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- TidBITS#105/03-Feb-92
- =====================
-
- Apple slashes prices this week on many Mac models, but if you
- bought a Mac recently, read on to find out about your free
- software! A brief look at ClarisWorks, an explanation of Word's
- weird numerology, and news of several mysterious bugs with Word
- 5.0 and System 7. For those spanning two worlds we've got
- articles on SoftPC and the new ANDOR ONE, a PC expansion card
- that puts a Mac in your PC (a tiger in your tank?).
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
- Internet: ace@tidbits.uucp -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/03-Feb-92
- Apple Prices Slashed
- ClarisWorks Rave
- PC in a Mac/SoftPC
- Mac in a PC/ANDOR ONE
- Microsoft Weird 4.00E
- System 7 Bug
- Reviews/03-Feb-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-105.etx; 27K]
-
-
- MailBITS/03-Feb-92
- ------------------
- Glenn Fleishman writes to expand on some points about the snazzy
- keynote presentation at Macworld Expo.
-
- Just some points of clarification. The photographer who assisted
- in John Sculley's presentation was Greg Heisler, a leading
- photojournalist, who recently did the Time Man of the Year (Ted
- Turner/CNN) cover (more on that below).
-
- The camera he used was a Kodak Professional Digital Camera System
- (DCS). I work for Kodak more or less and my place of work has two
- of these systems. Kodak doesn't sell the just CCD back for the
- camera; it sells a Nikon F-3 with the back installed along with a
- 200 MB hard drive packaged with a tiny monitor and some controls.
- Plans are in the works, I think, to make it smaller and higher
- capacity. The camera comes in several models, storing from 156 to
- 600 4.5 MB RGB or black and white files depending on the model.
-
- The Time Man of the Year cover was done at my place of employment,
- the Kodak Center for Creative Imaging in Camden, Maine. Greg
- Heisler came out and spent 10 days working through ideas, and
- walked away with an RGB file (about 20 MB) created entirely in
- Photoshop that Time separated digitally through a CMYK proprietary
- conversion process. Greg's a great guy, and participated in the
- Sculley presentation partially because of this connection with
- Time and partially because he likes the Mac. As it turns out, they
- downplayed the artistic and collaborative end of the demo, because
- Apple apparently wanted to highlight the technology which didn't
- work exactly as planned, despite four days (instead of a promised
- four hours) in Time's offices, setting up the connection.
-
- Information from:
- Glenn Fleishman -- cci.mac@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Apple Prices Slashed
- --------------------
- by Tonya J. Engst
-
- On February 3rd, Apple announced price cuts, free deals for
- potentially irate customers, new PowerBooks, and the shipping of
- the Quadra 700 upgrade board.
-
-
- Price Cuts
- Those who have watched the Macintosh market over the past several
- years will not be surprised to learn that Apple has announced yet
- another round of list price reductions. Low-end buyers will be
- happy to see a $200 drop in price for a StyleWriter, $500 drop in
- price for a Classic II, and almost $1000 drop in the price of a
- Mac LC. High-end buyers will save lots of cash to the tune of
- about $1200 on a typical IIsi and $2000 on a IIci.
-
- Keen market observers will note that Apple usually drops prices in
- an especially sweet way when it is about to discontinue a model.
- In light of the fact that Apple also announced a future direction
- of having all Classics, Classic IIs, and LCs ship with 4 MB of
- RAM, and that Apple also announced a new 4/40 PowerBook 100, we
- might expect the 2/20 PowerBook 100s, the 2/40 LC and Classic, and
- possibly the 3/40 IIsi to be discontinued rather soon. With the
- rest of the line-up, though, the future is anyone's guess.
-
-
- Freebies
- Naturally, recent purchasers of Macintosh systems may want some of
- their money back, since they could have saved enough money to buy
- a few airplane tickets to somewhere warm and sunny (substitute
- somewhere cold and dreary if you live in a currently pleasant
- climate) if they had only waited a week or two before buying. In
- an effort to salvage customer satisfaction (and presumably to
- increase Claris's installed base), Apple has a special offer for
- some recent purchasers who took advantage of the Macintosh Right
- Now promotion extension (between 01-Jan-92 and 02-Feb-92). So, if
- you bought one of the following packages:
-
- * Macintosh Classic with a StyleWriter or Personal LaserWriter LS
- * Macintosh Classic II with a StyleWriter
- * Macintosh LC with a StyleWriter or any Personal LaserWriter and
- an Apple monitor.
