and volumes in the Genesis and did not want it tied up for a long time. The removal process takes about 15 minutes for the startup disk alone, so if you are going to run this program please be patient. Force-quitting the application will not kill the process that is removing the files (the name of that process is “find”). When the process is complete, a dialog box will tell you how much space you saved on the startup disk. DeLocalizer only works on the boot disk so if you have systems installed on more than one disk or on more than one partition you will have to restart your computer and run the DeLocalizer program from each disk individually in order to clean the foreign language files off it. DeLocalizer was created entirely with AppleScript Studio by a programmer named Mike Bombich. He has made it available as a FREE download from the internet with this caveat: While I am entirely confident of DeLocalizer’s ability to perform well without undesired data loss, you are reminded that use of this software is at your own risk without any warranty. More information about this program is available on the internet. This software is distributed as freeware — you are free to download it and use it as much as you want at no charge! Total Training Offer As I indicated in the June 23rd MaUsE Meeting Report, there’s more to TOTAL TRAINING than just what we saw at the meeting. Besides the CDs and brochures they provided to the Club in exchange for demonstrating their product line they also donated to the club an amazing package consisting of seven DVDs comprising 26 hours of training videos for users of Adobe Photoshop CS, the Creative Suite version of their latest Photoshop release. This set of training seven disks retails for $299.00 US (about $460.00 Canadian) and it was offered to the club by TOTAL TRAINING with the understanding that it could be raffled off at a club meeting or used as a club resource and circulated amongst the membership. There are so few members of the club who actually have the need of this unique and exclusive training expertise and who actually have copies of Photoshop CS and are running the right system that it was deemed inappropriate to raffle the DVDs to the membership. There was just too great a chance that the DVDs would be won by someone who would never use them or who would never have a use for them and they would be lost to the club. Like in many raffles open to the public with one big non-exchangeable prize, isn’t it always Grandma that wins the HarleyDavidson. As MaUsE Resource Librarian I have taken on the responsibility for keeping this set of DVDs together and lending them out to members on a first-come first-served basis. It is essential that these DVDs be properly treated as a resource belonging to all of us and not anyone's private property to be lost, neglected, abused, lent out to friends and relations, or split up so that one or more DVDs gets lost or broken. The value of this instruction course would be seriously diminished if one or more of the DVDs were lost or damaged. Contact: Michael at 905-576-2097 to get on the list to borrow these DVDs. ASANTE FriendlyNET Cable/DSL Router Laura is back off to university in Guelph in September and will be out of residence and sharing a house with a bunch of other Responsible Young Adults. Like all modern RYA types they will each have a bed, a bookshelf and a computer. And they will all need to connect to the internet and waste precious hours and hours and hours gabbing and downloading songs and sending photos to their adoring friends. To make it possible for Laura and the other RYAs to all share one ultra-fast internet connection without loss of speed I picked up an Asante FR3004C FriendlyNET DSL Router. Back a few years ago when high-speed internet service was relatively rare and these things were new they were a LOT of money, but now that many new networks have gone strictly wireless you can pick one up used for next to nothing. A search for this particular router on eBay shows one listed for $15.00 that got NO BIDS, another with an opening bid of $3.99 that got NO BIDS and one listed for $0.99 that got ONE BID and actually sold for ninetynine cents plus postage. Postage is the killer for an item like this: the one I picked up,from a seller I know on the Low End Mac SWAP LIST was mailed from New Jersey for an actual cost of $14.85 US in postage. To use this the RYAs will have to get an internet account and a high-speed modem from Sympatico, Rogers, or some other ISP down in Guelph and run an ethernet cable from the high-speed modem to the WAN RJ-45 port on this Asante router. Then they will use ethernet cables to connect their computers to the other RJ-45 ethernet ports on the router and set their TCP/IP computers internet preferences to connect via ethernet using DHCP. All of the computers will see a fast connection to the internet and each other.In case of an emergency, like if Rogers cable goes down, there is a port where a regular dial-up modem can be plugged into the Asante router and shared as well. If they need more ports to connect more computers to the system can be easily expanded with a ethernet hub. Built from the ground up to provide multiple levels of security, the FriendlyNET Cable/DSL Router is designed around natural firewall that protects your local computers from outside intruders. The security-hardened FriendlyNET router is the only IP network address exposed to the outside elements. To guard against unauthorized removal or theft, the sleek Asanté FriendlyStack case design features special hooks (to attach security cables) and four mounting holes (including two concealed holes). These security features are ideal for securing the router in hotels, schools and other public areas where physical security is essential. Unlike other Internet routers, the FriendlyNET router was designed for maximum network