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- TidBITS#284/03-Jul-95
- =====================
-
- This week we bring you news of Apple's acquisition of the popular
- Internet mail server program MailShare, along with Apple's
- re-acquisition of Guy Kawasaki, this time in the prestigious
- role of an Apple Fellow. Also, Adam steps onto the soapbox for
- a moment to comment on the direction of TidBITS, we bring you
- an overview of StarNine's Mac Web server WebSTAR, and Tonya
- begins a two-part review of the FullWrite 2.0 word processor
- from Akimbo Systems.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
- For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
- * Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- http://www.halcyon.com/
- Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
- * Hayden Books, an imprint of Macmillan Computer Publishing
- Free shipping on orders via the Web -- http://www.mcp.com/
- Mac Tip of the Day & free books! -- http://www.mcp.com/hayden/
-
- Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/03-Jul-95
- TidBITS Contents
- StarNine Ships WebSTAR
- FullWrite, Part I of II
- Reviews/03-Jul-95
-
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#284_03-Jul-95.etx
-
-
- MailBITS/03-Jul-95
- ------------------
- I never scoff at the occasional bit of serendipity, but I may
- laugh heartily at it. After Cary Lu's article, "Computing's Holy
- War," in TidBITS-283_, the online version of Dilbert began to
- cover much the same topic. "What's Dilbert?" you ask. Check out
- the URL below, and then look at the cartoons in the two-week
- archive starting with the 950622 file. [ACE]
-
- http://www.unitedmedia.com/comics/dilbert/
-
-
- **Just an Apple Fellow Kind of Guy** -- The rumors were true:
- Apple announced last week that Guy Kawasaki has been appointed an
- Apple Fellow. Always an outspoken and often controversial advocate
- of the Macintosh, Guy led Apple's developer relations and product
- management efforts on the Macintosh from 1983 to 1987 - where he
- coined the term "software evangelist" - before leaving to found
- ACI US and pursue other enterprises, most recently serving as the
- president of Fog City Software, the creators of Claris's
- forthcoming Emailer program. Guy is the author of several books,
- including _The_Macintosh_Way_ and
- _How_to_Drive_Your_Competition_Crazy_, and has frequented the
- pages of MacUser and Macworld as a columnist. As an Apple Fellow,
- Guy will "represent developer issues and perspective to Apple" as
- well as work with various developers and "serve as a resource" for
- Apple projects. Sounds suspicious, doesn't it? Developer reaction
- to the announcement has been positive - if nothing else, Guy's
- return to Apple should make life a lot more interesting. Apple
- needs someone like Guy to yell loudly about various inanities
- every now and then. [GD]
-
- http://www.umsl.edu/~sbmeade/macway/
-
-
- **QuickTime 2.0** is now available for Mac and Windows directly
- over the Internet. Until now, QuickTime 2.0 has been available
- only with the purchase of System 7.5, or a Mac with 7.5 pre-
- installed, or Mac or Windows multimedia software that includes a
- copy. Apple's new QuickTime-oriented Web server offers Mac or
- Windows versions for $9.95 using First Virtual's Internet payment
- system for secure credit card transactions. The software is sent
- directly to the purchaser's computer via FTP. According to Apple
- Software Licensing, QuickTime 2.0 may also now be purchased via
- CompuServe, and other online services might get into the game.
- [MHA]
-
- http://quicktime.apple.com/
- http://fv.com/
-
-
- **Apple Acquires MailShare** -- Apple announced last week that it
- has acquired both Glenn Anderson and his excellent program
- MailShare, an SMTP and POP Internet mail server for the Mac. Apple
- will rename the program "Apple Internet Mail Server" and plans to
- continue making the current version of the software available as
- freeware on the Internet, although future versions will be
- commercial products. Glenn will be moving to Cupertino from New
- Zealand to work for Apple as a software engineer. It's nice to see
- additional recognition of Internet talent from Apple -
- particularly if Apple pays Glenn's moving expenses. [GD]
-
- http://abs.apple.com/products/mailserver.html
-
-
- **Dan Kogai** <dankogai@jms.jeton.or.jp> writes:
- Since making HTML documents is one of my tasks, I was excited to
- see in TidBITS-283_ that ClarisWorks 4.0 was shipping. I
- immediately purchased the upgrade online from Cyberian Outpost and
- it came in a few days. Here's what I found: HTML? Yes! WorldScript
- support? Nah. ClarisWorks 4.0 does have WorldScript preferences,
- and it did show Japanese text, with trouble. ClarisWorks 4.0 did
- not calculate the width of 2-byte character codes correctly, so
- the text didn't select or wrap correctly. This is hardly
- satisfactory. I expected _true_ WorldScript support like Nisus
- Writer. We have the "kurarisuwaakusu" (Japanese) version of
- ClarisWorks, which is a best-seller in Japan, but it's only
- version 2.0 and the HTML translator doesn't work with it! The HTML
- translator of ClarisWorks 4.0 is great, but I have to write HTML
- both in English and Japanese. It's a good thing I have Nisus
- Writer handy, which can also handle HTML. [With an excellent set
- of HTML macros from Sandra Silcot - see the second URL below.