-
- You should call Apple at 800/695-2506 and be prepared to send them
- a copy of your invoice to get one of the following free gifts:
-
- * Resolve
- * MacWrite II and MacPaint 2.0 bundle
- * MacDraw II and MacPaint 2.0 bundle
- * AppleCare for one of the above-mentioned hardware packages.
-
- The offer is good through 14-Mar-92, but you should also keep in
- mind that Claris just chopped the price of MacWrite II from $249
- list to $129 list. So if you were going to pick up that MacWrite
- II bundle, it might be worth snagging a different one and actually
- buying MacWrite II. People who purchased MacWrite II between
- 01-Apr-91 (hmm) and 31-Jan-92 will get a free upgrade to MacWrite
- Pro when it ships, hopefully before I retire. If you buy MacWrite
- II now at the lower price, you'll have to pay $69 to upgrade to
- MacWrite Pro.
-
- Apple doesn't have an offer for people who didn't buy one of these
- packages, sorry. I think Apple would do better to make an offer to
- anyone who purchased a now-discounted Macintosh or printer. Such
- an offer would go even further to enhance customer satisfaction,
- and Claris needs to increase its an installed base. Resolve needs
- to compete with Excel and 1-2-3, and MacWrite II needs to maintain
- its installed base since MacWrite Pro has slipped far behind
- WordPerfect 2.1, Nisus Compact, and Word 5, all of which shipped
- recently.
-
-
- The Bottom Line
- We won't publish all the new prices, but for those who are
- interested, here are the highlights (model, old suggested retail
- price, new suggested retail price):
-
- 68000 Macintoshes:
- PowerBook 100 2/20, no floppy 2,299 1,999
- PowerBook 100 2/20, floppy 2,499 2,199
- Classic 2/40 1,499 1,349
- Classic 4/40 1,649 1,499
-
- 68020 Macintoshes:
- Mac LC 2/40 2,499 1,549
- Mac LC 2/40 w/VRAM 2,499 1,549
- (Yes, these are priced identically. One of those
- marketing mysteries, I suspect.)
- Mac LC 4/40 2,649 1,699
- Mac LC 4/80 w/VRAM 2,999 2,049
-
- 68030 Macintoshes:
- Classic II 2/40 1,899 1,349
- Classic II 4/40 2,049 1,499
- Classic II 4/80 2,399 1,649
- Mac IIsi 3/40 3,769 2,499
- Mac IIsi 5/80 4,569 2,999
- Mac IIci 5, with floppy 5,269 3,299
- Mac IIci 5/80 5,969 3,999
- Mac IIci 5/160 6,369 4,599
- Mac IIfx 4, with floppy 7,369 5,099
- Mac IIfx 4/80 8,069 5,799
- Mac IIfx 4/160 8,669 6,399
-
- StyleWriter 599 399
-
- Information from:
- Claris propaganda
- Pythaeus
-
-
- ClarisWorks Rave
- ----------------
- This is not a review but a rave. It takes a lot to impress me
- these days, but I've been impressed by ClarisWorks. I'm not even
- all that likely to use it since I mostly do a ton of writing in
- Nisus and uAccess, but I suspect that if I need to do a compound
- document I'll use ClarisWorks. In this day and age of 1.4 MB
- programs that prefer 8 MB of RAM, ClarisWorks is a mere 562K and
- likes only 900K of RAM. For all that you get word processing,
- graphics, spreadsheet, database, and communication capabilities.
- Taking each alone, the modules are fairly unimpressive, but when
- you use them as they were meant to be used, they're great.
-
- Start a letter. Draw a whimsical scrawl right in the letter
- without changing windows. Remember that you need to include some
- simple numbers, and draw out a spreadsheet as easily as you would
- draw a rectangle. Decide you'd like to graph those numbers and
- it's a two-step process. Scale the graph and add a legend as an
- independent text block with the text tools. Move all these objects
- around as in a page layout program. Run the spelling checker on
- the whole thing, including text in the spreadsheet. You can do all
- of this without changing windows or documents or modules - just
- select an object and the appropriate tools are present.
