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Navigate: | My Mac Online | The Archives | January 1997 | Bits & Pieces | |
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By Grant Cassiday
THE BE BUZZ THAT WAS
THE MACQUISITION
POWER NOTES Meanwhile, PC Week (Dec. 9) was reporting on growing doubts that IBM will continue plans to build equipment using PowerPC systems. This has Microsoft making noise that version 5.0 of Windows NT might not be the PowerPC-friendly system they are currently planning on it being. "...If the major hardware companies all call us tomorrow and say they're changing direction, then we'll change our plans." And as proof that computer industry reporters have no interest in sharing information and writing each other's stories the way Washington's political reporters do, Infoworld (Nov. 25) wrote a very different article than Information Week and PC Week. Instead of focusing just on Motorola (like the former), or on IBM (like the latter), Infoworld simply reported that both companies were showing off their PowerPC motherboards at the Comdex show. No doubts about IBM's commitment were expressed (although most of the PC press sides with PC Week on this one).
OLD NEWS FROM THE OLD WORLD
AppleCyber In a happy moment for Apple's PR department, Infoworld Canada continued the focus on Apple's great Web hope with its November headline (accompanied by mug shot of CEO Gilbert Amelio). First, it was explained that Gil is a very sharp fellow to be sitting out the browser war being fought by Netscape and Microsoft. People can browse all they want to, the strategy seems to go, and as the browse, they'll be looking at Apple. This will be the result, Apple hopes, of all the products listed in the article as cutting-edge technologies coming from the makers of the Mac. Among them: HotSauce, OpenDoc (don't forget about the Sun/Java Beans alliance), V-Twin, QuickDraw, and QuickTime. Oh, and Amelio apparently declared that "the final upgrade version of Copland (i.e., the technologies formerly known as System 8) which will tie together the incremental releases, is now expected to be released in (the second quarter of) 1997." Hmmm. Was that before or after NeXT?
SOLAR POWER I was quite surprised to find this past week that that mark is apparently already being made. Computerworld (Nov. 25) ran a story on OpenDoc being used in conjunction with Java Beans by the University of Utah "to help doctors diagnose and treat their patients." Everyone is extremely excited by the possibilities, potential, etc. But I've honestly got to admit that the real story in this article is the name of one of the doctors interviewed for the story: Dr. Sky Blue.
REVIEWS
FIGHTING WORDS Speaking of self-indulgent, Upside decided to repeat its occasional "Upside's Elite 100" list in the December issue. Such lists are a fun way for people who write magazines to make their printed opinions seem even more official. This list is supposed to rank people currently "running the show" in the combined worlds of the information technology, media, and telecommunications industries. The top 20 positions are littered with Microsoft (Gates was #1), Intel (#2), Sun, Netscape, Oracle, IBM, and even FCC officials. Apple's CEO was number 17. Could be worse; AOL's Steve Case was number 27. Well, O.K., things were worse in Inter@ctive Week 's similar year-end poll. In the December 2nd issue of the magazine, the publisher's list of the top 25 "Driving Forces of Cyberspace" was printed. Gates was #1 again. Case moved all the way up to #7. No Apple names appeared. However, in yet another one of those 'self-indulgent and zany realities' of Apple Computer, Inter@ctive Week published in the same issue this little MacToid: 28.2% of all Internet access is by Macs, making it the #2 operating system on the Net. Number one is Windows 95 which just barely squeaks by Mac OS with 28.54%. I suppose "Driving Force" is in the eye of the beholder.
MacToids
Grant Cassiday (GBCassiday@aol.com)
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