- -Adam]
-
- http://www.cybout.com/
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com//pub/tidbits/tisk/html/nisus-ss-html-macros-20.hqx
-
-
- **Get a Grip** -- PowerBook owners who plan to spend any time
- where its hot enough that sitting quietly at your keyboard can
- make you sweat, or who carry their PowerBooks around a lot, might
- want to check out a product called Grip~it Strips, which make the
- surface of your PowerBook (or any portable computer or device)
- less slippery. Grip~it Strips work much like stickers, only their
- non-stick sides are rough and rubbery. Grip~it Strips come in
- several shapes, including long, thin, lightning-bolt zig zags,
- dots, and diamonds. You can put them on in regular patterns, or
- you can combine them to make flowers or avant garde designs.
-
- Grip~it Strips have been available for some time now; for the past
- year, Adam has used them on his PowerBook 100, and they do make
- handling easier. I didn't put them on my Duo, because I feared
- they might prevent it from fitting into a dock in a possible
- future life. I recently found out that I shouldn't have worried -
- apparently Duos can dock with Grip~it Strips attached, and if a
- future problem came up, the strips can be peeled off and their
- stickiness removed with a little rubbing alcohol. A Grip~it Strip
- package sells for around $9. [TJE]
-
- http://www.grip-it.com/
-
-
- TidBITS Contents
- ----------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- As I'm sure most of you have noticed, and a couple of you have
- commented upon, we've been publishing more articles about the
- Internet in TidBITS over the last few months. These articles, for
- the most part, do concentrate on the relationship of the Macintosh
- and the Internet, or look at Macintosh software that one uses to
- connect to the Internet.
-
- Some people feel that this is a change in our focus, and that
- feeling is both correct and incorrect. In the first three years of
- TidBITS, we focused much more on specific Macintosh programs,
- utilities, tips, and so on. Although there was a certain amount of
- Internet-related news, I included it not so much because it was
- guaranteed to interest readers, but because the Internet was (and
- remains) by far the main way TidBITS is distributed. Then, after I
- wrote the first edition of _Internet_Starter_Kit_for_Macintosh_,
- an increasing amount of Macintosh-related Internet information
- started appearing.
-
- There are a few reasons for this. First, the "mission statement"
- of TidBITS (not that I'm really the sort to record such a thing)
- is to report on news, events, and products that interest me (or
- Tonya, Geoff, or Mark, especially as they have taken over more of
- the work). Egotistical and opinionated as that may be, that has
- been the overriding force behind TidBITS for its entire life. As
- I've done more in the industry, learned more about the Mac,
- written more articles, met more people, and so on, it's only
- reasonable that my interests would evolve over time, and in this
- case, they've evolved toward the Internet. Second, one of the
- reasons my interests have moved ever toward the Internet is that
- I'm a bit of a populist, at least in the sense that I'm
- increasingly uninterested in niches or in fields that exclude
- people. When TidBITS started, programs were less powerful but had
- less of a learning curve, and of course, there were fewer of them.
- They were more inclusive - more people would use something like
- PageMaker even if they weren't serious desktop publishers, perhaps
- because it was really good at making signs or something like that.
-
- Programs like that still exist, certainly, but the examples tend
- to stick out more these days. RAM Doubler is the big one, and
- things like Conflict Catcher, or the Now Utilities, or Retrospect
- - all of these are programs that any Macintosh user could want and
- could use. I'm not saying that everyone does, or should, but you
- don't have to be in a certain industry, or have a certain skill
- set to use these programs. They _include_ users.
