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- TidBITS#288/31-Jul-95
- =====================
-
- New products and updates! Adobe announces PageMaker 6.0, Peter
- Lewis revs his popular FTP client Anarchie, CE Software announces
- new pricing for educational users, the Yahoo Web catalog gives
- itself a face lift, and Claris ships Guy Kawasaki's Emailer. We
- also bring you information on a new HyperCard virus, things to
- keep in mind when buying a mail-order Mac, and thoughts from Matt
- Neuburg on what a user should expect from commercial software.
-
- 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/31-Jul-95
- New Virus Targets HyperCard Stacks
- CE Goes to School
- Let the Buyer Beware
- The User Over Your Shoulder - Malign Neglect
- Claris Emailer Ships
- Reviews/31-Jul-95
-
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#288_31-Jul-95.etx
-
-
- MailBITS/31-Jul-95
- ------------------
-
- **It's a Whole New Yahoo** -- In news that made it all the way to
- CNN last week, Yahoo! Corporation - maintainers of arguably the
- most widely-used catalog of the World Wide Web - announced they
- will be introducing a new interface on 31-Jul-95, along with
- directly incorporating hourly wire service newsfeeds from Reuters.
- Yahoo's new interface sports small graphic elements and a bare-
- bones search form right on the top page; also, the number of major
- categories has been reduced from 19 to 14, and Netscape 1.1 users
- are treated to a two-column display of major topic headings. (Yes,
- a text version is still available.) Yahoo has been picking up
- corporate sponsors in an effort to remain free to Web users - it's
- grown from a two-person effort to a company with a couple dozen
- employees . Yahoo's new interface should be available today at
- Yahoo's usual URL, but if they're running a little behind, check
- out their beta site. [GD]
-
- http://www.yahoo.com/
- http://beta.yahoo.com/
-
-
- **PageMaker 6.0 Announced** -- Adobe has announced PageMaker 6.0,
- a long-awaited update to its widely-used publishing application
- recently acquired in its purchase of Aldus. In addition to several
- new features targeted at its primary competitor, QuarkXPress,
- PageMaker 6.0 features the ability to export documents in Acrobat
- PDF format (with smart hyperlinks joining stories) and sets hearts
- aflutter amongst Web weenies everywhere with the ability to export
- HTML. But before you start saving your money, consider a few other
- added features: PageMaker 6.0 requires OLE, needs 20-30 MB of hard
- disk space for installation, has a RAM requirement of 8-10 MB, and
- though it will run on a 68030-based machine, it wants a 68040-
- based machine or Power Macintosh. PageMaker 6.0 should be
- available shortly at a suggested retail price of $895, and
- registered owners will be able to upgrade for $149. A CD-ROM
- version of the program will also be available, and it will include
- a version of Adobe's Type On Call. Adobe Systems -- 800/422-3623
- 415/961-4400 [GD]
-
-
- **Anarchie 1.6 Released** -- Peter Lewis <peter@stairways.com.au>
- has released version 1.6 of his popular Internet FTP client
- Anarchie. New in this version of Anarchie are Open Transport
- compatibility and a few interface enhancements (click the transfer
- indicator fields in the transfer progress windows, and almost
- everything in the About box is now hot) in addition to optional
- Simple Internet Version Control (SIVC). Spearheaded by Chris
- Johnson <chrisj@mail.utexas.edu> at the University of Texas, SIVC
- allows Peter to both have a rough idea of how many copies of
- Anarchie are in use _and_ inform you of updates to Anarchie when
- new versions are available. (Chris has been using this technique
- with his MacTCP Monitor program for some time.) Participation is
- voluntary so as not to produce privacy concerns: if you're
- paranoid, just keep SIVC version checking turned off in Anarchie's
- preferences. This version of Anarchie also has several bug fixes
- and support for non-standard FTP ports. Anarchie is $10 shareware,
- and weighs in at a little over 600K.
-
- ftp://mirrors.aol.com//pub/info-mac/comm/tcp/anarchie-16.hqx
- http://gargravarr.cc.utexas.edu/mactcp-mon/main.html
-
-
- **FWB Correction** -- The contact information given for FWB, Inc.
