TweetFollow Us on Twitter

Mac ISP
Volume Number:12
Issue Number:1
Column Tag:Internet Solutions

Becoming a Macintosh Service Provider

Tales from the field

By Brad Schrick and Eric Bickford

For several months MacTech has published articles explaining how to configure and program Internet WWW servers. Of course, Macintosh Web development isn’t just programming: there’s money to be made! Eric Bickford and Brad Schrick, two professional Macintosh WWW developers, report on market conditions. The forecast is sunny.

Eric Bickford

It began innocently enough. Put up a few web pages and see what happens. Seven months later the Mac Web Con-sultants Directory http://www.macweb.com/ had received listings from 440 consultants in 20 countries throughout the world (80% of those in the USA).

The Mac Web Consultants Directory was launched in April 1995 at WebEdge I, the Macintosh WWW Developers Conference. The idea behind the Directory was simple: Provide a searchable database of consultants who are experts in electronic publishing on the World Wide Web using Apple Macintosh and compatible computers.

Listing

To register, a consultant need only complete a free online application form. The application form asks for contact information and a short description of the services the consultant offers. This description becomes the consultant’s primary vehicle for attracting clients who search the Directory.

The application form also has a skills matrix for Services, Scripting Languages, Database Programs, and Web Tools. Any individual consultant might be skilled in CGI programming using AppleScript, C++, or Frontier. They might be skilled with a Macintosh database like 4th Dimension, Butler, or FileMaker Pro. Or, they are skilled in a specific web-related tool like AppleSearch or NetCloak.

Once a consultant creates a profile, they have the capability to update their profile at any time. Should a consultant be unavailable, for example, they’re encouraged to update their availability status to “Booked Solid”.

Searching

The Directory’s web-based search screen is very simple: Select the field you wish to search, such as “City”, and enter a search term. Results of a search are returned as a hitlist of records with consultant contact and profile information. Small icons on each consultant profile give an indication of the special skills that a consultant might offer.

The individual consultant must sell himself. Each listing in the Directory should have a URL pointing to the consultant’s home page. The quality of a consultant’s home page is often the primary selling point for acquiring new projects.

It Actually Works

Large and small companies and organizations use the Directory to find experts to help them build mission-critical, industrial-strength solutions on the WWW. It’s rewarding when you plan and build something like this Directory and it actually works. Again and again I find I’m talking to or reading email from someone in the directory who mentions getting a project or referral from it.

The Directory, however, isn’t without some problems. Because listing as a consultant is free, some people have listed themselves who arguably should not be in the Directory. For example, a quick search of the Directory finds that not all consultants have a home page URL. Likewise, an even 10% of all consultants listed have an email address with an .edu university top-level domain.

Brad Schrick

In mid-1993 Chuck Shotton wrote MacHTTP, and showed that a Macintosh could be a competent server on the World Wide Web. By late 1994 there was a lively group of commercial, educational, and personal Mac OS WWW servers using MacHTTP on the Web.

Show me

However, despite these many examples and an active discussion list, even Macintosh advocates often believed that UNIX was required to serve pages on the WWW. Instead of arguing endlessly, Brad Schrick, a MacHTTP advocate and customer, decided to try to list the servers that use Mac OS to deliver World Wide Web services.

The list debuted in October 1994

The first listings were easy to choose, starting with Chuck’s site on his IIci at the University of Houston (now www.biap.com), Apple’s front door, tended by Dale Mead at www.apple.com on a Mac IIfx, Stephen Collins’s Web66 ‘WWW cookbook’ at web66.coled.umn.edu (with several other Mac WWW sites), Jon Wiederspan’s CGI tutorial (http:// www.uwtc.washington.edu/computing/www/lessons/) at the University of Washington, and about 50 others.

Over the past year, the lists were automated to allow Mac webmasters to enter and change their own listings, and the lists were grouped by new listings, geography, equipment, and software in a continuing process to help Mac webmasters evaluate techniques and markets for their work.

The Mac WWW Server lists at http://brad.net/macwww/ currently hold about 1100 listings for about 900 to 1000 distinct Mac servers from around the world, and are growing at a pace of one to two hundred per month. About 900 listings are currently searchable. Some other Internet experiments and surveys indicate that as many as 5000 Mac OS WWW servers may be publicly available on the Internet. If automated techniques being developed here for listing them work, the number of servers in the listings will grow dramatically before New Year’s Day 1996.

