Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!decvax!decwrl!pyramid!hplabs!sdcrdcf!psivax!mc0!garyf From: garyf@mc0.UUCP Newsgroups: net.micro.pc Subject: IBM does an impersonation of itself Message-ID: <284@mc0.UUCP> Date: Mon, 9-Jun-86 12:25:26 EDT Article-I.D.: mc0.284 Posted: Mon Jun 9 12:25:26 1986 Date-Received: Tue, 10-Jun-86 18:31:17 EDT Reply-To: garyf@mc0.UUCP (gary friedman) Distribution: na Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA Lines: 63 The following article appeared in the Wall Street Journal, 6/6/86, pg. 25: (reprinted without permission): [BEGINNING OF ARTICLE] IBM'S IMPROVED PC KEYBOARD IS SETBACK FOR SOME SOFTWARE For years, users have complained about the awkward keyboards in the IBM Personal Computer family. Now International Business Machines Corp. has introduced a new keyboard aimed at such complaints-only to spur a new round of gripes. The problem: Some software programs won't operate on the new device, now sold as an option with the PC XT and AT models. The snag illustrates a sort of high-tech Murphy's Law: As computer makers try to make things ever easier for customers, the internal workings of the machines get ever more complex, sometimes defeating the effort. The new keyboard simplifies things by separating the cursor keys that had doubled as number keys; marking the enter key "enter" instead of using only a broken arrow, and placing special "function keys" horizontally for easier access. But such programs as Ashton-Tate Inc.'s Framework and Borland International Inc.'s SuperKey won't work with the new layout. Indeed, even a version of IBM's own "windowing" program, Topview, won't run on the new IBM keyboard; buyers must avoid version "1.01" in favor of "1.10." IBM says any problems are the fault of software developers that violate IBM's technical guidelines. "There's no story here," a company spokeswoman says. But software makers say IBM is unrealistic. A cardinal IBM rule dictates that software should "talk" only to the PC's internal coding, known as the BIOS (basic input-output system); then the BIOS acts as a translator and tells the machine's chips what to do. But many programs violate this rule, bypassing the translator and talking directly to the chips to let screen images show up more quickly and to add special commands. Software makers gamble that the rules they break won't work against them when IBM later changes hardware features. "In certain products we have to depart from them to get the performance we need," says Roy Folk, Ashton-Tate's executive vice president. With Framework, Ashton-Tate gambled and lost. The program uses unusual key combinations to move rapidly across the screen, but the new keyboard doesn't recognize them. Ashton-Tate is writing new software to fix the problem. IBM says it tested 200 programs and only a half dozen or so didn't work on the new keyboard, which most XT and AT customers are buying instead of the original device. But the snags may be more widespread than the IBM sample indicates. After all, there are some 10,000 IBM PC-compatible software programs now on the market. [END OF ARTICLE] Why, why, why, why, why does ANYONE patronize IBM?????? -- Gary Friedman Jet Propulsion Laboratory UUCP: {sdcrdcf,ihnp4,bellcore}!psivax!mc0!garyf ARPA: ...mc0!garyf@cit-vax.ARPA