- in the article on quad-speed CD-ROMs last week in TidBITS-287_ was
- partially incorrect. FWB's main phone number is 415/325-4392, with
- a fax number at 415/883-4655. Their email address remains
- <fwb.inc@eworld.com>. [GD]
-
-
- New Virus Targets HyperCard Stacks
- ----------------------------------
- by Mark Anbinder, News Editor <mha@tidbits.com>
-
- Antiviral utility developers today announced the recent discovery
- of a virus that infects HyperCard stacks. The "HC-9507" virus
- infects HyperCard's Home stack when an infected stack is executed,
- and from there spreads to other running stacks and randomly-chosen
- stacks on the startup disk. Depending on the day of the week and
- the time, the virus can cause odd system behavior when an infected
- HyperCard stack is running. For example, the screen may fade in
- and out, the word "pickle" may be inserted into your text, or the
- system may unexpectedly shut down or lock up.
-
- Symantec and Datawatch have released updates to their SAM and
- Virex tools, respectively, which find and remove HC-9507
- infections in HyperCard stacks. Check your documentation for
- instructions on obtaining the updates. Central Point Anti-Virus,
- Disinfectant, and VirusDetective do not attempt to deal with
- HyperCard viruses, so no updates are being released for these
- tools. Mac users who do not use HyperCard need not worry about
- this virus; only executing an infected HyperCard stack will spread
- the virus.
-
- Information from:
- Gene Spafford
-
-
- CE Goes to School
- -----------------
- by Mark Anbinder, News Editor <mha@tidbits.com>
-
- In the late 1970s and through the 1980s, Apple dominated the
- education market by donating computers to school districts and
- colleges, and by making many more available at steep discounts.
- Much of the software that schools needed was available first and
- finest for the Apple II and then for the Macintosh, and Apple had
- the institutions hooked. Taking a history lesson from Apple's
- success, CE Software has just unveiled a plan to put QuickMail on
- the desk of every student and teacher in North America.
-
- CE's "Educate America" program begins this August (when CE has
- scheduled QuickMail 3.5 to ship) by offering the company's LAN-
- based email software to schools for $10 per faculty user and $3
- per student user (with several license sizes starting at ten-user
- packs). These prices contrast with current educational packages at
- around $35 per user, or the standard packages that sell for almost
- twice that.
-
- The company says faculty license packages will include the server
- and administration software, network client software for Macintosh
- and DOS, "file based" client software for Windows (which requires
- an intermediary file server), the company's QM Forms custom form
- editor, and QM Remote software for checking mail by modem. Student
- packages include the client software but none of the server or
- maintenance software. (Purchasers will need at least one faculty
- package or an existing QuickMail system.)
-
- QuickMail 3.5 is expected to offer Macintosh "drag and drop"
- functionality, styled text within messages, and a new gateway to
- America Online.
-
- Educate America goes on to offer Internet email service, World
- Wide Web browsing, and other Internet capabilities through Global
- Village Communication's GlobalCenter service. For a one-time setup
- fee of $300 and a monthly flat rate of $325, all users on the
- network will have unlimited Web browsing and email access. Global
- Village's Internet service (now through a recently announced
- partnership with UUNET) offers automatic connection via 28.8 Kbps
- modems or ISDN using the company's OneWorld Internet hardware.
-
- QuickMail isn't the necessarily the best solution for Internet
- email access, but it's well-suited to local networks of a few
- dozen or a few hundred users (especially if the majority are Mac
- users). The GlobalCenter Internet service provides a simple way to
- connect an entire network, and may prove to be a good starting
- point for schools considering more expensive connections down the
- road.
-
- CE Software -- 800/523-7638 -- 515/221-1801 -- <sales@cesoft.com>
- Global Village Communication -- 800/736-4821 -- 408/523-1000
- <sales@globalvillage.com>
-
- Information from:
- CE Software propaganda
-
-
- Let the Buyer Beware
- --------------------
- by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
-
- There has been a recent spate of reports on the nets and to
- TidBITS regarding warranty service on Macintosh computers through
- third-party mail order vendors, such as those advertising in the
- backs of Mac trade magazines. Some customers have had difficulty
- obtaining warranty service they expected for defective machines
- and components, often leading to a great deal of frustration, not
- to mention lost time and money. Though there's not enough
- information available right now to make specific recommendations,
- there are some general points to keep in mind if you're thinking
- about buying machines from third-party vendors:
-
- * Apple cannot (and does not) warranty any third-party accessories
- added to machines you order from a vendor. This includes (but is
- not limited to) third-party RAM, hard disks, CD-ROM drives, video
- cards, and so on. Any warranty or service on these components
- comes at the discretion of the vendor or the original
- manufacturer.
