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.