-
- I've been an Internet user for many years, but in writing the
- book, I learned a lot more about what software was available for
- Mac users to access the Internet as Mac users should - via clean
- graphical interfaces. I also started to meet some of the
- programmers and become involved in a Mac Internet culture I hadn't
- previously known. In the process I realized several things. I
- realized that the Internet is not exclusionary - anyone can, if
- they want to, find something of interest, no matter what they do
- or who they are. I also saw what could happen when talented
- programmers working on their own communicate with one another. I
- saw programs like NewsWatcher build in a commonly agreed-upon
- Apple event to support programs like Anarchie and Fetch, and then
- later TurboGopher and MacWeb. I saw Peter Lewis and Quinn write
- Internet Config and release it to the public domain, merely
- because it was the right thing to do.
-
- While all of this happened, I was watching much of the rest of the
- Macintosh industry stagnate. Everything was a "me-too" program,
- yet another contact database, or version X.0 of a program that had
- been around for years. I saw few new ways of thinking about how we
- use computers, and how programs and programmers can make that
- process both easier and more enjoyable. Sure, there were brief
- moments of light, a feature here or there that was just done
- right, but it's been a time of bloatware and refinement. Nothing
- inherently wrong with that, but it doesn't flip my pancakes.
-
- It's not easy putting out a newsletter every week, and the things
- that keep you going are the excitement of what's changing, the
- feeling of having done a really solid article on something, and
- the kind comments from readers. And, for me personally, a lot of
- it is the satisfaction of having done something different, of
- having broken the rules (most of which I never knew to begin with
- anyway).
-
- I hope that explains a bit of why our subject matter has slowly
- evolved to include more Internet-related topics. We are by no
- means going Internet-only, and only time will tell toward what we
- end up evolving in the future.
-
-
- StarNine Ships WebSTAR
- ----------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor <mha@tidbits.com>
-
- StarNine Technologies has made waves with the recent release of
- the new WebSTAR World Wide Web server software for Macintosh and
- Power Macintosh. The software is a new version of Chuck Shotton's
- MacHTTP server utility, with quite a bit of additional
- functionality and performance, a cleaner user interface, and
- StarNine's marketing muscle behind it. Apple has taken WebSTAR to
- heart, including it at the core of the company's ready-out-of-the-
- box Internet server machines.
-
- Naturally, WebSTAR is a Macintosh application first and foremost.
- It brings configuration and control directly to the user in very
- Mac-like ways, combining intuitive dialog boxes and informative
- displays with a remote administration tool that network
- administrators will fall in love with. The WebSTAR Admin
- application uses Apple's Program Linking feature (which debuted
- along with File Sharing in System 7, but has gotten far less
- attention) to monitor and control the Web server's activities and
- features from any Macintosh on the same AppleTalk network. The
- only flaw in this arrangement is that administrators ought to be
- able to perform the same tasks via TCP/IP over the Internet, where
- AppleTalk connectivity isn't always feasible. Since Timbuktu Pro
- works via TCP/IP and is a common tool in net managers' arsenals,
- this shouldn't pose too much of a problem.
-
- Like any good Macintosh application, WebSTAR runs on just about
- any member of the Mac family. Sites with simple needs could use a
- low-end Mac as their Web server (WebSTAR requires a Mac with 4 MB
- of RAM and System 7, as well as a full-fledged connection to the
- Internet), though of course a faster Macintosh will offer better
- responsiveness and much smoother multi-user performance. The
- software is available in both 68000 and PowerPC versions. Our
- tests show that WebSTAR performs without apparent slowness while
- handling multiple requests on a Mac IIsi and a Centris 610, two
- computers from Apple's past that were never considered
- particularly speedy. Reliable sources say that WebSTAR "really
- cooks" on a Power Macintosh 9500/132, but that's no surprise.
-
- One frequent comment we've heard is that "serious" or high-traffic
- Web sites should stick with traditional Unix computers running
- NCSA's httpd or Netscape's server software. Judging on a cost
- basis alone, we disagree; it would be less expensive to set up a
- rotating pool of Mac-based Web servers than a single high-
- horsepower Unix server. According to MacHTTP author Chuck Shotton,
- "If you compare $10,000 worth of Macs versus a single $10,000 Unix
- workstation, you can buy or re-use several Macs and, with mirrored
- copies of WebSTAR installed on each, create a powerful array of
- computers that behave like a single Web site to browsers on the
- Net and easily outpaces the performance of a single Unix
- workstation."