-
- * Remember that clock-chipping a Macintosh to increase your its
- CPU speed violates your Apple warranty.
-
- * Modification to or stripping down a stock Apple configuration
- may not be covered by a warranty, and may invalidate Apple's
- warranty on a machine. Say you want to buy a Power Mac 6100
- _without_ an internal CD-ROM. The vendor will probably charge you
- for a technician's time, but removing the drive may invalidate the
- Apple warranty. Be sure you understand the ramifications of any
- changes made to a machine by a vendor _before_ you buy.
-
- * Examine the vendor's return policy and warranty agreement before
- making a purchase. Many vendors leave warranty service on stock
- configurations entirely up to Apple; others may charge shipping or
- return fees if there are problems.
-
- * If possible, use a credit card with a consumer protection plan
- for your purchase. In the event you do have a legitimate problem
- with a vendor, the credit card company will often back you up.
-
- When contacted, Apple declined to give an official response to
- reported problems but noted that they generally go to some lengths
- to meet warranty obligations (and this has been true in my
- personal experience). Also, it should be noted that vendors aren't
- generally in the business of selling people bad machines, but they
- are in business of selling machines as cheaply as they can.
- Sometimes vendors are able to advertise lower prices because they
- managed to obtain a set of units that were discontinued or were
- originally slated to be shipped to a foreign market; other times,
- they may be able to offer refurbished machines at a significant
- discount, but with no warranty.
-
- Always be sure you understand precisely what you're buying,
- precisely what the vendor's warranty and return policy is on your
- purchase, and precisely what your options are if there should be a
- problem. Buying a machine mail order isn't necessarily for the
- faint of heart, and though there can be some substantial deals out
- there, always remember that if something seems to good to be true,
- it probably is.
-
-
- The User Over Your Shoulder - Malign Neglect
- --------------------------------------------
- by Matt Neuburg <clas005@cantva.canterbury.ac.nz>
-
- More than ten weeks after U.S. customers began receiving the Word
- 6.0.1 update, it became available in New Zealand. Anyone calling
- Microsoft from New Zealand was told they had to deal with
- Microsoft NZ, and then - airplanes be damned - it was popped on
- the slow boat to save a buck. Amusingly, Microsoft NZ then
- overnight-expressed us our copy, as if this could somehow make up
- for the irrationally long wait.
-
- After the usual harrowing installation procedure, I bravely but
- tremblingly turned Super Boomerang back on, and started Word; so
- far, no crash, so perhaps the thing I was most unhappy with is
- fixed. Meanwhile, as I'm trying to type while keeping my fingers
- crossed, I glance over some of what Microsoft has to say about the
- other improvements in this update:
-
- * "Word Count was significantly slower in 6.0 than 5.1.
- Performance is now par with 5.1. Fixed by changing how we check
- for an escape out of the action."
-
- * "The View menu took longer to drop than other menus. The extra
- time was used drawing the bullet symbol. We now preload the
- bullet."
-
- * "The MS LineDraw font was corrupt. It has been replaced."
-
- * "Other applications could not open Word 6.0 files saved as Word
- 5.1 files. Saving a file as Word 5.1 left the file with a W6BN
- File Type. The file now gets a WDBN File Type so other
- applications can recognize the file type."
-
- And so forth. Microsoft is implying I should be grateful for these
- fixes. But why? After all, what's being fixed in each case seems
- to have been a pretty silly error in the first place. Microsoft
- isn't rescuing me from anything except itself! Perhaps Microsoft
- thinks of this update as valiant customer support, but to me it
- suggests that Microsoft did sloppy work and left its customers to
- act as beta-testers.