performance at an affordable price. Start with the integrated 2-port 10/100 Mbps Fast Ethernet switch. When directly connecting two computers in the same room, network traffic moves at up to 100 Mbps (200 Mbps in full duplex mode) - ideal for backing up data from a notebook computer to a desktop machine. As your network needs grow, just add another FriendlyNET 10/100 switch or hub to connect up to 253 users over standard Fast Ethernet cabling. Running mission-critical applications? Even if you’re just doing day-trading, you’ll never want to be off-line when your broadband Internet connection is sluggish or down. The FriendlyNET routers come with a builtin standard serial port to connect an optional external v.90 56K modem - just in case. The FriendlyNET router also offers a cost-effective way to share a color inkjet or laser printer. Instead of dedicating a computer to act as a print server, let the FriendlyNET router handle that for you. Now you have the freedom to share a parallel port printer through a 10/100 Fast Ethernet network. The FR3004LC model has a redundant modem port so you can upgrade from a v.90 56K analog modem and still keep it as a back-up modem (when your broadband connection is not available). The FR3004LC model also adds an integrat- ed print server for sharing a printer with a parallel port. Router Features Data Transfer Rate: 100 Mbps Networking Standards: Ethernet, Fast Ethernet Networking Features: IP-routing, DHCP support, NAT support, VPN, Manageable, Print server Transport Protocol: TCP/IP, PPTP, IPSec, PPPoE Integrated Switch: 4-port switch Switching Protocol: Ethernet Status Indicators: Port status, Link activity, Power, 100M device connected Form Factor: External General Product Info Weight: 1.54 lbs Dimension: 1.4 in x 8.5 in x (HxWxD) Cost in 2004 About the price of a slice of pizza, PLUS postage. Total Impact Total Power MP Waltzing through eBay looking for cheap and cheerful PCI things to play with in my old Daystar Genesis and 9600, I came across an item I’m totally unfamiliar with, something I never new existed. The green and red cards pictured here are obviously a PCI cards designed to plug into one of the PCI slots on a computer like the 7200 through 9600 series Macintosh, but all of those Macs have the Apple 604e processor on a daughtercard and the 604e daugter card must be removed if you replace it with a G3 or G4 upgrade of any sort. The Total Power Total Impact MP PCI processor upgrade cards for PCI Macs cards pictured above feature two DIMM slots and one to four G3 (green) or G4 (red) PowerPC processors, each with 1 MB of backside cache. The Total Power series is different from traditional upgrade cards that plug into the daughtercard slot or ZIF socket and replace the original processor. Instead, two or four processors and two 168-pin SDRAM DIMM slots are provided on a PCI card that augments the slower more primitive 604e processor. The logic behind designing a processor upgrade card for the slower PCI bus rather than the relatively faster processor direct slot escaped me until I researched this weird card further. Computers like mine have ONE PDS slot for a daughter card but they have up to SIX PCI slots. For additional speed, multiple cards can be used together, effectively creating a “supercomputer” for applications modified to take advantage of the “Total Freedom” software libraries. New pricing for G4 based systems: 2 X 400MHz G4 with 128MB of SDRAM: 2 X 500MHz G4 with 128MB of SDRAM: 4 X 400MHz G4 with 128MB of SDRAM: 4 X 466MHz G4 with 128MB of SDRAM: 4 X 500MHz G4 with 128MB of SDRAM: $1600 $1900 $3100 $3600 $4200 Total Impact’s mPower solution offers either 4 PowerPC G3 (750) or 4 Power PC G4 (7400) CPUs ranging from 366 to 500MHz on a single PCI based board for integration into PCI based computers. Up to 10 additional mPower PCI boards can be utilized in Total Impact’s Power Box enclosure via a high speed PCI card to the host computer. Multiple Power Box enclosures can also be configured together for highly intensive computations. Unfortunately the red card sold for $200.00US so I didn’t buy it. Six PCI Slots One PDS Slot 512k Cache Twelve DIMM Slots (1.5 Gig Total RAM) SCSI Connectors PDS Cards for Tsunami Macs and Clones Its a wonderful thing when a Mac user gets a new Mac. Fortunately most of us, including me, are too intimidated by brand-new still-under-warranty computer equipment to tear it apart and put it back together just to see how its made. Around my house its a wonderful thing when we get any kind of a Mac, whether it be a new Mac or an old one. My desktop is constantly evolving and right now the new old Mac I’m playing with the most is the beautiful 9600/233 that I picked up last month on eBay (see the July 2004 Double Click) for just under $60.00US. I must say that it is very well behaved and a pleasure to crack open and root around in the guts of. For those of you who do not delight in rooting around in mature Macs, I will explain a few basics: all of the 9600 models except the 300 and 350 Mhz models have a Tsunami motherboard inside. The 9500 Macs have the same board, and most of the tower model Mac Clones, like the Apple 233 MHz 604e Daystar and PowerTower, also have the same board. Thats a picture of it above and as you can see its a brute with maximum expansion capability. This motherboard went into computers that shipped with one 2 or4-meg PCI video card and 16 or 32 megs of RAM but can accept up to six PCI cards and a dozen 128-meg DIMMs for a total of 1.5 Gigs of RAM. To make them even more upgradable they were equipped with a PDS slot with the 604e processor on it, a design idea which made it possible to upgrade just the processor as faster ones became available. This 9600 came equipped with the 233 Mhz 604e processor card when I bought it. In last month’s Double Click I outlined the performance improvement I achieved by putting