-
- Of course, now that I've raved about it, let me emphasize that if
- you have sophisticated needs, you'll outgrow ClarisWorks quickly.
- I'd like to see the same sort of tool-based philosophy - "What You
- Need When You Want It" - with all engines at full power. Let's
- face it, I want Nisus's text-processing power, Excel's or
- Resolve's numeric capabilities, FileMaker Pro's or Panorama II's
- database skills, MicroPhone II's communication abilities merged
- with uAccess's UUCP connectivity, and Canvas's drawing power to
- top it off. Oh, and it would be nice to have all of this in a
- pasteboard-style environment from PageMaker or XPress, but that
- might be asking too much for tomorrow. :-)
-
- Seriously, folks, ClarisWorks is good. I've heard good things
- about BeagleWorks too, but haven't had a chance to see it yet. I
- hope that I'll be able to say similar things about it. I said at
- first that this is not a review, but we do have a full review of
- ClarisWorks coming out soon as a special issue, so stay tuned to
- the network ether.
-
-
- PC in a Mac/SoftPC
- ------------------
- I've been a serious slug on this one, and I'd like to apologize to
- Insignia Solutions for taking so long. Some time ago they sent me
- SoftPC to review and I checked it out fairly thoroughly... and
- then somehow just forgot about the review in the shuffle of
- getting married and moving. This is late, but I think still
- applicable.
-
- I'm sure that most of you have at least heard of SoftPC by now, in
- part because Apple loves to advertise that Macs have DOS
- compatibility*, and if you follow the asterisk down to the three
- point type at the bottom of the page, it always says something to
- the effect of "With the addition of SoftPC emulation software from
- Insignia Solutions."
-
- I'm pleased to report that SoftPC lives up to its claims of
- running most PC software on the Mac with no additional hardware.
- All the commercial software I tried worked almost perfectly, and
- the main programs that crashed were public domain and shareware
- games that may not have run on many PCs either, since they were
- obviously breaking programming rules and using illegal tricks to
- directly touch the hardware. I'd hate to try and run some of those
- programs from within Windows.
-
- The other general problem I had, which I'm sure was due to my
- configuration of the PC program and not inherently because of
- SoftPC, was with programs like terminal programs that need to
- access the serial port. SoftPC handles that quite well, but it's a
- confusing enough subject on the PC that it took some
- experimentation to get everything working. Printing was similarly
- confusing, in part because so few PC applications know how to
- handle a PostScript printer. SoftPC basically gives you a choice
- between fooling the PC into thinking you have an Epson dot matrix
- printer or a PostScript printer. Again, I don't fault Insignia for
- this confusion since it's bad enough in DOS. SoftPC's manual is
- generally decent, although the idea behind SoftPC is that you
- should think you're actually using a PC and should therefore
- resort to your PC and DOS manuals - it's not Insignia's job to
- make a PC easy to use.
-
- Herein lies the true problem with SoftPC. Unless you know
- specifically that you have to run a certain DOS program and you
- cannot use a Mac equivalent (like WordPerfect, 1-2-3, FoxBase,
- etc.), DOS software is simply too much of a pain to mess with. In
- my experience, the majority of the people who think they need to
- run PC software really just need to know how to translate files
- better between programs on the different platforms. That said, if
- you need to run a specific program, test it first at a dealer
- before buying SoftPC because Insignia may be unable to help you if
- your program is poorly written and isn't completely PC-compatible.
-
- If you've decided you need SoftPC for a specific program and that
- program does run, you'll encounter the final problem with SoftPC.
- It's pokey. Simple as that. When a Mac, even a high-end Mac, tries
- to pretend that it is really a PC, including support for a 286 and
- coprocessor, EGA graphics, and expanded memory, it just can't run
- all that quickly. On my SE/30 I'd rate SoftPC (I'm using the older
- EGA/AT module with version 1.4) at slightly under the speed of a
- PC XT, although my SoftPC can do things an XT can't, like run
- programs that require an 80287 coprocessor. I suspect that a
- Quadra would significantly speed up SoftPC, perhaps even to the
- point where it would be usable for long periods of time without
- creating undue frustration. Admittedly, I'm sure that the most
- recent versions of SoftPC are somewhat faster, but I'd hate to
- need to do serious work in SoftPC on anything slower than my
- SE/30.