-
- Some sites on the Web already use multiple Unix workstations to
- handle heavy loads, so this approach isn't too non-traditional.
- Shotton also stresses that there's a large expense inherent in
- hiring or training the Unix expert(s) needed to run a Web server,
- making WebSTAR even more affordable. As an example, downloading
- the 2 MB WebSTAR compressed archive from StarNine's Web site via
- modem took longer, by far, than installing it on a Mac and getting
- it running, ready to serve Web pages.
-
- A comparison less likely to draw comment from Unix aficionados
- relates to security concerns. Some Unix-based Web server software
- in the past has allowed browsers access to directories and files
- that were never meant to be published. WebSTAR carefully avoids
- this scenario by allowing only files and directories contained
- within its folder to be accessed. As with MacHTTP, the
- administrator may configure the WebSTAR server to require username
- and password authentication for access to some or all material,
- and can limit access to certain domains and IP address ranges.
-
- WebSTAR works in conjunction with a variety of other programs,
- both commercial and not, to make your Mac Internet server act in
- many ways like a fully-functional (dare we say it?) Unix machine.
- A good example is StarNine's own ListSTAR, their new mailing list
- software available in SMTP and LAN-based mail flavors. The fully
- scriptable ListSTAR can work well with WebSTAR to generate mailing
- lists with a forms-based subscription front end on the Web.
- Naturally, WebSTAR also works well in conjunction with other IP
- server utilities such as MailShare and FTPd.
-
- For database searches, StarNine says its WebSTAR server isn't
- limited to interacting just with scriptable database applications
- such as FileMaker Pro. EveryWare Development Corporation's new
- ButlerLink/Web is designed to serve as intermediary between
- WebSTAR and SQL compliant database engines like its own Butler SQL
- package. This toolkit is included with Apple's new Internet
- servers, and is available from EveryWare and its resellers.
- (EveryWare is also working on OpenDoc-compliant database tools,
- which were on display at last month's PC Expo.)
-
- http://www.everyware.com/
-
- WebSTAR also now supports pre-processing and post-processing of
- URLs received from Web browsers, so that the URLs may be
- redirected to any application via AppleScript, and allows custom
- actions based on the filename extensions of requested URLs.
-
- If you've been meaning to try WebSTAR but had given up thanks to
- last Friday's expiration date on StarNine's demo version (see
- TidBITS-282_), take another look. The company has extended its
- free demonstration version, available from their Web site, to work
- until 01-Aug-95. Coincidentally, that's the same day WebSTAR's
- prices go up, so you'll want to move fast.
-
- http://www.starnine.com/
-
- Speaking of prices, WebSTAR bears a $349 introductory price
- through 31-Jul-95. After July ends, the price goes to the
- published list price of $795 for new users. (MacHTTP users who
- registered before 02-May-95 may purchase the software now for $99,
- or after 31-Jul-95 for $495.) Discounts are available for
- educational institutions.
-
- EveryWare Development -- 905/819-1173 -- <info@everyware.com>
- StarNine Technologies, Inc. -- 800/525-2580 -- 510/649-4949
- <info@starnine.com>
-
- Information from:
- StarNine propaganda
- EveryWare propaganda
- Pythaeus
-
-
- FullWrite, Part I of II
- -----------------------
- by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
-
- Although FullWrite is only at version 2.0, the word processing
- program has been around for years. It began life in 1988 as
- Ashton-Tate's FullWrite Professional, but after Borland acquired
- Ashton-Tate, not much happened with FullWrite until Akimbo Systems
- purchased the program in 1993 and released version 1.7.
-
- Akimbo released FullWrite 2.0 in October of 1994. My enthusiastic
- plans to use FullWrite as my primary word processor for a month or
- so before reviewing it were set back substantially by my car
- accident last fall, and it's becoming clear that I should write
- the review already, and not try to base it on a month's
- experience. The review came out a little on the long side, so it
- will finish in next week's issue.