-
- Don't get me wrong; I'm not a Microsoft-basher. I actually tried
- to write an article for TidBITS taking the decidedly minority tack
- of praising Word 6.0, as to its overall design and functionality
- at least. No praise, though, for this attitude that releasing an
- update is as good as getting it right the first time, which seems
- to part of a general sloppiness among many commercial software
- developers. In the rush to publish, the user is lost sight of,
- while also being taken advantage of: by releasing buggy software
- so as to beat the competition to market, the developers raise
- capital to fix it at their leisure. And they have the leisure,
- because once you've bought bad software you're hooked, waiting for
- the fix.
-
- Granted, no software is bug-free (as every programmer knows), and
- software held back too long from release is vaporware. But many of
- the mistakes which the 6.0.1 update fixes were downright shoddy,
- and this is why I attribute them more to an attitude gone awry
- than the normal vagaries of the development cycle. And don't
- forget, users who upgraded were paying big bucks to make this
- shoddiness part of their lives.
-
- The makers of my other love/hate word processor, Nisus Writer, are
- not so different. Subscribers to the Nisus mailing list, probably
- among the program's most thoughtful and intensive users, actually
- got organized enough to come up with survey of improvements they'd
- like to see. However, they were told quite explicitly by a
- representative of the company that their views had been largely
- cast aside at a meeting as being too marginal (revealingly, by the
- marketers and engineers, not by the techies).
-
- And another representative of the same company recently wrote me
- personally and asked me to stop contributing to that mailing list,
- because my criticisms of the company were annoying the other
- readers. Funny how no readers had written directly to me about it;
- and never mind that the review of Nisus that I wrote with Adam in
- TidBITS-116_, TidBITS-117_, and TidBITS-118_ - which the company
- happily distributed with its demos (without telling me) - won and
- still wins the program many converts. It seems that when my
- admittedly enthusiastic tone of writing extends to certain home
- truths, I'm anathema.
-
- And what are these home truths? Mostly that the new version, Nisus
- Writer 4.0, for which users shelled out what I think is an
- outrageous sum, is demonstrably much slower and considerably
- buggier than the version it replaced (Nisus 3.47). True, it's been
- getting better after several maintenance upgrades, but that's
- largely thanks to the vociferous complaints of paying customers,
- like me, who found the bugs and drawbacks in 4.0 that the company
- missed (or deliberately set aside).
-
- Well, I'm sorry. I think putting customers in the position of
- paying big bucks to act as unwilling beta testers for Nisus - or
- for Microsoft, or for anybody - _is_ outrageous. And I think we've
- paid for the right to scoff. Of course one should resist the
- ever-present tendency to flame incoherently. But if the
- relationship between developers and customers has gone wacko, only
- the clamor of the customers can do something about it.
-
- There was a day, not long ago, when the fact that your computer
- did anything at all seemed a miracle. Your jaw dropped in
- admiration, and you felt love and warmth for the dedicated artists
- who turned a dead box of chips and wires into ingenious magic. I'm
- not saying that that day is entirely past, but I am saying that
- the gee-whiz factor can now be tempered with a considerable dose
- of practical reality. The simple fact is that computer programs
- are not magic but artifacts, mere human creations with a
- straightforward functional purpose. If you've paid for them, they
- can (and should) be viewed and criticised like any other
- commercial artifact like a house, a car, a shirt, a cigarette
- lighter. If it's shoddy, if it doesn't do what you need it to do,
- by jingo it's _your_ money - you shouldn't have to stand for it.
-
- Yet we do stand for it. I constantly get email from folks who have
- noticed a bug or a shortcoming in a program, and I say: great, and
- have you written the developers about this? Too often the answer
- is "No," or "Gee, I didn't think of that." I myself have more than
- once shelled out a couple of hundred bucks for software I found so
- buggy as to be unusable, and neither returned it nor complained.
- Why?
-
- I suspect it's partly because there's a tendency to hope for
- developers to notice and fix their mistakes, as if they were with
- you, watching benevolently from inside your computer. This
- scenario, even with the best face put on it, is unrealistic; as
- Dave Winer pointed out in TidBITS-280_, the notion that a
- corporation is going to generate good software is irrational.