-
- Enough complaining, when it comes right down to it, SoftPC does
- what it claims to do and does it well. I genuinely enjoy using it
- on occasion because I don't use PC software enough to warrant
- buying one and SoftPC has yet to fail me. SoftPC creates its own
- C: drive as a 1 MB (or larger) document to hold DOS and other
- required boot files. You can then define a SuperDrive or third
- party drive (like those from Kennect and Dayna) as a PC floppy
- drive, you can create another SoftPC hard disk document as a D:
- drive, and you can define a Macintosh folder as an E: drive. I
- mention this because I truly dislike navigating in DOS, and most
- of the DOS shells are still a step below the Finder. When I'm
- using SoftPC, I create all files on my E: drive (the folder) and
- then switch in and out of the Finder whenever I need to copy,
- rename, delete, or otherwise play with files. The only slight
- caveat to this is that SoftPC gets confused whenever I change the
- files in the E: drive so if I was in a subdirectory on E: it puts
- me back to the root directory on E: to recalibrate.
-
- All that talk of E: drives and subdirectories may sound confusing
- (and to many it is) but what I'm trying to get at is that SoftPC
- running in combination with the Finder is even easier to use than
- a normal PC. It's also hard to accept that PC programs can just
- sit on the Mac hard drive as normal files and still run from
- within SoftPC, but it works fine. It even works fine when
- Salient's AutoDoubler has compressed those PC files, which
- surprised me slightly. I used SoftPC to create some disks of
- public domain games for relatives spending a year in Tanzania with
- only a 286 laptop. It was easier than I expected because I could
- download the files from the Internet and America Online using
- normal Mac software, expand and test the files within SoftPC, and
- then create the DOS disks on a SuperDrive.
-
- These days Insignia has several versions of SoftPC at different
- price points, Entry Level SoftPC for the Mac LC and below at $125
- (discount), Universal SoftPC for all Macs from the Plus on up at
- $195 (discount), and for $300 (discount) SoftAT to add to
- Universal SoftPC for the 80287 coprocessor support, expanded
- memory support, and EGA color support (otherwise you can only use
- CGA graphics). SoftAT requires a 68020-based system at a minimum.
- Insignia also has SoftNode ($105 discount) for Universal SoftPC
- and SoftAT (but _not_ Entry Level SoftPC) that will allow you to
- run Novell Netware PC client software on the Mac, which can be
- extremely useful in some large organizations with Novell networks.
-
- The new versions have some significant enhancements over the
- version I have. The printing support has been enhanced so that you
- can do better graphics printing and wide-carriage printing, and
- there is now support for non-European character sets. More
- interesting given the spread of CD-ROM drives is support for the
- Microsoft CD-ROM Extensions, so you can use CD-ROMs that would
- otherwise be relatively useless on the Mac. SoftPC can now format
- floppy disks internally and supports a second floppy drive, and
- for those of you who actually upgraded, it also supports, but does
- not ship with, DOS 5.0. It still comes with DOS 3.3, if you're
- curious. Insignia also says that they have redone the interface to
- make it easier to use and have added balloon help and access to
- some AppleEvents, although SoftPC has always been able to do some
- copy and paste between the PC screen and a Mac application, an
- extremely handy tool for writing and illustrating documentation.
-
- When it comes right down to the question of should you buy this
- program, I think it's a question that you should be able to answer
- fairly well now. If you need a little access to PC software and
- would appreciate integration of the PC with your Mac software for
- documentation and whatnot, then yes, get it, it's great. If you
- want to avoid buying a PC but still want to run heavy-duty Windows
- software and use the PC as much as you use the Mac, you're fooling
- yourself and you should buy a PC. By the way, I gather that
- Windows will run, if run is the correct word for it. Considering
- that Windows is no speed demon on a real 386-based PC, I'd hate to
- see it amble under SoftPC.
