On Fri, 4 Mar 2005 15:48:08 -0500
Bill Sheehan <sheehan at sheehan.tzo.com> wrote:
Back in the day, I bought a copy of NewWave after
reading a glowing
review in one of the trade rags. As I recall, it was so slow you
could get ahead of screen refreshes doing nothing more than typing.
I still have the box sitting on my shelf, and one of these days I'm
going to fire it back up again.
-- Bill
On Mar 4, 2005, at 2:54 PM, Jules Richardson wrote:
> Just found the following snippet in a 1990 document (someone's
> review of
> a GUI show which they'd attended). Just struck me as interesting in
> that
> I never knew there was an alternative to 8.3 filenames in the
> DOS/Windows world prior to Win95, nor have I ever heard of HP
> NewWave before...
>
> Apparently also included macros/activity recording, associations
> between
> data and application (e.g. double-click on a spreadsheet file and it
> opens in the spreadsheet app etc.), and context-sensitive help.
> Sounds like a winner, only I've never even heard of it...
>
> Apologies to the original author (who almost certainly isn't on this
> list!) for the cut & paste!
>
> (I do like that first line :-)
>
> -------
>
> NewWave is a 'front end' to MSWindows to make them useable. It
> provides a Filer facility which tarts up the MS-DOS filing system to
> enable 30 character filenames with no obvious character set
> limitations (ie it'll accept a space in the filename) and a
> framework to interchange and combine multiple data types into one
> document. This framework manages dynamic links between the document
> and the original object which is contained in the document such that
> when the document is reconstructed any changes to, say the
> spreadsheet data, get reflected in, say, the report. Parts of
> foreign objects can also be imported with the same results, eg a few
> rows and columns of a spreadsheet can be imported to a
> word processed document.
>
>
>
HP NewWave was good enough that it got a backhanded 'endorsement' by
being a co-plaintiff with Microsoft Windows in Apple's look-n-feel legal
adventure.
Which, thank goodness, they didn't win. License your X11 system from
Apple, anybody?