a basic cheap NewerTech 300 MHz G3 card ($25.00 plus postage on eBay) into it. The 9600/300 G3 still runs the same applications and system software, with OS8.6 and OS9.1, but it runs everything so much faster. As you can see from the picture to the right the NewerTech card physically resembles the Apple card except for the colour of the heat-sink. Apple uses white aluminum heat-sinks. NewerTech often colours theirs black. Sonnet very often uses a distinctive bright purple. Then I ran into an offer I could not refuse for a 450 MHz Sonnet G3 card for the 9600 so I arranged to flog the NewerTech card for what I paid for it and I picked up the Sonnet card. As you can see from the picture at right, the Sonnet card is much smaller than the NewerTech card. The 9600/233/512k 604e that became a 9600/300/1M G3 has now become a 9600/450/1M G3 with the final digits indicating a full 1 Meg of cache. Sometimes you have to be careful when shopping for PDS G3 processor upgrade cards as there are usually two grades available for any given processor speed, depending on the size of the Level 2 cache built into the card. The cache on the Tsunami motherboard is a set of four chips totalling 512k. The size of this cache proved to be a performance issue so the next generation of boards had a full 1 Meg of cache. Many G3 cards shipped with the smaller 512k cache as well so watch out for the upgrade cards with the full 1 Meg of cache. They are faster at everything than the cards with the smaller cache. My Daystar Genesis MP 800+ computer has the exact same motherboard as the 9600 but it shipped with a vastly different processor card and has got an even more different one in it now. The original card was HUGE and held four heatsinks and four 200 Mhz 604e processors but like the 9600/233 it only had 512k of cache, a condition that inhibited it from realizing its potential. Using special multiple-processor technology and software developed by Daystar and Apple NewerTech 300 MHz G3 Sonnet 450 Mhz G3 during the Clone Wars of the late 90’s the Genesis MP computers were the fastest personal computers in the world and hideously expensive. As you can see from the pictures here, all of these cards serve the same purpose and have the same connector that fits in the same PDS slot on the same motherboard but they all look very different. I replaced the nPower card in my Genesis with the 800 Mhz Sonnet G4 card pictured below and even though it shipped with System 7.6 on it it can now run OS8, OS9, and OSX Jaguar. Daystar Quad 604e vs. Apple 604e Replacing the processor daughtercard in your computer with a newer, faster, more powerful model should not disrupt any of your normal procedures. There is often an extension to install or control panel to configure to make sure that your computer sees the new processor and there is a little easy-to-find button beside the PDS that should be pressed to clear the PRAM in the computer every time you replace the processor with one of a different type. As more and more Mac users move on to G4 and G5 models and abandon their PCI Macs the prices of these wonderful machines will continue to plummet. Processor upgrade cards are getting faster and cheaper all the time and the cost of the used cards on eBay just keeps on dropping. 800 MHz Sonnet G4 Eventually there will be G6 and G7 models available from Apple and in another few years you will probably start to see antique PowerPC 9600s and the early G3 CPUs at the Goodwill if you shop there. Between now and then there is still a lot of fun to be had for very little money cracking open these and other middle-aged Macintoshes to transplant youthful components that can restore them to a longer more productive life. 9500 (Tsunami Board) With Card RAGTIME solo RagTime solo has now been made available as an unbelievable gift for everyone who wants or needs a fully featured desktop publishing program and doesn’t want to pony up big bucks for Quark XPress, Microsoft Office or InDesign. This program is easy to use, easy to learn, uses all of the Macintosh menu commands that you already know, and will enable even an avowed amateur user to create professional-quality documents that look better than you would have a right to expect even if you’d spent hundreds of dollars for this program. I will not differentiate between Ragtime and RagTime solo because in terms of functionality there really is no difference between the two programs. RagTime is a desktop publishing program like the best of them but with a few very big differences. One big difference is that Ragtime is compatible with every operating system you are likely to use, including Windows XP, NT, ME, Windows 98 and Windows 2000, Macintosh OS8, OS9, and OSX. Another big difference is that RagTime has made their software available as a FREE download called “RagTime solo” that you can install on your computer, use as much as you want and for as long as you want, without paying a cent as long as you are not making money with it. This is not a light version or a “tryout” version with Save disabled: this is a fully featured completely functional copy of their software that you can use just like the commercial version as long as you are not using it for business purposes. This is ideal for students and other people who need or want a really excellent crossplatform desktop publishing suite for an activity club like ours and do not want to spend a lot of money. Ragtime 5 is the commercial product, Ragtime Solo is the free version for home use that can be downloaded from <http://ragtimeonline.com/>. With RagTime you don’t create text or tables; you create documents. The result of your work is judged by the finished printed document. Reports, price lists, analysis and sales materials are more than simply text, spreadsheets and charts. It is the combination of all the elements, which transforms a text into a report and a table