-
- Insignia Solutions -- 800/848-7677
-
- Information from:
- Insignia propaganda
- Dave Hull -- insignia@netcom.COM
- Jason Proctor -- jason@insignia.co.uk
-
-
- Mac in a PC/ANDOR ONE
- ---------------------
- I can see wanting to run the occasional PC program on your Mac,
- after all, I just spent 45 minutes writing about just that topic
- above. But I'm less sure about wanting to run the occasional Mac
- program on your PC. It's possible now, thanks to Hydra and its
- ANDOR ONE.
-
- The ANDOR ONE is a PC expansion board that works with all PC-
- compatible computers (though not most laptops due to the slot
- limitations) that use an ISA or EISA bus, although it won't work
- on a Micro Channel bus. You must add your own Mac 128K ROMs and
- Macintosh system software (yes, it works with System 7), much like
- emulators for the Atari ST and the Outbound Portables. As far as I
- can tell from Hydra's press information - which is very complete
- by the way, these people did their homework - the ANDOR ONE is
- essentially a slightly souped-up Mac Portable in the sense that it
- uses a 16 MHz 68000 and is thus twice as fast as the Classic,
- although still about half the speed of an SE/30. The speed of the
- host PC doesn't make too much difference, except when it comes to
- disk access times, which of course drop significantly on the
- faster PCs.
-
- From what I gather, Hydra designed the ANDOR ONE so it can share a
- PC hard disk much as SoftPC shares a Mac disk by creating a single
- file that looks like an entire hard disk inside. I'd prefer to
- have be able to see all the PC files from within the Finder and
- all the Mac files from within DOS, but it doesn't look like ANDOR
- can do that. However, with some clever software, Hydra has made it
- possible for the ANDOR to read, but not format, Macintosh 400K and
- 800K (but not 1.4 MB) floppies directly in most 3.5" PC floppy
- drives, which is something of a feat. Realizing that the PC
- connectivity is still limited in terms of connecting to Macintosh
- peripherals, Hydra also put two SCSI ports (one 50-pin and one
- 25-pin) and an AppleTalk RS-422 port on the ANDOR card, so you can
- still hook up directly to most Macintosh peripherals directly.
-
- I played with one of these running on a 486 at Macworld, and it
- did indeed run all the standard Mac software that was installed on
- their hard drive, including PageMaker 4.0 and Word 4.0. The speed
- was certainly acceptable, though not on the level of an SE/30, and
- the only problem I had was that I couldn't figure out how they had
- mapped the option key. The PC Alt key seemed to equate to the Mac
- command key, and shift did what you'd expect, but control did not
- equal option. It's not a big deal, and I probably just missed it,
- but I'd hate to be without an option key in PageMaker and many
- other applications.
-
- The ANDOR ONE is not cheap at $995 list price, and adding 4 MB of
- RAM and the Mac ROMs will add another $600 or so. The question
- comes up immediately: "Why should I buy this instead of a
- Classic?" Hydra provides four answers to this question, three of
- which are pretty good (I said that they did their homework). The
- first answer is that the ANDOR ONE is faster. That's true, but big
- deal, so is a PowerBook 100 and I'd far rather have a PowerBook
- 100 than a Classic. However, Hydra goes on to point out that an
- ANDOR, because of its host PC, has many more networking options
- than a normal Mac, an ANDOR ONE can run both PC and Mac software
- at full speed, and finally, purchasing restrictions may prevent
- some people from buying a true Macintosh but a PC card that
- happened to run Macintosh software would be OK. I like the way
- these people think, but I'm afraid that unless they significantly
- reduce the price of the ANDOR ONE it won't sell particularly well.
-
- Hydra Systems -- 408/253-5800
-
- Information from:
- Hydra propaganda
-
-
- Microsoft Weird 4.00E
- ---------------------
- Word is starting to sound like Old MacDonald's Farm: "E I E I O."
- As promised, Microsoft released version 4.00E of Word to resolve
- problems with Word and the 68040 caches. If you have a Quadra and
- don't want to upgrade to Word 5.0, which also works with the 68040
- caches enabled, you can get a free upgrade to 4.00E by calling
- tech support or customer service. Support for the Quadras is the
- _only_ difference between Word 4.00E and 4.00D, the current
- version, and Microsoft has not tested 4.00E on machines other than
- the Quadras since there's no real point - most people will either
- be happy with 4.00D or will upgrade to 5.0.