- Another problem is that it's surprisingly hard to describe -
- objectively and helpfully - a problem or shortcoming with a piece
- of software. And yet another problem is that most software
- companies have no clear ingoing communications channel: the folks
- who mind the phones or the email, I find, are usually not
- responsible for the program itself, and are either there to act as
- a buffer between you and those who are, or else, if they actively
- try to advocate your view, are just one more voice apt to be lost
- in the corporate storm.
-
- I have no solution. There must be give on all sides. Developers
- must break out of their present isolationism and genuinely respect
- their users, actively seeking and facilitating cooperation with
- them. They ought to especially pay attention those who show
- expertise, which is usually accompanied by a visionary commitment
- that the developers ought to value, not marginalize. Users must
- stop expecting either that software problems won't exist or that
- they'll just go away, do less flaming and less sitting on their
- hands, and make an effort to communicate cogently and persuasively
- with developers. And, I suppose, software prices should become
- more realistic. Think how different your loyalties, feelings,
- expectations, patience, and response would have been if the
- upgrade from Word 5.1 to 6.0 had cost $20.
-
-
- Claris Emailer Ships
- --------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- [Claris announced last week that it has released Emailer, an
- all-in-one email application. The following text is excerpted and
- edited from Adam's just-released
- _Internet_Starter_Kit_for_Macintosh,_Third_Edition_. -Geoff]
-
- Emailer was developed by Guy Kawasaki's Fog City Software - it's a
- program that Guy had a strong hand in because, like many people in
- the industry, Guy has a large number of email accounts on
- different services, and checking mail on each one is a royal pain.
- Enter Emailer, which Guy and the folks at Fog City Software
- designed to be your central email program. Emailer can currently
- connect to America Online, eWorld, CompuServe, and RadioMail and
- understands POP and SMTP for talking to Internet email accounts.
- Other services, like BIX or GEnie, may also appear at a later
- date.
-
-
- **Services with a Smile** -- I tested pre-release versions of
- Emailer for several months, and it worked like a champ with the
- Internet, CompuServe, AOL, and eWorld. The configuration for each
- service is tailored to that service, so when you configure your
- Internet account, for instance, you enter things like your POP
- account, SMTP server, and return address. In a nice touch, Emailer
- is among the first commercial programs to support Internet Config,
- an increasingly widely used public domain utility that holds
- configuration information for use by any Internet Config-savvy
- Internet program.
-
- ftp://mirror.aol.com//pub/info-mac/comm/tcp/internet-config-11.hqx
-
- Because many of us have multiple accounts on different services,
- Emailer takes that into account and lets you check all of your
- accounts, no matter how many you may have. In addition, many
- people travel around, and need to connect to the different
- services using different phone numbers. In the past, it's been a
- pain to reconfigure each different program - CIM, AOL, or eWorld -
- for the local phone numbers in the places you regularly visit.
- Emailer turns this task into a one-time event by allowing you to
- store a variety of connection-specific settings (including modem
- initialization strings and baud rates as well as telephone
- numbers) for each service in its Locations list.
-
- But Emailer's elegant design doesn't stop there. Anyone who uses a
- number of different services doesn't want to connect to each of
- them manually throughout the day. It's much more convenient to
- have the program connect automatically at a preset time, and in
- fact, CIM, AOL, and eWorld can all do this. Well, so can Emailer,
- and it's more flexible than the lot of them, allowing you to
- schedule the time of day and which days of the week the scheduled
- connections are made.
-
-
- **Destinations and Filters** -- All right, so we have a program
- that can connect to multiple services using multiple accounts in
- many different locations at pre-specified times. Emailer has to
- know how to send mail from one service to another, and as you'd
- expect, it relies on the Internet, which can connect to all of
- these different services. You can, of course, reply to CompuServe
- mail back through CompuServe, but if you'd rather use a cheaper
- connection through the Internet say, you can also set Emailer's
- Destinations settings to send mail back through a different
- service than the one you received it from. I especially like this
- feature, because I can have all my CompuServe replies go out
- through the Internet. In addition, if I want to send new mail to
- someone on CompuServe, Emailer uses this information to properly
- address the message so it's delivered to CompuServe via the
- Internet.