into an analysis that is ready for a presentation. Up to now, you probably haven’t used layout programs, because you couldn’t afford to do without spreadsheet calculations or text processing. Now you can give your work that final polish. With RagTime, you have a single convenient layout environment in which you can process text, tables, drawings, pictures and graphs. The intuitive user interface simplifies your quick access to all of RagTime’s functions. RagTime spreadsheets have two faces: They simplify your work whenever you have to clearly divide a section of your page into rows and columns. Plus, in RagTime, spreadsheet cells can accommodate anything you can place on a normal page: pictures, charts, text, whatever. At the same time, they’re still calculating tools featuring sophisticated mathematical functions, from simple sums to statistical evaluations, and much more. And all of this is possible in layout mode! Naturally, you not only have settings for fonts, paragraphs, lines and colors but also those necessary for kerning and a multitude of other useful typographical adjustments. With RagTime, you have access to an unlimited range of master pages, which can of course be used in accordance with specific rules. An automatic table of contents, an index and the management of footnotes with free markers round out the picture. The Inventory Window You probably have never seen this before but I have. In an Inventory window, you have an organized overview of all the components and aids that have been used in your document. (The Apple Media Tool program uses an identical presentation method so you can keep track visually of all of the images, files and clips you used to create your multimedia AMT projects). However, this Inventory window is not simply a passive list, rather each object in it can be edited by simply double-clicking on its name in the list. Even better: with Drag & Drop components can be moved to or from documents or to the desktop or can even be duplicated. Naturally, you don’t need this to quickly write and print an informal fax. However as soon as you need to maintain compliance with a set of rules regarding format and to ensure that the documents are organized and have a uniform appearance, you will quickly find the Inventory list to be an indispensable aid. System requirements • Windows (minimal): 486-compatible instruction set running Windows 95, 24 MB RAM, 30 MB available disk space • Windows (recommended): Pentium processor, Windows 98 or higher, NT 4 SP3, 64 MB RAM, 75 MB available disk space • Macintosh (minimal): Macintosh with Mac OS 8.1, 32 MB RAM, 30 MB available disk space • Macintosh (recommended): Macintosh with Mac OS 9 or higher, 64 MB RAM, 75 MB available disk space • Mac OS X: Power Macintosh with Mac OS X version 10.2. Version 10.2.3 or later recommended. 120 MB free hard disk space for one language, about 55 MB for any additional language. If you want to install the downloaded version of RagTime, you have to add the size of the downloaded file to the required hard disk space. Features: Seamless cooperation of all components • Drawing objects are at the same time the containers for word processing, spreadsheets, pictures, graphs and more. • The components can be edited directly on the page or alternatively via a separate window. • The same functions work in tables, text, graphs and buttons • RagTime components - even drawings - can be used in all shapes of frames and cells of a table or flow with the text. • Free rotation, scaling and skewing of all drawing objects including their content • Common style sheets for characters, paragraphs, lines and fillings are available in all components • Consistent spell checker in all components including text, spreadsheet, and graphs ... Text • Text flow in and around freely customizable shapes • Footnotes, table of contents, index and drop initials • Gridlines, baseline grid, freely customizable units and rulers • Non printing text for comments and notes • Small capitals, kerning and leading • Number of columns can vary from paragraph to paragraph • A dictionary CD with hyphenation rules and dictionaries for other languages is available Spreadsheet • More than 200 functions, easy table layout, even pictures can be put into cells • Three dimensional table with 16,000 rows, columns and layers, unlimited tables per document • Linked cell areas, rotatable cell contents • All typography settings available in cells • Continuation of tables over any number of pages with pipelines Graphs • Gallery containing over 200 templates • 2D and 3D graphs with illumination and view point: line graphs , circle graphs, XYZ- graphs, balloon graphs and polar graphs as well as combinations types • Dynamic link between tables and graphs via drag & drop Maps • Geo-insight for RagTime is a mapping plug-in that allows you to show your data on a map. • Definable fill style sheets with linear and radial patterns and colors for symbols • Change colors, size, and location of symbols from the data in your spreadsheet or database. • Plot your data on graphs in the same document. • Use pop-ups in RagTime to select demographic data by zip code, county, state or any other boundary map files. • Import shape files to create your map Pictures • Pictures can be cropped, scaled, rotated and skewed. • Direct scanning into RagTime via a Photoshop plug-in or TWAIN • Direct data transfer from digital cameras • Supported file formats: JPEG, PNG, EPSF, WMF, EMF, BMP, PICT, TIFF ( CMYK, LAB and separated as well) with color profiles • Clipping path in JPEG, TIFF and EPSF Drawing • Many drawing tools, for Bezier curves as well • Predefined filling style sheets with linear and radial gradients • Object coordinate palette for precise numerical position information and transformation (rotation, skewing, scaling) • Interprets vector data in PICT files • Detailed settings for