-
- It's high time to clear up some confusion about various versions
- of Word. The _program_ version is 4.00E, but the _invoice_ version
- is 4.00I and it will appear on the invoice as such, confusing the
- heck out of everyone in sight. Microsoft knows about this "bug"
- and is working to fix it, but remember, the 4.00I revision is
- completely imaginary and was made up by the invoice elves that
- inhabit Microsoft's mainframes and are known to play tricks late
- at night when only the Windows debugging teams are still awake.
-
- Actually, the Word 5.0 debugging teams are also cluttering the
- atmosphere with the by-products of some midnight oil, trying to
- fix a problem that appears only on 68000 machines. It seems that
- if you are running on a 68000 machine and open the Grammar
- Checker, Word occasionally crashes for no known reason. Microsoft
- is aware of the problem and is trying to gather more information
- about it since it hasn't been tracked down any further than we've
- just described.
-
- Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
- Microsoft Mac Word Technical Support -- 206/635-7200
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- System 7 Bug
- ------------
- Perfect timing once again. Just after we send out our issue on
- System 7 with information about a couple of problems it has,
- another pops up. Apparently a few people, not a lot, have been
- having files and folders disappear mysteriously from their hard
- drives. Using the Finder's Find command will make them temporarily
- reappear, but at first it seemed that the only way to fix the
- problem was to reformat the hard disk and restore from a backup.
- Now it appears that you can fix the problem by forcing the Mac to
- rebuild the Desktop DB and Desktop DF files manually (by using a
- utility like DiskTop to make them visible, renaming them
- differently and then rebooting, or by using the Desktop Reset
- utility that ships to registered users of Salient's DiskDoubler
- and AutoDoubler). I'm not sure why you can't use the normal method
- of holding down command-option when the Mac starts up to rebuild
- the desktop, but no one has mentioned that as a fix yet and I
- haven't lost any folders so that I can test it. For that matter,
- restarting under System 6 and then again under System 7 might have
- the same effect.
-
- The bug does not appear to discriminate (that's what we like,
- equal-opportunity bugs) in that it affects users of System 7 and
- 7.0.1 on different types of Macs and different brands of hard
- drives. Once again, Apple knows about the bug and is working to
- fix it (what do you think - they'd just apologize and throw up
- their hands?). If you feel the need, you can call Apple Customer
- Service, but I'd recommend just fixing the problem.
-
- Apple Customer Assistance -- 800/776-2333
-
- Information from:
- Mike Fessler -- MIKEF@brownvm.brown.edu
- Alan Hewat -- Hewat@Frill.bitnet
- Stephen C. Harmony -- sharmony@nova.ta52.lanl.gov
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 03-Feb-92, Vol. 6, #5, pg. 3
- MacWEEK -- 27-Jan-92, Vol. 6, #4, pg. 1
-
-
- Reviews/03-Feb-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Adobe Premier -- pg. 39
- Mirror 600 Color Scanner -- pg. 39
- CD-ROM drives -- pg. 40
- Apple CDSC Plus
- CD Technology Porta-Drive 3300
- Chinon CDC-431
- SpeedyCD -- pg. 40
- Backup programs -- pg. 45
- Retrospect 1.3
- DiskFit Pro 1.0
- Fastback Plus 2.6
- NetStream 2.1
-
- * MacUser
- Lotus 1-2-3 for Macintosh -- pg. 42
- ClarisWorks -- pg. 44
- Mouses -- pg. 48
- A3 Mouse
- Little Mouse
- MouseMan
- Spark Cordless Mouse
- ReadIt Pro -- pg. 50
- ReadRight for Macintosh -- pg. 50
- Masquerade -- pg. 52
- File Utilities -- pg. 54
- Cataloger
- Offline
- ColorDex
- JMP 2.0 -- pg. 58
- DeskWriter C -- pg. 63
- TeleFinder Pro -- pg. 77
- Tesserae -- pg. 77
- DynoPage -- pg. 77
- AgentDA -- pg. 79
- FolderBolt -- pg. 79
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 27-Jan-92, Vol. 6, #4
- MacUser -- Mar-92
-
-
- ..
-
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