-
- Currently at version 2.0.3, FullWrite runs on a Macintosh Plus or
- newer, with System 6.0.4 and newer. Although the PowerPC-native
- version is not yet available, FullWrite runs fine on a Power
- Macintosh in emulation. FullWrite takes up slightly less than 4 MB
- of disk space for a complete install, and asks for a preferred RAM
- allocation of 2 MB, though its suggested size is 1.5 MB and
- minimum size is 1 MB. Akimbo suggests that Power Macintosh users
- set a preferred allocation of 3 MB. You'll need to increase the
- memory allocation for complex documents or documents over 100
- pages; the "FullWrite 2 Read Me" file explains this nicely.
-
- Running on my Duo 230 (33 MHz 68030) and running in emulation
- (approximately Mac IIfx speeds) on my Power Mac 7100, FullWrite is
- fast enough that I don't notice its speed - it just works. Dialog
- boxes appear promptly, text formats apply quickly, and scrolling
- with the scroll bar or the Page Up and Page Down keys goes fast.
-
- FullWrite has no toolbars, and it keeps its number of clickable
- doodads to a minimum. Its rulers (which show optionally) offer an
- intelligent and manageable number of options. The bottom edge of
- its document window displays a small status box and five small
- buttons which let you switch among FullWrite's five views: Icon
- Bar, Outline, Change Bar, One Page, and Two Page (you can also
- press Command-Comma to switch views). The first three views
- include visual elements that help in creating a document; the
- latter two remove the visual elements and give one- and two-page
- views of the document.
-
- FullWrite's keyboard shortcuts are weird - it offers a few on the
- menus, but not many. You can issue any command on any menu by
- pressing a logical sequence of keys, but I'd prefer to have more
- shortcuts pre-assigned. I've seen FullWrite criticized online and
- in Connie Gugliemo's "War of the Words" (MacUser, Apr-95) for
- having most of its options stuffed in dialog boxes that require
- you to access them through the menus; this is only partly true -
- FullWrite has a number of subtle tricks for working efficiently,
- but you must read the manual to learn them.
-
- http://www.ziff.com:8007/~macuser/mu_0495/feature1.html
-
- That said, let's see how FullWrite would work in a few different
- situations, starting with my fourteen-year-old sister, Rebecca.
- Rebecca needs to write reports for school and wouldn't mind
- dabbling with graphics.
-
-
- **High School Student** -- Rebecca may have trouble finding the
- Spelling Checker by looking at the menus, and if she looks up
- Spelling in the online help, the help incorrectly directs her to
- choose an unspecified command from the Edit menu. The manual,
- suggests that she use the Edit Word submenu. Eventually, Rebecca
- will discover the Check Document command in a hierarchical menu
- off the Words command, which is in the Tools menu. Once you find
- the Spelling Checker, it works fine. Suggested replacement words
- appear with Command-key shortcuts.
-
- FullWrite employs a main dictionary, which comes with the program;
- a user dictionary, which you add words to in order to supplement
- the main dictionary; and a document dictionary, which holds words
- that are considered correct in a specific document. You can
- purchase FullWrite with any main dictionary, and there are many
- choices (though no Arabic or Asian options), including two
- varieties of English, two of French, two of Portuguese, and two of
- German. Additional dictionaries cost $40.
-
- FullWrite comes with many extensions, add-ons that enhance the
- program. Some extensions provide standard features (such as
- spelling and balloon help); others are more esoteric. Learn
- Selection, an extension that began shipping with more recent
- versions of FullWrite 2.0.x, enables you to add batches of words
- to the user dictionary. If you bought FullWrite before Learn
- Selection came out, you can download the extension from the
- Internet.
-
- ftp://ftp.std.com//vendors/Akimbo/learn-selection.sit.hqx
-
- The footnote and endnote features should carry Rebecca through
- high school and her undergraduate years at college. Endnotes can
- go at the end of each "chapter" or at the end of a document.
- FullWrite does not work with Niles and Associates' EndNote
- referencing software, but it does offer a Bibliography feature to
- help in referencing situations where you place the author's name
- and date in the document text and list the complete reference at
- the end of the chapter or document. To get the most out of
- referencing and other features, Rebecca will need to become
- comfortable with Icon Bar View and note panels.