PostScript line characteristics Intelligent templates • Standardized stationery pads for reoccurring tasks • Flexible rules for automated page addition with different subsequent pages • Company wide uniform templates can be used from a file server, possible on Windows and Mac OS Output • onto local and network printers • Color print to inkjet and laser printers • Spot color and four color separation of RGB, LAB and CMYK for bit maps, text and vector elements • Color management with more than 30 MB quality profiles complying to the ICC-standard • EPS export of complete pages or an optional selection, preview: WMF, TIFF in Windows, PICT or TIFF in Mac OS • PDF export of complete pages or page sections via Acrobat Distiller Miscellaneous • Identical file format under Windows and Mac OS • Direct working in print preview • Drag & drop to import files, assign formats etc. • Layouts with master pages and pipelines • Tear off palettes and menus • Extensive information dialogue for all components • Import/export for Word 6/97/98/2000, Excel 4/5/ 97/98/2000, RTF, SYLK, DBF, XTND, JPEG, PNG, EPSF, TIFF, WMF, EMF, BMP, PICT, and text (Mac, DOS, Windows and Unicode) • Context menus • Customizable key bindings • Freely customizable shortcut keys ( e.g. for 144 dpi screens) Our Trip to Macworld Expo by Jim Foster History It has been my habit for the past several years to try to attend the east coast version of Macworld Conference & Expo. Macworld Expo events in North America have evolved to the west coast event held in San Francisco in early January and an east coast event held in July. The location of the east coast event was originally Boston, then went to New York City for several years, and for 2004 was moved back to Boston. The traditional "mode" in which I participated in the east coast Macworld events was as part of a group consisting of a half dozen or so members of several Mac User Groups from southern Ontario. Each summer, Richard Crispin of the Waterloo MUG would seem to put his organizational skills to the test and come up with enough people to warrant the effort. We would generally corral a vehicle suitable for whatever number of people we had, and Richard would also organize some place for us to stay in the host city, usually involving a LOT of people sleeping in one room. The key to making this work at minimum cost was that Richard could usually arrange for at least some of our accommodation and meal expense to be picked up by other parties. Those "other parties" sometimes included Apple or outside contractors working for Apple or other major Macworld exhibitors, and the trade-off was that we would volunteer to provide help with organizing their promotional events. Since many of these events were targeted at User Group Executives, and would have been events that we would have paid to attend anyway, this was an excellent way for us to take in Macworld at a reasonable cost. Over the years, it got so "the Canadians" were a welcome and expected team of volunteers at each east coast Macworld. In 2003, of course, I was unable to make it to the last Macworld in New York City because I was recuperating from surgery for colon cancer. As Macworld 2004 approached, I was really hoping to be able to attend in order to renew many acquaintances with members of other Mac User Groups from across North America, and indeed the world, whom I had not seen for two years. Planning the Trip The 2004 edition of Macworld Expo east was to take place in July, at the brand new Boston Convention & Exhibition Center. The only fly in the ointment was that, due to a falling out between Apple Computer and IDG, the firm which organizes the show each year, Apple had let it be known that they would not be exhibiting or attending the event. The big unknown factor, then, was just how successful this Macworld event could be without Apple. Planning for the event began, as usual, around April with Richard sending out his usual email probes to identify who was interested in attending. The initial responses were not optimistic. Some of the folks elected to "pass" because of the uncertainty associated with Apple's absence from the show. Some others were interested but indicated that, if they attended this year, they would rather do so as part of a vacation trip to Boston with their spouse instead of as part of a "boy's night out" approach. Still others simply didn't think they would be able to attend due to cost or other conflicts. The early outlook, then, was that a few of the original crowd might be able to take in Macworld, but certainly it did not look like the usual crowd of "Canadian volunteers" would show up. Fortunately, as the date of the event approached, the outlook for some of the usual cast improved. In the end, Richard Crispin was able to put together three other folks to travel with him by car (Van) in the form of his son Peter, Peter's friend Joel, and Richard's friend Michael. Meanwhile, Bruce Cameron and his wife Carol decided to drive down and visit some friends outside of Boston, allowing Bruce to make it into Macworld for a couple of days, and my wife Susan and I finally decided to make the trip by plane, use hotel accommodations, and to add a few days before and after Macworld in order to make it a real vacation. Jack Seary, another MaUsE member, was also making the trip but combining it with other business rather than as a totally recreational activity. Travel I had quite a number of Aeroplan credits built up and was therefore able to arrange for airfare for Susan and I between Toronto and Boston and back without having to actually buy tickets. When you do this, you do still have to pay certain taxes and fees, but obviously this was a nice cost saving overall. For accommodations, I had hoped to be able to stay at one of the newer hotels on the Macworld hotel partner list. It was described as being located right "across the