The STAR Site

In an attempt to help focus attention on some of the best sites, a STAR site was established to feature a Mac OS site every few days, and this is the second most popular page at the site. The New Servers listings page is the most popular so far.

List your Mac WWW sites, public and internal!

If you’re considering establishing a Mac OS WWW site, take some time with these listings. If you have at least one Mac OS WWW server, list it! We ask that those who have internal WWW servers, but who still wish to participate in the Mac WWW Server community, list their URL as “internal site,” so that NetScape will report “...cannot connect to server... internal site...” In this way all Mac webmasters who wish to can show what they are doing with the technology, and meet and work with others who are attempting similar efforts, whether public or private.

 
AAPL
$565.32
Apple Inc.
-5.24
GOOG
$603.66
Google Inc.
-5.80
MSFT
$29.07
Microsoft Corpora
-0.04
MacNews Search:
Community Search:
view counter

view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter

Empire of the Eclipse Review
Empire of the Eclipse Review By Carter Dotson on May 24th, 2012 Our Rating: :: OVERSHADOWINGiPhone App - Designed for the iPhone, compatible with the iPad Empire of the Eclipse is an ambitious strategy MMO that is very deep, and aimed at dedicated players.   | Read more »
Bejeweled HD Review
Bejeweled HD Review By Jennifer Allen on May 24th, 2012 Our Rating: :: ADDICTIVEiPad Only App - Designed for the iPad The iPad version of the ever addictive Match Three title.   Developer: PopCap Price: $3.99 Version Reviewed: 1.2 Device Reviewed On: iPad 2 | Read more »
Facebook Releases New Camera App To Stre...
While not a replacement for Instagram, Facebook Camera is a good first step in this month+ old union of the two companies. Released today, Facebook camera looks to streamline the viewing of photos and the uploading of them. The app allows you to apply simple filters to images, tag people, upload multiple images at once, and post a note about the... | Read more »
Missile Monkey Review
Missile Monkey Review By Lisa Caplan on May 24th, 2012 Our Rating: :: FLYING LOWUniversal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Missile Monkey is a must miss   Developer: Munsey Clan Games Price: $0.99 Version Reviewed: 1.0 Device Reviewed On: iPad 2 | Read more »
Boomlings Review
Boomlings Review By Lisa Caplan on May 24th, 2012 Our Rating: :: FUN FREEBIEUniversal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Boomlings is a traditional matching puzzle game, with some explosive twists   | Read more »
Dave vs Cave Review
Dave vs Cave Review By Jason Wadsworth on May 24th, 2012 Our Rating: :: WATCH FOR FALLING ROCKSUniversal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Kid falls down hole, kid gets trapped in cave, kid fights evil rock monsters to escape.   Developer: Origame64 | Read more »
Python Pocket Power: Python Bytes 3 – Mo...
Python fans are certain to welcome the best bits from the penultimate season of the BBC sketch comedy in a new iPhone app: Python Bytes 3 – Monty Python Series 3. If you have a flair for the obvious, you’ll correctly assume this is third in a series of apps that feature the best skits from the cult-classic, Monty Python’s Flying Circus. | Read more »
Slingshot Racing Review
Slingshot Racing Review By Carter Dotson on May 24th, 2012 Our Rating: :: SWING ME AROUNDUniversal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Slingshot Racing is a racing game where players must race around the courses by grappling and swinging around the slippery courses.   | Read more »
Go to the Cannes Film Festival with The...
For the movie industry the Cannes Film Festival is one of the most important events in which to preview films and watch the stars. The 65th annual festival is happening in France right now, but if you weren’t able to secure an invite or make the journey, hope is not lost. Film buffs and star gazers can keep tabs on the festival with The Hoolywood... | Read more »
David Haye’s Knockout Review
David Haye’s Knockout Review By Jennifer Allen on May 24th, 2012 Our Rating: :: PUNCHING FUNUniversal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad A simple yet satisfying cartoon-style boxing game.   | Read more »
All contents are Copyright 1984-2010 by Xplain Corporation. All rights reserved. Theme designed by Icreon.