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October 1999 General Meeting
Report
Steven Kiepe, Vice President
Programs
A large WAP crowd gathered at Northern Virginia Community
College on the very morning of Apple's scheduled release of
long awaited Mac OS 9. Although a few lucky souls had
already managed to get their hands on this latest operating
system upgrade (some vendors had made it available at
midnight), most of the crowd wanted an in-depth look at the
enhanced system before making the jump. After Lawrence
Charters finished dazzling the crowd with enlightened
answers during the traditional question and answer period
(or was it baffling with BS?), Apple Development Executive
Barrett Thompson took the stage.
With trusty iMac and PowerBook in hand, Barrett provided
an update on Apple's corporate strategy, current product
lines and a brief map to the future. Although most folks in
the audience had already seen an iMac, very few people had
seen or heard of the new iMac DV edition (for Digital
Video). Barrett reviewed this bargain priced home and small
office digital video powerhouse including the top-of-the
line Special Edition iMac DV, encased in a graphite colored
shell. The DV series iMacs, with their 400 MHz G3
processors, FireWire ports, extra VGA port and more include
many of the features of comparable desktop video solutions
costing several times as much.
Apple didn't stop with a hardware solution to desktop
video. Instead, Apple's new iMovie application,
available only as bundled software with the iMac DV, truly
brings the words "plug and play" to desktop video creation.
Barrett connected a standard FireWire equipped digital video
camera to the iMac and then, completely within
iMovie's intuitive interface, operated the camera,
identified the segments of a video he was interested in,
added transition effects and sound tracks, and output a
complete movie back to the video camera. The entire process
was completed without touching any button other than "power"
on the camera. Apparently, he caused a lot of folks get
bitten by the home video bug as evidenced at November's iMac
DV feeding frenzy at a local computer retailer!
Barrett continued his presentation highlighting the
release of the new G4 series Macs and the Apple's highly
successful iBook introduction. Then it was time for the
featured segment, Apple's new Mac OS 9. With over 50 new
features, Barrett had to keep a fairly fast pace to cover
them all in the time allotted. The audience was captivated
from the beginning of "my voice is my password" log-on
through the highly customizable individual settings for
computers with multiple users, and onto the amazing Sherlock
2. With demonstration of new features like keychains (never
worry about forgetting passwords to websites again),
enhanced speakable item functionality, operating system
auto-updating via the Internet and cross-Internet file
sharing, this is a major rebuild of the Mac's operating
system. Barrett took questions from the audience until NOVA
pushed the group out the door. He must have been effective
because MacUpgrades, strategically stationed outside the
auditorium door, managed to pick up a fair number of buyers
of the new operating system!
Throughout the meeting, Anthro Corporation's iCart was on
prominent display. The iCart is a tubular steel framed,
laminate shelved portable desk that is a must have accessory
for new iMac Owners. Built of heavy gage steel and solid top
construction strong enough to hold an adult or two, it comes
in a multitude of colors to match the iMac's flavor
selections. The iCart also comes in two different
configurations; tall with an extended "hutch" top that is
perfect for printers, scanners and the like; and short,
without the additional extension. Anthro also offers a line
of specialized accessory shelf, document and cup holder
options.
The iCart had been on display in the WAP tutorial room
for the last two months. Anthro offers special user group
pricing, a savings of 25% for our members. As a special
gesture, Anthro donated the grand prize of the morning's
raffle drawing, the silver metallic iCart that had been on
display. If I was more paranoid (ha!), I'd almost be
suspicious of what happened next but here's the inside
scoop. Dana Essick, the daughter of our former VP for
Programs, literally put a stake in the ground that she was
going to get the iCart for her birthday which just happened
to be the same day as the general meeting. As name after
name was drawn from the box for the other raffle items, she
almost seemed to be computing the odds of her name being
selected from the remaining pile. Finally, as the grand
prize slip was drawn, Don Essick's name was announced.
Needless to say, Dana got her birthday wish and Don went
home a happy man. Happy birthday Dana and thank you Anthro!
Our other raffle winners included: Book winners - Bob
Whitesel, Dreamweaver; Bob Vandegrift,
Fireworks; Colleen O'Brien, Quicktime and
MoviePlayer Pro; Caroline Quandt, GoLive
Cyberstudio; Norma Kaufman, Illustrator 7 WOW;
Clifton Bailey, Mac Secrets 4; Paul Simon, WWW
Color Pages Simplified; John Quill, Illustrator
7; Harvey Bresler, 3D Studio Max; Susan Ware,
Teamwork Notebook; Robert Langer, JavaScript;
Gabe Croft, Hotdog Pro; Bennett Kobb, GoLive
Cyberstudio; and Curtis Parks, The Hill on the
Net.
Tom Witte also had an opportunity to work his throwing
arm passing tee-shirts to Dick Roblin, Bob Wilbur and Bill
Durham. Finally, Lawrence Charters brought home 64MB of RAM
donated by one of our generous WAP members. Congratulations
to all of our winners.
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