-
- Emailer offers full filtering capabilities that can auto-forward
- or auto-reply to a message, based on a number of criteria such as
- its sender or its subject. You can set priorities, file messages,
- and filter on basically any piece of information in an incoming
- mail message. Thought they bear some resemblance to the filters in
- the commercial Eudora 2.1.3, Emailer's filtering capabilities -
- mostly thanks to the auto-forward and auto-reply features - are
- perhaps the best I've seen.
-
-
- **Reading and Sending Mail** -- When you connect to a service,
- Emailer brings in all waiting mail and sends all mail queued for
- that service (assuming that you ask it to do that; the two actions
- can be activated separately). Mail comes into your In Box,
- accessible from the Emailer Browser window, and double-clicking a
- message opens it for reading.
-
- Almost anything you could want to do with a message is available
- in Emailer's In Box, including deleting it (Emailer moves it to a
- Deleted Mail box in the Filing Cabinet part of the Browser for
- later permanent deletion), filing in a separate mailbox, printing,
- forwarding to another person, and replying (and Emailer quotes the
- selected text when you reply, a great feature). You can also move
- back and forth between messages in the current mailbox, and
- Emailer can automatically move read messages to a Read Mail box in
- the Filing Cabinet if you prefer. If you want to see who a message
- was sent to, the triangle in the upper left-hand corner flips down
- to display that header information, and clicking the "plus" button
- next to the sender's name adds that person to your Address Book.
-
- Speaking of the Address Book, it's almost a work of art. You can
- easily store multiple addresses for users (including multiple
- addresses at the same service); you can create groups of users;
- and you can filter the group based on text strings (this is useful
- if a list gets large). I could go on for some time, but that would
- spoil the fun.
-
- Other useful features in Emailer include search capability within
- saved mail, multiple mailboxes for filing mail, support for
- enclosures, and even support for enclosures from CompuServe to
- other services - something that isn't possible any other way.
-
-
- **Not Perfect, But It's Close** -- I don't use Emailer in favor of
- the commercial version of Eudora for two reasons. First, in a
- design mistake, Emailer stores each message as a separate file on
- your hard disk (in comparison with Eudora, which stores multiple
- messages in a single mailbox file in Unix mailbox format). Most
- messages are relatively small, but they can take up a full
- allocation block on disk. For instance, the partition of my hard
- disk that holds email is formatted to 700 MB or so. That means
- that a 500 byte email message in Emailer's format takes up about
- 20K on disk, since that's the smallest file size possible on such
- a large disk. Considering how many hundreds of messages I get and
- send and keep each day, this inefficiency is a problem, and it may
- be addressed in a future revision of Emailer. Second, although I
- like Emailer's interface and I think it's well done for the most
- part, I've come to enjoy Eudora's clever touches, such as turbo-
- redirect and automatically opening the next message after a
- deletion. That's purely a personal preference though.
-
- Overall, Emailer is strong contender among email programs, and I
- strongly recommend it, especially to anyone who uses multiple
- email accounts on the commercial services.
-
- According to announcements from Claris, Emailer has a suggested
- retail price of $89, with educational pricing set at $59. Emailer
- requires a 68020-based Mac or better, System 7, 1.5 MB of RAM and
- at least 3 MB of disk space. Emailer will be available from retail
- and mail-order companies, as well as from Claris directly. Also, a
- demo version of Emailer is available online from Claris.
-
- http://www.claris.com/News/emailer-ships.html
- ftp://ftp.claris.com/pub/USA-Macintosh/Trial_Software/ClarisEmailer1.0.hqx
-
- Claris Corporation -- 800/544-8554 -- 408/727-9054 (support)
- <info@claris.com>
-
-
- Reviews/31-Jul-95
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 24-Jul-95, Vol. 9, #29
- Aperture 5.0 -- pg. 27
- Internet Valet -- pg. 27
- Colorize 2.0 -- pg. 30
- HP DeskWriter 660C -- pg. 30
-
- * InfoWorld -- 24-Jul-95, Vol. 17, #30
- PowerCADD 2.0 -- pg. 100
- HyperCard 2.3 -- pg. 101
-
-
- $$
-
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