-
- When you type the text for a document element such as a footnote,
- header, or annotation, you type in a separate window-like area
- called a "note panel." The note panel looks much like a window,
- although pressing Command-W to close it does not work - you must
- use the mouse or press Command-` (that's the single quote on the
- Tilde key). After you insert an element, FullWrite shows an icon
- just left of the line where you inserted it. (The icon only shows
- in Icon Bar View.) You can double-click an icon to open its
- associated notes window. The icons make sense, but their tiny size
- may make them cryptic for some, and FullWrite does not offer a
- zooming feature. Footnotes, headers, and so on show on the page in
- the correct location in most views, though to edit them you must
- work in a note panel.
-
- Rebecca likes to create cards and letters that have creative,
- colorful touches, so she'll appreciate the capability of
- formatting text in any of 32,768 colors. FullWrite also offers a
- competent picture editor for creating graphics; unfortunately, you
- cannot import graphics except through the clipboard. Rebecca will
- enjoy adding borders by paragraph. Borders can be colored or in
- shades of gray and you get six or so options including single and
- double lines, and hairlines.
-
- If Rebecca becomes concerned with formatting, she'll encounter a
- gentle introduction to styles through the Base Styles dialog box,
- where she can format common document elements such as document
- text, footnotes, and headers. By using the Base Styles dialog box
- you are setting styles, though you don't have to think of it that
- way.
-
-
- **Graduate Student** -- My other sister, Rachel, is currently
- about to spend two years working for the Peace Corps in The
- Gambia, West Africa, but she recently completed her masters degree
- at Yale, and I'm pretending she's still there for the sake of this
- review. Rachel has a PowerBook 145, writes long papers, and works
- with scientific data.
-
- FullWrite uses EGO (Edit Graphic Object - EGO works much like OLE
- from the user's standpoint, and it does _work_) to integrate an
- Equation extension, which is a "junior version" of Design
- Science's Math Type. Any EGO-savvy application can hook into
- FullWrite, and Rachel might be keen on trying Cambridge Scientific
- Computing's line of chemistry-related products.
-
- Rachel will also use the Classify feature, which flexibly lets you
- number figures and other items. Classified items can be cross-
- referenced, though I found the steps, terminology, and interface
- for cross-referencing awkward. You can create multiple references
- to a single footnote, endnote, or bibliography entry. Although
- FullWrite has no features for numbering or referencing across
- multiple documents, you can create hypertext links within a
- document.
-
- Because Rachel writes longer documents, she will use the Chapter
- Ruler feature. FullWrite documents can be broken into chapters,
- and to start a new chapter, you insert a Chapter Ruler. (Chapter
- Rulers function much like section breaks in Microsoft Word.) The
- Ruler sits in your text and you use it or double-click it to
- fiddle with the columns in the new chapter, the header and footer
- height, or the page numbering. I _like_ this method of dividing a
- document and formatting the resulting "chapters" - it's the most
- elegant approach I've seen yet.
-
-
- **Next week** -- Next week I'll continue this review with a look
- at how my Mom and myself might use FullWrite, along with some
- concluding thoughts.
-
-
- Reviews/03-Jul-95
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 26-Jun-95, Vol. 9, #26
- CD-ROM Drives -- pg. 35
- AppleCD 600e Quad-Speed
- FWB hammerCD 6x Reader
- NEC MultiSpin 6X
- KPT Vector Effects -- pg. 35
- MicroNet Master CD Pro -- pg. 38
- InfoGenie 1.0.2 -- pg. 40
-
- * MacUser -- Aug-95
- Power Computing Power 100 -- pg. 37
- Projectors -- pg. 43
- InFocus LitePro 580
- nView nFinity P115
- Sharp XG-E650U
- In Control for Workgroups -- pg. 46
- ARCserve for Macintosh -- pg. 48
- Hewlett-Packard ScanJet 3c -- pg. 52
- TurboCAD for Macintosh -- pg. 53
- OneWorld Internet -- pg. 54
- Mathematica 2.2.2 -- pg. 56
- Pantone ColorDrive -- pg. 61
- Alchemy 3.0 -- pg. 61
- ScanPartner Junior -- pg. 65
- Taxi with Zagat Surveys -- pg. 65
- MacLinkPlus 8.0 -- pg. 67
- Power Macintosh 9500 -- pg. 68
- Desktop Publishers Tools -- pg. 82
- (too many to list)
- Macintosh Utilities -- pg. 92
- (too many to list)
-
-
- $$
-
- Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if
- full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee
- accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
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-
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