road" from the convention center and on the Boston Harborfront. By the time I called for reservations, though, the hotel was booked up for Macworld. Not being too familiar with Boston, and running out of time to try to forage for recommendations from local user group members, I next tried the Sheraton Boston where the User Group Leadership Conference and Adobe events were being held. I was able to get a room there for the full period of our stay in Boston. The only problem was that it was not cheap. It turns out the Sheraton Boston is kind of like the Royal York in Toronto - pretty pricey but also a darn nice place to stay. I crossed my fingers and hoped that the pricey accommodations would help to make it a memorable vacation. It turned out that I was not to be disappointed. The original hotel I had tried to get was indeed much closer to the Convention Center where the show was being held, but it was entirely inconvenient to the many other sights and sounds of Boston which we were able to enjoy within walking distance of the Sheraton. It also turns out that both that original hotel and the convention center itself are in a very industrial / commercial section of Boston. Staying there would be akin to staying in a Toronto hotel because it was located adjacent to Pearson International Airport - handy if your only concern is business but not the best for a vacation. The relatively high cost of the Sheraton Boston was not without its perks. We had free continental breakfasts in the morning as well as free hors d’oeuvres in the evening. There was broadband Internet access in the room, for extra cost, as well as free wireless access at the Starbucks café located in the hotel lobby. The area where the free breakfast and evening refreshments were served also had a couple of PC’s set up with Internet access. We also took advantage of the great outdoor swimming pool and took note of the well equipped exercise facility. This year's Boston Macworld Expo began on Monday, July 12. Actually, Monday was reserved for special "working sessions" which Macworld attendees could sign up for at extra cost. The Exhibit Hall and main Macworld events actually opened on Tuesday, July 13th and ran through Thursday, July 15th. The Apple User Group Advisory Council, headed up by Chuck Joiner of the Hershey, Pennsylvania, Mac User Group, decided to organize a User Group Leadership Conference for Monday, and Bruce Cameron and I had registered to attend that event right at the Sheraton Boston. When Chuck heard that Richard and I were going to be able to make it to the show after all, he immediately solicited us to spend some time in the User Group Booth on the Exhibit Hall floor to promote User Groups and answer any questions which show attendees might have about User Groups. We were invited to focus our attention on Canadian Macworld attendees, so Richard and I, along with Bruce, did spend half of Tuesday meeting and greeting folks on the Exhibit Hall floor. More on that later. As part of making our trip to Boston a real vacation and not exclusively a computer show event, Susan and I flew into Boston on Saturday, July 9th, and had tickets to fly back home to Toronto on Sunday, July 18th. We grabbed a cab from the Boston airport to the Sheraton and were amazed to get a cabbie who had a very good understanding of several Canadian cities and Canadian politics. He claimed to have had Kim Campbell in his cab recently, and he was confident that "Paul Martin will have to team up with those NDP's in order to get some things done in Parliament". It turns out that some percentage of Boston cabbies are of Somali descent and in turn often have relatives in Canada or have lived in Canada. We found other cabbies with similar knowledge of Canada. Before dropping us off, our cabbie pointed out some of the high end shopping districts close to our hotel but cautioned us, "Don't buy anything in this neighbourhood - the prices are too high!" Of course, as soon as we had checked in, we immediately went out for a walking tour of the area, had lunch at a lovely outdoor cafe right in the middle of the area which the cabbie had highlighted, and ended up paying close to $90.00 U.S. for two bowls of clam chowder, two lobster rolls, and one of my favourite beers! Saturday night, Richard left us a message that he was planning a drive to Cape Cod on Sunday and would we like to come along? We got together with him and Michael on Sunday and had a great day driving out to Cape Cod, knocking back another great seafood lunch along the way, and checking out various other tourist attractions in the area. The User Group Leadership Conference The Monday User Group Leadership Conference was an afternoon event. Having participated in these kinds of events in previous years, I was pretty sure I knew that there would be some "volunteer work" opportunities on Monday morning. Susan and I hunted around and found Chuck Joiner and his team. Sure enough, each UGLC registrant was to receive a complementary Adobe "bag" full of promotional materials from all the UGLC sponsor companies and these bags needed to be stuffed and organized in readiness for the Noon hour registration. We pitched in to help with this task, all the while renewing acquaintances with Chuck and the several other User Group folks who are part of the Apple User Group Advisory Council. A few others of the "regulars" also showed up to pitch in and get everything ready for the conference. Once Noon came, Susan departed to spend the afternoon on her own (I think that was the Spa afternoon, if memory serves me correct.) and I reverted from volunteer status to active UGLC registrant status. The UGLC basically consisted of about ten conference sessions, each put on by a member of a Mac User Group, and covering a wide variety of topics of potential interest to other User Group Executives or Members. For example, there were