Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!mnetor!seismo!lll-crg!nike!ucbcad!ucbvax!decvax!wanginst!wang!ephraim From: ephraim@wang.UUCP (pri=8 Ephraim Vishniac x76659 ms1459) Newsgroups: net.micro.mac Subject: MacWorld Show impression Message-ID: <853@wang.UUCP> Date: Tue, 19-Aug-86 14:25:23 EDT Article-I.D.: wang.853 Posted: Tue Aug 19 14:25:23 1986 Date-Received: Thu, 21-Aug-86 02:11:46 EDT Distribution: net Organization: Wang Labs, Lowell MA Lines: 47 On Saturday, I went to the MacWorld show at the Bayside Expo Center in Boston (well, Dorchester, but who's counting?). I was impressed. I wasn't impressed by the hordes of undistinguished disk drives (internal and external, hard disks and floppies) or the flood of drawing software. I wasn't even as impressed as I thought I would be by the speedup boards, such as Levco's Prodigy 4. I certainly wasn't impressed with memory expansion kits. But I was completely blown away by *large screens.* E-Machines (7945 S.W. Mohawk St., Tualatin, Oregon 97062, 503-692-6656) was demonstrating a 1024x808 pixel 17" screen. $1595 show price (until October 31, with coupon), $1995 otherwise. Another company, whose name escapes me, was showing a similar product for about $2995. (They're mentioned in the September MacWorld. Extra price is due to greater modularity, choice of output signals, ...) The "Big Picture" (E-Machines' product) consists of a monitor, cabling (runs through security slot), and a clip-on piggyback board. The board contains 128K of high-speed RAM so that CPU access to video memory is full speed, not delayed by interleaving. They claim about 20% improvement in drawing speed. You also get a set of INITs which make the system switch from the normal screen over to theirs during bootup. To run without their screen, just boot from an unmodified system. Their patches include hooks to over-ride brain-damaged programs that have the standard Mac screen size hard-coded. If you hold the option key while growing a window, their patch replaces the program-supplied bounds with the real screen bounds. So, even recalcitrant programs can be coaxed to produce more-than-full-page windows. You can read more than a page in MacWrite, 132 columns in MacTerminal, huge areas in MacDraw. I didn't see FullPaint on this screen, but I imagine it's worth seeing. For the truly extravagant, it's worth noting that the Big Picture is Prodigy 4 compatible. Let's see: Prodigy 4 = $6995, Big Picture = $1595 (show price), Mac Plus = $1299 (developer's price). So, for less than $10K, you could blow your mind completely. Oh, but you'd probably want a SCSI disk or two... Downside: The folks at E-Machines' booth did not know of any debugger which handles non-standard screens correctly. The next release of TMON is supposed to. Macsbug works until the first debugger screen is full, then it blows the scrolling. Ephraim Vishniac decvax!wanginst!wang!ephraim Disclaimer: I have no business connection with Levco, E-Machines, or MacWorld, although I fervently hope to become a customer of E-Machines.