sessions devoted to MUG web site design, making your web site easier to find with search engines, how to attract youth to MUG's, and how to add pizzazz to club newsletters. [Promoting MUG Web Site Seminar] There were usually two different sessions happening at any given time, so it was good that both Bruce and myself represented MaUsE so we could each attend different events if our interests varied. Each participant at UGLC also received a DVD, which features many of the UGLC sponsors materials, and we have also been able to download audio files and presentation materials for all the UGLC sessions from Chuck’s MUGCenter web site. Overall, UGLC was a great way to spend an afternoon, just in terms of the information gleaned. But it was especially nice as a way to renew friendships with many other User Group folks whom I had not seen in a long time. Adobe Systems was the major sponsor of the UGLC event, and as part of the conference all attendees were also invited to an evening reception and product demonstration hosted by the Adobe folks immediately following the UGLC activities. Susan rejoined me for this event, and both of us really enjoyed the reception food and drink, as well as the product demos. There was even a lot of humour in this event as Richard Crispin was persuaded to dress up in a toga and pointy cap, pretending to be the Statue of Liberty for a lengthy demo session which was supposedly taking place in New York City. The highlight of the Adobe event was that everyone in attendance was given a copy of Adobe InDesign CS, a software package with a value of several hundred dollars U.S. I have turned one copy over to our Double Click Editor, Michael Shaw, who assures me that D-C will be making the conversion to InDesign, and we will have the other copy available for use as a raffle prize at some upcoming meeting. Macworld Expo - the People At the risk of repeating myself, I would say that my main incentive for making the trek to Macworld Expo each year was to renew acquaintances with a lot of people whom I just plain enjoy being with but with whom I also feel a kind of kinship because of our mutual interest in finding ways to make our own User Groups more enjoyable for all our members as well as ourselves. In prior years, there is no doubt that a secondary attraction was to see how much "free stuff" we could lug home for ourselves or to benefit the club. This year's event was quite different than all prior Macworld's, and I fully expected that it would not produce the same quantity of "free stuff". But it was a LOT of fun in terms of getting back together face to face with many people with whom I have only had an electronic relationship for the past two years. The afternoon spent staffing the User Group Booth on the Exhibit Floor was also an opportunity to meet other Canadians at the show. We learned lots of good lessons which will help us do an even better job at the booth next year, and had a lot of fun handing out some CD’s we had made which listed and had content from all the User Groups in Canada. We even handed out some $2 Tim Horton’s Gift Certificates to help make this a truly Canadian experience. Macworld Expo - the Show It is a fact that the absence of Apple from the Macworld Exhibit Floor had a domino effect, which resulted in many other major Mac vendors also electing to be no shows. A typical east coast Macworld in prior years took at least one full day to fully take in all the booths and exhibits on the exhibit floor. This year's Boston event was much smaller and you could probably have done the tour in two hours or less. Another thing that happened as a result of Apple’s absence was that this year's Macworld had far fewer new product announcements, even from those firms who did participate. New product announcements associated with Macworld Expo’s have the effect of putting Macworld on the map for those thousands of Mac users who are not attending the show. They also tend to result in raising the media spotlight on the show in ways that go beyond the immediate Press Releases. Because of the relative scarcity of new product announcement press releases associated with this year's event, Mac users who were not there could be excused for not even being aware that it was happening! But all of this had been well anticipated by the show organizers from IDG, and they had taken many steps to ensure that the focus of this year's event would be squarely on those people who DID elect to attend. For example, there was a much greater emphasis placed on the Conference Sessions, which are opportunities which attendees can exercise to attend extra cost training and information sessions at all sorts of experience levels. There were also a far greater number of "events" held on the show floor and therefore available to the basic exhibit hall pass attendees at no extra charge. IDG even organized an evening Mardi Gras theme party available only to Macworld attendees, albeit for the very reasonable charge of $20.00 U.S. per person. Macworld Expo Highlights Since Apple was not participating in the show, there was no usual Keynote Address. In its place, the organizers scheduled a panel presentation hosted by noted writer and TV personality David Pogue and featuring several of the men who had participated in the original Macintosh design team. One of these people is Bill Atkinson, whose actual claim to Mac fame is that he "invented" HyperCard. This was many years ago, and Bill has now turned his attention to an original love of photography. His latest product is a "coffee table" book featuring fantastic photos of various rock formations. He took the opportunity to do a book-signing event after this presentation, so Susan got to have her picture taken with Bill as he signed her copy! One of the highlights of the Exhibit Floor was the booth featuring PhoneValet, a software application that allows you to incorporate your local phone line or lines into your Digital Hub. Many people were impressed with the features that have been incorporated into the latest version of this package. There were lots of other entertaining things to see on the Exhibit Floor, albeit many which would have a fairly narrow niche of potential customers. After all, how many of us NEED a device that can duplicate and label CD's and DVD's all for a very reasonable price of $1,500 to $3,000 U.S.? The User Group Lounge is another feature of most Macworld Expo's. While open to any Macworld attendees, only User Group members often know the very existence of the User Group Lounge. The Lounge at Boston was by far the largest and most luxurious that I have experienced. The chairs in the Lounge, actually throughout the Convention Center session rooms, appear to be from the same manufacturer (Herman Miller) who makes the Aeron computer chair that costs around $1,000 Cdn., and it seemed that everyone was raving about how comfortable they were. The only bad side to the Lounge was that it was located a very long walk away from the exhibit floor. Macworld Expo - Boston Our plan to make our trip to Boston a real vacation turned out to be a great idea. Beyond attending Macworld, Susan and I had a wonderful time. It was my first real trip since getting sick and it really hit the spot! A number of presentations were scheduled to take place in the User Group Lounge, featuring many luminaries from the Mac world like Adam Engst who produces the TidBITS newsletter and Andy Ihnatko who writes for various Mac periodicals. These sessions were again free for anyone attending the show. On the final day of the show, there was even a session at the Lounge where we got to provide our feedback on the event to the top three executives of IDG, the show organizers. This turned out to be a very productive session, where one of the best suggestions they indicated they got was to next year provide all User Groups with a "kit" which would allow us to do a 15 minute presentation about the show to our club members, thus hopefully encouraging even more Mac users to attend next year's event. By all means we recommend that people visiting Boston for the first time take the Duck Tour. This is a tour of the city and harbour so named because participants travel in ex-WWII landing craft that can travel on land like a truck or travel in water like a boat. The tour guides use a lot of humour to make the trip fun but also pass along tons of useful information which helps you to decide what areas of the city to investigate further later on in your visit. I am sure that Boston restaurants offer all types of food, but frankly Susan and I had a hard time turning down the opportunity to partake of seafood at almost every oppor- We caught a free Shakespeare play in the Boston Commons one night and another night we were treated to a symphony orchestra playing in another part of this public park. We were a little disappointed to learn that the Boston Pops orchestra shuts down for the summer, their final event being the big July 4th outdoor event by the Charles River. Maybe next year we will head to Boston even earlier!! tunity. A travel agent relative of ours had recommended both Jimmie's Restaurant and the Legal Sea Foods restaurants and we can attest that both will serve you up a terrific seafood dinner while emptying your wallet. The Boston Aquarium was very nice and we would recommend it to you only with the proviso that you try to visit it on a weekday. We went on the weekend and it was very, very crowded. At one point, Susan said, "The thing I love about Boston is that so many things here are for the people. They don't charge for these things, and you see everyone enjoying them regardless of their origins or financial status." While I would have to agree with her on this, I also have to say that I have never seen such a proliferation of Mercedes-Benz automobiles as in Boston. Me thinks it's a great place to visit but don't expect to move here until you win a lottery! Macworld Expo - Summary We had a terrific time in Boston, and I would certainly recommend that you consider visiting Boston for next year's event. While Susan and I took the financial high road by staying at one of the most expensive hotels in Boston, Richard and his crowd were able to use their university contacts to find a college dorm where they stayed for only $12.00 U.S. per night. Somewhere in between these two extremes will likely be our objective in future. There is also a HUGE wading pool located in the public park. It meanders through the park, is never more than about six inches deep, and has lifeguards posted about every 100 feet down each side. It is hugely funny to watch these guards repeatedly and earnestly shouting out "No running!" commands to the hoards of little kids cooling off from a hot summer sun, many of whom are too little to understand what all the shouting is about. If you can only make it for the three or four days of Macworld itself, be sure to consider signing up for whatever of the Conference Sessions are most attractive to you and your budget, since it is likely that the Exhibit Floor will not grow hugely from what it was this year. Investigate the activities that are available to Mac User Group members, and call on those of us with experience to provide suggestions to you. My personal recommendation, though, is to combine a trip to Macworld Conference & Expo with a few days of vacation in Boston and surrounding area. If you have no automobile, there are tons of attractions to which you can walk or use the excellent public transit system from your hotel. If you do have an automobile, then you have the option of extending your tourist activities to sites outside Boston proper. I am sure Susan and I will be able to make many more trips back to Boston before we feel there is nothing left to see.